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Martial arts star reveals strength at UCLA
screening
By Howard
Ho DAILY BRUIN SENIOR
STAFF hho@media.ucla.edu
During a span of seven years in
the 1960s and 1970s, actor Cheng Pei-pei made twenty-some films that
redefined the Chinese martial arts film, starting with King Hu's
1966 film "Come Drink With Me."
"I did a lot of movies but
no one recognizes them (as much as) 'Come Drink With Me,'" Cheng
said. "Today I'm still (making movies), I think, because of King."
Cheng made "Come Drink" when she was 19, and the film
propelled her into stardom. Last Saturday she appeared in person for
a screening of "Come Drink" along with another film in which she
plays the titular character, "Golden Swallow."
"I watched
your film in Hong Kong when I was young," said a fan in the audience
during the Q&A session at the screening. "For a whole generation
of girls in that day in age, it was incredible to see a woman being
a hero like that. It really changed our thinking of what a woman
should be."
Cheng continues to exemplify a strong woman. She
took time off from starring in films to produce four children, many
of whom are now emerging film stars on their own. In fact, Cheng
hopes to make a sequel to "Come Drink," which will star her as the
aging heroine with her daughters Marsha and Eugenia Yuan.
"I'm still the Golden Swallow," Cheng said in an interview
in Melnitz. "King Hu is my teacher so I want to do something to
remember him."
Cheng also is involved with a possible remake
of Zhang Che's "Golden Swallow," which John Woo wants to direct. Woo
was Che's assistant director, and he later continued Che's style of
making stories about violent male bonding and suffering with
peripheral female characters.
"Zhang Che always thought that
women should be feminine," Cheng said. "Personally, I was very upset
about that. He didn't want me to do a lot of parts, because he
thought it was too strong."
Cheng is most recently known to
mass audiences from Ang Lee's "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon."
According to Cheng, she was cast as the villainous Jade Fox early
on.
"When Ang Lee wanted to make a martial arts movie, he
wanted to have three generations of martial arts women together,"
Cheng said. "That's why he has me, Michelle Yeoh, and the new
generation, Zhang Ziyi."
Cheng actually grew up in Shanghai,
studying Chinese dance and ballet. When she moved to Hong Kong, she
joined the dance groups there who were often cast in martial arts
movies for their physical talents. Cheng signed a contract with the
Shaw Bros. film studio in a system similar to 1930s MGM.
Today she continues to teach dance. Cheng is also a
spokesperson for Celestial Pictures, which purchased the 760-film
catalog of the Shaw Bros., which produced "Come Drink" and "Golden
Swallow."
If Bruce Lee was the king of the martial arts film
(Cheng still considers him to be the best actor in the genre), then
Cheng is certainly the queen.
Sometimes that is too much for
the opposite sex to handle.
"Men don't like heroic women,"
Cheng said. "That's why I don't have a husband
anymore."
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