Rohit Arora
Rohit Arora is an Indian actor, best known for Tamil cinema. Rohit Arora began their career in 2012 and has been a prominent figure in the industry for over 14 years. With 30 credits to their name and an average audience rating of 6.3, Rohit Arora remains one of the most prolific and celebrated talents in the industry. An emerging voice in Tamil cinema, Rohit Arora is already attracting significant attention for their distinctive work.
- Born
- Age
- 37
Biography
Rohit Arora is a Hindi cinema actor, filmmaker, and fashion photographer born in Paris, France, who gained early exposure to the entertainment industry as a television actor in his teenage years. He played the character Jogi in Sadda Adda (2012), a comedy directed by Muazzam Beg, where he was noted as a standout among the ensemble cast. His work spans film and digital platforms, including a role in the SonyLIV series Avrodh Season 2 and The Pickup Artist on Amazon Prime, the latter earning multiple Remi Awards. He has expanded into filmmaking, creating McGuffin, in which he also stars, demonstrating a dual career as both actor and independent film creator.
Rohit Arora by the Numbers
If you watched every Rohit Arora film back-to-back, you'd be at it for roughly 2 hours.
Filmography
See all 30 credits →Career Analytics
Language Distribution
Films by Decade
Legacy & Influence
Rohit Arora is an actor recognized for his role in the 2012 film 'Sadda Adda', a comedy-drama centered on the lives, dreams, and struggles of six friends sharing a house in Delhi. His portrayal of Jogi contributed to the film's exploration of youthful ambition and camaraderie, a theme resonant with a segment of Indian urban audiences. The film, with its modest budget and focus on relatable storytelling, found a niche audience. Arora's performance was part of an ensemble cast that delivered a slice-of-life narrative. Beyond this notable project, his filmography and public presence in the industry appear limited. Consequently, his direct impact on the broader trajectory of Indian cinema is not widely documented or substantial. His contribution remains anchored to a single, specific film that is remembered by its viewers for its earnest depiction of friendship and the pursuit of dreams in a metropolitan setting. Without further significant roles or publicly known ventures in filmmaking, his legacy is defined by this early work, which holds a place in the catalog of early 2010s Hindi cinema that attempted to capture the voice of young India outside the mainstream masala template.
