Nǃxau ǂToma

Farmer

Birthday December 16, 1944

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Tsumkwe, South West Africa, South Africa (present-day Namibia)

DEATH DATE 2003-7-5, Tsumkwe, Namibia (58 years old)

Nationality Namibia

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1944

Nǃxau ǂToma (short: Nǃxau, alternative spelling Gcao Tekene Çoma; 16 December 1944 – 5 July 2003) was a Namibian bush farmer and actor who starred in the 1980 film The Gods Must Be Crazy and its sequels, in which he played the Kalahari Bushman Xixo.

The Namibian called him "Namibia's most famous actor".

Nǃxau was a member of the ǃKung people, one of several peoples known as Bushmen.

He spoke Juǀʼhoan, Otjiherero and Tswana fluently, as well as some Afrikaans.

He did not know his own exact age, and before his appearance in the films he had little experience beyond his home.

He had only ever seen three white people prior to casting, and when director Jamie Uys gave him his first cash payment of $300 for The Gods Must Be Crazy, he allegedly let it blow away in the wind because he did not understand its value.

This was despite money already being a serious matter for other San, since many of them depended on purchased food and government aid and/or had enlisted in the South African Army due to the high wages it paid.

He was, however, able to negotiate for near several hundred thousand for his appearance in the sequel.

He came from a culture that did not value the material things that money could buy and consequently had not learned money management skills, although he used some of his income to build a brick house with running water and electricity for his family.

He also bought a used car and subsequently hired a chauffeur, as he had no desire to learn to drive.

In addition to The Gods Must Be Crazy, Nǃxau starred in a series of sequels: The Gods Must Be Crazy II, Crazy Safari, Crazy Hong Kong and The Gods Must Be Funny in China.

After his film career ended, he returned to Namibia, where he farmed maize, pumpkins and beans, and kept several head of cattle (but no more than 20 at a time because, according to The Independent, without the complex farming systems of the "modern world", he had trouble keeping track of more).

The Namibian local daily New Era stated that he simply could not count further than 20.

2000

Nǃxau converted to Christianity and in July 2000, he was baptized as a Seventh-day Adventist.

2003

He was found dead in late June 2003 near his home in Namibia after going out to collect wood and on an excursion for hunting guineafowl.

He died from multiple-drug-resistant tuberculosis.

According to official estimates he was about 58 or 59 years old at the time.

He was buried on 12 July in a semi-traditional ceremony at Tsumkwe, next to the grave of his second wife.

He had six surviving children.