Before finding lasting love, Raveena was briefly engaged to Anil Thadani, a distributor and the brother of actress Farah Naaz. The engagement in the early 2000s was a quiet affair, far from the media circus of her Akshay days. However, this relationship too fizzled out. Industry insiders cited compatibility issues, and the engagement was called off amicably. This period marked a shift for Raveena—she seemed to retreat from the public eye, focusing on her work in parallel cinema ( Shool , Daman ) rather than chasing tabloid headlines.
In 2004, Raveena married Anil in a quiet ceremony. The "bad girl" of Bollywood had finally found her anchor. Today, they have two children together (Rasha and Ranbir), and Raveena often credits Anil for bringing stability to her life. Watching her walk the red carpet today, hand-in-hand with her husband, is the ultimate "happily ever after" that none of her film scripts could have written better. Before finding lasting love, Raveena was briefly engaged
In what is now a cult classic, Raveena played the heiress Raveena opposite Salman Khan’s Prem. While the film is a comedy, its romantic storyline is a delightful parody of Bollywood tropes. The charm here was the innocence. Unlike her fiery roles with Akshay, her pairing with Salman was sweet, goofy, and filled with misunderstanding. The "Do Mastane" romance—where two conmen fight for one girl—showed Raveena’s ability to be the object of affection without being objectified. She was the princess in the castle, and her eventual union with Salman was a victory for simple, affectionate love. The "bad girl" of Bollywood had finally found her anchor
As she matured as an actress, her romantic roles shifted toward more complex emotional landscapes. In movies like Aks and Satta , she moved away from the "song-and-dance" love interest to portray women dealing with power, betrayal, and the darker side of affection. As she matured as an actress