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Post the Salman breakup, Aishwarya entered a professional bubble. She played Paro in Bhansali’s Devdas —a woman whose love is rejected by a man too proud to accept it. Paro spends the film watching her lover drink himself to death.

This mirrored her real life: the romance with Abhishek moved off-screen and into the domestic sphere. There are no more epic love stories on the horizon. The "relationship" Aishwarya now prioritizes is with her daughter and her private life. The public rarely sees her holding hands with Abhishek; instead, they see her shielding Aaradhya from cameras. What makes Aishwarya Rai Bachchan’s journey unique is how her cinematic language changed as she aged. She started as the object of obsession (Salman-era), moved through suffering (Post-breakup), settled into partnership (Abhishek-era), and finally arrived at quietude (Motherhood).

Her real-life relationships didn't just influence her roles; they redefined what romance meant in Bollywood. With Salman, she taught us that passion without peace is poison. With Abhishek, she taught us that the greatest romantic storyline isn't a grand gesture—it is a marriage that survives the spotlight.

The irony was brutal. On screen, Salman’s Sameer fights to win her back through grand gestures. Off screen, reports of discord, jealousy, and a notoriously toxic breakup began to surface. The movie’s climax—where Aishwarya’s character chooses duty over obsession—became a meta-narrative of her real-life decision to walk away. Years later, when she famously called the relationship a source of "pain," it reframed the film’s passionate songs as a warning rather than a wish. The Relationship: The Media vs. Aishwarya The Romantic Trope: The Unrequited Martyr

In Guru , Aishwarya plays Sujata, a woman who marries a flawed, ambitious man (Gurukant Desai, played by Abhishek). She is not a damsel; she is his moral compass. She challenges him, supports him, and crucially, she chooses him against her family’s wishes. The romance is mature, pragmatic, and based on respect rather than reckless passion.

Before the paparazzi culture exploded, Aishwarya and Salman Khan were Bollywood’s most explosive pairing. Their off-screen romance was volatile, intense, and tabloid gold. It was during this period that Sanjay Leela Bhansali cast them in Hum Dil De Chuke Sanam —a film about a woman (Nandini) who marries one man but cannot forget the reckless, passionate lover (Sameer) she left behind.