Saw Mya Aye Kyi
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Saw Mya Aye Kyi ( my, စောမြအေးကြည်, 1892 – 1962) was a Burmese musician who specialized in performing the collection of Burmese classical songs known as the ''
Mahāgīta ''Mahāgīta'' ( my, မဟာဂီတ; from pi, Mahāgīta; ); also rendered into Burmese as ''Thachingyi'' ( my, သီချင်းကြီး) is the complete body or corpus of Burmese classical songs. The songs descend from the musical t ...
''. She was a royal mistress of Sir Sao Chel, Saopha of Hsipaw State. She has been dubbed as the "mother of Mahāgīta." A bronze bust of Saw Mya Aye Kyi stands outside the National Theatre of Mandalay.


Early life

Saw Mya Aye Kyi was born in
Mandalay Mandalay ( or ; ) is the second-largest city in Myanmar, after Yangon. Located on the east bank of the Irrawaddy River, 631km (392 miles) (Road Distance) north of Yangon, the city has a population of 1,225,553 (2014 census). Mandalay was fo ...
to Maung Maung Tin, a royal privy council officer, and Khin Phwar, the property custodian of the Princess of Saw Hla. Her given name was Khin Sein Kyi. She was a descendant of the Prince of Swetawoak, a member of the Konbaung royal family.


Royal mistress

At the age of 12, Saw Mya Aye Kyi started learning traditional singing and dancing at Manusadda Shwedaung Kyaw Thu U Lugyi. A year later she went to the Hsipaw Palace to continue studying the ''Mahāgīta''. She married Sir Sao Chel, Saopha of Hsipaw, when she was 17. Sir Sao Chel recognized her proficiency in various parts of the ''Mahāgīta'' by awarding her the title of Sao Okka at the age of 20. This was followed at age 22 by the title of , awarded for the ''patpyoe'' "Moe Deva". She also composed the ''patpyoe'' "Lamin Thawda" (). These were the last two songs to be included in the ''Mahāgīta''. Saw Mya Aye Kyi left Hsipaw Palace in 1928 and accompanied Yagan U Tin to Yangon. There she learned more traditional songs, eventually becoming regarded as the mother of the ''Mahāgīta''.


Later career

Saw Mya Aye Kyi worked as a music teacher (''pantya'') until World War II, and tutored at the Yangon Music and Art School from 1953 to 1958. She was awarded the title of
Alinkar Kyawswa Alinkar Kyawswa ( my, အလင်္ကာကျော်စွာ) is the highest national honor of recognition of an individual for their artistic skills by the government of Myanmar. From 1949 to 2022, there were about 57 recipients of this awa ...
by the government of Myanmar in 1952, honoring her contributions to the field of music. In 1954 she became the only person in Myanmar to receive an honorary Bachelor of Arts in the field of fine arts from the University of Yangon. She worked for the History Commission as a music research fellow in 1962, and as a member of the
MRTV Myanmar Radio and Television ( my, မြန်မာ့အသံနှင့်ရုပ်မြင်သံကြား, abbreviated MRTV), formerly the Burma Broadcasting Service (BBS), is the parent of the state-run Myanmar Radio National ...
''Mahāgīta'' music scrutiny board. She also served as chairwoman of the Myanmar Musical Instrument Federation. She continued to teach the ''Mahāgīta'' until her death. Tin Tin Mya was one of her students.


Death

Saw Mya Aye Kyi died on February 10, 1968, in Yangon. Her hands and lips were gilded in accordance with tradition.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Mya Aye Kyi, Saw Burmese royal consorts 20th-century Burmese women singers 1892 births 1968 deaths People from Mandalay Recipients of the Alinkar Kyawswar