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Gong Li was born in Shenyang, Liaoning, China, she has appeared in most films directed by Zhang Yimou up till 1995. Gong Li grew up in Jinan, the capital of Shandong Province. In 1985, Gong Li enrolled in the Central Academy of Drama to study acting, and graduated in 1989. She was still a student there when Zhang Yimou chose her in 1987 for the lead role in his first film as a director, Red Sorghum, which was awarded the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival.


Gong Li's Movies DVD

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 2007
Hannibal Rising
Curse Of The Golden Flower

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 2006
Miami Vice
Memoirs of a Geisha

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 2004
Eros
2046

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 2002
Zhou Yu's Train

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 1999
Breaking the Silence
The Emperor and the Assassin

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 1997
Chinese Box

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 1996
Temptress Moon

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 1995
Shanghai Triad

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 1994
The Great Conqueror's Concubine
Dragon Chronicles
To Live

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 1993
Flirting Scholar
Farewell My Concubine

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 1992
Mary from Beijing
The Story of QiuJu
Raise the Red Lantern


Gong Li's Movies DVD in 1991
Back to Shanghai

God of Gamblers II

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 1990
JuDou

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 1989
The Puma Action
A Terracotta Warrior
Mr. Sunshine

Gong Li's Movies DVD in 1987
Red Sorghum

 

Biography of Gong Li

Gong Li was the youngest daughter of an economics professor. She knew from a young age that she wanted to be an actress, and at school she excelled at singing and dancing almost to the exclusion of other subjects. In spite of failing her college exam twice, Gong Li was eventually accepted to the Beijing Central College of Drama in 1985. At that time, Chinese cinema was experiencing a renaissance after the tumult of Mao Zedong's Cultural Revolution. Chen Kaige's Yellow Earth (1984) had just taken the Hong Kong International Film Festival by storm, heralding the rise of the Fifth Generation of filmmakers. One of these young directors was Zhang, the cinematographer for Yellow Earth, who cast Gong in his debut project, Red Sorghum (1987). Immediately a critical and commercial success both abroad and at home, the film garnered the Golden Bear award at the 1987 Berlin Film Festival and thrust both director and star into the international limelight.

Their professional and well-publicized personal relationship would go on to shape Chinese cinema for the next decade. Yimou's films made Li an international household name, while Li's undeniable presence pulled in audiences. After appearing in the forgettable Codename Cougar (1987) and starring opposite her beau in The Terracotta Warrior (1989), Li grabbed the attention of international audiences again with the Academy Award-nominated Ju Dou (1990). Her performance as the beleaguered bride of a bitter, impotent old man glistened with barely repressed sexuality, and fierce, gleeful vengeance. In her next film, Raise the Red Lantern (1992), widely considered Yimou's masterpiece, Li again brilliantly played a woman whose independence and sensuality are oppressed by a rigidly patriarchal culture. Yet Li's performance in The Story of Qiu Ju (1992) is perhaps her most memorable. Instead of playing the object of obsession, she portrayed an unflagging agent of justice in the guise of a dumpy, pregnant peasant woman. The change in characters paid off, as she won a Best Actress award at the 1992 Venice International Film Festival.

After playing the lead in Sylvia Chang's well-received Mary from Beijing (1992), Gong Li played a prostitute turned opera star's wife turned enemy of the people in Kaige's stunning, Farewell, My Concubine (1993), which won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival. For the first time, Li received international acclaim in a film not directed by Yimou. Though she would star in two more of Yimou's films, To Live (1994) and Shanghai Triad (1995), her career started to take her in a different direction. After the latter was released, the press reported that Li and Yimou had officially ended both their personal and professional relationships. That same year, she married Singapore tobacco tycoon Ooi Hoe Soeng. Since then, she has appeared in two more Kaige films, Temptress Moon (1996) and The Emperor and the Assassin (1999). In 1997, she appeared in her first English language role opposite Jeremy Irons in Chinese Box (1997).

Gong Li's limited Hollywood appearances include 1997's Chinese Box, and will expand in 2006 with a film adaptation of Miami Vice (2006) as well as Memoirs of a Geisha (2005), which has already won her rave reviews. She is also expected to team up with Zhang Yimou one more time in the upcoming Autumn Remembrance as well as starring in Young Hannibal: Behind the Mask, the prequel to the other 3 Hannibal Lecter films.

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