Gong Li G
ong Li, Wade-Giles Kung Li (born December 31, 1965, Shenyang, Liaoning province, China), popular Chinese actress, widely associated with movies by Chinese director Zhang Yimou but perhaps best known to a broad Western audience for her role as a 1930s Japanese geisha in the film Memoirs of a Geisha (2005). Gong was the youngest of five children in a family of academics. In 1985 she was admitted to the prestigious Central Drama Academy in Beijing. It was during her second year there that director Zhang Yimou, who was interviewing young actresses for the part of the rebellious young bride in Hong gaoliang (1987; Red Sorghum), noticed her. She not only won the role but she also won the director’s heart. Her romance with Zhang (who was still married at the time) both scandalized and delighted fans throughout East Asia, and Red Sorghum went on to become a major hit at the 1988 Berlin Film Festival.
Zhang’s and Gong’s careers grew together, with Ju Dou (1990) and Raise the Red Lantern (1991). In each of these films, Gong played a spirited young woman forced into marriage. She was soon wooed by Hong Kong producers and landed her first comic role in Terra-Cotta Warrior (1990), in which she is pursued throughout the centuries by a faithful lover, played by Zhang. She also appeared in parodic gangster movies, light-hearted dramas, and kung fu comedies. It was with mainland directors, however, that she did what is usually considered her best work. In Zhang’s Qiu Ju da guansi (1992; Qiu Ju Goes to Court, also known as The Story of Qiu Ju) she played a decidedly unglamorous country wife, who, though heavily pregnant during most of the film, stubbornly wages a fight against the local bureaucracy. The film was a triumph at the Venice Film Festival, where it received the Golden Lion and Gong received the best actress award. In Chen Kaige’s Bawang