Chiung Yao
Chen Che | |||||||||
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Native name | 陳喆 | ||||||||
Born | Chengdu, Sichuan, Republic of China | 20 April 1938||||||||
Died | 4 December 2024 Tamsui, New Taipei, Taiwan | (aged 86)||||||||
Pen name |
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Occupation |
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Language | Chinese | ||||||||
Nationality | Taiwanese (Republic of China) | ||||||||
Education | Taipei Municipal Zhongshan Girls High School | ||||||||
Period | 1962–2024 | ||||||||
Subject | Romance | ||||||||
Notable work |
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Spouse |
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Children | One son, three stepchildren | ||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 瓊瑤 | ||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 琼瑶 | ||||||||
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Chen Che | |||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 陳喆 | ||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 陈喆 | ||||||||
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Chen Che (Chinese: 陳喆; pinyin: Chén Zhé; 20 April 1938 – 4 December 2024), better known by her pen name Chiung Yao (Chinese: 瓊瑤; pinyin: Qióngyáo), was a Taiwanese writer and film producer. The name Chiung Yao is a phrase taken from the Classic of Poetry, where it means "splendid pure jade".[1] Born in Chengdu, Sichuan, her family moved to Taiwan in 1949 after the Communist takeover.[2]
She was a representative figure in Chinese-language romance novels. She rose to fame with her novel Outside the Window (1963), which led to her acquaintance and romantic involvement with Ping Hsin-tao, the owner of the Crown magazine . After both divorced their original spouses, they married and co-founded several companies to adapt Chiung Yao's works into films and TV dramas.[3] Her novels have been adapted into more than 100 films and TV dramas.[4] However, her romantic experiences also sparked controversy in Taiwan.[3]
Her works were well-received in Taiwan and later the whole Chinese-speaking world,[5][6] and Southeast Asia.[7] The BBC describes her as "the world's most popular Chinese language romance novelist" and her TV drama My Fair Princess (1998) as "the most popular Chinese-language drama shows of all time".[8]
Early life and education
[edit]Chen Che was born in Chengdu, Republic of China, on 20 April 1938.[9][10] She experienced an unstable childhood due to the Second Sino-Japanese War.[11] Her father, Chen Chih-ping , came from a humble background in Hengyang, while her mother, Yuan Hsing-shu, belonged to an upper-class family in Suzhou and Shanghai; her grandfather was the head of the Bank of Communications.[12][13] Yuan fell in love with Chen Chih-ping, who was her Chinese teacher, and the two defied social norms and married.[13] When Yuan Hsing-shu became pregnant, Chen Chih-ping, then only 20 years old, initially planned to have the pregnancy terminated. However, upon discovering she was carrying twins—a boy and a girl—he changed his mind and decided to raise the children. The girl was Chiung Yao.[12] During the war, the family endured a turbulent life as refugees. To survive, they performed in plays and sold potatoes, while Chen Chih-ping and Yuan Hsing-shu also taught in various locations, including Guizhou and Sichuan.[11]
With both parents being Chinese literature teachers, the literary atmosphere of her family instilled in her a love for literature from a young age.[9] In 1947, she moved with her family to Shanghai, where she published her first short story, The Poor Little Qing, on the Ta Kung Pao.[14] In 1949, her family relocated to Taipei, Taiwan.[9][14] After arriving in Taiwan, her father became a Chinese literature professor at National Taiwan Normal University, while her mother worked as a Chinese literature teacher at Taipei Municipal Chien Kuo High School.[15] Compared to many of her peers who grew up in post-war Taiwan's poverty, Chiung Yao enjoyed a relatively privileged upbringing.[16] At the age of 14, she published a short story under the pen name Lü Gui. In 1954, she adopted the pen name Xin Ru and published another story.[17][12]
Chiung Yao struggled academically as a child, often facing criticism from her parents.[12] In her final year of high school, she fell in love with her Chinese literature teacher, Jiang Ren, who was single and much older than her.[18] The two planned to marry after being admitted to university, but their relationship ended due to opposition from her parents.[18] Ultimately, Chiung Yao did not pass the university entrance exams,[12] and graduated from Taipei Municipal Second Girls' High School (now Taipei Municipal Zhongshan Girls High School).[14]
In 1959, she married Ma Sen-ching, a graduate of the Foreign Languages Department at National Taiwan University.[19] Ma worked at Taiwan Aluminium Corporation in Kaohsiung, where the couple settled after their wedding. In addition to his day job, Ma was a part-time writer.[20] The couple had one son, Chen Chung-wei.[21]
Career (1964–2013)
[edit]Novelist
[edit]In 1962, Chiung Yao published several short and medium-length stories in Crown magazine.[22] She then rewrote her high school teacher-student romance into the novel Outside the Window.[18][6] Initially rejected by multiple publishers due to its length, it was eventually accepted for publication by Ping Hsin-tao's Crown magazine.[3]
In July 1963, Chiung Yao's semi-autobiographical love story Outside the Window was serialised in Crown magazine, achieving significant success. It was later released as a standalone book.[14][6] This success led to her acquaintance with Ping Hsin-tao.[3] Ping rented a flat opposite his own for Chiung Yao and hired domestic carers, allowing her to focus on writing full-time. As a result, Chiung Yao moved from Kaohsiung to Taipei with her child.[3] Ping's wife, Lin Wan-chen, began to suspect an unusual relationship between Chiung Yao and Ping after their young children told Lin of their conversations.[3]
Chiung Yao's husband, Ma Sen-ching, was deeply humiliated by the public disclosure of her first love and attacked her in newspapers. Their relationship gradually deteriorated.[23] Writer Chi-chi recalled an incident where she visited Chiung Yao's home, and a servant opened the door to find Chiung Yao coming downstairs with bed linens, claiming they were "poisoned" and announcing her intent to divorce Ma Sen-ching.[20] The couple officially divorced in 1964.[21] After the divorce, Chiung Yao and Ping Hsin-tao entered into a romantic relationship.[20] They became a couple on the premiere night of Outside the Window film adaptation, with Chiung Yao becoming Ping's mistress.[23]
Due to the hardships in her personal life, Chiung Yao's early works often had tragic endings. Between 1964 and 1971, her short and medium-length stories explored varied styles.[24] After 1964, Chiung Yao published six bestsellers, including Fire and Rain, Six Dreams, and Many Enchanting Nights.[24]
Film producer
[edit]Between 1964 and 1983, Chiung Yao's works were adapted into 50 films, leading to "Chiung Yao film" becoming a genre in and of itself.[25][26] Chiung Yao's novels and their adaptations sparked a "Chiung Yao fever" in Hong Kong and Taiwan.[24]
Authorised adaptations
[edit]In 1965, Taiwanese director Li Hsing adapted two stories from Chiung Yao's Six Dreams into films: Four Loves and The Silent Wife. These marked the beginning of cinematic adaptations of Chiung Yao's works.[27] Four Loves was successful both critically and commercially, while The Silent Wife achieved even greater success, becoming a bestseller in Hong Kong. However, Chiung Yao was occasionally dissatisfied with Li Hsing's adaptations. For example, in The Silent Wife, Chiung Yao envisioned the heroine as a "child bride", but Li Hsing insisted on portraying her as a cousin, deviating from the original narrative.[28]
Shaw Brothers Studio in Hong Kong purchased the film rights to her works. Among these, My Dream Boat became the second-highest-grossing Mandarin-language film in Hong Kong that year. After leaving Shaw Brothers, Hong Kong director Li Han-hsiang founded Grand Motion Pictures in Taiwan, where he extensively adapted Chiung Yao's novels for the screen. His film Many Enchanting Nights earned actress Chiang Ching the Golden Horse Award for Best Actress for her role as the protagonist.[28]
In the mid-1970s, Li Hsing returned to Chiung Yao's works, adapting The Young Ones and The Heart has a Million Knots. These films boosted the popularity of actors Chen Chen and Charlie Chin, who starred in The Young Ones. The soundtrack also gained widespread recognition, with Teresa Teng's renditions of A Thousand Words and How Can I Leave You from the film becoming major hits.[29] Brigitte Lin, who had failed her university entrance exams, was discovered by director Sung Tsun-Shou from the Outside the Window production team. This marked her entry into the entertainment industry. However, due to copyright disputes, the film was ultimately unable to be released in Taiwan.[30]
Superstar Motion Picture
[edit]Unsatisfied with Shaw Brothers' adaptation of The Purple Shell,[28] Chiung Yao established Firebird Picture Company in 1966, producing Mist Over Dream Lake and Lucky Clover.[28] However, due to poor box office performance, the company closed in 1971.[31] In 1976, Ping Hsin-tao asked his wife Lin Wan-chen for a divorce.[32] That same year, Chiung Yao co-founded Superstar Motion Picture to adapt her novels into films,[31][25] ending her collaboration with Li Hsing in 1977.[33]
In 1979, Jiang Ren, the inspiration for the male lead in Outside the Window, died, and Chiung Yao married Ping.[32] Chiung Yao and her second husband Ping adapted many of her novels into television series and films, often serving as producers or screenwriters themselves.[6] Film adaptations in the 1970s often featured Brigitte Lin, Joan Lin, Charlie Chin, and Chin Han, who were then collectively known as the "Two Lins and Two Chins".[25]
At Superstar, Brigitte Lin became Chiung Yao's go-to actress, starring in many of Chiung Yao's films.[30] Early works such as Cloud of Romance and The Love Affair of Rainbow were scripted by Chang Yung-hsiang, while later works, including Moonlight Serenade and Yesterday's Love, were penned by Chiung Yao herself.[31] Cloud of Romance, featuring Brigitte Lin and co-stars Charlie Chin and Chin Han, was a major hit, with the title song sung by Fong Fei-fei gaining widespread popularity.[28]
Chiung Yao films dominated prime slots during Lunar New Year and Youth Day.[34] Songs were often performed by Fong Fei-fei,[35] with music composed by Tso Hung-yuan .[36] The films, set in dining rooms and cafes, were nicknamed "Three-Hall Films ". However, their formulaic nature led to diminishing appeal.[31] After the 1982 failure of Amid the Rolling Clouds, Chiung Yao announced her retirement from filmmaking.[29]
Television producer
[edit]Adaptations of earlier works
[edit]Chiung Yao stopped creating film adaptations in 1980, choosing instead to focus on television.[25] From 1982 to 1985, Chiung Yao's writing began to address controversial societal issues, producing works such as Paradise on Fire. However, after 1985, she experienced a creative bottleneck and paused her writing until the 1990s.[24] In 1985, Chiung Yao's novels began to be adapted into television dramas. The following year, Chiung Yao and her husband Ping Hsin-tao co-founded Yi Ren Communications.[22] By 1990, four more adaptations were released within a single year. Most of these dramas aired during Taiwan's prime-time evening slots, drawing massive viewership.[24]
Romantic melodrama
[edit]After Taiwan's lifting of martial law, the society's growing openness and diversity of values led to the decline of the "fighting for love" trope in Chiung Yao's works.[24] Consequently, her stories shifted to settings in late Qing and early Republican China, focusing on themes like class conflict and feudal restrictions rather than generational gaps or romantic disputes.[24] Her works during this period emphasised "love above all" and featured intense melodrama.[22] The female protagonists—dubbed "Chiung Yao Girls"—embodied the image of tragic beauty.[22] While her narratives critiqued feudal patriarchal oppression, they simultaneously portrayed enduring hardship and framed marriage as the ultimate victory.[22]
In 1987, following Taiwan's approval for citizens to visit relatives in China, Chiung Yao travelled there. After Taiwan lifted restrictions on filming in China in 1989, Chiung Yao led her production teams to China, making her the first Taiwanese producer to film on location there. From that point on, nearly all of her television dramas included scenes shot in China, with Chinese actors joining the casts.[22] In the 1990s, her romance-focused dramas resonated with Taiwan's emotionally complex society,[24] while in China, they gained popularity for their themes of freedom and liberation following years of social suppression.[22] In Vietnam, Chiung Yao's works faced initial censorship for their depictions of extramarital affairs and love triangles but regained popularity after the government embraced reform and openness.[37]
Romantic comedies
[edit]In 1998, My Fair Princess marked a significant departure from Chiung Yao's trademark melodramatic style, introducing a light-hearted and comedic tone.[38][39] This series is "regarded as one of the most popular Chinese-language drama shows of all time".[8] Following this success, Chiung Yao revisited and reimagined her earlier works, producing remakes of her earlier works.[39] In 2013, she released an original drama, Flowers in Fog. The series incorporated South Korean influences and contemporary romantic elements to appeal to younger audiences.[40] However, it received mixed reviews, with some viewers labelling it a "cringeworthy drama".[41] Afterward, Chiung Yao gradually withdrew from the entertainment industry.[42]
Final years (2014–2024)
[edit]Copyright lawsuit
[edit]On 15 April 2014, Chiung Yao accused Chinese screenwriter and producer Yu Zheng of blatant plagiarism, seeking immediate suspension of the broadcast of his TV series Palace 3: The Lost Daughter, which she alleged to have been plagiarized from her 1992 novel Plum Blossom Scar (梅花烙). Yu denied the claim. On 28 April, Chiung Yao filed a plagiarism lawsuit against Yu.[43] On 12 December 109 Chinese screenwriters published a joint statement supporting Chiung Yao.[44] A day later, an additional 30 Chinese screenwriters made their support of Chiung Yao known.[45]
On 25 December, the court ruled in Chiung Yao's favour, ordering four companies to stop distributing and broadcasting The Palace: The Lost Daughter, also demanding Yu Zheng to publicly apologize and pay Chiung Yao RMB 5 million (around $800,000) in compensation. China Radio International called it a "landmark ruling".[46][47]
Family disputes
[edit]In 1959, Chiung Yao married Ma Sen-ching (馬森慶), also a writer. After she became famous and began to outshine her husband, their marriage broke down and ended in divorce in 1964.[48] In 1979,[48] Chiung Yao married her publisher Ping Hsin-tao, who had had three children with his first wife Lin Wan-zhen. In 2018, Lin published a memoir in which she accused Chiung Yao of breaking up her marriage.[49]
After Ping suffered a stroke and lost nearly all ability to communicate, Chiung Yao had a falling out with her step-children over whether to continue his intubation.[49][50] Since then, she has become a supporter of voluntary euthanasia, as expressed in her open letter published in March 2017.[51] Ping died on 23 May 2019, at the age of 92.[52]
Advocacy for Han Kuo-yu
[edit]She refrained from expressing political opinions until 2018 when Kuomintang candidate Han Kuo-yu won the Kaohsiung mayoral election. Following his victory, Chiung Yao published an open letter praising him and later accepted an invitation to serve as the chief consultant for Kaohsiung's Love Industry Chain project. In 2020, upon learning of Han's presidential campaign, she once again expressed strong support, referring to him as a "hero" in her writings. After Han's defeat in the election, she posted a message stating: "Though the people may shed tears, the hero remains unyielding. After the heart-wrenching pain, may the scars heal".[53]
Death
[edit]On 4 December 2024, Chiung Yao was found dead at her home in Tamsui District, New Taipei City, after an apparent charcoal-burning suicide. She left behind a note.[54] Her son stated that he had asked her secretary to check on her around midday. Upon entering the house, the secretary discovered that Chiung Yao had no vital signs and immediately called emergency services. When paramedics arrived, they confirmed she had died and did not transport her to the hospital.[55][56] Local police confirmed that there was no external intervention in her death.[57][58][59]
She died at the age of 86.[58][60][8] Six days before her death, Chiung Yao had posted a tribute to her late husband on social media.[61] In her suicide note, she described her death as "flitting away",[62] and wrote, "I have truly lived, never wasted my life".[63] Later that afternoon, her secretary posted a pre-recorded video and her final written work, When Snowflakes Fall, on Chiung Yao's Facebook page.[64][65][66] In her final social media message, she expressed a desire to avoid the pain of "weakness, deterioration, illness, hospital visits, treatment, and lingering suffering". However, she also urged younger generations not to give up on life easily.[67] Many actors who had starred in her works, such as Zhao Wei, expressed their condolences online.[68]
Her death also sparked discussions in Taiwan about euthanasia.[69] On 5 December, Chiung Yao's family announced on Facebook that, as per her last will, no public commemorations would be held, in order to avoid using public resources.[70]
Chinese dissident Wang Dan expressed disapproval of Chiung Yao's later political stance but urged respect for others' choices to mourn or not mourn her passing. He emphasised that "not everything in this world needs to be measured by political correctness".[71]
Reception
[edit]Chiung Yao's romance novels were very well received in Taiwan, and by the 1990s, she was also one of the best-selling authors in China.[5] She has since been enormously popular throughout the Chinese-speaking world.[6] Chiung Yao's readership and viewership are predominantly female, owing to her emphasis on the feelings of young women.[72] Her biggest sellers are Outside the Window and Deep Is the Courtyard (1969), which have been repeatedly reprinted.[6] She is often regarded as the most popular romance novelist in the Chinese-speaking world.[73]
Her novels have been praised for the prose, the poetry that is part of her earlier works, and the literary allusions of their titles.[6] They are sometimes described as "morbid",[by whom?] as some feature socially or ethically questionable romantic relationships (e.g. between teacher and student).[6] Her romance novels and their film adaptions have been criticized for their melodramatic plotlines[74][75] and long-winded dialogues.[76]
Personal life
[edit]Family
[edit]Chiung Yao's second husband was Ping Hsin-tao, the head of Crown Publishing, with whom she had an eight-year extramarital affair before their marriage.[56] Her father, Chen Chih-ping, was a professor in the Department of Chinese Literature at National Taiwan Normal University.[15] Her mother, Yuan Hsing-shu, taught Chinese at Taipei Municipal Chien Kuo High School.[15] Her maternal grandfather, Yuan Li-chen, served as the first president of the Bank of Communications.[13] Her maternal grandmother, Tseng Yi, was self-taught and excelled in poetry and painting. She was also a nationally renowned female physician in China.[13] Her granduncle, Yuan Li-zhun , was a tutor to the Xuantong Emperor.[13] Her aunt, Yuan Jing, was a writer, and another aunt, Yuan Xiaoyuan, was China's first female diplomat and tax official.[13]
Religion
[edit]Chiung Yao was an atheist. In her later years, she expressed respect for religion on multiple occasions but consistently rejected any form of proselytisation or religious rituals. She regarded ghosts and deities as elements of literature and drama and rejected the possibility of their existence in reality. She advocated confronting life by enriching oneself rather than relying on religion or superstitions.[77]
In her will, she explicitly requested that no religious practices be used to commemorate her - such as setting up a mourning hall, burning joss paper, or holding traditional rituals like the "seven-day rites". Instead, she expressed a preference for an eco-friendly flower burial. She emphasized that death was a deeply personal matter and should not impose a burden on others.[77]
Publications
[edit]Year | Chinese title | English title | Adaptations | Notes |
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1962 | 情人谷 | Lover's Dale[78] | Translated into English by Tommy Lee. | |
1963 | 窗外 | Outside the Window | Outside the Window (1973) | |
1964 | 煙雨濛濛 | Misty Rain | Romance in the Rain (2001) | Translated into English by Mark Wilfer and released as Fire and Rain. |
菟絲花 | ||||
幾度夕陽紅 | Several Degrees of Sunset Red | |||
潮聲 | ||||
1965 | 船 | |||
1966 | 六個夢
|
Six Dreams
|
An anthology of six short stories. Wan-Chun's Three Loves was initially released in 1965 as a novelette. | |
紫貝殼 | Purple Shell | |||
寒煙翠 | Mist Over Dream Lake | Mist Over Dream Lake (1967)[79] | ||
月滿西樓 | ||||
1967 | 翦翦風 | Rude Wind | ||
1968 | 彩雲飛 | Flying Rosy Clouds | The Young Ones (1973) | |
1969 | 庭院深深 | The Deep Garden and Courtyard | Deep Garden (1987) | |
星河 | Starry River | |||
1971 | 水靈 | |||
白狐 | White Fox | |||
1972 | 海鷗飛處 | Where Seagulls Fly | ||
心有千千結 | The Heart has a Million Knots | |||
1973 | 一簾幽夢 | Dream Curtain | Fantasies Behind the Pearly Curtain (1975)[80] | Alternatively known as Dream Link. |
浪花 | Painted Waves of Love | |||
1974 | 碧雲天 | Posterity and Perplexity | ||
女朋友 | Girlfriend | |||
1975 | 在水一方 | One Side of the Water | One Side of the Water (1988) | Alternatively known as The Unforgettable Character |
秋歌 | ||||
1976 | 人在天涯 | |||
我是一片雲 | I am a Cloud | |||
月朦朧鳥朦朧 | ||||
雁兒在林梢 | The Wild Goose on the Wing | The Wild Goose on the Wing (1979) | ||
1977 | 一顆紅豆 | |||
1978 | 彩霞滿天 | |||
金盞花 | ||||
1979 | 夢的衣裳 | Clothing of Dreams | My Cape of Many Dreams (1981) | |
聚散兩依依 | ||||
1980 | 卻上心頭 | |||
問斜陽 | ||||
1981 | 燃燒吧!火鳥 | Burning Firebird | ||
昨夜之燈 | ||||
1982 | 匆匆,太匆匆 | |||
1983 | 失火的天堂 | |||
1985 | 冰兒 | |||
1984 | 不曾失落的日子·童年 | Escape from Heng Yang[81] | Translated into English by Eugene Lo Wei. | |
1988 | 剪不斷的鄉愁-瓊瑤大陸行 | |||
1990 | 雪珂 | Xue Ke (lit. 'Snow Jade') | ||
望夫崖 | Wang Fu Cliff (lit. 'The "Awaiting Husband" Cliff') | |||
1992 | 青青河邊草 | Green Green Grass by the River | Green Green Grass by the River (1992) | |
梅花烙 | Plum Blossom Scar | |||
1993 | 水雲間 | Between The Water and Cloud | ||
鬼丈夫 | Ghost Husband | |||
1994 | 新月格格 | Princess Xinyue (lit. Princess New-Moon) | ||
煙鎖重樓 | Smoke Amongst The Floor | |||
1997 | 還珠格格 | Princess Pearl | My Fair Princess (1998) | Princess Returning Pearl |
1998 | 蒼天有淚 | Tears In Heaven | ||
1999 | 還珠格格第二部 | Princess Pearl Part 2 | ||
2003 | 還珠格格第三部之天上人間 | Princess Pearl Part 3: Heaven and Earth |
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Chiung Yao, Taiwanese novelist, dies by suicide, writes 'I burned with all my strength'
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External links
[edit]- Official website (archived)
- Chiung Yao at IMDb
- 1938 births
- 2024 deaths
- 2024 suicides
- 20th-century Chinese short story writers
- 20th-century novelists
- 20th-century Taiwanese women writers
- 20th-century Taiwanese writers
- 21st-century novelists
- 21st-century Taiwanese women writers
- 21st-century Taiwanese writers
- Chinese Civil War refugees
- Chinese film producers
- Chinese lyricists
- Chinese television producers
- Chinese twins
- Chinese women novelists
- Chinese women short story writers
- Second Sino-Japanese War refugees
- Short story writers from Sichuan
- Suicides in Taiwan
- Taiwanese film producers
- Taiwanese lyricists
- Taiwanese people from Sichuan
- Taiwanese television producers
- Taiwanese twins
- Taiwanese women novelists
- Taiwanese women short story writers
- Women television producers
- Writers from Chengdu