Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers

Hrithik Roshan Full HD wallpapers


Hrithik Roshan maternal grandfather famous director-producer J. Om Prakash first introduced his beloved grandson on-screen at age 6 in the hugely successful Aasha (1980), by secretly having his camera crew film without the little boy's knowledge as he danced spontaneously while 'visiting Grandpa' on Grandpa's movie set. As J. Om Prakash later recounted the eventThe song was to be shot on Jeetendra. Hrithik was on the sets, and he liked the interlude music very much and started dancing. I had asked my cameraperson and crew to be ready. I asked Hrithik if he liked the song, and he said, "Yes, Deda, it is lovely music." I replayed the music and he started dancing, and we shot it without his knowledge. When the music got over, the entire studio applauded excitingly. The remaining part of the music was to be shot in the same way with Jeetu. After Jeetu's shot was over, he came to me and said, "For God's sake don't shoot a single more shot in this film with this boy, otherwise the audience will hoot my performance!" That was a remark that came from Jeetu [Jeetendra, the male lead of Aasha and a major Hindi filmstar]What followed over the next several years is what adult Hrithik describes as his childhood "lucky mascot" period: tiny one- or two-shot uncredited appearances in various of his family's film projects, where his only task was to have fun and supposedly bring luck to the movie. Thus child Hrithik (aged 6) can be seen riding a tricycle on a beach during the song "Ram Kare Allah Kare" in his father Rakesh Roshan's production Aap Ke Deewane (1980). In his grandfather J. Om Prakash's Aas Paas (1981), a gap-toothed Hrithik (aged 7) even received a costume and a close-up, as he passes a love note from