Cui Wei (actor) explained

Cui Wei
Native Name:崔嵬
Birth Name:Cui Jingwen
Birth Date:14 October 1912
Birth Place:Zhucheng, Shandong Providence, China

Cui Wei (; 14 October 1912 – 7 February 1979), born Cui Jingwen, was a Chinese film director and actor. In 1962, Cui won the Hundred Flowers Award for Best Actor as Zhu Laogong in Keep Red Flag Flying (1960).[1]

Early life

Cui Jingwen was born on 14 October, 1912 into a poor peasant family. He started working at the age of twelve. Cui was able to attend a school in Qingdao due to the help of a relative but was expelled due to his Communist political activities.[2]

In 1930, having briefly studied scriptwriting at Shandong Provincial Experimental Theatre, he organized the Seagull Theatrical Troupe and wrote stage play scripts. In 1932, he joined the League of Left-Wing Dramatists and traveled to the east and north of China, performing in leftist activities to promote patriontism against the Japanese invasion.After studying theatre, Cui moved to Shanghai in 1935 and was a part of the leftist theatre movement.[3] He adapted the play Lay Down Your Whip for street performances.[4]

Career

In 1938, Cui joined the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and taught at the Lu Xun College of Arts in Yan'an. In 1949, he was appointed as director of the Cultural Bureau of the Central and South China District. He was also elected deputy of the Third National People's Congress, member of the 5th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultive Conference, and the China Federation of Literature and Art Circles.

In 1954, Cui made his acting debut as the male lead in The Rebels (1955). In 1955, he quit his job at the CCP to join Beijing Film Studio and starred and multiple other films such as The Spirit of the Sea (1957), New Story of an Old Soldier (1959), and Keep Red Flag Flying (1960). For his performance in the latter, he won Best Actor at the 1st Hundred Flowers Awards.He also directed and co-directed films such as Song of Youth (1959), an adaptation from Yang Mo's novel of the same name, Zhang Ga, a Boy Soldier (1963), a children's film,[5] and Women Warriors of the Yang Family (1960), which was an adaptation of a traditional opera.

In 1966, Cui was repeatedly subjected to censorship and, in 1968, was imprisoned and sent to reform through labor. He was released in 1972.[6]

Death

Cui died on 7 February, 1979, of liver cancer.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Chan, Jessica Ka Yee . Chinese Revolutionary Cinema: Propaganda, Aesthetics and Internationalism 1949–1966 . 21 January 2019 . . 9781786734341 . 123 . en.
  2. Book: Tan, Ye . Historical Dictionary of Chinese Cinema . Yun . Zhu . 4 October 2012 . . 9780810879133 . 40 . en.
  3. Book: Xiao, Zhiwei . Encyclopedia of Chinese Film . Zhang . Yingjin . 1998 . . 9781134745548 . 2002 . 133 . en.
  4. Book: Song, Yuwu . Biographical Dictionary of the People's Republic of China . 10 January 2014 . . 9781476602981 . 52 . en.
  5. Book: Pickowicz, Paul G. . China on Film: A Century of Exploration, Confrontation, and Controversy . 2013 . . 9781442211797 . 232 . en.
  6. News: Cui Wei is an actor, director and screenwriter. He has directed "Xiao Bing Zhang Ga" and "Song of Youth" . 30 March 2024 . INF News.