The Indian actor Rishi Kapoor, who built a career as one of Bollywood’s romantic heroes, has died of leukaemia at the age of 67.
Kapoor,
part of a famous Bollywood family, was admitted to hospital in Mumbai
on Wednesday and died on Thursday, according to a family statement.
“The doctors and medical staff at the hospital said he kept them entertained to the last,” said the family in a statement.
“He
remained jovial and determined to live to the fullest right through two
years of treatment across two continents. Family, friends, food and
films remained his focus and everyone who met him during this time was
amazed at how he did not let his illness get the better of him.”
Kapoor
had returned to India last September after undergoing treatment for
cancer in the US for almost a year, and was admitted to hospital twice
in February.
His father, Raj Kapoor, and grandfather, Prithviraj
Kapoor, were doyens of Bollywood, the vast Hindi-language film industry
based in Mumbai. Kapoor began acting as a teenager and received the
National Film Award for his debut role as a child artist in his father’s
1970 film Mera Naam Joker.
He went on to act in more than 90
films, often as the romantic lead, and became well known for his talents
in singing and dancing. In one of Bollywood’s most legendary love
stories, he ended up marrying Nitu Singh, who had co-starred as his love
interest in several films. Their son Ranbir Kapoor is now also a
current top Bollywood actor.
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