Name Ammara Siripong | ||
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Born November 1, 1980 (Age 40), Ang Thong, Thailand Nationality Thai Birth Sign Scorpio Occupation Actress Similar Yanin Vismitananda, Chookiat Sakveerakul, Panna Rittikrai |
Ammara Siripong is an actress, reggae singer, DJ, and model who hails from Ang Thong, Thailand. She was born on the1st of November 1980, and as of 2021, Siripong will be clocking 41.
As an actress, Siripong is well-known under the name Ammara Siripong, while as a singer, she’s known as Zom Ammara. She also has a morning radio show called Get Divas on Thailand Get 102.5 radio show.
In Thailand, Siripong is known as the reggae queen as she’s the first female to write and sing that genre of music in Thailand. Let’s find out more about her!
Contents
Zom Ammara - Shake It Baby [Official MV] ( ส้ม อมรา )

Facts
Early and Personal Life

As a young child, Siripong has always loved singing and acting. Whenever she and her younger siblings played out a drama, she always took the lead.
Siripong's love for performing was still waxing strong when she was taken to an all-girls boarding school, where she grew up with 1000 ladies until she was 18.
Career

Siripong is many things in one; a singer, an actor, and a Radio-Dj. As an actor, she has featured in a lot of movies, including:
Kill' em All! (2012)
Bangkok Rush (2016), etcetera
Siripong loves to act out the tough girl in action movies; an excellent example of this is her role in Chocolate and Kill 'em All! However, this doesn't mean she finds it hard to act out other movie scenes.
As a singer, Siripong's band plays five instruments combining Beats/Hip-Hop/Reggae/Rock with Blue & Jazz tone. Out of all her chosen career paths, Siripong says it's the singing that stands out for her.
As of 2013, Siripong was involved in other projects, including being a creative and marketing manager for a few companies, a consultant for some of her own company's projects, and comic writing.
Family

Siripong was born as the only girl amongst five children. She’s the eldest and a big sister to 4 brothers. As a young girl, Siripong was raised amid boys. She was later raised amongst girls when she was sent to an all-girls boarding school before turning 18.
Being a child born to a doctor and a mother who loved to read, Siripong says that she was raised amidst books, cooking, blood, and death.
From a young age, her father introduced her to the concepts of pain and Buddhism. He often brought her along on his numerous hospital visits, where she was exposed to significant amounts of blood and death, providing her with early firsthand experiences of medical environments and the realities of human suffering.
At age 14, Siripong already knew she wanted a tattoo, but due to her young age and the stereotype that then existed with people who wore tattoos, Siripong struck a deal with her mom to wait until she was 18 before getting a tattoo.