New York Magazine’s viral essay on Hollywood’s nepo baby boom has generated many thoughts and opinions on actors with famous parents. But there’s another realm of entertainment where nepotism is always at the forefront of conversations.
Nate Jones’ anchor essay on nepo babies sparked conversations about star kids and their many advantages in the entertainment industry.
But this conversation has always been happening in India about the Bollywood industry.
“Many people don’t know that Bollywood is also almost as old as Hollywood,” says Snigdha Sur, founder of South-Asian publication The Juggernaut and self-proclaimed Bollywood encyclopaedia.
Also known as Hindi cinema, Bollywood tends to have what’s called the “founding families of Bollywood”.
After the partition of Greater India, many families moved to Bombay because it felt more of a cosmopolitan city, and many of these families went into the film industry. And because the film industry was seen as salacious and looked down upon, many of these families ended up providing a lot of the talent.
One founding family includes the Kapoor family, with over 93 years in the Hindi film industry and at least four generations currently in the family business.
The patriarch Prithviraj Kapoor had six children, including influential filmmaker and actor Raj Kapoor, who had kids like actor Rishi Kapoor, whose son is currently one of Bollywood’s highest-paid actors, Ranbir Kapoor.
“The Kapoor family is one of the biggest families in Bollywood to this day where you could probably name as many as 10-12 people somehow related to, or married into this family that’s still working in Bollywood as actors, producers, writers, filmmakers,” says Snigdha.
It’s because of families like this that you mainly hear the same names like Kapoor, Khan and Mukherjee.
“That has basically been one of the hallmarks of Bollywood as a film industry,” says Snigdha.
And while the many founding families are thriving in Hindi cinema, some actors are known as the “outsiders” who aren’t descended from founding families but sometimes do make it onto the big screen.
Outsiders include Shah Rukh Khan, Ayushmann Khurrana, Deepika Padukone and her husband, Ranvir Singh. And while these actors are currently some of the biggest names in Hollywood cinema, many have expressed their need to work harder and feel excluded.
“You know what, some of the outsiders are even bigger than that,” says Snigdha.
In the first episode of the seventh season of Indian talk show Koffee With Karan, hosted by filmmaker Yash Johar’s son Karan, Ranvir Singh was a guest with Mahesh Bhatt’s daughter Alia, who is also married to Ranbir Kapoor. The actor made a subtle dig at Karan for having a bias for nepo babies and having to work harder as an outsider after he was seen favouring Aliaa in the show’s game segment.
When she asked Deepika Padukone if she felt the need to work harder as a non-nepo-baby, Snigdha said she said yes. But the actress revealed that she doesn’t let it get to her and just has to accept that she needs to work ten times harder to make it into the industry.