Tuesday 18 October 2016

ZHOU XUN CHINESE SUCCESSFUL ACTRESS BORN 1974 OCTOBER 18

ZHOU XUN CHINESE SUCCESSFUL ACTRESS
BORN 1974 OCTOBER 18


ZHOU XUN WITHOUT MAKE UP


Zhou Xun (born October 18, 1974) is a Chinese actress and singer. She gained international fame for her earlier roles in Suzhou River (2000) and Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (2002).
Zhou Xun
周迅 Zhou Xun.jpg
Zhou at the MTV Movie Awards in Beijing2002.
Chinese name
PinyinZhōu Xùn (Mandarin)
JyutpingZau1 Seon3 (Cantonese)
BornOctober 18, 1974 (age 42)
QuzhouZhejiang
Other name(s)Zhou Gongzi (周公子, "Young Gentleman Zhou")[1]
OccupationActress, singer, model
Voice type(s)Lyric Contralto
Years active1991–present
Spouse(s)Archie Kao (m. 2014)
ParentsZhou Tianning (father)
Chen Yiqin (mother)

Zhou is widely considered to be the most critically acclaimed Chinese film actress, and has received critical acclaim for her many works; She has won Best Actress honors from Asian Film Awards, Beijing College Student Film Festival, Chinese Director's Association Awards, Chinese Film Media Awards,



 Golden Bauhinia Awards, Golden Horse Awards, Golden Rooster Awards, Hong Kong Film Awards, Hong Kong Film Critics Society Awards, Hundred Flowers Awards and Shanghai Film Critics Awards; as well as the French award-giving body Festival du Film de Paris. She is regarded as one of the Four Dan Actresses of China.

Early life[edit]
Zhou was born to a middle-class family in Quzhou, Zhejiang. Her father, Zhou Tianning (周天宁), was a local film projectionist, and her mother, Chen Yiqin (陈以琴), was a salesperson at a department store. She had her schooling in Quzhou No.1 Middle School. After she graduated,Zhou enrolled at the Zhejiang Arts Institute to further her interest in dramatic arts, against the wishes of her parents, who wanted her to graduate from a university. She was handpicked for a role in the film Strange Tales Amongst Old and Desolate Tombs during her teenage years in school.

Acting career[edit]
1995 - 2004[edit]
Zhou debuted in the comedy movie The Pampered Wife. The same year, she auditioned for a minor role in Chen Kaige's Temptress Moon and was praised for her acting skills. Chen Kaige then invited her to star in his film The Emperor and the Assassin, where she played a blind girl.

In 2000, Zhou starred in historical drama Palace of Desire as the young Princess Taiping, and won the Most Popular Actress Award at the 18th China Golden Eagle TV Art Festival.

Zhou's rise to fame came in 2000, when she starred in Lou Ye's Suzhou River. In the film, she plays two different women, and won the Best Actress award at the 15th Festival du Film de Paris. She was named as one of the Four Dan Actresses alongside Zhang Ziyi, Zhao Wei and Xu Jinglei.

In 2001, Zhou starred in Hollywood Hong Kong, where she performed all her lines in Cantonese. She was nominated at the Hong Kong Film Awards and Golden Horse Awards for Best Actress.

She then starred in Zhao Ningjing's directorial debut A Pinwheel Without Wind, which won her the Hundred Flowers Awards for Best Actress.

Following Suzhou River in 2000, Zhou once again achieved international recognition when she starred in the Franco-Chinese romance drama film Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (2002). The same year, Zhou starred in the popular series Ju Zi Hong Le, and was named as one of the Top 10 Actors of the year.

In 2003, Zhou starred as Huang Rong in the 2003 television series The Legend of the Condor Heroes, reuniting her with Kaixin Jiuhao television co-star Li Yapeng, who played Guo Jing. The series was one of the most watched ones in mainland China in that year.[citation needed] The series was also broadcast in Japan, where it became very popular, and raised Zhou's profile there.

From 2004 to 2005, Zhou starred in a couple of films, namely Baobei in Love, Beauty Remains and A West Lake Moment. She won the Chinese Director's Association Awards for Best Actress for her performance in Baobei in Love.

2005 - 2010[edit]

Zhou made her foray into the Hong Kong film industry in 2005, starring in Peter Chan's musical film Perhaps Love, which represented Hong Kong at the 2006 Academy Awards and entered the Top 5. Zhou was awarded Best Actress honors at numerous prestigious award ceremonies for her performance, including the Hong Kong Film Awards, 



Hong Kong Film Critic's Society Awards, Golden Bauhinia Awards, Golden Horse Awards, Beijing Student Film Festival and Hangzhou Student Film Festival for her performance. Zhou also sang the theme song of the movie with Takeshi Kaneshiro, titled "Shi Zi Jie Tou"; it was named as the "Best Original Film Song" at the 43rd Golden Horse Awards.

In 2006, Zhou signed on with Huayi Brothers, and starred in Feng Xiaogang's wuxia film The Banquet. She won the Golden Bauhinia Awards and Hong Kong Film Awards for Best Supporting Actress.

Zhou's next project was Susie Au's film Ming Ming (2007), which won high praise at the 2006 Pusan International Film Festival held in South Korea. At the premiere of the film, she released her new music video, featuring the theme song of Ming Ming.[2][3]

In 2008, Zhou starred in Cao Baoping's romantic thriller The Equation of Love and Death as a taxicab driver on the lookout for her missing boyfriend.[4][5] Despite achieving lackluster results,

 Zhou was highly praised. Reviews by Western critics cite Zhou's performance as Li Mi as the redeeming point of the movie and that "...the film ultimately belonged to Zhou Xun." Zhou went on to receive 5 different Best Actress awards at the Asian Film Awards, Golden Rooster Awards, Chinese Film Media Awards, Shanghai Film Critics Awards and Beijing Student Film Festival.

She then appeared in Gordon Chan's Painted Skin, a remake of a classic supernatural thriller of the same title. The film was a box office and critic success. Zhou played a fox spirit who disguises herself as a human.

In 2009, Zhou starred in critically acclaimed espionage spy thriller The Message. The same year, she was named the Star of the Year at the GSCA Asian Film Expo. Asia-Pacific Producers Network (APN) also honored her as the Asian Star of the Year for her exemplary box office achievements, with her films Pained Skin and The Message achieving commercial success. Zhou also represented Asia to become the cover model for French magazine Le Point, and received an interview from CNN who named her as one of the "Top 25 Actors" of the World.

In 2010, Zhou was cast in the 3D wuxia film Flying Swords of Dragon Gate. The film was released in 2011 and became the second highest grossing local production of the year.

As part of the 60th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China, Zhou starred in biographic drama film Confucius (2010) and The Founding of a Party (2011), a patriotic tribute detailing the process of establishing the People's Republic in 1949.





2012 - Present[edit]

In 2012, Zhou made her Hollywood debut in the science fiction film Cloud Atlas, playing multiple roles in the film.[6]

Zhou then starred in Painted Skin: The Resurrection, the sequel to the 2008 film Painted Skin, reprising her role as Xiao Wei. The film grossed over 700 million yuan to become the highest grossing Chinese film of all-time, before being beaten by Lost in Thailand. Zhou received critical acclaim for her performance, and she was nominated at the Chinese Director's Association Awards for Best Actress.

The same year, Zhou starred in two Hong Kong films; the action-fantasy comedy The Great Magician and thriller The Silent War alongside Tony Leung Chiu-wai. She was nominated at the Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actress for both films, but did not win any awards.

In 2014, Zhou starred in two films Overheard 3 and Women Who Flirt, both of which are solid mid-level hits. She received the French Cultural Order at the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres Awards.

In October 2014, Zhou made her highly anticipated return to television after 10 years in Red Sorghum, based on Nobel prize laureate Mo Yan's 1986/1987 novel of the same name. The series was broadcast on 4 major broadcasting channels - CCTV, SDTV, Zhejiang TV and SMG; and achieved first place in ratings. Online views of the show exceeded 2.5 billion views in 3 weeks. Zhou won the Best Actress Award at Asian Television Award and Shanghai TV Festival for her performance.[7]

In 2016, Zhou began filming for award-winning director Ann Hui's new film The Great Escape, in which she would star together with Wallace Huo as a couple who has to give up their romance due to war. She is then cast in legal suspense film Remain Silent alongside Francis Ng and Zu Feng.




In August 2016, Zhou began filming for the historical costume drama Ruyi's Royal Love in the Palace, the sequel to the 2012 hit drama The Legend of Zhen Huan. She would star as the titular character Ruyi.

Singing career[edit]
Apart from her acting career, Zhou has also participated in the soundtracks of films, such as Perhaps Love, Ming Ming and Baobei In Love. She has also released two solo albums, Summer (2003) and Come Across (2005).

Environmental advocate[edit]

Zhou at the Shanghai International Film Festival in 2007


Zhou Xun is the 2010 Laureate of United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)'s Champions of the Earth (Inspiration & Action). She was the first entertainer in the world to receive this honour.

Zhou Xun and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) jointly runs a campaign 'Our Part', which promotes ‘tips for green living’.

She was named a UNDP Goodwill Ambassador for China in 2008 with a special focus of promoting environmental sustainability.

She was also the Green Ambassador for the 2010 World Expo in Shanghai.[8]

Fashion[edit]

Since 2011, Zhou was formally announced as a new ambassador for Chanel. Chanel chief designer Karl Lagerfeld noted Zhou Xun for her strong fashion sense, describing the actress as "a synthesis of young Coco Chanel and Ballet Troupe Zizi Jeanmaire."[9]

Personal life[edit]

Zhou Xun married American actor Archie Kao on July 16, 2014 on stage after a charity event in Hangzhou, China.[10]




Born October 18, 1974 in Quzhou, Zhejiang, China
Height 5' 3½" (1.61 m)
Mini Bio (1)
Zhou Xun is an internationally acclaimed Chinese actress and singer.

She caught international attention through her roles in Lou Ye's Suzhou River in 2000 and Dai Sijie's film adaption of the book of same name Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress in 2002. In 2003, she starred in the television remake of Jinyong's novel The Legend of the Condor Heroes as "Huang Rong" with actor Li Yapeng. Zhou then successfully entered the Hong Kong film market in Peter Chan's Perhaps Love in 2005. This role gained her the Best Actress award in the Hong Kong Film Awards. Aside from acting, she has also released solo albums in 2003 titled "Summer" and in 2005 "Come Across", and sang for "Baober In Love," "Xin Bian Guo Le Xi San Meng You Xian Jing," and "Perhaps Love" motion picture soundtracks.
- IMDb Mini Biography By: Ron

Spouse (1)
Archie Kao (16 July 2014 - present)
Trivia (6)

Zhou Xun is the first and only actress in history to have won all three top acting prizes of Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. She bagged Best Actress awards at Hong Kong Film Awards and Taiwan's Golden Horse Awards for Perhaps Love (2005) in 2006. In 2009, Zhou set the historical record with her Best Actress win at China's Golden Rooster Awards for The Equation of Love and Death (2008).
For her continuous effort to push for environmental awareness in China from the ground up, Zhou Xun was awarded with UNEP's Champion of the Earth award in 2010, the first entertainer in the world to receive this honor.


Aside from the critical acclaim, Zhou Xun is also the most commercially successful actress in the history of Chinese cinema, by total box office grosses. Her recent film Painted Skin: The Resurrection (2012) is the highest grossing domestic production of all time, among her other top grossing films.
As an advocate for low carbon lifestyles, every year Zhou Xun purchases hundreds of saplings and trees to be planted in Inner Mongolia, as a way to compensate for her yearly carbon consumption.
After watching a documentary series about autistic children, Zhou Xun started Autism Care Week on April 31, 2011, to shed a light on a subject long neglected in the Chinese media.

Beijing, China [March 2008]

Filmography[edit]

Film[edit]

YearTitleChinese TitleRoleNotes
1991Old Grave古墓荒斋 !! Jiao Na
1993Story of Rouge Chamber胭楼记Zheng Yue'e
1995The Pampered Wife小娇妻Yangyang
Nü'er Hong女儿红Hua Dao
1996Temptress Moon风月Little dance girl
1998My Rice Noodle Shop花桥荣记Xie Yan
1999The Emperor and the Assassin荊軻刺秦王Blind girl
2000Suzhou River苏州河Mei Mei / Mou DanFestival du Film de Paris for Best Actress
If I Lose You如果没有爱Xun
2001Beijing Bicycle十七岁的单车Hong Qin
Hollywood Hong Kong香港有个好莱坞Hung Hung/Tong TongNominated - Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Golden Horse Awards for Best Actress
2002A Pinwheel Without Wind烟雨红颜Zhao NingjingHundred Flower Awards for Best Actress
Beijing Student Film Festival for Top Ten Favorite Actress
Where Have All the Flowers Gone那时花开Huan Zi
Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress巴尔扎克和小裁缝Little seamstress
2004Baobei in Love恋爱中的宝贝Bao BeiChinese Director's Association Awards for Best Actress
2005A West Lake Moment鸳鸯蝴蝶Xiao Yu
Beauty Remains美人依旧Xiao Fei
Stolen Life生死劫Yan Ni
Perhaps Love如果·爱Sun NaGolden Horse Award for Best Actress
Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actress
Hong Kong Film Critics Society Awards for Best Actress
Golden Bauhinia Awards for Best Actress
Beijing Student Film Festival for Best Actress
Hangzhou Student Film Festival for Best Actress
2006The Banquet夜宴QingnüHong Kong Film Award for Best Supporting Actress
Golden Bauhinia Awards for Best Supporting Actress
Nominated - Golden Horse Awards for Best Original Film Song
Nominated - Hong Kong Film Critics Society Awards for Best Actress
2007Ming Ming明明Mingming / Nana
2008The Equation of Love and Death李米的猜想Li MiAsian Film Awards for Best Actress
Golden Rooster Awards for Best Actress
Chinese Film Media Awards for Best Actress
Shanghai Film Critics Awards for Best Actress
Beijing Student Film Festival for Best Actress
Painted Skin画皮Xiao WeiNominated - Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Hundred Flowers Awards for Best Actress
Nominated - Hong Kong Film Critics Society Awards for Best Actress
All About Women女人不坏Ou Fanfan
2009The Message风声Gu XiaomengNominated - Golden Horse Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Chinese Film Media Awards for Best Actress
Nominated - Asia Film Critics Society Awards for Best Actress
2010Confucius孔子Nanzi
True Legend苏乞儿Yuan Ying
2011The Founding of a Party建党伟业Wang Huiwu
The Flying Swords of Dragon Gate龙门飞甲JadeNominated - Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actress
Nominated - Hong Kong Film Critics Society Awards for Best Actress
Nominated - Hundred Flowers Awards for Best Actress
Nominated - Beijing Student Film Festival for Best Actress
2012The Great Magician大魔术师Liu YinNominated - Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actress
Painted Skin: The Resurrection画皮IIXiao Wei[11]Nominated - Chinese Director's Association Awards for Best Actress
The Silent War听风者Zhang XueningNominated - Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actress
Cloud Atlas云图Talbot/Hotel Manager
Yoona~939
Rose
2014Overheard 3窃听风云3Ruan YuehuaNominated - Hong Kong Film Critics Society Award for Best Actress
Women Who Flirt撒娇女人最好命Zhang Hui
Meet Miss Anxiety我的早更女友Qi Jia
2016Remain Silent保持沉默Duan Mulan
2017The Great Escape明月几时有Fang Gu

Television[edit]


YearTitleChinese TitleRoleNotes
1997Hong Chu Fang红处方Shen Pei
1998Jingtan Fengyun警坛风云Lin Peipei
1999Lüyi Hongniang绿衣红娘Fan Xiaoxuan
2000Jinqian Bense金钱本色Mandy
Kaixin Jiuhao开心就好Tan Gege
Palace of Desireyoung Princess Taiping
April Rhapsody人间四月天Lin Huiyin
The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom太平天国Shi Yiyang
Xin Wang心网Na Niu
Yuanlai Yijiaren缘来一家人Tao Tao
2001Love Story in Shanghai像雾像雨又像风Du Xinyu
2002Ripening Orange橘子红了Xiu He
2003The Legend of the Condor Heroes射雕英雄传Huang Rong
Beach海滩A'Tong
Business Family买办之家Su Boyuan/Xia He
2014Red Sorghum红高粱Jiu'er/Cang JiulianAsian Television Award for Best Actress
Shanghai TV Festival for Best Actress
2017Ruyi's Royal Love in the Palace如懿传Ulanara·Ruyi

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