Jeeva age

Jiiva

Indian actor

This article is about the Tamil film actor. For the religious concept, see Jiva (Jainism). For other uses, see Jeeva (disambiguation).

Jiiva

Jiiva in 2014

Born

Amar Choudary


(1984-01-04) 4 January 1984 (age 41)

Madras, Tamil Nadu, India

Occupations
Years active1990, 1997, 2003–present
Spouse

Supriya

(m. 2007)​
Children1
FatherR. B. Choudary
HonoursKalaimamani (2006)

Amar Choudary (born 4 January 1984), known professionally as Jiiva, is an Indian actor and film producer who works mainly in Tamil cinema and a few Malayalam, Telugu and Hindi films. He is the youngest son of film producer R. B. Choudary.

He began his career as a child actor in 1991 in films produced by his father. He made his debut as a lead actor in his father's 50th production, Aasai Aasaiyai (2003). After Sivaji Ganesan, Jiiva is the only Tamil actor to have been awarded at the Cyprus International Film Festival, particularly for his performance in Raam (2005).

After this, he has acted

Think purple, think Taylor acoustic guitars... think jiva

Singer/songwriter duo with a distinctive gentle blend.

"They diven't blaah yer lugs off."

Background

Jimmy and Val first sang together in the early 1970s in their local folk club - 'The Jerry' in Prudhoe, Northumberland. Val's work took her to London while Jimmy remained in the North East performing with local acoustic bands.

jiva was formed when Jimmy ('ji') and Val ('va') got together again in 2002 after 30 years when Val moved back to Northumberland. Since then they built a solid reputation (not only in the North East, but across the UK) as performers of quality self-penned material and interpreters of carefully chosen songs by other artists.

They happily agreed to requests to 'top the bill' at folk clubs, to play at festivals, and to provide live music for residential care homes, house parties, community organisations, local charities and fund-raising events.

jiva also played official support slots for: Allan Taylor, Anthony John Clarke, Ben Sands, Cathryn Craig & Brian Willoughby, Bram Taylor, Dana & S

Biography of Jiva Gosvami

Some people disagree with the practice of calling all these exalted Vaiṣṇavas as ‘Prabhu.’ They argue that only Śrīman Nityānanda and Śrīmad Advaita are worthy of being addressed as “Prabhu”.

 

While this is true, it does not mean that it is wrong with those who honour Vaiṣṇava ācāryas and Bhajanānandī Vaiṣṇavas as ‘Prabhu.’ They respect the Guru, Kṛṣṇa, and Vaiṣṇava equally. They have the understanding that all these three are the same from the aspect of qualities. Within some Acarya families, titles like ‘Prabhu,’ ‘Ṭhākura,’ ‘Gosvāmi,’ etc. which are not śāstrika, are only addressed by the devotees. These matters should be discussed in a mālya-candana-sabhā (a gathering where everyone is expected to receive a garland and sandalwood pulp) and not elsewhere.

 

True devotees avoid such debates. But the self-centred, arrogant,

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