Win Min Than
- Actress
Win Min Than grew up in Rangoon when Burma was part of the British Raj.
She was the daughter of a government official. After the Japanese
occupied Burma during World War II, the family fled to India. Until she
was 14 years old, she attended a convent school where she learned
English. In 1951, the family sent her to London, where she attended
Marie Rambert's dance school; but she quickly realised she was no
dancer and soon returned to Burma, where she married the famous
politician Bo Setkya (Thakin Aung Than), who was almost 20 years her
senior. In 1954, a friend of American director Robert Parrish visited
her home and took a photograph of her, which he sent to Parrish.
Parrish was at the time planning the filming of H.E. Bates' novel "The
Purple Plain" and needed an Asian actress for the lead role. Seeing her
picture, he realised she would be perfect and flew to Burma to convince
her to accept the role, although she had no previous acting experience.
After the UK premiere in September 1954, she was convinced to come to
the US in the spring of 1955 to help promote the film. While there, she
received several offers of film roles, but declined them all, stating
that a film career would conflict with her role as wife; and after a
few weeks she returned to Burma and her husband and never acted again.
The military coup in 1962 forced the couple to flee to Bangkok,
Thailand, where her husband died in 1969.