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Jiban Bhattarai is, at his core, a theatre man. Born on November 9, he entered the performing arts through the stage — joining a local theatre group and honing a craft that demands full presence, uncut emotion, and no second takes. Over the years he has acted in and directed dozens of plays, building an instinct for character and story that no amount of film school can replicate. He is also the director of Paana Arts, the creative company through which he has produced and directed numerous music videos — a quieter but prolific side of his artistic output that often goes unnoticed.
What many fans may not know is that Jiban is also a poet — someone who finds meaning in words on paper as much as in words delivered on stage. That sensitivity to language and emotion is visible in how he carries himself as a performer: he does not play characters loudly; he inhabits them.
Jiban first found mass recognition through the beloved TV serial Sathi Sanga Manka Kura — one of Nepal's most long-running and impactful youth programmes. His work on the show introduced him to audiences across the country and gave him the kind of broad, trusted visibility that only television can provide.
Theatre gave him the foundation. Television gave him the audience. Cinema gave him the canvas.
His transition to film has been steady and deliberate. He has appeared in Kagaz Patra, Na Yeta Na Uta, Ranveer (2019), Prem Geet 3 (2022), Changa, Jhyanakuti, and most recently, Laalimaa (2026) — directed by Roshan Miraz — where he takes on a significant supporting role in what has been described as one of the boldest Nepali social dramas in recent years. Each project has widened his range and deepened his credibility as a screen performer.
Jiban is married to fellow actress Laxmi Bardewa — herself one of the more respected performers in contemporary Nepali cinema, known for roles in Bulbul, Kagaz Patra, and Chapali Height 3. The two have appeared on screen together and bring a natural warmth to their shared professional world. In Nepal’s close-knit entertainment industry, they are one of the most admired couples — not for glamour, but for the quiet, consistent quality of their work.
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