Chencho Dorji (Actor)
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Chencho Dorji is a Bhutanese actor, director, and producer who has appeared in over 60 Bhutanese films. A five-time winner of the Bhutan National Film Awards for Best Actor, he serves as President of the Film Association of Bhutan.
Chencho Dorji is a Bhutanese actor, director, producer, and media personality widely regarded as one of the most prominent figures in the Bhutanese film industry. Over a career spanning nearly two decades, he has appeared in more than 60 Bhutanese feature films and has won five Bhutan National Film Awards in the Best Actor (Male) category. He currently serves as President of the Film Association of Bhutan and is the founder and CEO of Li Wang Multimedia.
Early Life and Education
Chencho Dorji graduated from Salesian College in Darjeeling, India, before returning to Bhutan to pursue a career in the entertainment industry. Details of his birth year and early personal life have not been widely published.
Film Career
Chencho Dorji's career in cinema began in 2006 with early roles in Bhutanese-language films. His breakout came through a villainous role in the film Tshering Meto, which drew critical attention. Producers subsequently cast him as a leading man in Golden Cup, and he went on to establish himself as one of Bhutan's most bankable actors.[1]
Over the following years, Chencho built an extensive filmography. Notable films include Seday (2008), for which he won Best Actor in Lead Role, Sha Dha Simo (2009), Chi Sem Chi Lu (2010), Sangha (2012), Ngodupchen (2017), and Munmo Tashi Khyidron (2018). His work spans multiple genres within Bhutanese cinema, from romantic dramas to action films and social commentaries.[2]
In addition to acting, Chencho has directed five feature films and produced seven others, demonstrating range beyond performance. He is also credited with founding "The Voice," a singing reality television show in Bhutan, which helped expand the country's entertainment landscape beyond cinema.
Awards and Recognition
Chencho Dorji is a five-time winner of the Bhutan National Film Awards in the Best Actor (Male Lead) category, making him one of the most decorated actors in the history of Bhutanese cinema. His first major award came in 2008 for Seday, followed by Best Actor for Sha Dha Simo in 2010. He received additional recognition from Clover Entertainment as a fan-voted Best Actor.[1]
Other Roles
Beyond filmmaking, Chencho Dorji holds several institutional positions within Bhutan's cultural and educational sectors. He serves as President of the Film Association of Bhutan, the principal industry body representing filmmakers in the country. He also holds the position of Director of Communications and Strategic Engagement at Kingston International College and sits on the board of Chithuen Phendey Tsogpa, a Bhutanese non-governmental organization.
Bhutanese Film Industry Context
The Bhutanese film industry, sometimes informally called "Bollywood of the Himalayas," is relatively small compared to regional neighbors but has grown significantly since the early 2000s. The industry produces several dozen feature films per year, primarily in Dzongkha. International recognition for Bhutanese cinema has increased following the success of films like Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom (2019), which received an Academy Award nomination, and The Monk and the Gun (2023), directed by Pawo Choyning Dorji. Chencho Dorji's career, focused largely on domestic productions, represents the backbone of the Bhutanese film industry — the popular commercial cinema that sustains the industry alongside the internationally oriented art-house films that attract foreign attention.[3]
See also
- Sherab Dorji (actor)
- Chencho Gyeltshen
- Dasho Paljor J. Dorji
- Jigme Dorji Wangchuck
- Dasho Benji (Paljor J. Dorji)
References
See also
Sherab Dorji (actor)
Sherab Dorji is a Bhutanese actor, musician, and filmmaker best known for his lead role as Ugyen Dorji in Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom (2019), Bhutan's first Oscar-nominated film. He won the Best Actor award at the Festival International du Film de Saint-Jean-de-Luz for his performance.
people·5 min readDasho Benji (Paljor J. Dorji)
Dasho Paljor Jigme Dorji, widely known as Dasho Benji, is a Bhutanese conservationist, judge and diplomat born in 1943. He founded the Royal Society for the Protection of Nature in 1987, served as the first Chief Justice of the High Court of Bhutan, and is often described as the founding figure of organised environmentalism in the country.
people·4 min readYeshey Dorji
Yeshey Dorji is a pioneering Bhutanese photographer, ornithologist, writer, and blogger considered one of the first professional photographers in Bhutan. He has authored eight books, including a landmark coffee table book on Bhutan's wild birds, and his image of the rarest heron is featured in the Guinness Book of World Records.
people·4 min readAshi Dorji Wangmo Wangchuck
Ashi Dorji Wangmo Wangchuck (born 10 June 1955) is a Queen Mother of Bhutan and the first wife of the fourth King, Jigme Singye Wangchuck. She is an acclaimed author, philanthropist, and the founding president of the Tarayana Foundation, which has transformed the lives of more than 300,000 rural Bhutanese.
people·5 min readShabdrung Jigme Dorji
Shabdrung Jigme Dorji (1905–1931) was the seventh and last politically recognised mind incarnation (thugtul) of Zhabdrung Ngawang Namgyal. Recognised in childhood and enthroned in Punakha, he came into conflict with the early Wangchuck monarchy and died at Talo Monastery under contested circumstances. His death effectively ended state recognition of further Zhabdrung mind reincarnations in Bhutan.
people·6 min readDorji Wangmo Wangchuck
Ashi Dorji Wangmo Wangchuck (born 10 June 1955) is a Queen Mother of Bhutan and the eldest of the four sister-queens of the 4th Druk Gyalpo Jigme Singye Wangchuck. She is the founder and president of the Tarayana Foundation (2003) and the author of two widely read books on Bhutan.
people·4 min read
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