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Vishal Bhardwaj is an Indian filmmaker, music composer, screenwriter and producer, widely regarded for his adaptations of William Shakespeare's plays into Indian settings and for his contributions to Hindi film music. He is best known for his Shakespearean trilogy — Maqbool (2003), Omkara (2006) and Haider (2014) — based on Macbeth, Othello and Hamlet respectively.
| Full name | Vishal Bhardwaj |
|---|---|
| Born | 4 August 1965, Bijnor, Uttar Pradesh, India |
| Occupation | Film director, music composer, screenwriter, producer, lyricist, singer |
| Spouse | Rekha Bhardwaj (singer) |
| Children | Aasmaan Bhardwaj |
| Years active | 1990s – present |
| Production company | VB Pictures |
| Notable works | Maqbool, Omkara, Kaminey, Haider, The Blue Umbrella, Makdee |
| Major honours | National Film Awards; Padma Shri (2023) |
Vishal Bhardwaj was born in Bijnor district, Uttar Pradesh, and grew up partly in Meerut and Najibabad. His father, Ram Bhardwaj, was a sugarcane inspector with the Uttar Pradesh government and an Urdu poet who occasionally wrote lyrics for Hindi films. Vishal studied at Hindu College, University of Delhi. His early ambition was to play first-class cricket before he turned to music.
Bhardwaj began his career in the music industry in the late 1980s and early 1990s, initially as an assistant to composer Usha Khanna. He composed for the children's album Ek Tha Bachpan with playback singer Gulzar, beginning a long-running collaboration. His film music debut as a composer is associated with Abhay (1995). He later composed widely admired scores for Satya (1998, songs), Godmother (1999), Maachis (1996), and several of his own films. The album of Omkara and the song "Beedi" became particularly popular.
Bhardwaj made his directorial debut with Makdee (2002), a children's fantasy film featuring Shabana Azmi. He followed it with Maqbool (2003), a transposition of Macbeth into the Mumbai underworld, starring Irrfan Khan, Tabu, Pankaj Kapur and Naseeruddin Shah. The Blue Umbrella (2005), based on a Ruskin Bond novella, won the National Film Award for Best Children's Film.
Omkara (2006) reset Othello in the political badlands of Uttar Pradesh, with Ajay Devgn, Saif Ali Khan, Kareena Kapoor, Vivek Oberoi, Konkona Sen Sharma and Bipasha Basu. The film was screened at the Cannes Film Festival's marketplace and received international attention.
Subsequent films include Kaminey (2009), 7 Khoon Maaf (2011, based on Ruskin Bond's Susanna's Seven Husbands), Matru ki Bijlee ka Mandola (2013), Haider (2014, set in Kashmir of the 1990s), Rangoon (2017), Pataakha (2018) and Khufiya (2023). He has also produced films, including Ishqiya (2010) and Dedh Ishqiya (2014), both directed by Abhishek Chaubey.
| Year | Film | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 2002 | Makdee | Director, composer |
| 2003 | Maqbool | Director, composer |
| 2005 | The Blue Umbrella | Director, composer |
| 2006 | Omkara | Director, composer |
| 2009 | Kaminey | Director, composer |
| 2011 | 7 Khoon Maaf | Director, composer |
| 2014 | Haider | Director, composer |
| 2017 | Rangoon | Director, composer |
| 2018 | Pataakha | Director, composer |
| 2023 | Khufiya | Director, composer |
Bhardwaj is associated with cinema that bridges arthouse sensibilities and mainstream Hindi film grammar. His work is noted for rooted regional milieus — the cane belt of western Uttar Pradesh in Omkara and Matru, Kashmir in Haider, the Bombay underworld in Maqbool — and for layered female characters. As a composer he is recognised for foregrounding folk idioms, ghazals and unconventional song picturisations, often in collaboration with lyricist Gulzar and singer Rekha Bhardwaj.
He is married to playback singer Rekha Bhardwaj, who has sung many songs in his films. Their son, Aasmaan Bhardwaj, made his directorial debut with Kuttey (2023), produced by Vishal Bhardwaj.