One of the most talked-about biopics in Bollywood history is finally happening. After years of rumours, casting changes, and budget headaches, the long-awaited film on legendary actress Madhubala has a lead, a producer, and a shooting date.
Dhurandhar actress Sara Arjun has been confirmed to play the iconic star, with Sanjay Leela Bhansali on board as producer and Jasmeet K Reen set to direct. The film will skip the theatres entirely and head straight to a streaming platform.
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Sara Arjun Steps Into the Role of a Lifetime
Sara Arjun, who made her Bollywood debut alongside Ranveer Singh in Aditya Dhar’s Dhurandhar, will take on what is arguably the most demanding role a young actress could be handed — portraying Madhubala, a woman widely regarded as the most beautiful actress Indian cinema has ever seen.
According to Variety India, Arjun has already begun preparing for the role and will undergo a significant physical and stylistic transformation to embody Madhubala’s beauty, grace, and magnetic screen presence. The preparation reportedly includes closely studying the iconic actress’s mannerisms, movement, and the particular quality of warmth that made her impossible to look away from on screen.
It is worth noting that Arjun was not the first name attached to this project. Reports suggest that Kiara Advani had earlier been considered for the lead role before things did not work out. That Arjun is now confirmed signals that the project has moved from wishful thinking to active production.

Bhansali Produces, Jasmeet K Reen Directs
The creative pairing behind this biopic is an interesting one. Sanjay Leela Bhansali, the filmmaker synonymous with large-scale, visually opulent explorations of love, tragedy, and femininity — think Devdas, Bajirao Mastani, and Gangubai Kathiawadi — is producing the project. His involvement is not accidental. Madhubala’s life, with its layers of glamour, heartbreak, and an untimely death, sits squarely in the kind of territory Bhansali has made his own over a three-decade career.
The film was reportedly stalled for a long time due to budgetary constraints. Bhansali’s arrival as producer appears to have resolved those concerns and given the project the financial backbone it needed to move forward.
Behind the camera will be Jasmeet K Reen, who made her directorial debut with Darlings — the Netflix crime-comedy starring Alia Bhatt and Shefali Shah that was widely praised for its sharp writing and assured direction. Reen’s ability to tell stories centred on complex women, and to do so with wit and emotional intelligence, makes her a compelling choice for a subject as layered as Madhubala.
Shoot Starts in July 2026, Direct OTT Release Confirmed
Production on the yet-untitled biopic is expected to begin in July 2026. The film will be released directly on an OTT platform, bypassing a theatrical run — a significant decision that reflects both the current landscape of streaming and the ambition to reach the widest possible audience for a story that deserves to be seen.
While the specific platform has not yet been announced, casting for two other key roles is currently underway. The film will portray Madhubala’s relationships with two of Hindi cinema’s greatest icons — actor Dilip Kumar and actor-singer Kishore Kumar — and the actors who will play them are yet to be finalised.

Who Was Madhubala? The Life the Biopic Will Bring Back
For younger audiences, a brief introduction to the woman at the centre of this film is worth offering — because Madhubala was not merely a famous actress. She was a phenomenon.
Born Mumtaz Jehan Begum Dehlavi on Valentine’s Day, 1933, in Delhi, she came from a large, poor Pathan Muslim family. Her father moved the family to Bombay in search of work, and Madhubala began acting as a child to help support them. She was just nine years old when she appeared in her first film.
Her breakthrough came with Kamal Amrohi’s Mahal in 1949, a reincarnation thriller in which she starred opposite Ashok Kumar. Overnight, she was a superstar. Through the 1950s, she dominated Indian cinema — she was comedic in Chalti Ka Naam Gaadi, intense in Amar, fearless in Kala Pani, and utterly luminous in everything she did. Hollywood came calling too; director Frank Capra reportedly wanted to cast her in an American production, but her father declined.
Her most iconic performance came in K. Asif’s Mughal-e-Azam (1960), where she played Anarkali — a doomed 16th-century courtesan in love with a Mughal prince. The film took nearly a decade to make and broke every box office record upon release. Film critic Dinesh Raheja has described it as the crowning glory of her career, and her portrayal of Anarkali is considered one of the greatest performances in Indian cinema’s history.
The Heartbreak, the Relationships, and the Tragedy
What the biopic will also explore — and what gives Madhubala’s life its particularly poignant quality — is the personal suffering that ran beneath the surface of all that fame.
Her seven-year romance with Dilip Kumar is the stuff of Bollywood legend. The two were deeply in love and the chemistry between them onscreen was electric. But the relationship collapsed under the weight of a public court case involving her father, who refused to let her travel for an outstation shoot on B.R. Chopra’s Naya Daur. During the legal proceedings, Dilip Kumar testified in support of the production house — a move that Madhubala experienced as a betrayal. They parted ways, and their story ended in heartbreak rather than the happily-ever-after the public had hoped for.
She later married actor-singer Kishore Kumar in 1960. But by then, her health had already begun to fail. Madhubala had been living with a ventricular septal defect — a congenital hole in the heart — for which there was no effective treatment at the time. She had been concealing her condition from the industry for years, frequently coughing up blood on sets while continuing to perform with a smile that gave nothing away.
After Mughal-e-Azam, her health declined rapidly. She spent the last years of her life largely confined to her room. On February 23, 1969 — just days after her 36th birthday — Madhubala passed away. She had appeared in 73 films and had barely scratched the surface of what she was capable of.
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Why This Biopic Matters Now
The question of who could play Madhubala has haunted Bollywood for years. Her legacy is so vast, her beauty so singular, and her life so dramatically rich that any biopic was always going to carry enormous expectations.
With Bhansali producing — a director-turned-producer who understands better than almost anyone how to build a world around a woman’s story — and Reen at the helm, the project has the right creative instincts behind it. Sara Arjun, still early in her career and reportedly putting in serious preparation work, brings a fresh energy to a role that could define a generation’s understanding of one of Hindi cinema’s most enduring icons.
Madhubala’s story has always been waiting for the right people to tell it. July 2026 cannot come soon enough.


