peoplepill id: tang-wei-2
TW
China
1 views today
1 views this week
Tang Wei
Eastern Han Dynasty person CBDB = 17853

Tang Wei

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Eastern Han Dynasty person CBDB = 17853
Places
Gender
Male
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Tang Wei (simplified Chinese: 汤唯; traditional Chinese: 湯唯; pinyin: Tāng Wéi, born 7 October 1979) is a Chinese actress. She rose to prominence for her appearance in Lust, Caution (2007).

Tang ranked 70th on Forbes China Celebrity 100 list in 2013, 38th in 2014, 55tth in 2015.

Life and career

1979–2005: Early life and career beginnings

Tang was born in Wenzhou, Zhejiang, China and was raised in Hangzhou, Zhejiang. She is the only child of a former stage actress and painter. In an interview, she explained that she often travelled around China and learned to paint, adding that she was influenced by her parents. Tang graduated from a local vocational high school in her hometown in 1996, where her teachers described her as "athletic" and a "good student who always did her homework". She had no plans to become famous; she originally aspired to become an archaeologist or lawyer. Tang made the decision to enter the entertainment industry after doing some modelling in 1997 and played a minor role in the TV series Chinese Female Football. She graduated from the Central Academy of Drama where she majored in directing.

Shortly after her university graduation, Tang met Stan Lai during one of his trips to China. He was impressed by the actress, and was quoted as saying, "The number of stars may not be good actors, a lot of good actors may not be good stars, but Tang Wei was fortunate to have done it." He proceeded to recommend her to several directors and was thus cast in more roles, although she was relatively unknown outside her hometown in China at this time. Nonetheless, Tang starred in a TV series, Policewoman Swallow (2004) and a brief university drama, Che Guevara (2004). After working with a more diverse group of actresses, she also appeared in TV dramas Sons and Daughters of the Red Cross (2004), Leaving Seafront Street (2005), East Meets West (2005), Born in the 60s (2006) and Silent Tears.


2006–08: Lust, Caution and ban

Tang at the 61st British Academy Film Awards in 2008

In July 2006, Tang was selected from more than 10,000 actresses to appear in Ang Lee's Lust, Caution (2007). Tang plays the film's main character, Wong Chia-chi, inspired by the story of the executed spy Zheng Pingru. Tang learned both Shanghainese and the related Suzhou dialect for her role. After the film premiered, Tang received wider fame throughout and beyond China. She won the Golden Horse Award for Best New Performer and was nominated for the Independent Spirit Award.

Despite her success, China's State Administration of Radio Film and Television (SARFT) ordered a media ban due to Tang's performance of sexual acts in Lust, Caution. All print ads and feature content using Tang were removed, and her endorsements were discontinued. She was set to star in Tian Zhuangzhuang's budget period film The Warrior and the Wolf (2009), but was replaced by Maggie Q. In February 2009, during her absence from the movie industry, she was reported to have briefly attended drama classes at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom.

2010–11: Return to the screen

Tang at the Chopard Trophy Awards Party at Cannes in 2008

Tang made her return to the big screen in Crossing Hennessy (2010), a romantic drama by Ivy Ho which revolves around two people who are set up on a blind date by well-meaning relatives, despite the fact that they both have somebody else on their minds. Tang, who plays a simple girl-next-door with a stubborn streak, learned Cantonese for her role. As this was Tang's first film to be shown in China since Lust, Caution, a March 2010 news article quoted her as saying, "Coming to Hong Kong for this premiere, I can see director Ivy and co-star Andy On again. I've been very happy. Now I'm just excited to see the movie. I will be happy if everyone can see my work."

From November 2009 to March 2010, Tang filmed alongside Hyun Bin in Late Autumn (2010), directed by Kim Tae-yong. The film was shot in Seattle, Washington. Tang's performance in Late Autumn,in which she played an inmate who strikes up a relationship with a man, won over South Korean audiences and made her the only non-Korean to win the Baeksang Awards for Best Actress.

In September 2010, it was announced she was to appear in the patriotic tribute film The Founding of a Party. However her scenes were all cut in the theatrical version, allegedly at the request of Mao Zedong's grandson, Mao Xinyu. In December 2011, she also voiced the character of Pia Sahastrabuddhe in San Geshagua, the Mandarin Chinese dubbed version of the 2009 Bollywood blockbuster film 3 Idiots starring Aamir Khan, which was originally portrayed by Kareena Kapoor.

Tang returned to mainstream cinema with two major films; Speed Angels, a car-racing flick directed by Jingle Ma and Dragon, a martial arts epic directed by Peter Chan. Though Speed Angels was a commercial flop,Dragon was successful and was named the eighth best movie of 2012 according to Time magazine.

2013–present: Career resurgence

In 2013, Tang starred opposite actor Wu Xiubo in the Xue Xiaolu directed romantic comedy Finding Mr. Right. She plays a girl who goes to Seattle to give birth to a child by her wealthy, married boyfriend. The sleeper hit grossed $85 million at the box office in China and Tang received rave reviews for her performance. Shanghai newspaper City Weekend wrote, "The most compelling element of the movie however, is still Tang Wei herself. It is a testament to her on-screen charisma that such a shrill, materialistic, and generally awful character can have the audience rooting for her."

Tang was then cast to play Xiao Hong, a writer known for depictions of hunger and poverty in China during the 1920s and '30s in Ann Hui's biopic The Golden Era, which closed at the Venice International Film Festival. Though the film was highly anticipated prior to its premiere, it received mixed reviews and failed to do well at the box office.

Tang made her English-language film debut in Blackhat, an action thriller co-starring Chris Hemsworth. She also starred in A Tale of Three Cities, based on the wartime experiences of Jackie Chan's parents.

Tang and Wu then teamed up again to film the sequel to Finding Mr. Right, titled Book of Love. Book of Love was a huge commercial success and became the highest grossing Chinese romantic film of all time.

In 2017, Tang was cast as the female lead of a detective film titled Long Day’s Journey Into Night, directed by Bi Gan. The same year, she announced her return to the small screen in the upcoming historical drama Empress of the Ming.

Personal life

Tang married South Korean film director Kim Tae-yong in 2014, in the front yard of the home of film legend Ingmar Bergman on the remote Swedish island of Fårö. A formal wedding ceremony was later held in Hong Kong, with only immediate family members as guests. In August 2016, Tang gave birth to their daughter, Summer.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
2007Lust, CautionWong Chia Chi
2010Crossing HennessyOi-lin
Late AutumnAnna
2011The Founding of a PartyTao YiScenes removed before release
DragonAyu
Speed AngelsHong Xiaoyi
3 IdiotsPia SahastrabuddhVoice actor (Mandarin dub)
2013Finding Mr. RightJia Jia
2014The Golden EraXiao Hong
2015BlackhatChen Lien
Monster HuntDealer
Only YouFang Yuan
A Tale of Three CitiesChen Yuerong
OfficeSophie
2016Book of LoveJia Jia
2018Long Day's Journey into NightWan Qiwen/Kaizhen
2019Push and ShoveCameo
The Whistleblower

Television series

YearTitleRoleNotes
1998Chinese Female FootballGoalkeeper
2004Policewoman SwallowSwallow
Sons and Daughters of the Red CrossNing Xiaoya
2005Brother, BrotherSecretary
Leaving Seafront StreetYan Lei
Qingqian NalatiChen Yan
2006Born in the 60sYue Linlin
2007Silent TearsShang Li
2019Empress of the MingSun Ruowei

Theater

YearTitleRole
2001A Dream Like a DreamLai Shengchuan
2004Che GuevaraYang Ting

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryNominated workResultRef.
200720th Chicago Film Critics Association AwardsMost Promising PerformerLust, CautionNominated
44th Golden Horse AwardsBest ActressNominated
Best New PerformerWon
20082nd Asian Film AwardsBest ActressNominated
61st British Academy Film AwardsRising Star AwardNominated
51st Cannes Film FestivalTrophée ChopardWon
8th Chinese Film Media AwardsBest ActressNominated
Best NewcomerWon
Independent Spirit AwardsBest ActressNominated
201047th Golden Horse AwardsBest ActressCrossing HennessyNominated
201111th Chinese Film Media AwardsBest ActressWon
30th Hong Kong Film AwardsBest ActressNominated
17th Hong Kong Film Critics Society AwardBest ActressNominated
47th Baeksang Arts AwardsBest ActressLate AutumnWon
22nd Blue Dragon Film AwardsBest ActressNominated
12th Busan Film Critics AwardsBest ActressWon
20th Buil Film AwardsBest ActressNominated
31st Korean Association of Film Critics AwardsBest ActressWon
20123rd KOFRA Film AwardsBest ActressWon
13th Women in Film Korea FestivalBest ActressNominated
31st Hong Kong Film AwardsBest ActressDragonNominated
20139th Huading AwardsBest ActressLate AutumnNominated
10th Huading AwardsBest ActressFinding Mr. RightNominated
10th Guangzhou Student Film FestivalMost Popular ActressWon
22nd Shanghai Film Critics AwardsBest ActressWon
201421st Beijing College Student Film FestivalBest ActressWon
5th China Film Director's Guild AwardBest ActressWon
32nd Hundred Flowers AwardsBest ActressNominated
33rd Hong Kong Film AwardsNominated
2nd China International Film Festival LondonBest ActressThe Golden EraWon
6th International Chinese Film FestivalBest ActressWon
201522nd Beijing College Student Film FestivalBest ActressNominated
30th Golden Rooster AwardsBest ActressNominated
51st Golden Horse AwardsBest Leading ActressNominated
9th Hong Kong Film Directors' Guild AwardsBest ActressWon
34th Hong Kong Film AwardsBest ActressNominated
9th Asian Film AwardsBest ActressNominated
34th Hong Kong Film AwardsBest ActressNominated
201635th Hong Kong Film AwardsA Tale of Three CitiesNominated
201736th Hong Kong Film AwardsBook of LoveNominated

Other honors

  • 2004 - Miss Universe China finalist
  • 2007 - Top Chinese fashion figure
  • 2007 - New York Times listed her as one of the Best 15 Performers in 2007
  • 2008 - The Annual Independent Critics List #59 of 2008 World's Most Beautiful People
  • 2008 - Forbes ranked her 18th on the China Celebrity 100 list
  • 2008 - Japanese magazine Cut placed her in the Top 50 Best Active Celebrities
  • 2008 - Accepted invitation and appeared at the Cannes Film Festival
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
Lists
Tang Wei is in following lists
comments so far.
Comments
From our partners
Sponsored
Credits
References and sources
Tang Wei
arrow-left arrow-right instagram whatsapp myspace quora soundcloud spotify tumblr vk website youtube pandora tunein iheart itunes