Wang Ying (actress)
Wang Ying | |
---|---|
王莹 | |
Born | |
Died | March 3, 1974 | (aged 60)
Other names | Yu Zhihua |
Alma mater | Fudan University Tokyo University |
Occupation | Actress |
Spouse |
Xie Hengeng (m. 1951–1974) |
Wang Ying Chinese: 王莹; née, Yu Zhihua; during incarceration, Prisoner No. 6742; March 8, 1913 – March 3, 1974) was a Chinese actress in the 1930s. She rose to be a star of plays and cinema. The most valuable Chinese painting was of her. She was the first Chinese actor to appear for the US President. During the Cultural Revolution she was imprisoned. Her reputation was not re established until after her death.
Life
Wang was born in 1913 in Wuhu when her name was Yu Zhihua. She went to live with her aunt whose family name was Wang.[1] This was after her father sold her as a child bride to a man in Nanjing. She had to leave and she went to Shanghai after she was arrested for writing a critical letter to He Jian.[2]
In 1929, she joined an art troupe in Shanghai led by Qian Xingcun and Xia Yan. The writer Xie Bingying renamed her Wang Ying and under that name she starred in three films - Women's Cry, Story of Red Tears and The Same Enemy.[2] Her iconic appearance in the play "Put Down Your Whip" was seen throughout China and abroad and it inspired an eponymous painting by Xu Beihong. This was converted into a postcard and the painting in time became the most valuable painting by a Chinese artist. By 1939, the art troupe was now named the New China Troupe and was touring Asia. Wang was also writing a column for a Shanghai newspaper.[1]
United States
Wang left for the United States in 1942 to improve her education. Whilst there, she met President Franklin Roosevelt and his wife and performed the play Put Down Your Whip in the White House. She continued to write and her thoughts were published in Chinese American newspapers.[1] She had become a friend of Pearl S. Buck[3] and she assisted Agnes Smedley in writing her book about Zhu De.[1]
When Buck wanted to visit China, she found that was unwelcome because she was a friend of Wang Ying's.[3]
She was persecuted by Jiang Qing at the time of the Cultural Revolution, and died at age 60. During incarceration, she was called Prisoner No. 6742.
Legacy
Wang Ying was politically rehabilitated on July 6, 1979.
After her death, two books Two Kinds of Americans and her autobiography novel Bao Gu, were published. Besides her films, she also appeared in paintings.[2]
References
- ^ a b c d Lily Xiao Hong Lee (July 8, 2016). Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women: V. 2: Twentieth Century. Routledge. pp. 539–541. ISBN 978-1-315-49924-6.
- ^ a b c Wang Ying: An Artist to Remember During Anti-Japanese War, 18 September 2015, WomenInChina, Retrieved 23 November 2016
- ^ a b Peter Conn; Peter J. Conn (January 28, 1998). Pearl S. Buck: A Cultural Biography. Cambridge University Press. pp. 374–. ISBN 978-0-521-63989-7.
External links
- 1913 births
- 1974 deaths
- Chinese dramatists and playwrights
- Writers from Anhui
- Chinese stage actresses
- People persecuted to death during the Cultural Revolution
- 20th-century Chinese actresses
- Actresses from Anhui
- People from Wuhu
- Singers from Anhui
- 20th-century Chinese dramatists and playwrights
- 20th-century Chinese women singers
- Chinese film actresses
- 20th-century novelists
- Chinese women novelists
- 20th-century Chinese women writers