Anshula Kapoor's Wedding Begins: The Kapoor Siblings' Most Emotional Chapter Yet

Entertainment98 articles covering this story· 2026-07-06

Anshula Kapoor's Wedding Begins: The Kapoor Siblings' Most Emotional Chapter Yet

Arjun KapoorMehndiJanhvi KapoorKapoor familyBoney KapoorInstagram
Anshula Kapoor's Wedding Begins: The Kapoor Siblings' Most Emotional Chapter Yet
"Arjun Kapoor and Parineeti Chopra enjoying thier fame at Reliance Digital" by Reliance Digital Store is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/.

There are Bollywood weddings, and then there are the ones where the emotion refuses to be choreographed. Anshula Kapoor's mehendi and chooda ceremonies, which kicked off the wedding festivities ahead of her marriage to Rohan Thakkar, fell firmly into the second category — and the images and videos shared directly by the family on social media make that unmistakable.

The mehendi ceremony was, by all accounts, an intimate, family-first affair before the wider circle descends for the main event. Anshula wore a teal blue lehenga; her fiancé Rohan arrived in a powder blue kurta. The palette was understated by Bollywood standards — deliberately so, it seems, for a couple who have kept their relationship largely out of the spotlight.

The ceremony was organised by Anshula's half-sisters Janhvi and Khushi Kapoor, who took on full bridesmaid duties. For anyone who has followed this family's complicated public history — the blended Kapoor household that emerged after Boney Kapoor's marriage to Sridevi, and the grief that followed Sridevi's sudden death in 2018 — watching Janhvi and Khushi centre their half-sister's celebration carries a weight that a simple family-gathering headline does not capture.

The moment that cut through everything else was Anshula breaking down in the arms of her brother, actor Arjun Kapoor. The hug — long, tight, and clearly not staged for a photographer — was shared by Arjun himself on his social media accounts, captioned simply with words about fuller hearts. It is the kind of moment that makes even habitual celebrity-story sceptics pause. These are people who have grown up largely in public, lost a parent in the glare of that public, and are now marking a major life transition together.

The kaleera moment added a layer of levity. In a tradition where the bride shakes her kaleeras — the ornamental gold and silver charms attached to her chooda bangles — over the heads of unmarried guests, with lore holding that whoever the kaleera falls on will be next to marry, Arjun Kapoor found himself on the receiving end. His reaction, by his own account, was one of conspicuous happiness — and Anshula's video of the moment underscores that the family is leaning into the joy as much as the sentiment.

The wedding itself is expected to follow the pre-ceremonies, though the couple has not made a formal public statement detailing the full schedule or venue. What has surfaced organically — through the family's own posts rather than any publicist-managed drip feed — suggests a celebration that is deliberately more personal than performative, even by the standards of a family whose professional lives are inseparable from public attention.

Anshula Kapoor is not an actress. She co-founded FanFight, a fantasy sports platform, and has been candid in the past about her experiences with body image and mental health — conversations she opened publicly on her own terms. Her choice of partner, her handling of the pre-wedding events, and the way the family has chosen to share it all point to someone who has deliberately built a life adjacent to the industry rather than inside it.

What the mehendi ceremony ultimately documents — beyond the lehenga choice and the kaleera tradition — is a blended family that has, visibly and over years, done the work of becoming a real one. That is not a small thing. In a cultural moment where celebrity families are routinely dissected for fracture lines, the Kapoors are showing something less dramatic and considerably more durable: they showed up.

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