Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo height - How tall is Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo?

Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo was born on 18 September, 1950 in Mongolia, is a Theater artist, writer, film director and film producer. At 70 years old, Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo height not available right now. We will update Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo's height soon as possible.

Now We discover Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo's Biography, Age, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of net worth at the age of 72 years old?

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Occupation Theater artist, writer, film director and film producer
Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo Age 72 years old
Zodiac Sign Virgo
Born 18 September 1950
Birthday 18 September
Birthplace Mongolia
Nationality Mongolian

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 18 September. He is a member of famous with the age 72 years old group.

Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo Weight & Measurements

Physical Status
Weight Not Available
Body Measurements Not Available
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Who Is Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo's Wife?

His wife is Dolgor Nanzad (m.1990)

Family
Parents Not Available
Wife Dolgor Nanzad (m.1990)
Sibling Not Available
Children 5

Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo Net Worth

He net worth has been growing significantly in 2021-22. So, how much is Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo worth at the age of 72 years old? Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from Mongolian. We have estimated Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2022 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2022 Under Review
Net Worth in 2021 Pending
Salary in 2021 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income

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Timeline

2019

Nyamgavaa's professor Goncharov believed he saw the influence of playwright, and poet Bertolt Brecht on Nyamgavaa's work, even though Nyamgavaa himself had no idea who Brecht was at that time. Goncharov admired Nyamgavaa's direction of Alexander Pushkin’s play Mozart & Salieri (Russian: «Моцарт и Сальери) at GITIS. After this project Goncharov told Nyamgavaa, " I thought you were like Stanislavsky, but I can feel the style of Brecht in your work as well.” Goncharov recognized Nyamgavaa’s interest in making the theater a place for intellectual engagement and not just storytelling or melodrama. Another affinity with Brecht was the blending of eastern and western styles and ideas. Much later, this same tendency to connect cultures would be admired by Bundan Boldsaikhan (Mongolian: Бунданы Болдсайхан), honored doctor of Mongolia: “He has two horses, from the Eastern and Western worlds.” Goncharov continued to appreciate Nyamgavaa's work even after the latter left the university. Andrei Borisov, famed Russian director, recalls: “During my studies, our teacher Goncharov often praised a former student named Nyamgavaa on his creative skills and talent. Nyamgavaa’s skills to deliver his art in a unique style through his creative imagination had not been forgotten by his teacher Goncharov. Ever since his student days his vision and talent shone through his passion, time after time, with unpredictable twists to his storytelling.” Borisov and Nyamgavaa would later work together on the film By the Will of Chingis Khan.

2017

Nyamgavaa published two books. One, Odd Number (Sondgoi Too, Mongolian: Сондгой тоо) he adapted into the screenplay for I Love You. The other, Tears (Nulims, Mongolian: Нулимс) was a collection of short stories. In 2017, he wrote Movie Scenario (Mongolian: Кино зохиолуудbook) with co-writer Damdin Jamiyan, which collected three screenplays: Holy Chingis Khan, Wolf’s Ankle Bone, and Queen Khulan. The book includes text in Mongolian script, Mongolian Cyrillic, Russian, and English. It won the Golden Feather Award, the national literary award in Mongolia, for play and film script for 2017.

2012

In 2012, he directed 19, which won the Mongolian Academy Award for best short film. In 2014, he directed Unlimited (Mongolian: Хязгааргүй), a story of a journalist whose investigations lead to his imprisonment by the government. He is currently working with Damdin Jamiyan (Mongolian: Дамдины Жамьян ) and Sean Chichelli on the script for a new project he will direct titled Blue Horse.

2009

In 2009, Nyamgavaa produced By the Will of Chingis Khan (Mongolian: Чингис хааны захиас) with his son Bilegt Nyamgavaa (Vladimir Davidovich Ivanov) and oldest daughter Sarnai Nyamgavaa Tessitore. It screened at the Cannes Film Festival and the Montreal World Film Festival. It was Mongolia's official submission for Best Foreign Language Film at the Academy Awards. In the same year he was a producer on the Japanese-Mongolian co-production Genghis Khan: To the Ends of the Earth and Sea.

Screened at the Montreal World Film Festival, 2009

2006

Under the new government, Nyamgavaa's work was seen as positively revolutionary and respected for its ability to change the minds of its audience. His influence and power increased and he was ultimately able to transform the Youth and Children's Theatre into the first privately owned theater in Mongolia. He served as its director and owner until 2006.

2000

Screened at Seattle International Film Festival, 2000

Selected as part of Mongolia Now: Independent Voices film festival at the American Museum of Natural History, New York City, 2000

1991

Selected elected for "Focus on Asia: Best Selections 1991 - 2000

1990

Nyamgavaa's return to the Youth and Children's Theater was during a transition in Mongolian culture from communism to democracy, inspired by the Russian Perestroika. Because of his willingness to resist government criticism and censorship, Nyamgavaa was very popular with and inspiring to his fellow artists and those who would head the 1990 revolution. Gombo Zoljargal (Mongolian: (Гомбын Золжаргал ) of the Mongolian National Broadcast, credits Nyamgavaa's direction of Tserendorjiin Baldorj's plays Raven (Kheree, Mongolian: Хэрээ) and The Wicked Women (Mongolian: Эмсүүд) at the Youth and Children's Theatre in the mid-80s with being a wake-up call for the young generation, who began to demand change and support democracy. These two plays were extremely popular, tapping into the desire of Mongolia's youth for a new way of life. So, although democracy did not come to Mongolia until years after the production of these plays, Nyamgavaa and Baldorj's work was inspiring the future leaders of the bloodless 1990 Democratic Revolution (Mongolian: Ардчилсан хувьсгал, Ardchilsan Khuvĭsgal).

In the early 1990s, he became better known to western filmgoers and began his career as a producer with The Running Antelope (1993; Mongolian: Цахилж яваа гөрөөс). That film, which he also directed, was featured in both the Fukuoka International Film Festival in 1993 and the Berlin International Film Festival in 1994. He next directed and produced Boi (1994; Mongolian: Бой), which was featured in the Festival of the Three Continents in Nantes, France in 1995. Rolan Bykov, Russian director and screenwriter, wrote that he was “completely shocked” by the film, which was the only Mongolian film of the time to criticize Russia. Nyamgavaa also produced and directed the film Slaughter (1995; Mongolian: Байлдан дагуулагч) during this period.

In the late 1990s, two films Nyamgavaa directed and produced won the best film in the Goo Maral awards (Mongolia's top film prize): My Native Land (1998; Mongolian: Газар шороо мину зэ) and Ferocious Saint Lord of Gobi (1998; Mongolian: Догшин хутагтын сахиус). This latter film made history as the first Mongolian Film screened in the United States, screening in 2000 at the Seattle International Film Festival and the Mongolia Now: Independent Voices film festival at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.

In 1990, he married Dolgor Nanzad (Mongolian: Нанзадын Долгор), an award-winning Mongolian actress. She worked on several important plays directed by Nyamgavaa, including Raven, The Wicked Women, and Love for Love. She also acted in two films with which Nyamgavaa was involved: I Love to Fly, which he wrote, and Ferocious Saint Lord of Gobi, which he directed. They moved to the United States in 2009, settling in Chicago. The couple has two children: Maral Nyamgavaa, who studied to be a beauty specialist and Michid Nyamgavaa, who studied business.

1986

Screened at Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, 1986

1985

In 1985, Nyamgavaa returned to Ulaanbaatar and became the artistic director of the Youth and Children's Theater, where he stayed until 2006. He began choosing works by Mongolian playwrights who were questioning communist ideology. They were so popular that the communist government was reticent to interfere in their production. He produced or directed over fifty plays, including many by top Mongolian playwrights. Notable were his productions of Love for Love (Mongolian: Хайрыг хайрла жүжиг) by Darmaa Batbayar (Mongolian: Дармын Батбаяр), Princess (Mongolian: Эрх гүнж) by Dorj Garmaa (Mongolian: Доржийн Гармаа), and works by journalist and playwright Tserendorjiin Baldorj (Mongolian: Ц.Балдорж сэтгүүлчийн): Raven (Kheree, Mongolian: Хэрээ) and The Wicked Women (Mongolian: Эмсүүд). Famous Mongolian actress Oidovjamts Enkhtuul (Mongolian: Ойдовжамцын Энхтуул) looked back on her role in Raven: “I had so many good roles, but the character in this play was my favorite.” Baldorj credited Nyamgavaa for his career in the arts: “It was Nyamgavaa who brought me into the world of drama and cinema. I was thrilled by his world and admired him so much that I bowed down to him.” Nyamgavaa also introduced many western plays to Mongolian audiences. Among the most notable were The Blind by Maurice Maeterlinck, and Talent and Admirers by Alexander Ostrovsky.

1982

Nyamgavaa began his career in filmmaking in 1982 with Five Fingers of One Hand (Mongolian: Гарын таван хуруу), which he wrote and directed based on the play he had adapted from Chadraabal Lodoidamba's work for the Youth and Children's Theater. It was featured in the Moscow International Film Festival. The next year he wrote the screenplay for I Love You (Mongolian: Би чамд хайртай). In the late 1980s, he wrote two films, I Love to Fly (1987; Mongolian: Би нисэх дуртай) and The Best Treasure (1989; Mongolian: Нандин эрдэнэ), which he also directed. He also directed After Telling Story (1987; Mongolian: Үлгэр дууссан хойно).

1974

In 1974, Nyamgavaa graduated and returned to Mongolia. The Mongolian government was suspicious about his loyalty because of the trouble surrounding his production of Vstuplenie. He was assigned to work in the countryside, away from the capital city of Ulaanbaatar, as punishment. He began work as a director at Zaluuchuud Theater in Darkhan, Mongolia. The theater was small, with only 19 employees, but Nyamgavaa would build it into a beloved institution with far-reaching influence over the next decade. He directed and produced over one hundred production and oversaw the construction of a new theater building for the group. His work began to be noticed throughout the country, and the theater became very popular and successful, eventually employing over 200 artists and other workers.

In 1974, Nyamgavaa married dancer Battsengel Choijinnyam. They divorced in 1990. The couple has two children: Sarnai Nyamgavaa Tessitore, a producer in Chicago, and Aleona Nyamgavaa Sencion, a psychologist in New York.

1973

In 1973, while still a student at GITIS, Nyamgavaa returned to the Youth and Children's Theater in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, where he had acted from 1965-1969. He wanted to direct Soviet novelist, playwright, and journalist Vera Panova’s Vstuplenie (based on the story "Valia and Volodia”, Mongolian: (Гэнэн залуу нас) as his first project, which would also be part of his GITIS thesis, as a director at the theater. The modernist style was threatening to the Mongolian government because it was seen to reject the communist system and traditional culture. It led at first to the cancellation of the play. Ultimately, he chose to make the changes suggested by the government to enable him to reopen the play. After the changes, the production blended Mongolian tradition styles with modernism, still satisfying the censors. He also adapted the novel Five Fingers of One Hand (Mongolian: "Гарын Таван хуруу ) by famed Mongolian writer Chadraabal Lodoidamba (Mongolian: Чадраабалын Лодойдамба) into a play which he directed for Youth and Children's Theater, also as part of his GITIS thesis in 1974.

1969

In 1969, Nyamgavaa received a scholarship from the Mongolian government to study directing at the Russian Academy of Theatre Arts - GITIS, in Moscow, Russia. He studied with Andrey Goncharov, famed Russian theater director and writer. He graduated in 1974 and returned to Mongolia.

While he was studying in Moscow, between 1969 and 1974, Nyamgavaa was in a relationship with Ivanova Domna, a fellow student of Yakut heritage and actress. They had a son together in 1972, Vladimir Davidovich Ivanov (Mongolian name: Bilegt Nyamgavaa). Ivanov is a famous kickboxing master and coach and a successful producer in Russia.

1965

He completed secondary school in 1965, two years after his father's death. He had begun working while still in school to help support his family. After graduation, when he was fifteen years old, he began acting in Mongolia's Youth and Children's Theater in Ulaanbaatar (Mongolian: Улаанбаатар) Between 1965 and 1969, he acted in over 10 productions, including playing Mercutio in Romeo and Juliet.

1950

Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo (born September 18, 1950) is a Mongolian theater artist, writer, film director, and film producer. He is president of Mongolian National Academy of Art and was named an Honored Artist of Mongolia for his contributions to film and theater in 2013 by the Mongolian President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj (Mongolian: Цахиагийн Элбэгдорж).

Nyamgavaa Ichinkhorloo was born on September 18, 1950 in Khuvsgul province, Mongolia to two teachers, Ichinkhorloo Jamyan and Yanjinsuren Mijid. He was the first of the couple's eight children. His father, Ichinkhorloo taught history and geography; his mother Yanjinsuren taught Mongolian language and literature. Nyamgavaa credits his parents with instilling in him a great respect for education and a love for language and story. He notes that, by the Mongolian lunar calendar, the moment he was born was the Tiger year, the Tiger day, and the Tiger hour; this is traditionally thought to be very auspicious. Mongolian tradition is that “triple tigers” are very brave, competent, and unpredictable. Khulan Tsoodol, a famous Mongolian poet, spoke to these qualities as they manifest in Nyamgavaa: “ To make a metaphor, Nyamgavaa is an artist like an erupting volcano. …He is always restless, burning from inside and finding his ideas in his passion and sufferings.”