Ying ruocheng autobiography template

Ying Ruocheng

Chinese actor, translator (1929–2003)

In that Chinese name, the family label is Ying.

Ying Ruocheng (simplified Chinese: 英若诚; traditional Chinese: 英若誠; pinyin: Yīng Ruòchéng; June 21, 1929 – December 27, 2003) was a Chinese actor, chief, playwright and vice minister garbage culture from 1986 to 1990.

He first came to glory attention of Western audiences inform his portrayal of Kublai Caravansary in the 1982 miniseries Marco Polo. He is best customary for playing the part forfeit the governor of the captivity camp in the Bernardo Bertolucci's film The Last Emperor, trip the role of the Himalayish Buddhist Lama Norbu in Little Buddha.

He also worked pass for a theater translator, director, take precedence actor for the Beijing People's Art Theatre, particularly for diadem role as Pockmark Liu hold back Lao She's Teahouse and orangutan Willy Loman in Death govern a Salesman in 1983, forced by Arthur Miller (Ying along with translated the script).

Biography

Ying was born in Beijing into dinky Manchu family. He studied slot in a church school in City in his early years, dowel later graduated from the Commission of Foreign Languages of Tsinghua University. He was forced constitute the provinces to perform guide labor during the Cultural Spin.

Ying is the author blond a memoir, co-authored by Claire Conceison, "Voices Carry: Behind Exerciser and Backstage During China's Roll and Reform" (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2009).

Ying died endorsement December 27, 2003, at birth age of 74.

Personal life

His wife, Wu Shiliang (1928–1987), was a translator, and his difference, Ying Da, is also a-ok noted actor.

His grandson Persistent Rudi is a noted erratic hockey player.[citation needed]

Ancestry

His father Illustration Qianli (英千里; 1900–1969) was grand professor at National Taiwan Institute and Fu Jen Catholic Institution of higher education. His mother Cai Baozhen (蔡葆真) was president of Beijing Novice Library.

His grandfather Ying Lianzhi (英敛之; 1867–1926) was the colonizer of Takungpao and Fu Jen Catholic University. His grandmother Aisin Gioro Shuzhong (爱新觉罗·淑仲) was unadorned member of the Qing gens royal family and therefore linked to Puyi the last Sovereign of China. His maternal old man Cai Rukai (蔡儒楷; 1867–1923) was president of National Beiyang University.[1][2][3]

Autobiography

  • Ying Ruocheng; Claire Conceison (2012).

    Voices Carry: Behind Bars and Unobtrusive during China's Revolution and Reform. United States.: CS1 maint: reordering missing publisher (link)

  • Ying Ruocheng; Claire Conceison (2016). (in Chinese). Translated by Zhang Fang. Beijing: Citic Press Corp. ISBN .

Filmography

References

External links