From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This is a Chinese name; the family name
is Jiang.
| Jiang Wen |

Jiang Wen, March 14, 2008 |
| Born |
January 5, 1963 (1963-01-05) (age 47)
Tangshan, Hebei, China |
| Years active |
1986 - present |
| Spouse(s) |
Sandrine Chenivisse
Zhou Yun |
|
|
Jiang Wen (Chinese: 姜文; pinyin: Jiāng Wén; born January 5,
1963) is a Chinese film actor and director. As a director, he is sometimes
grouped with the "sixth generation" that emerged in the 1990s.[1] He is
also well known internationally as an actor, such as the male lead
opposite Gong Li in fifth
generation director Zhang Yimou's debut Red Sorghum
(1986).
He has a younger brother who is also an actor, Jiang Wu.
Life and
career
Born in Tangshan, Hebei province into an army family,
Jiang Wen shifted to Beijing
at the age of 6. In 1980, he entered China's foremost acting
school, the Central Academy of Drama,
graduating in 1984. That same year he started acting both on the
stage (with the China Youth Theater) and in films.
After appearing in many television serials and films, Jiang became
renowned in China for his starring role in the 1992 TV series
Beijingers in New York, which made him one of the
best-loved actors of his generation. In addition to these he also
starred in Hibiscus Town (1984, directed by Xie Jin), Black Snow
(1990, directed by Xie Fei), The
Emperor's Shadow (1996, directed by Zhou Xiaowen) and
The Soong Sisters (1997).
Other than Red
Sorghum, Jiang also collaborated with Zhang Yimou for his
1997 film Keep Cool.
Jiang wrote and directed his first film in 1994, In
the Heat of the Sun, adapted from a novel by Wang Shuo. A tale set in the Cultural
Revolution, it won for its young lead actor Xia Yu the Best Actor prize at the Venice
Film Festival and garnered six Golden Horse
Awards in Taiwan. Jiang's
second feature, Devils on the Doorstep, set
during the Japanese
occupation of China in the early 1940s, won him the Grand Prix in the 2000 Cannes Film
Festival.[2]
He has acted in many TV series, the
most recent where he portrayed Huang Taiji.
He was married to French actress Sandrine Chenivisse,[3] with
whom he has a daughter. He is now married to Chinese actress Zhou
Yun and the two have a son together.[4]
Filmography
As actor
As
director
As writer
References
External
links