Jump to content

Emma Wu

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 113.254.134.196 (talk) at 13:58, 13 August 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Template:Chinese name

Emma Wu
Wu in October 2016
Born
Wu Ying-chieh (吳映潔)

(1989-08-11) 11 August 1989 (age 35)
Keelung, Taiwan
Occupation(s)Singer, actress
Years active2005–present
Musical career
Also known asGemma
Gui Gui (鬼鬼)
Oh Young-gyul (오영결)[1]
GenresMandopop, K-pop
Labels
Wu Yingjie
Traditional Chinese吳映潔
Simplified Chinese吴映洁
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinWú Yìngjié

Emma Wu Ying-chieh (Chinese: 吳映潔; pinyin: Wú Yìngjié; born 11 August 1989), also known as Gui Gui (Chinese: 鬼鬼), is a Taiwanese singer and actress.

Early life

Wu Ying-chieh, nicknamed Gui Gui, was born in Keelung City, Taiwan on 11 August 1989, and is the only child of divorced parents.[2][3] In her early childhood, the family moved frequently, and this resulted in her having to attend five different elementary schools. Wu briefly attended the Dao Jiang Senior High School of Nursing & Home Economics (臺北市私立稻江高級護理家事職業學校) before transferring to Zhuangjing Senior Vocational School in the Xindian District of Taipei, where she became classmates with JPM's Wang Zi.[4]

Regarding the origin of her alias, Gui Gui (literally: Ghost), Wu has explained that she is "full of reckless things" (Chinese: 古靈精怪) [5] and adopted a phonological pun on the Chinese idiom (Chinese: "鬼”靈精怪) to describe herself as having an eccentric or impish personality.

Career

2005–2009: Variety and musical debut

In November 2005, Wu debuted as one of the original members of Blackie's Teenage Club (Chinese: 我愛黑澀會), a variety show seeking talents for the television network, Channel [V]. After three rounds of casting, Wu was recruited to join Hei Se Hui Mei Mei (Chinese: 黑澀會美眉), a nine-member Taiwanese girl group established c. 2006. Though the group's name was a clever play on the words "Hei She Hui" (Chinese: 黑社會, literally: black society; triad) and "Mei Mei" (Chinese: 妹妹; lit. 'sisters'), it was renamed Hey Girl (Chinese: 黑Girl) after a label change and the launch of their first self-titled album in August 2008.

In April 2009, Channel V's director, Andy Chang, responded to rumors of Wu leaving his agency. He expressed that though she was unlikely to renew her contract, the singer would partake in group activities per usual since Hey Girl's record contract did not belong to Channel V. Yet, despite Chang's statement, Wu was notably absent from their album promotions, and on 6 May 2009, he confirmed her departure from both Hey Girl and Channel V's management.

2007–2015: Transition into acting

In 2007, Wu announced her acting debut with the idol drama, Brown Sugar Macchiato. However, the drama was viewed more as an "introductory chapter" to the two groups, Hey Girl and Lollipop F, than a major production.[6] After thirteen episodes, the series ended on 7 October 2007, and an official soundtrack was released with songs from Lollipop and Hey Girl.[7]

In 2008, Wu starred in Mysterious Incredible Terminator, opposite of Aaron Yan from Fahrenheit and Alien Huang. After the completion of M.I.T., Wu and Aaron, both widely praised for their on-screen chemistry and closeness, were to co-star in Taiwanese drama Momo Love. Yet, filming was halted due to Yan's scheduling conflicts, and once resumed, Wu and Aaron were replaced by Cyndi Wang and Jiro Wang, respectively.

Following a two-year hiatus, Wu signed with Polyface Entertainment Media Group in 2011 and returned to the small screen with I, My Brother (我和我的兄弟·恩). Later that year, Wu was cast in the television version of Painted Skin (TV series),[8] in collaboration with Fiona Sit, Chen Yi Rong, and Li Zhong Han. It was also this opportunity that allowed Wu to shift her focus to the Chinese market.

In 2012, Wu debuted on the big screen with a three part-film series, The Four, starring Ronald Cheng, Anthony Wong, Deng Chao, and Liu Yifei. In February 2013, she was cast in the Korean reality show, We Got Married with Ok Taecyeon, of South Korean boy band 2PM, as her virtual husband. Regarding this experience, she has commented, "I feel thankful that you found me. I think the fact that I was able to do this show was a gift from the up above."[9]

In the consecutive years, Wu has starred in Chinese TV dramas: Legend of Lu Zhen, Incisive Great Teacher (犀利仁師), A Different Kind of Pretty Man (不一樣的美男子), Roommate Diaries (一男三女合租記), The Four (2015 TV series), The Girl Wearing Tassel Earrings (戴流蘇耳環的少女) and The Legend of the Flying Daggers (飛刀又見飛刀 (2016年電視劇)).

2016–present: Musical comeback

On 7 March 2016, Wu signed with CJ E&M and returned to the music scene.[10][11] In preparation for her Korean debut, she underwent a rigorous 3-month training that included vocal, choreography and Korean lessons. On 26 September, Wu released her first official music video, Sugar Rush, and on 7 October, she launched her first self-titled EP, GEMMA.[12] In an interview introducing the extended play, Wu stated that GEMMA represented a new identity. "G" was derived from her nickname, Ghost (Chinese: 鬼鬼) while Emma is her proclaimed English name.[13]

In June 2017, Wu parted ways with CJ E&M [14], and established her personal agency Gemma Wu Studio. In October of the same year, she released the single "Knock Knock Knock" after investing NT$8 million in production works herself.[15][deprecated source]

In August 2019, Wu joined Avex Taiwan and released the single "Love Me Love Me" in celebration of her thirtieth birthday.[16]

Filmography

[17][18]

Television series

Year Title Role Network Notes
2007 Brown Sugar Macchiato Gui Gui (as herself) FTV, Star Chinese Channel Acting Debut
2008 The Legend of Brown Sugar Chivalries Guardian of Cult Star TV Cameo, Ep. 13
Mysterious Incredible Terminator Li Xiao Xing / Tian Mo Xing GTV Female Lead
2009 K.O.3an Guo Huang Yue Ying FTV / GTV Cameo, Ep. 44–46
2011 I, My Brother Lu Wei Wei CTV Female Lead
Painted Skin Xia Bing TVS4, ZJTV, GTV,
Shenzhen Satellite TV
Supporting Role
Love Recipe Wang Mei Ya CTV Supporting Role
2012 Dream in Blue Shen Xiao Qi ZJTV Supporting Role
Summer Fever Chen Wen Qing / Chen Tian Qing CTV Female Lead
2013 Female Prime Minister He Dan Niang Hunan TV Supporting Role
2014 Incisive Great Teacher Song Wen Wen Dragon TV Supporting Role[19]
A Different Kind of Pretty Man Tong Yu Chen Hunan TV Female Lead
Roommate Diaries Li Mei Dai Supporting Role[20]
2015 The Four (2015 TV series) Ling Yi Yi Supporting Role[21]
The Girl Wearing Tassel Earrings Ruan Qing Tian Hunan TV, Anhui TV Female Lead
Slacker's Food Diary Zhang An An iQiyi, Viu (streaming media) Female Lead[22]
2016 The Legend of the Flying Daggers Fang Ke Ke Youku Supporting Role
TBA The Fairy Lady Chen Xian Qi Female Lead

Film

Year Title Role Notes
2011 The Four Ding Dang Supporting Role
2013 The Four II
2014 The Four III
2015 Dream Holiday Dani Special appearance
2016 Days of Our Own Chen Yinuo[23] Supporting Role
2018 More than Blue Bonnie Special appearance
2019 Passage of My Youth

Variety show

Year Title Notes
2005–2009 Blackie's Teenage Club Ep. 79-958
2006–2007 Mo Fan Bang Bang Tang Assistant host
2007 Mei Mei Pu Pu Feng DJ
2007–2008 Fashion in House Guest host
2009 Golden Taxi
Game GX
Mi Gu Celebrity School
2010 Ultimate Player
2011 Genius Go Go Go
2013 We Got Married World Ver. with Ok Taecyeon
2016 Who's the Murderer Season 1 Guest
2017 Who's the Murderer Season 2
Fans! Fans!
Who's the Murderer Season 3
2018 Twenty-Four Hours (TV series) Season 3
Best Friends’ Perfect Vacation
Back to Field Season 2
Who's the Murderer Season 4
2019 Who's the Murderer Season 5

Music videos

Year Title Director(s)
2016 "Sugar Rush" Digipedi[24]
"Waiting For Your Love" Un­known
"Always"
2017 "Knock Knock Knock" Bboydry[25]
2019 "Love Me Love Me" Un­known

Music video appearances

Year Title Artist(s)
2006 "Manservant (男傭)" Kenji Wu
2009 "The Sky You Can't See (你看不到的天空)" Evan Yo
"Love Is Right" Evan Yo
2010 "Red" Wallace Chung
2011 "Missing You" Liu Zi Qian
"Stick to You"
"Love's Secret Recipe (愛的秘方)" Kenji Wu
2013 "Love Away from Me One Meter" Hu Xia
2016 "Not Letting Go" Ben Wu

Discography

Studio album

Title Album details
GX
  • Released: 22 September 2020
  • Labels: Avex Taiwan
  • Formats: CD, digital download

Extended plays

Title Album details
Gemma
Track listing
  1. Sugar Rush (Chn ver.)
  2. Waiting For Your Love (等你愛)
  3. Always (一直)
  4. By My Side (愛在我身邊)
  5. Sugar Rush (Kor ver.)

Singles

Title Year Peak chart
positions
Album
CHN[26]
"Sugar Rush" 2016 Gemma
"Knock Knock Knock" 2017 Non-album singles
"Love Me Love Me" (啦咪啦咪) 2019 37
"Go" 2020
"—" denotes releases that did not chart.

Collaborations

Year Title Other artist(s) Album
2013 "I Love You" Ok Taec-yeon We Got Married Global Edition OST
2018 "Small Meteor" (小流星) Silence Wang Non-album single

Soundtrack appearances

Year Title Album
2012 "Breaking Rules" (犯規) Summer Fever [zh] OST
"The Flavour Of Summer" (那年夏天的味道)
2018 "Kitty Bomb" More than Blue OST

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Nominated work Result Ref.
2009 1st Degree Idol Drama Awards Best Female Actress Pi Li MIT Won [27]
Best Onscreen Couple (with Aaron Yan) Won
2013–2015 Sina Weibo Dream Valentines Female Artists Won
2014 Taiwan CGC Award Most liked Female Artists Won
2014 Taiwan EToday Award Most popular Female Artists Won
2014 Asia Top Ten Goddess (Voting) Number 4 in Asia Actress Won [28]
2016 Asia Top Ten Goddess (Voting) Number 7 in Asia Actress Won [29]
2017 Hito Radio Music Awards Best New Artist (vocal and dance) Sugar Rush Won [30]
2017 Asia Top Ten Goddess (Voting) Number 9 in Asia Actress and Singer Won [31]

References

  1. ^ Kang, Soo-jin. "中스타 우잉지에(오영결), 한국 CJ E&M과 전속 계약 체결 화제 (Taiwanese star Wu Ying-Jie (Oh Young-gyul) joins CJ E&M for activities in Korea)". Kyunghyang Shinmun. Retrieved 17 April 2016.
  2. ^ "Appledaily, 黑人贈媽1500萬華廈 金屋藏鬼鬼".
  3. ^ "Youtube, Kang Xi Lai Le (康熙來了): 親愛的!我真的好想再見你一面!".
  4. ^ "Youtube, 100% Entertainment, 我家也有大明星".
  5. ^ "Youtube, 我愛黑澀會,鬼鬼出道".
  6. ^ "棒棒堂怎麼可能紅到香港去". 康熙來了. 3 October 2007.
  7. ^ "EMI Music Taiwan". Archived from the original on 8 June 2009.
  8. ^ 吴映洁29日做客腾讯微博 分享"鬼鬼"身边故事. Tencent QQ (in Chinese). 28 April 2011. Archived from the original on 12 May 2011.
  9. ^ "Youtube, 5ivesense TV, GWGM Making Film".
  10. ^ 吳映潔與 CJ E&M 簽約 (Gui Gui (Emma Wu) signs up with Korea's CJ E&M)
  11. ^ CJENMMUSIC. "大势吴映洁访韩!与CJ E&M签署合约!(Wu Ying-Jie goes to South Korea! Joins the CJ E&M artist roster!)". Retrieved 1 April 2016 – via YouTube.
  12. ^ "Youtube, CJEM Sugar Rush".
  13. ^ "Tencent Video, Star!調查團, 鬼精灵的甜蜜新世界 – 鬼鬼吴映洁专访".
  14. ^ "傳慘遭韓經紀公司提前解約 鬼鬼經紀人出面回應了!".
  15. ^ "吳映潔新單曲燒台幣800萬 自信擊到零再爬起".
  16. ^ "鬼鬼吳映潔正式加盟avex taiwan 即將發行新單曲".
  17. ^ Emma Wu at douban.com
  18. ^ Emma Wu at chinesemov.com
  19. ^ "Incisive Great Teacher" to Air on June 4. Cfensi Wordpress. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  20. ^ ShenZhen 2014 (Roommate Diaries) Archived 21 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
  21. ^ Kisses & Hugs in the trailer of Idol Cdrama "The Four". Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  22. ^ Slacker's Food Diary drops 14-minuter trailer with Gui Gui & Dylan Kuo. Retrieved 11 April 2014.
  23. ^ 我们的十年 Days of Our Own
  24. ^ "Gemma's 'SUGAR RUSH' MV released". Yonhap News. 28 September 2016.
  25. ^ "Knock Knock MV Credits". Facebook.[non-primary source needed]
  26. ^ "Billboard China Top 100". Billboard.
  27. ^ "Gui Gui turns mature, popularity sky-rockets!". Archived from the original on 23 September 2012. Retrieved 8 July 2011.
  28. ^ http://bagua.ifensi.com/article-1483125.html
  29. ^ http://news.cnwest.com/content/2016-10/03/content_14168166.htm
  30. ^ http://www.nownews.com/n/2017/06/04/2548802
  31. ^ http://news.vdfly.com/dujia/201702/577521.html