Let’s be brutally honest upfront: Bollywood nepotism babies get dragged harder than anyone, and Shanaya Kapoor has taken her fair share of the heat. Daughter of Sanjay and Maheep Kapoor, she’s the definition of “connected but not that connected.” No Karan Johar godfather launch that actually happened (Bedhadak got shelved, thank you creative differences), no daddy-producer muscle like some of her more famous cousins or contemporaries. Yet here she is, two films in, and the conversation is still “is she bad or are our expectations just rock-bottom?”
Short answer: She’s not bad. She’s actually… fine. Sometimes better than fine. And yeah, maybe our bar is set low because we’ve seen too many star-kid disasters, but that doesn’t erase the fact that Shanaya has quietly shown more screen comfort in two movies than some of her hyped peers managed in their first three.
Start with the “blind film” everyone keeps referencing: Aankhon Ki Gustaakhiyan (2025). Her debut opposite Vikrant Massey. The movie was a mess—clunky execution, absurd plot logic, and it flopped hard. But Shanaya? She wasn’t embarrassing. She played a method-acting theatre kid who blindfolds herself for prep and accidentally falls for an actually blind musician. The role required her to sell vulnerability while literally stumbling around in the dark, and she did it with a straight face and zero over-the-top hysteria. Critics called her debut “confident.” Audiences mostly shrugged at the film but didn’t single her out as the problem. For a first-timer, that’s not nothing. It’s not Alia Bhatt-in-Highway levels of “whoa,” but it’s solid B-minus work that didn’t scream “nepo hire who can’t act.”
Then came Tu Ya Main (2026). And suddenly the narrative shifted. Karan Johar himself posted a glowing review calling her performance “assured” and “hugely convincing” as the polished influencer Miss Vanity who loses her shit in a crocodile-infested pool. Zoya Akhtar, Suhana Khan, Ananya Panday—her circle—praised it. Even the early audience chatter says she holds her own opposite Adarsh Gourav (who, let’s be real, is the MVP). She brings the glossy, curated social-media energy in the first half and flips into raw panic in the second without looking like she’s trying too hard. Chemistry clicks. Facial expressions land. She’s not stealing scenes from Adarsh, but she’s not dead weight either. That’s progress. Noticeable, measurable progress from her debut.
So why does it still feel like she’s not getting the big-banner love? Three reasons, none of which are shocking:
Here’s the part the haters miss: Shanaya seems self-aware. She’s talked openly about shelved projects shaping her, about learning from failure, about not expecting the red carpet just because of her surname. That humility plus incremental improvement is more than we get from some star kids who coast on entitlement. She’s not a generational talent (yet), but she’s also not the punchline some Reddit threads want her to be.
So is our expectation low? A little, yeah. After years of “nepo kid flops” headlines, anyone who shows basic competence looks like a revelation. But even adjusting for that lowered bar, Shanaya is clearing it. The real question is whether Bollywood will let her keep climbing or keep her in the “cute supporting nepo” lane because her last name isn’t big enough and her face isn’t “safe” enough.
Give the girl a couple more chances. She might not be the next big thing, but she’s proving she’s not a waste of screen space either. And in this industry, that’s rarer than it should be.
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