
Gauri Spratt’s Vow and a Hand-Kiss: Inside Aamir Khan’s Third Wedding
A quiet civil ceremony at his Bandra home sealed the actor’s marriage to his partner of two years, with a leaked video of her vows and his tender gesture capturing a deliberately intimate day.
At the moment the marriage register was signed, a mobile phone—held aloft by a guest in Aamir Khan’s living room—captured Gauri Spratt turning towards the actor and speaking words that would instantly ripple beyond the yellow-lit Pali Hill apartment. “I, Gauri Spratt, take Aamir Khan, my protector, my shelter, as my lawful husband,” she said, her voice steady in the Instagram story shared by Imran Khan’s partner, Lekha Washington. As she finished and looked at him, Khan took her hand and kissed it, a gesture at once old-fashioned and startlingly unscripted amid the folding doors, pastel floral arrangements and children still in football jerseys who leaned in to witness the signatures.
That clip, and a handful of grainy photographs of the couple bent over official documents, became the primary public record of an event the 61-year-old star had promised would be “very basic”. The registered marriage on 5 July, conducted under India’s Special Marriage Act, gathered roughly 150 people—among them Khan’s children Junaid, Ira and Azad, filmmaker Ashutosh Gowariker, cricketer Irfan Pathan, and Spratt’s six-year-old son. Former wives Reena Dutta and Kiran Rao were not photographed arriving, though their children moved freely through the house, and the menu, it was later reported, had been curated entirely by the couple’s offspring.
Observers in Mumbai noted the wedding’s deliberate modesty as a conscious departure not only from Bollywood spectacle but also from Khan’s own public narrative of romantic perfectionism. A resurfaced quip by Salman Khan on “The Kapil Sharma Show” had framed Khan’s repeated marriages as an extension of his perfectionist persona: “Until he makes marriage absolutely perfect, he will keep doing it.” That joke, revived by news outlets across English and Hindi media as the ceremony approached, underscored a persistent cultural framing in which Khan’s personal life is read through the meticulousness he brings to his craft. Yet the images from Bandra suggested no pursuit of an ideal; instead, they displayed a carefully circumscribed ordinariness: a cream kurta, an ivory lehenga, a room of relatives, and a legal official bent over paperwork.
For a global readership accustomed to South Asian celebrity weddings as displays of dynastic soft power, the Khan-Spratt union inverted the template. No corporate sponsorships or designer collaborations were visible; the couple had reportedly planned the affair themselves, from the guest list to the post-ceremony lunch. Spratt, a Bengaluru-born salon entrepreneur of mixed Tamil-British and Punjabi-Irish ancestry, had been introduced to the media only four months earlier, on Khan’s 60th birthday, after a relationship that began when the two reconnected in 2024 through his cousin—a quarter-century after they first met. Her presence at the production house Aamir Khan Productions, where she now works, quietly layers a professional partnership beneath the personal.
As the newlyweds later swayed together in a video posted by Pathan, the actor held his wife close, guests cheering from sofas. The image that lingered, however, was not choreographed: it was the hand-kiss in the living room, before the music started, while an elderly family member watched from the corner of the frame and a boy in a sports jersey peered over the table where two lives, a blended family and a deliberately small chapter of a sprawling filmography were being inscribed into a register.
| Indian & South Asian press | 0.00 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Southeast Asian press | −0.20 | neutral |
| Arab Gulf press | +0.70 | aligned |
We report these weddings as part of our cultural fabric: quiet, traditional, and familial.
By focusing on familiar rituals and guest lists, the coverage normalizes celebrity weddings as extensions of ordinary Indian ceremonies.
It downplays the media frenzy and star status, omitting the commercial aspects and exclusive deals surrounding these events.
We view this wedding as a closure: after two failures, a third attempt at marriage.
By repeatedly referencing the two previous marriages, the coverage frames the current wedding as a corrective measure, implying a pattern.
It omits the intimate and celebratory atmosphere of the ceremony, focusing only on the numerical aspect of marriages.
We celebrate this union as a stylish, high-profile event that retains warmth and privacy.
By detailing the star-studded guest list and the intimate home setting, it creates a narrative of exclusive access and understated luxury.
It leaves out any mention of previous marriages or personal histories, focusing solely on the present ceremony.
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