San Yati Moe Myint
San Yati Moe Myint | |
---|---|
စံရတီမိုးမြင့် | |
Born | Thal Thal Aung Myint 3 June 1994 Yangon, Myanmar |
Nationality | Burmese |
Other names | Thal Thal |
Education | Dagon University |
Occupation(s) | Actress, model |
Years active | 2010–present |
Height | 5 ft 5 in (1.65 m) |
Parent(s) | Aung Myint Khin Moe Thu |
San Yati Moe Myint (Burmese: စံရတီမိုးမြင့်; born Thal Thal Aung Myint on 3 June 1994 in Yangon, Myanmar) is a Burmese actress and model.[1] She is considered one of the most successful actresses in Burmese cinema and one of the highest-paid actresses.[2] Throughout her career, she has acted in over 200 films.[3]
Early life and education
[edit]San Yati Moe Myint was born on 3 June 1994 in Yangon, Myanmar to parent Aung Myint aka Mazda Aung Myint, a photographer and his wife Khin Moe Thu. She is the second child among four siblings. From 1st till 8th grade, she attended Basic Education Middle School No. 1 Dagon, moving to Basic Education High School No. 2 Dagon for her 9th and 10th. She studied in the English majoring at the Dagon University for 2nd years.[3][4][5]
Career
[edit]She often getting familiar and adoring all of the actors, actresses, models and all that came to her father's photo studio. She claimed that it was then that her passion for acting begin, dancing and singing along to numerous TV advertisements that were common during her childhood years. Because of the passion, she joined John Lwin's model training tangency Stars & Models International in 2010.[3] Since then, she took professional training in modelling and catwalk. She began her entertainment career as a photo model. She first appeared on cover of the Idea Magazine. Then, she appeared on many local magazine cover photos.[6] Then came the offers for TV commercials. She has appeared countless more commercial advertisements. Her hardwork as a model and acting in commercials was noticed by the film industry and soon, movie casting offers came rolling in.[7][8]
She made her acting debut in 2012 with a leading role in the Myanmar film Thain Mwe Thaw Lamin Nat Shine Thaw Pinle (The Gentle Moon, The Deep Sea) alongside Aung Ye Lin. In 2014, she made her big screen debut in film Professor Dr. Sate Phwar, where she played the main role with Kyaw Thu, Yan Aung, Ye Aung and May Myat Noe, which screened in Myanmar cinemas on 24 June 2016.[9] Ever since then she had starred in over 200 films and countless more advertisements, music videos and so on.[3]
Filmography
[edit]Film (Cinema)
[edit]Film
[edit]Year | Film | Burmese tile | Co-Stars | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|
2012 | Thain Mwe Thaw Lamin Nat Shine Thaw Pinle | သိမ်မွေ့သောလမင်း နက်ရှိုင်းသောပင်လယ် | Aung Ye Lin | |
2013 | Chit Chat Ka 9 Lout Shi Dal | ချစ်ချက်က9လောက်ရှိတယ် | Khant Sithu | |
2016 | Pwint Tar A Pyit Lar[12] | ပွင့်တာအပြစ်လား | Myint Myat | |
War Tee Coat | ဝါးတီးကုတ် | Myint Myat | ||
2017 | Tout Tout Kyaw | တောက်တောက်ကျော် | Zay Ye Htet |
References
[edit]- ^ "ကိုယ့်ကို တကယ်ချစ်ပြီး သစ္စာရှိတဲ့သူကို လက်တွဲဖော်အဖြစ် ရွေးချယ်မယ့် စံရတီမိုးမြင့်". The Irrawaddy (in Burmese). 12 November 2018.
- ^ Toe, Thiha (5 April 2016). "Super Women တွေနဲ့ ထူးခြားခဲ့တဲ့ အကယ်ဒမီဖက်ရှင်". The Irrawaddy (in Burmese).
- ^ a b c d Khine, Lin Lin (25 July 2019). "A peek into the life of Actress San Yati Moe Myint". Eleven Media Group.
- ^ "သရုပ်ဆောင်စံရတီမိုးမြင့်နှင့် တွေ့ဆုံခြင်း". The Standard Time Daily (in Burmese). 13 October 2019.
- ^ Thet, Khine Swe (21 October 2018). "ချစ်သူထားရင် ပြောမပြတော့ဘူးဆိုတဲ့ စံရတီမိုးမြင့်". 7Day News (in Burmese).
- ^ "တစ်ယောက်တည်းနေရတာကို နှစ်သက်တယ်ဆိုတဲ့ စံရတီမိုးမြင့်". Kumudra (in Burmese). 11 July 2018.
- ^ "ဘဝကို အေးအေးချမ်းချမ်းပဲ ဖြတ်သန်းသွားချင်တယ်လို့ဆိုသူ စံရတီမိုးမြင့် ရဲ့ ငယ်ဘဝအမှတ်တရဖြတ်သန်းရာ". Eleven Media Group (in Burmese). 19 July 2019.
- ^ "ပရိသတ်နှင့် အဆက်အသွယ် မပြတ်စေရ ပါဘူးလို့ ဆိုလာသူ စံရတီမိုးမြင့်". Myawady Daily (in Burmese). 29 May 2018.
- ^ "Professor Dr. Sate Phwar (2016 Burmese Movie)". Myanmore Magazine. 27 May 2016.
- ^ "Movies showing this week from 24th to 30th October 2019". Myanmore Magazine. 18 October 2019.
- ^ "Ko Paw". Myanmore Magazine. 20 February 2020.
- ^ "Pwint Tar A Pyit Larr". www.iflix.com.