Indian cinema has always understood the power of a name. The right name carries rhythm, memorability, and something harder to define — a kind of aspirational weight that makes an audience believe in the person before the first frame of the film rolls. Which is probably why so many of the biggest names in the industry aren’t the names these people were born with.
Some of the changes make obvious commercial sense. Some were suggested by directors or poets who saw something in the actor that their original name didn’t quite capture. Some happened because someone else in the industry already had the same name. And some are simply the result of a long family name being trimmed to something easier to put on a marquee.
Here are the ones worth knowing — with the stories behind them.
Original Names of Indian Celebrities: Starting With Bollywood’s Golden Era Legends
Dilip Kumar was born Muhammad Yusuf Khan. The screen name was adopted at the suggestion of Bollywood insiders who felt a Hindustani-sounding name would have broader appeal in the post-partition industry landscape. The strategy worked — Dilip Kumar became one of the most acclaimed actors in the history of Indian cinema, and Muhammad Yusuf Khan is a name most of his fans have never heard.
Madhubala — the actress whose story we covered elsewhere and who remains one of Bollywood’s most extraordinary figures — was born Mumtaz Jehan Begum Dehlavi. The name Madhubala was suggested by Devika Rani, one of early Indian cinema’s most important figures. It means something close to “honey girl” — soft, memorable, and entirely right for the image she projected.
Meena Kumari was Mahjabeen Bano. The screen name has a classical elegance that suited a career built on some of Hindi cinema’s most emotionally devastating performances.
Dev Anand was born Devdutt Pishorimal Anand and somehow became simply Dev Anand — three syllables, effortless cool, the exact right name for the actor who embodied a particular kind of breezy urban charm across the 1950s and 60s.
Rajesh Khanna — widely considered Bollywood’s first superstar — was born Jatin Khanna. The name change happened before his rise to fame and has become a footnote to one of the most remarkable careers in Indian film history.
Guru Dutt, whose films like Pyaasa and Kaagaz Ke Phool are studied in film schools internationally, was born Vasanth Kumar Shivashankar Padukone. That last name will ring bells for a different reason entirely — Deepika Padukone is a relative, continuing a family connection to Indian cinema across generations.
Kishore Kumar — the singer and actor whose voice defined a generation of Hindi film music — was born Abhas Kumar Ganguly. The stage name became so completely his that the birth name is largely forgotten outside trivia circles.
The Modern Era Bollywood Names
Amitabh Bachchan was reportedly named Inquilab Srivastava at birth — Inquilab being a reference to the freedom movement slogan “Inquilab Zindabad.” The name Amitabh, meaning “the light that never dies” or “eternal light,” was suggested by the poet Sumitranandan Pant. It’s difficult to imagine a name better suited to a career that has lasted more than fifty years and shows no signs of ending.
Akshay Kumar is Rajiv Hari Om Bhatia. The screen name was adopted before his Bollywood entry and proved particularly well-suited to the action-hero image he built in the 1990s. Whether Rajiv Hari Om Bhatia would have had the same career trajectory is an unanswerable question.
Salman Khan’s full name is Abdul Rashid Salim Salman Khan — the shortened version used professionally being, essentially, just the latter portion of what’s on his official documents. The simplification was practical and turned out to be one of the most commercially powerful three-word combinations in Indian entertainment.
Ajay Devgn was born Vishal Veeru Devgan. Two things changed: the first name completely, and one vowel from the surname — the “a” was removed from Devgan to make Devgn. The unusual spelling became part of his branding, which is either a clever piece of differentiation or a consequence of numerology advice, depending on which account you believe.
Hrithik Roshan was born Hrithik Rakesh Nagrath — Nagrath being his birth surname before his father Rakesh Roshan’s screen name became the family’s public identity.
Ranveer Singh was Ranveer Bhavnani. He dropped the surname entirely for his screen career, which in retrospect was the right call — Ranveer Singh has a cadence that works well with the high-energy public persona he’s built.
Kartik Aaryan was born Kartik Tiwari and added “Aaryan” specifically for his Bollywood identity. The added surname gave him a more distinct screen presence in a crowded market.
Kiara Advani was Alia Advani until a slightly awkward situation arose: Alia Bhatt had already become one of Bollywood’s biggest young stars. Having two prominent actresses named Alia in the same industry at the same time would have created perpetual confusion, so the change was sensible and practical.
Shahid Kapoor was born Shahid Khattar — his mother’s surname — before using his father Pankaj Kapur’s surname professionally.
Jackie Shroff was born Jai Kishen Kakubhai Shroff. The nickname Jackie stuck, simplified the public identity, and now it’s the only name most people know him by.
Johnny Lever has one of the more unusual name-change stories in the industry. Born John Prakash Rao Janumala, he began performing comedy at Hindustan Lever Company events and adopted “Lever” from the company name as his stage surname. It became permanent, which is a genuinely charming origin story.

South Indian Cinema’s Real Names
Rajinikanth was Shivaji Rao Gaekwad — a Marathi name from a Maharashtrian family, which adds an interesting dimension to his identity as arguably the biggest Tamil cinema star in history. The name Rajinikanth was reportedly suggested by director K. Balachander when he cast the young actor in his debut film. What followed made that name one of the most recognized in Indian popular culture.
Kamal Haasan was born Parthasarathy Srinivasan. The screen name was adopted for his film career and has been his public identity for so long that the birth name is largely unknown outside his family and close circles.
Vijay — Thalapathy Vijay, whose political entry we covered in the actors-turned-politicians piece — was born Joseph Vijay Chandrasekhar. The “Joseph” was dropped for his screen identity, which is common among Tamil Christian actors who adopt secular professional names for broader appeal.
Suriya was born Saravanan Sivakumar — keeping his father Sivakumar’s last name as his first, then adopting Suriya as his screen identity. The name means the sun in Tamil, which suits both the imagery around his stardom and the literally blinding Chennai heat.
Dhanush was Venkatesh Prabhu Kasthuri Raja. The shorter, punchier single name was the right choice for an actor whose career has been built on intensity and emotional specificity rather than conventional glamour.
Prabhas — whose Baahubali films turned him into a pan-India phenomenon — was born with the full family name Uppalapati Venkata Suryanarayana Prabhas Raju. Using just Prabhas was both practical and, given what the name now represents globally, entirely sufficient.
Nayanthara was born Diana Mariam Kurian — a Kerala Christian name that she left behind when she entered Tamil cinema. The screen name has become one of the most powerful brands in South Indian cinema.
Yash — the KGF star who turned Kannada cinema into a pan-India conversation — was born Naveen Kumar Gowda. The single-word screen name turned out to be exactly right for a star whose persona is built around a kind of concentrated, singular intensity.
Mammootty, one of Malayalam cinema’s greatest actors, was born Muhammad Kutty Ismail Paniparambil. The simplified screen name has been his public identity for so long that it’s become its own kind of legend.
Chiranjeevi was born Konidela Siva Sankara Vara Prasad. The name Chiranjeevi means “one who lives forever” — spiritually inspired and, given the endurance of his career and cultural impact in Telugu cinema, arguably accurate.
Ram Charan’s full family name is Konidela Ram Charan Teja — the Konidela being the family surname shared with Chiranjeevi, his father. Simplified for professional use, he’s simply Ram Charan to audiences across India and increasingly internationally.
Also Read: Most Famous Actors in Bollywood in 2026? It’s Not Khans
The Complete List Is Here!
| Celebrity Screen Name | Original/Birth Name | Industry | Reason/Interesting Fact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amitabh Bachchan | Inquilab Srivastava | Bollywood | Name changed before debut; “Amitabh” means eternal light |
| Akshay Kumar | Rajiv Hari Om Bhatia | Bollywood | Adopted screen name for stronger film identity |
| Salman Khan | Abdul Rashid Salim Salman Khan | Bollywood | Shortened for simplicity and branding |
| Shah Rukh Khan | Abdul Rehman / Abdul Rashid Salim Khan (varies by source) | Bollywood | SRK became an iconic global brand |
| Aamir Khan | Aamir Hussain Khan | Bollywood | Minor name modification |
| Kareena Kapoor | Siddhima Raj Kapoor | Bollywood | Childhood name later changed |
| Kiara Advani | Alia Advani | Bollywood | Changed to avoid confusion with Alia Bhatt |
| Tabu | Tabassum Fatima Hashmi | Bollywood | Shortened for easy recall |
| Sunny Leone | Karenjit Kaur Vohra | Bollywood | Adopted stage name during early career |
| Hrithik Roshan | Hrithik Rakesh Nagrath | Bollywood | Simplified surname |
| Rekha | Bhanurekha Ganesan | Bollywood | Shortened into a single iconic name |
| Ajay Devgn | Vishal Veeru Devgan | Bollywood | Modified spelling for uniqueness |
| Govinda | Govind Arun Ahuja | Bollywood | Shortened version became more marketable |
| Saif Ali Khan | Sajid Ali Khan | Bollywood | Changed first name before films |
| Ranveer Singh | Ranveer Bhavnani | Bollywood | Dropped surname for branding |
| Shahid Kapoor | Shahid Khattar | Bollywood | Used mother’s surname in films |
| Sunny Deol | Ajay Singh Deol | Bollywood | “Sunny” became public identity |
| Bobby Deol | Vijay Singh Deol | Bollywood | Nickname turned screen name |
| Preity Zinta | Preetham Singh Zinta | Bollywood | Simplified for films |
| Katrina Kaif | Katrina Turcotte | Bollywood | Changed surname before Bollywood entry |
| Mallika Sherawat | Reema Lamba | Bollywood | Adopted new surname for screen image |
| Ayushmann Khurrana | Nishant Khurrana | Bollywood | Name changed for positivity and uniqueness |
| Kartik Aaryan | Kartik Tiwari | Bollywood | Added “Aaryan” for branding |
| Anushka Shetty | Sweety Shetty | South Indian Cinema | Changed before acting debut |
| Shilpa Shetty | Ashwini Shetty | Bollywood | Adopted more glamorous screen name |
| Jaya Prada | Lalita Rani | South Indian/Bollywood | Name created for cinema career |
| Rajinikanth | Shivaji Rao Gaekwad | Tamil Cinema | Screen name suggested by director K. Balachander |
| Kamal Haasan | Parthasarathy Srinivasan | Tamil Cinema | Shortened for film career |
| Sridevi | Shree Amma Yanger Ayyapan | South Indian/Bollywood | Simplified for nationwide appeal |
| Vijay | Joseph Vijay Chandrasekhar | Tamil Cinema | Dropped “Joseph” for screen image |
| Suriya | Saravanan Sivakumar | Tamil Cinema | Adopted memorable stage name |
| Dhanush | Venkatesh Prabhu Kasthuri Raja | Tamil Cinema | Chose shorter and punchier identity |
| Arya | Jamshad Cethirakath | Tamil Cinema | Simplified name before films |
| Chiyaan Vikram | Kennedy John Victor | Tamil Cinema | Adopted Vikram for acting career |
| Jiiva | Amar B. Choudhary | Tamil Cinema | Changed for screen recognition |
| Nayanthara | Diana Mariam Kurian | South Indian Cinema | Adopted glamorous screen identity |
| Chiranjeevi | Konidela Siva Sankara Vara Prasad | Telugu Cinema | Chose spiritually inspired screen name |
| Pawan Kalyan | Konidela Kalyan Babu | Telugu Cinema | Modified name before debut |
| Ram Charan | Konidela Ram Charan Teja | Telugu Cinema | Simplified for branding |
| Ravi Teja | Ravishankar Bhupathi Raju | Telugu Cinema | Shortened for industry appeal |
| Prabhas | Uppalapati Venkata Suryanarayana Prabhas Raju | Telugu Cinema | Simplified long family name |
| Mammootty | Muhammad Kutty Ismail Paniparambil | Malayalam Cinema | Shortened into a memorable star identity |
| Yash | Naveen Kumar Gowda | Kannada Cinema | Adopted short mass-friendly name |
| Puneeth Rajkumar | Lohith Rajkumar | Kannada Cinema | Name changed during film career |
| Dilip Kumar | Muhammad Yusuf Khan | Bollywood Legend | Screen name suggested before debut |
| Madhubala | Mumtaz Jehan Begum Dehelvi | Bollywood Legend | Renamed for glamorous image |
| Meena Kumari | Mahjabeen Bano | Bollywood Legend | Adopted classic screen identity |
| Mithun Chakraborty | Gouranga Chakraborty | Bollywood | Simplified first name |
| Dev Anand | Devdutt Pishorimal Anand | Bollywood Legend | Shortened for easy recall |
| Rajesh Khanna | Jatin Khanna | Bollywood | Renamed before superstardom |
| Kishore Kumar | Abhas Kumar Ganguly | Music & Films | Stage name became iconic |
| Sanjeev Kumar | Hari Bhai Jariwala | Bollywood | Adopted screen-friendly name |
| Guru Dutt | Vasanth Kumar Shivashankar Padukone | Bollywood Legend | Simplified for films |
| Shammi Kapoor | Shamsher Raj Kapoor | Bollywood | Shortened nickname became famous |
| Manoj Kumar | Harikrishna Giri Goswami | Bollywood | Name suited patriotic screen image |
| Nana Patekar | Vishwanath Patekar | Bollywood | Nickname became permanent identity |
| Chunky Pandey | Suyash Sharad Pandey | Bollywood | Childhood nickname became public name |
| Johnny Lever | John Prakash Rao Janumala | Bollywood | “Lever” came from Hindustan Lever performances |
| Jackie Shroff | Jai Kishen Kakubhai Shroff | Bollywood | Shortened for macho screen appeal |
| John Abraham | Farhan Abraham | Bollywood | Adopted more universal first name |
What All of This Actually Says
The pattern across all these name changes is interesting precisely because it’s not one thing. Some changes were strategic decisions made by the actors or their advisors. Some were suggestions from directors who saw a new identity in a new face. Some were purely practical — avoiding confusion, simplifying spelling, and making the name easier for audiences across different language communities to pronounce.
What they share is an understanding that in a mass entertainment industry, a name is part of the product. It needs to do certain things — be memorable, be pronounceable, project the right associations, and fit on a poster.
Most of these names did all of those things so successfully that the birth names are now footnotes. The screen names became the real names. Which is its own kind of transformation — not just a change of label, but a change of identity that stuck so completely it became permanent.


