Golden Rooster Award For Lifetime Achievement
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Golden Rooster Award For Lifetime Achievement
The Lifetime Achievement Award is a Golden Rooster Award that has been given since 2005 for an achievement that has made an outstanding contribution to cinema. There is no annual award category. From 2005, the Golden Rooster Awards and Hundred Flowers Awards take place on alternate years, but the Golden Rooster Award for Lifetime Achievement Award is still made annually. Results This table displays the individuals who received the Lifetime Achievement Award for their contributions to film. External links 艺术家于洋获金鸡奖终身成就奖 全场起立鼓掌祝贺M1905 17 October 2010 金鸡百花闭幕式-于蓝获金鸡奖终身成就奖Sina.com 17 October 2009 163.com 13 September 2008 {{Golden Rooster Award Lifetime Achievement Award Lifetime Achievement Achievement Award Lifetime achievement awards ...
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Golden Rooster Awards
The Golden Rooster Awards () are film awards given in mainland China. The awards were originally given annually, beginning in 1981. The name of the award came from the year of the Rooster in 1981. Award recipients receive a statuette in the shape of a golden rooster, and are selected by a jury of filmmakers, film experts, and film historians. The awards are the Chinese equivalent to the American Academy Awards. Originally, Golden Roosters were only available to mainland Chinese nominees, but in 2005, the awards opened up the acting categories to actors from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and elsewhere in an effort to compete with Taiwan's Golden Horse Awards. Films in the past two years are eligible for the Golden Rooster awards since 2007. The Golden Rooster and Hundred Flowers Awards have taken place on alternate years since 2005, with the Golden Rooster taking place on odd years. In 1992, the Golden Rooster and the Hundred Flowers Awards were combined into a single national festival. Aw ...
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Wang Weiyi (director)
Wang Weiyi can refer to: * Wang Weiyi (physician) (王惟一, 987-1067), Chinese physician * Wang Weiyi (filmmaker) (王为一, 1912—2013), Chinese film director and screenwriter * Wang Weiyi (biathlete) (born 1967), Chinese biathlete * Wang Weiyi (sport shooter) (王炜一, born 1974), Chinese sport shooter * Wang Weiyi (volleyball) Wang Weiyi can refer to: * Wang Weiyi (physician) (王惟一, 987-1067), Chinese physician * Wang Weiyi (filmmaker) (王为一, 1912—2013), Chinese film director and screenwriter * Wang Weiyi (biathlete) (born 1967), Chinese biathlete * Wang Weiy ...
(born 1995), Chinese volleyball player {{hndis, Wang, Weiyi ...
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Yan Jizhou
Yan Jizhou (; August 1917 – 21 June 2018) was a Chinese film director. Having fought on the frontline during the Chinese Civil War, he made popular war films in the 1950s and 1960s including ''Struggles in an Ancient City'', ''Tiger Heroes'', ''Heroes at Sea'', and ''Two Good Brothers'', which have come to be regarded as "red classic films". He won the Golden Rooster Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2012 and the Outstanding Contribution Award at the 2017 China Film Director's Guild Awards. Early life and wartime career Yan was born in August 1917 in Changshu, Jiangsu Province, and moved to nearby Shanghai in his youth to find work. After the city fell to Japanese occupation following the Battle of Shanghai, he went to the Communist base in Yan'an in 1938. He received military training at the Counter-Japanese Military and Political University, but was assigned to work in the army's drama troupe after graduation. During the Chinese Civil War, Yan, armed with musical instru ...
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Xiang Junshu
Xiang or Hsiang may refer to: *Xiang (place), the site of Hong Xiuquan's destruction of a Chinese idol early in the Taiping Rebellion *Xiang (surname), three unrelated surnames: Chinese: 項 and Chinese: 向 (both ''Xiàng'') and Chinese: 相 (''Xiāng'') *Xiang Chinese, a group of Chinese varieties spoken in Hunan *Xiang Island (simplified Chinese: 响沙; traditional Chinese: 響沙; pinyin: Xiǎngshā), a former island in the Yangtze estuary now forming part of Chongming Island in Shanghai *Xiang River, river in South China *Hunan, abbreviated in Chinese as 湘 (''Xiāng''), a province of China *Xiang, capital of the Shang dynasty during the reign of He Dan Jia People with the name Xiang *Half-brother of legendary Chinese leader Emperor Shun *Xiang of Xia (3rd millennium BC), fifth ruler of the semi-legendary Xia dynasty *Duke Xiang of Song (died 637 BC), a ruler of Sòng in the Spring and Autumn period *Duke Xiang of Jin (died 621 BC), a ruler of Jin *King Xiang of Zhou (died 6 ...
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Fu Zhengyi
Fu Zhengyi (; 1925 – 15 November 2019) was a Chinese film editor. He edited more than 200 films and over 400 television shows or episodes. He won the inaugural Golden Rooster Award for Best Editor in 1982 and the Golden Rooster Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2011. Life and career Fu was born in 1925 in Fujiawan, Huanggang, Hubei, Republic of China. His father died when he was three, and he lived on the meagre income of his mother, a weaver. During the Second Sino-Japanese War, he fled Hubei for the wartime capital Chongqing, where he studied at a school for refugee children in Geleshan. In 1940, Fu entered China Film Studio as an apprentice, working under Wu Tingfang 邬廷芳, Qian Xiaozhang 钱筱璋, and Situ Huimin. After the end of World War II, Fu joined the Kunlun Film Studio in Shanghai, where he participated in the editing of many classical films, including ''The Spring River Flows East'', ''Eight Thousand Li of Cloud and Moon (film), Eight Thousand Li of Cloud an ...
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Tian Hua
Tian Hua (born 14 December 1928) is a Chinese actress most famous for her role of Xi Er in the 1950 film ''The White-haired Girl''. Personal life In 1949, Tian married Su Fan, who was one of the stage designer of PRC founding ceremony. Tian is the best friend with actress Zhao Lirong Zhao Lirong (March 11, 1928 – July 17, 2000) was a Chinese singer and film actress. Biography Before she became involved in the film industry, Zhao Lirong was a famous Pingju supporting actress on the stage. From the 1980s, Zhao started .... In 2015, a website reported that Tian's husband and son suffered from cancer, and ran out of money for medical treatment.田华不接受捐款背后,与癌症儿子的含泪生死诀别
Sohu.com September 26, 2015


Selected filmography


Refer ...
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Yu Lan
Yu Lan (; 3 June 1921 – 28 June 2020) was a Chinese film actress. In 1961, Yu won the award for Best Actress at the 2nd Moscow International Film Festival for her performance in ''A Revolutionary Family''. Her youngest son is Chinese director and Beijing Film Academy professor Tian Zhuangzhuang. Life Yu was born 1921 in Xiuyan, Liaoning as Yu Peiwen (). She entered Counter-Japanese Military and Political University in 1938 and worked as an actress at a company affiliated with Luxun Academy of Arts after 1940. She died in Beijing } Beijing ( ; ; ), alternatively romanized as Peking ( ), is the capital of the People's Republic of China. It is the center of power and development of the country. Beijing is the world's most populous national capital city, with over 21 ... on 28 June 2020, aged 99. Filmography References External links {{DEFAULTSORT:Yu, Lan 1921 births 2020 deaths Actresses from Liaoning People from Anshan Chinese film actresses Counter ...
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Qin Yi
Qin Yi (; 4 February 1922 – 9 May 2022) was a Chinese actress. She gained fame for her stage performances in the war-time capital Chongqing during the Second Sino-Japanese War. After the war, she became one of China's most popular film actresses throughout the 1950s and the 1960s, and was recognised as one of the country's top four actresses. Premier Zhou Enlai called her the "most beautiful woman in China". Early life and theatre career Qin Yi was born on 4 February 1922 to a wealthy Shanghai family. Her name at birth was Qin Dehe (). She was one of the many daughters in the family. She enjoyed watching movies and Ruan Lingyu (1910–1935) was her favourite actress. After the Japanese invasion of China in 1937, Qin fled to Wuhan and became active in anti-Japanese activities. When Wuhan also fell to the Japanese, she fled to the war-time capital Chongqing in 1938, and received actor training at the China Movie Studio. She joined several theatre groups, and acted in dozens of ...
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Chen Qiang (actor)
Chen Qiang (; 1918 – 26 June 2012) was a Chinese film and stage actor and comedian best known for his performances as villains/antagonists in '' The Red Detachment of Women'', ''The White Haired Girl'' and ''Devils on the Doorstep''. Chen began his career as an actor in 1947 and has played more than 40 different characters since then. His second son, Chen Peisi, is also a well-known actor and comedian. Biography Chen was born Chen Qingsan () to a poor family in Xujiahe Township of Ningjin County, in Hebei province. When he was a child, he relocated to Taiyuan, Shanxi with his parents. In 1936, he attended Taiyuan Youth Theatre and Xinsheng Theatre; both were progressive groups organized by the Communist Party of China. In 1938, he went to Yan'an to study acting at Lu Xun Academy of Arts. After graduating in 1939 he joined the Song and Dance Troupe of Shanxi-Chahaer-Hebei Border Region. Chen joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1942, and made his comedy debut in ''The Second ...
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Zhang Jian (screenwriter)
Zhang Jian may refer to: Name * Zhang Jian (fencer) (born 1962), Chinese fencer * Zhang Jian (football) (born 1965/66), Chinese football administrator * Zhang Jian (businessman) (1853–1926), courtesy name Jizhi, Chinese entrepreneur, politician and educationist * Zhang Jian (runner) (born 1976), Chinese middle distance runner * Zhang Jian (sport shooter) (born 1985), Chinese sport shooter * Zhang Jian (Tang dynasty) (died 651), Tang Dynasty noble * Zhang Jian (footballer) (born 1989), Chinese footballer * Zhang Jian (activist) (1970–2019), Chinese activist Other * Chinese oceanographic research ship Zhang Jian, Chinese oceanographic research ship References * Changchien Changchien () is a Chinese-language surname. It originated near Kaohsiung as a combination of the surnames Zhang and Jian from a uxorilocal, matrilocal residence marriage custom in Fujian, China, and now exists in Taiwan and diaspora communities. ...
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Yuan Naichen
Yuan may refer to: Currency * Yuan (currency), the basic unit of currency in historic and contemporary mainland China and Taiwan **Renminbi, the current currency used in mainland China, whose basic unit is yuan ** New Taiwan dollar, the current currency used in Taiwan, whose basic unit is yuán in Mandarin ** Manchukuo yuan, the unit of currency that was used in the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo Governmental organ * "Government branch" or "Court" (), the Chinese name for a kind of executive institution. Government of Taiwan * Control Yuan * Examination Yuan * Executive Yuan * Judicial Yuan * Legislative Yuan Government of Imperial China * Xuanzheng Yuan, or Bureau of Buddhist and Tibetan Affairs during the Yuan dynasty * Lifan Yuan during the Qing dynasty Dynasties * Yuan dynasty (元朝), a dynasty of China ruled by the Mongol Borjigin clan ** Northern Yuan dynasty (北元), the Yuan dynasty's successor state in northern China and the Mongolian Plateau People and langu ...
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Zhang Ruifang
Zhang Ruifang (15 June 1918 – 28 June 2012) was a Chinese film and theatre actress. Life Zhang was born on 15 June 1918 in Baoding in Hebei Province. She studied painting in the Western style at Beiping's National Arts School. She completed the course in 1935. After joining the Communist Party in 1937 she joined the Chinese Drama Society and after she completed her course in 1936 she was employed on the stage. During the war with Japan she performed to support the national effort to resist the Japanese invasion.Zhang Ruifang
China.org.cn, Retrieved 14 June 2016
During the war she took the lead in her first film. The director Sun Yu cast her as a double agent in the film ''Baptism of Fire''. By 1943 she was married for the secon ...
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