Hsiung Shih-I Explained

Hsiung Shih-I
Native Name:熊式一
Birth Date:October 14, 1902
Birth Place:Nanchang, China
Other Names:S. I. Hsiung, Xiong Shiyi
Education:Peiping University

Queen Mary College, University of London
Occupation:writer, biographer, translator, academic, playwright
Known For:translating plays: English to Chinese, Chinese to English
Notable Works:Lady Precious Stream
Spouse:Dymia Hsiung

Hsiung Shih-I (; also S. I. Hsiung or Xiong Shiyi; 1902–1991) was a writer, biographer, translator, academic, and playwright in Beijing and London. He was the first Chinese person to direct a West End play, and the founder of Tsing Hua Academy in Hong Kong.

Biography

Hsiung was born in Nanchang on October 14, 1902, and educated at Beijing University (then Peiping University). As a professor and writer in China, Hsiung translated plays by George Bernard Shaw and J.M. Barrie. He also published a successful Chinese translation of The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin. He taught at universities in Beijing and Nanchang as well as Nanyang University in Singapore.

In 1932, he moved to England, studying English literature at Queen Mary College, University of London and translating Chinese plays into English.[1] After the success of Lady Precious Stream in 1934, however, he abandoned his studies.

In 1935, Hsiung's Lady Precious Stream, based on the Chinese folklore Wang Baochuan and Xue Pinggui, was performed at the Little Theatre in John Street, London, by the People's National Theatre, directed by Nancy Price and Hsiung, and ran for 1,000 nights.[2] The play was also later performed on Broadway at the Booth Theatre in New York, produced by Morris Gest.[3] It was adapted for television in 1950.[4]

Hsiung's subsequent works were also successful, but did not match the success of Lady Precious Stream.

Relationships

Hsiung's wife, Dymia Hsiung, was the first Chinese woman in Britain to author a fictionalized autobiography. They shared a flat in Hampstead, north London, with fellow expatriate Chiang Yee, author of The Silent Traveller series.[5] Hsiung’s great-grandson is comedian Ken Cheng.[6]

Legacy

Diana Yeh, a sociologist and social activist, gave the lives of Shih-I and Dymia shared attention in a 2014 biography, The Happy Hsiungs: Performing China and the Struggle for Modernity, published by Hong Kong University Press. It describes the "lost histories" of "two once highly visible, but now largely forgotten Chinese writers in Britain, who sought to represent China and Chineseness to the rest of the world." Yeh took the first phrase of her title from an illustrated article in Good Housekeeping magazine in the 1950s, depicting the couple at home in Oxford. The article formed part of a 2022-2023 British Library exhibition, entitled Chinese and British.[7] [8] [9]

Works

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Book: Godwin, George. Queen Mary College, an adventure in education. Queen Mary College and The Acorn Press. 1939. London. 64.
  2. Episode 8: Artistic pursuits . Chinese in Britain. BBC Radio 4. 9 May 2007 . 7 February 2011.
  3. Book: Hsiung, S.I.. Lady Precious Stream. 3. 9780573611391. 1962. Samuel French.
  4. Web site: Lady Precious Stream (TV movie 1950). IMDB. 2015-01-04.
  5. Web site: Victoria and Albert Museum . Digital Media . The silent traveller: Chiang Yee in Britain 1933-55 . www.vam.ac.uk . 2 July 2019 . 8 August 2012.
  6. Web site: Twitter. 2020-10-07. mobile.twitter.com.
  7. Web site: China Rhyming » Blog Archive » 4 Posts from the Chinese & British Exhibition at the British Library – Dymia Hsiung #2 . 2024-05-29 . en-US.
  8. Web site: 2022 . Chinese and British .
  9. Web site: 2022 . Chinese & British Now Open! .