Wang Ping (filmmaker)


Wang Ping was a Chinese film director and actress. She is considered to be the first female director in the People's Republic of China.

Biography

Wang Ping was born and grew up in Nanjing, China. She moved to Taiyuan in 1935. Wang moved again in 1937 following the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War, which motivated her to engage in leftist activism. She toured the country performing in politically oriented plays that supported Chinese resistance before settling in Shanghai after the war ended in 1945. Leftist liberal feminism became a major influence for Wang early in her life and she was a long time supporter of the communist revolution. She worked closely with the Communist Party both leading up to the revolution and after the establishment of the People's Republic of China.

Career

Wang first became interested in the theatre and acting while working as a teacher in her hometown of Nanjing. Her first prominent role as an actress came in 1935 when she took on the leading role in a Chinese adaption of the play A Doll’s House by Henrik Ibsen. Wang’s involvement in the play was controversial as the play’s major themes clashed with the conservative values of the New Life Movement, which had been launched a year earlier. The New Life Movement, which was created in support by the Chinese Nationalist Party, advocated for the renewal of li, I, Lien, and Chih, the ancient Chinese virtues that guided regular life. The movement rejected individualism, liberalism, socialism and communism. A Doll’s House, which ultimately ends with the lead woman leaving her husband and children to find herself, was considered to be antagonistic to the virtues that the New Life Movement was promoting. Wang was subsequently fired from teaching in 1935 by the Education Bureau of Nanjing Municipal Government and was banned from teaching anywhere in Nanjing.
In 1935 she moved to Taiyuan where she briefly worked for the Northeast Film Company as an actress before joining the Shanghai Amateur Dramatists Association, a leftist theatre group, in 1937. Wang toured the country with the Association, performing in politically oriented plays that supported the Chinese resistance during the Second Sino-Japanese War. She would continue to act in patriotic plays across the country up until the end of the war in 1945. After the war she found work as a supporting actress with the Kunlun Film Company, a Shanghai-based company which produced several important leftists films in the late 40s.
As an actress Wang became well known as a leftist and communist advocate. She was a strong supporter of the Communist Party and operated as an underground worker for the Party while living in Shanghai before the communist revolution and establishment of the People's Republic of China on October 1, 1949. Her support and work for the communist cause was rewarded in 1951 when the August First Film Studio appointed her as a film director. Despite having no previous directorial experience, her appointment was widely supported and she became a successful mainstream socialist filmmaker. It was not unusual in the years following the revolution to appoint novice film directors, partly because there were few professional directors working at that time, and partly because the new Communist government significantly financed the film industry. The film industry was seen as an art form that could reach the masses and could be used to effectively spread the party’s political message. Accordingly, Wang’s work fit into the mainstream socialist cinema and had an explicit pro-communist message. Her work was not particularly associated with women’s film. Although some of her films featured leading women, the narrative focused on class struggle and the communist revolution. When gender struggles were depicted, it was often to reinforce communism as a solution. Her work was financially supported by the state, which provided her with significant access to filmic resources, allowing her to learn the techniques of filmmaking through practice and experiment with film form. She became a respected and influential director.
Wang is considered to be the first female director since the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, however she was not the only woman working as a filmmaker in the early communist era. Because gender equality was a significant part of the Communist Party’s plan for economic reform, the following two decades would see a rise in the number of female directors in China, although the industry would continue to be overrepresented by men. Wang made her directorial debut in 1952 with an instructional film for the army. Her first feature film, Darkness Before Dawn, was released in 1956. In 1963, Zhou Enlai, the first Premier of the People’s Republic of China, appointed Wang to co-direct the film adaption of the popular play Sentinels under the Neon Lights. She remained active until 1985, during her career she directed feature films, musical stage plays, and military instructional videos. She died at the age of 74 on December 2, 1990.

Filmography

As an actress
YearEnglish TitleChinese TitleRoleNotes
1947The Spring River Flows East一江春水向東流
1947Eight Thousand Li of Cloud and Moon八千里路雲和月Jiangxi neighbour
1948Myriad of Lights萬家燈火Mrs. ChenAlso known as The Lights of Ten Thousand Homes
1948Caged Spring关不住的春光Miss LiAlso known as Spring Light that Cannot be Shut Out
1949Women Side by Side麗人行Also known as Three Women

As a director
YearEnglish TitleChinese TitleGenreNotes
1953Héchuān jìngōng河川进攻Instructional military film
1953Qí jiànhuá sùchéng shìzì fǎ祁建华速成识字法Instructional military film
1956Darkness before Dawn冲破黎明前的黑暗Feature filmWang's first feature film
Co-directed with Liu Peiran
1957Story of Liubao Village柳堡的故事Feature film
1958'永不消逝的电波Feature film; revolutionary, warAlso known as The Everlasting Radio Signals or The Undying Transmission
1960Měng lóng shā勐胧纱Feature film; revolutionary, warCo-directed with Yuan Xian
1962Locust Tree Village槐树庄Feature film; revolutionary, drama1963 2nd Hundred Flowers Award for Best Director
1964Sentinels under the Neon Lights霓虹灯下的哨兵Feature film; revolutionary, drama
1965The East is Red東方紅Feature film; stage performance; musical
1966Youth Red as Fire青春红似火Feature film; art film, revolutionary
1974'闪闪的红星Feature film; revolutionary, war
1976Long March Suit长征组歌——红军不怕远征难Feature film; revolutionaryAlso known as The Red Army is not afraid of Difficult Expedition – Long March Suite
1978We are the Eighth Route Army我们是八路军Feature film; revolutionary
1985中国革命之歌Stage performance; musical1968 6th Golden Rooster Awards Special Award

Awards

In 1963, Wang Ping won the award for Best Director for her film, Locust Tree Village, at the 2nd Hundred Flowers Awards. In 1968, Wang was presented with a Special Award at the 6th Golden Rooster Awards for her film, The Song of the Chinese Revolution.