Pai Bing-bing | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Birth Name: | Pai Yueh-o (白月娥) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Birth Date: | 1955 5, df=y | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Birth Place: | Keelung, Taiwan | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Occupation: | Singer, actress, media personality, social activist | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Years Active: | 1973–present | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Children: | Pai Hsiao-yen | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Pai Hsueh-hua (born 17 May 1955), born Pai Yueh-o, better known by her stage name Pai Bing-bing (also spelled Pai Ping-ping), is a Taiwanese singer, actress, media personality and social activist.
Born to an impoverished family in Keelung, Pai dropped out of formal education in her teenage years. In 1973, she won a prize in a singing contest held by Taiwan Television and following this success she pursued a career in the local entertainment business. In 1975, she moved to Japan to study singing and acting. At this time she had a relationship with Japanese comics writer Ikki Kajiwara and they later married. Their daughter Pai Hsiao-yen was born in 1980 but their marriage was quickly dissolved the next year after Kajiwara engaged in an extramarital affair and committed domestic violence. Pai Bing-bing had to return to Taiwan and raised Hsiao-yen as a single mother. Since mid-1980s, Pai has been gaining popularity for her bantering style, becoming one of the best-known Taiwanese entertainers. Richard Lloyd-Parry of The Independent described Pai as the "Cilla Black of Taiwan".[1] Besides her entertainment career, Pai also had significant investments in local catering service industry.
In 1997, Pai Hsiao-yen, then 16 years old, was kidnapped, raped, tortured and murdered. This event subsequently made the elder Pai into a social activist to advocate the use of death penalty; Pai founded the Swallow Foundation and chaired it to date to advocate capital punishment as well as provide legal support to local crime victims. Lloyd-Parry described the attention around the murder of Pai's daughter as giving Pai "a greater, though more terrible, fame than she had as an entertainer."[1] In 2010, in the wake of the global anti-capital punishment movement, Pai successfully held a protest against former Minister of Justice Wang Ching-feng, resulting in Wang's resignation and the resumption of executions in Taiwan.[2]
Year | English title | Original title | Role | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1978 | Karate Wars | カラテ大戦争 | Chen Ling-lan | ||
1983 | Chinese Magic | 中國法術 | |||
1990 | The Hilarious Army | 大笑兵團 | |||
鬼出嫁 | Hua | ||||
Seventh Moon | 七月鬼門開 | Bing-bing | |||
1992 | Kung-Fu Kids | 沒大沒小 | Nanny Gu | ||
1994 | Lonely Hearts Club | 寂寞芳心俱樂部 | Chen Chunnu | ||
1997 | Yours and Mine | 我的神經病 | |||
2010 | Comedy Makes You Cry | 拍賣春天 | Lingling | ||
2016 | Like Life | 人生按個讚 | Hsu Chuan-chen | also co-writer, supervising producer |
Year | English title | Chinese title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1994 | The Seven Heroes and Five Gallants | 七俠五義 | Gu Atao | |
2006 | Emerald on the Roof | 屋顶上的绿宝石 | Fang Min | |
2007 | Love at First Fight | 武十郎 | Lei Laohu | |
I Shall Succeed | 我一定要成功 | Chen Suchun |