Hong Shen

Hong Shen (Chinese: 洪深; Wade–Giles: Hung Shen; 31 December 1894 – 29 August 1955) was a Chinese playwright, film director and screenwriter, film and drama theorist, and educator. He is considered by drama historians as one of the three founders of Chinese spoken drama, together with Tian Han and Ouyang Yuqian.[1] He wrote the first Chinese film script, Mrs. Shentu.

Hong Shen
BornDecember 31, 1894
Wujin, Jiangsu, Qing Empire
DiedAugust 29, 1955(1955-08-29) (aged 60)
Occupationplaywright, screenwriter, director, film theorist
Notable work
Yama Zhao (1923)
The Young Mistress's Fan
Mrs. Shentu (1925)
Wukui Bridge (1931)
StyleChinese spoken drama

Early life and education

Hong Shen was born in Wujin, Jiangsu Province, Qing Empire on 31 December 1894.[2] After attending secondary schools in Shanghai and Tianjin, he entered the newly founded Tsinghua School (now Tsinghua University) in 1912, and graduated in 1916. [3] He then left for the United States to study ceramic engineering at Ohio State University on a Boxer Indemnity Scholarship. While there, he wrote and produced two plays in English.[4] A cast of Chinese students from OSU and Oberlin College performed one of them, The Wedded Husband, in April 1919 to an audience of 1300 in the university chapel. It was probably the first play written by a citizen of China to be performed in the United States.[5] In the fall of 1919, he transferred to Harvard University and was selected as one of "Baker's Dozen" to study drama under Professor George Pierce Baker.[3][6]

Career

Hong Shen returned to China in 1922, with the ambition of becoming China's Ibsen.[7] He taught Western Literature at Fudan University in Shanghai, as well as several other universities. He wrote and acted in the play Yama Zhao in 1923, which strongly opposed the brutal warfare that plagued China at the time, which is now known as the Warlord Era. The play was well received and established his reputation as a playwright.[3][6] He joined the Shanghai Association for Dramatists, and made a number of plays, including The Young Mistress's Fan, which was adapted from Oscar Wilde's Lady Windermere's Fan. The play was tremendously popular and was highly influential to the development of modern drama in China.[8][6]

In 1925, Hong Shen published the film script Mrs. Shentu in the Shanghai magazine Eastern Miscellany. It was never filmed, but is considered a milestone in film history for being the first published film script in China.[8] He directed his first film, Young Master Feng, at Mingxing (Star) Film Company in 1925. He then co-directed the films Love and Gold (1926) and The Young Mistress's Fan (1928) with Mingxing's founder Zhang Shichuan, and wrote the script for the 1931 film Sing-Song Girl Red Peony (directed by Zhang Shichuan), the first Chinese sound film (though it was sound-on-disc, not sound-on-film). He was appointed director of the China Film School in 1928.[8]

Hong Shen joined the League of Left-Wing Writers in 1930,[2] and participated in political activities. In the 1930s, he wrote many film scripts as well as three plays collectively known as the Trilogy of the Countryside.[6] Wukui Bridge is considered the best of the three. It was first staged in 1931 with Yuan Muzhi playing the main role.[9] Hong also wrote many books and articles on film and drama theory.[8]

After the Japanese invasion in 1937, Hong Shen left Shanghai for inland regions that were free from Japanese occupation. He staged many plays to advocate resistance against Japan. He returned to teach at Fudan University after the end of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1945, but was forced out because of his pro-Communist sympathy. He taught briefly at Xiamen University in Fujian Province before going to Northeast China in 1948, which was under Communist control.[8]

After the Communists won the Chinese Civil War and founded the People's Republic of China in 1949, Hong Shen was appointed Director of the Bureau of External Cultural Relations under the Ministry of Culture, and Vice-President of the China Theatre Association. He was also a member of the First National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.[8] On 29 August 1955, he died of lung cancer in Beijing.[2]

gollark: I can't say no to cellular automata!
gollark: No, it just becomes a crazy tactical thing.
gollark: Actually, maybe fewest votes but you have to have... over 0.1% of the population?
gollark: No.
gollark: (you have to have at least 1 vote to be considered, though)

References

  1. Chen 2014, p. 5.
  2. "Hong Shen (1894—1955)" (in Chinese). Ministry of Culture of China. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 15 May 2015.
  3. Ye & Zhu 2012, p. 75.
  4. East Asian Studies Studies Center, ICS Performance: "The Wedded Husband" November 2103 (Accessed June 10, 2015)
  5. “Wedded Husband” married Chinese culture with English language at OSU 31 January 2014
  6. Cody 2007, p. 624.
  7. Huang 2014, p. 91.
  8. Ye & Zhu 2012, p. 76.
  9. Eberstein 1989, p. 132.

Bibliography

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