Zhang Zhiyun
Zhang Zhiyun (traditional Chinese: 張織雲; simplified Chinese: 张织云; pinyin: Zhāng Zhīyún, fl. 1923–1953) was a Chinese actress. Born in Panyu County, Guangdong, she moved to Shanghai in her youth. Hired by the Greater China Film Company through a general casting call, she later transferred to Mingxing, with whom she made the commercially successful Lonely Orchid (1926) and was crowned "Movie Queen" in a newspaper poll. She left the film industry after beginning a relationship with Tang Jishan , and when they severed ties she was unable to regain her stardom despite making several films. Zhang moved to Hong Kong in her later years, where she is reported to have died homeless. BiographyEarly lifeZhang was born Zhang Ashan (張阿善; 张阿善) in Panyu County, Guangdong (now part of Guangzhou) in 1904[1] or 1905.[2] She was orphaned at a young age and lived with an adoptive mother.[3] She moved to Shanghai in her youth, where she completed several years of schooling. However, due to a lack of funds she dropped out in her junior secondary years.[1] Film careerIn 1923, Zhang responded to an advertisement from the Greater China Film Company seeking interested women to act in its films. More than ten thousand women submitted their photograph.[1] Initially, Zhang's portrait was not included in the pictures reviewed by Greater China. It was later found that ten photographs, including Zhang's, had been taken by a journalist with the Shen Bao – whose mailbox the company had used – after he deemed them the most beautiful.[3] Zhang was selected from these recovered pictures for the company's upcoming productions, and the theft of her portrait was used to generate hype.[1] Zhang spent two years with Greater China, completing such films as The Human Heart and Valour in War.[1] Zhang signed with the Mingxing Film Company in 1925,[1] making her first appearance in A Sincerely Pitiful Girl. Over the next three years she made seven films for the company, including Lonely Orchid,[4] in which she portrayed the dual role of a lovelorn young woman and the servant whose death is mistaken for hers.[5] The film was one of the most successful Chinese films of the silent era,[6] pulling in a reported 132,300 yuan (equivalent to ¥12,675,000 in 2019) in Shanghai alone.[7] Between August and September 1926, the Shanghai-based newspaper Shen Bao held a reader's choice award for favourite actress; Zhang won the poll, receiving 2,146 ballots and being crowned the newspaper's "Movie Queen".[1] After completing Fallen Plum Blossoms for Mingxing,[8] Zhang left the company for its rival Minxin. For her role in Pure as Ice, she gained audience recognition as a tragedy performer, with the magazine Movie Life (影戲生活; 影戏生活) comparing her to Lillian Gish.[1] Later life and careerIn the mid-1920s, Zhang moved in with Bu Wancang, a cinematographer and director. As Zhang became more famous, the two began to fight, and Zhang – under pressure from her adoptive mother to find a wealthier man – left him by 1927.[9] She later began dating Tang Jishan , a tea merchant, leaving the film industry to spend time with him in the United States.[3] However, the couple separated after Tang began romancing fellow actress Ruan Lingyu.[1] An agreement that Tang would provide her with financial support in case of a separation went unhonoured.[3] Zhang was asked by Zhang Shichuan to return to Mingxing for Lovelorn in 1933.[3] Intended to tell her life's story, the sound film suffered because of Zhang's poor command of Mandarin – the language of dialogue – and was received negatively. She appeared in several further films, including 1935's Fan of Peach Blossoms and 1937's Cantonese-language Proud Daughter of Heaven.[1] She spent time in Hankou, toured Southeast Asia, and lived briefly in Tianjin and Beijing.[7] She ultimately settled in Hong Kong in the 1950s with her husband Zhang Shuping.[1] They had divorced by the end of the decade.[7] Zhang made her final film appearance, a cameo as a beauty pageant panellist alongside Yang Naimei and Wu Suxin, in 1953's Heavenly Beauty.[10] She died in Hong Kong sometime in the mid-1970s,[11] having reportedly spent the last decade of her life living on the streets under her childhood name.[7] In subsequent years, she has received less coverage than contemporary actresses such as Ruan Lingyu and Hu Die.[3] Filmography
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