Faye Wong: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Chinese singer-songwriter and actress (born 1969)}} |
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{{Other uses}} |
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{{cleanup-date|May 2006}} |
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{{Family name hatnote|[[Wang (surname)|Wong (Wang)]]|lang=Chinese}} |
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{{Unreferenced}} <!-- If you believe this article is fixed already, delete one or more of these templates --> |
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{{Use British English|date=May 2013}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2024}} |
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{{otheruses4|the Hong Kong singer|other Wang Fei|Wang Fei}} |
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{{Infobox |
{{Infobox person |
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| name = Faye Wong |
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| image = Faye in Hong Kong 2011.jpg |
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|Background = light gray |
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| alt = picture of Faye Wong at a concert in Hong Kong |
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|Img = fayewong1997.gif |
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| caption = Wong in 2011 |
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|Img_capt = Faye Wong [1997] (Alternate Cover) |
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| native_name = {{nobold|王菲}} |
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|Birth_name = Xia Lin |
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| native_name_lang = zh |
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|Born = [[August 8]], [[1969]] |
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| pronunciation = |
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|Origin = [[Beijing]], [[China]] |
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| birth_name = Xia Lin {{#tag:ref|It has been reported that before the age of 15 she was called '''Xia Lin''', adopting her mother's [[Chinese surname|surname]] since her [[paternal]] family was persecuted in the [[Cultural Revolution]], but this claim has not been confirmed by her or her family. Some of Wong's former neighbours also could not remember this name.<ref name=huangxiaoyang>{{cite book|year=2005 |last=Huang Xiaoyang (黄晓阳) |title= |script-title=zh:王菲画传 |trans-title=A Pictorial Biography of Faye Wong |language=zh |publisher=China Radio & Television Publishing House |isbn=978-7-5043-4429-8 |url=http://book.sina.com.cn/nzt/ent/1103162882_wangfeihuazhuan/index.shtml |access-date=1 April 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091220010053/http://book.sina.com.cn/nzt/ent/1103162882_wangfeihuazhuan/index.shtml |archive-date=20 December 2009 }}</ref>|group=fn|name="givenname"}} |
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|Genre = [[Chinese Pop]] |
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| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1969|8|8|df=y}} |
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|Occupation = [[Singer]], [[Songwriter]], [[Actress]] |
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| birth_place = [[Dongcheng, Beijing]], China |
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|Years_active = 1985 - Present |
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| citizenship = [[Chinese nationality law|Chinese]] (Hong Kong) |
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|Label = Cinepoly, [[EMI]], [[Sony Music Entertainment|Sony Music]] |
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| other_names = |
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| occupation = {{flatlist| |
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* Singer-songwriter |
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* record producer |
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* actress |
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}} |
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| years_active = {{hlist|1989–2005}} {{hlist|2010-present}} |
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| spouse = {{plainlist| |
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* {{marriage|[[Dou Wei]]|1996|1999|reason=div}} |
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* {{marriage|[[Li Yapeng]]|2005|2013|reason=div}} |
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}} |
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| partner = {{plainlist| |
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* [[Nicholas Tse]] (2000–2003, 2014–present) |
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}} |
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| children = [[Leah Dou]]<br>Li Yan |
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| awards = |
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| module = {{Infobox musical artist|embed=yes |
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| alias = Shirley Wong ({{lang|zh|王靖雯}}) |
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| background = temporary |
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| origin = [[Hong Kong]] |
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| genre = {{hlist|[[C-pop]] (both [[Mandopop]] and [[Cantopop]])|[[C-rock]]|[[dream pop]]|[[Buddhist music]]|[[J-pop]]}} |
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| label = {{hlist|[[Cinepoly Records|Cinepoly]]|[[EMI]]|[[Sony Music]]}} |
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}} |
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| module2 = {{Infobox Chinese|child=yes |
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| name1 = Chinese name |
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| c = {{linktext|王|菲}} |
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| p = Wáng Fēi |
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| j = Wong<sup>4</sup> Fei<sup>1</sup> |
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| hk = Wong Fei |
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| altname = Stage name |
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| c2 = {{linktext|王|靖|雯}} |
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| p2 = Wáng Jìngwén |
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| j2 = Wong<sup>4</sup> Zing<sup>6</sup>man<sup>4</sup> |
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| hk2 = Wong Tsin-man |
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| altname3 = Birth name |
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| c3 = {{linktext|夏|林}} |
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| p3 = Xià Lín |
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| j3 = Haa<sup>6</sup> Lam<sup>4</sup> |
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| hk3 = Ha Lam |
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}} |
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}} |
}} |
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'''Faye Wong''', or '''Wang Fei''' ({{zh-cp|c=王菲|p=Wang Fēi}}) (born [[August 8]], [[1969]] in [[Beijing]]) is an extremely popular [[singer]] in Asia, especially in [[mainland China]], [[Taiwan]], [[Hong Kong]], [[Singapore]], [[Malaysia]], and more recently in [[Japan]] and to some extent in the [[Western world|West]]. |
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'''Faye Wong''' ({{lang-zh|王菲}}; [[pinyin]]: ''Wáng Fēi''; born on 8 August 1969) is a Chinese singer-songwriter and actress. Early in her career she briefly used the [[stage name]] '''Shirley Wong''' ({{lang|zh|王靖雯}}). Born in [[Beijing]], she moved to Hong Kong at the age of 18. She debuted with the [[Cantonese]] album ''[[Shirley Wong (album)|Shirley Wong]]'' in 1989 and came to public attention by combining [[alternative pop|alternative music]] with mainstream [[C-pop|Chinese pop]].<ref name=mitchell>{{cite book |year=2006 |last=Mitchell | first=Tony |editor-first=Shane| editor-last=Homan |title=Access All Eras: Tribute Bands and Global Pop Culture |pages=215–228 |chapter=Chapter 13: Tian Ci – Faye Wong and English Songs in the Cantopop and Mandopop Repertoire |publisher= [[Open University Press]] | isbn=0-335-21690-0 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_NK9JF-_K4QC&pg=PA215 |access-date=4 February 2011}}</ref> Since 1994, she has recorded mostly in her native [[Standard Chinese|Mandarin]]. |
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She is believed by critics and fans alike to be the most commercially and artistically distinguished female [[vocalist]] in Chinese music history, with a following so large and devoted that [[media in Hong Kong]], [[Media in Taiwan|Taiwan]] and [[Media of the People's Republic of China|mainland China]] often place the title ''tiānhou'', (天後; diva or goddess) before her name while Japanese fans call her "Diva of Asia". Shy and intensely private, she is one of the very few people widely popular on both sides of the [[Taiwan straits]] despite her aggressive avoidance of the media. According to The [[Guinness Book of Records]], she has sold 9.7 millons copies of all her albums as of March [[2000]]. Not only openly admired by well-known celebrities around the world, she was also labeled as the [[gay icon]] among the gay community. She has acted in several TV shows and films, most memorably in [[Wong Kar-wai]]'s ''[[Chungking Express]]'', a role that garnered her international acclaim, as well as the award for "Best Actress" at the 1994 [[Stockholm International Film Festival]]; and his most recent ''[[2046 (film)|2046]]'', starring as an android and one of [[Tony Leung]]'s love interests. She is known not only to many [[Final Fantasy]] fans for her [[Final Fantasy VIII]] theme "[[Eyes On Me]]", but also as the spokeswoman of such brands as [[Head & Shoulders]] [[shampoo]] and [[Pepsi-Cola]]. She was chosen by [[Zhang Yimou]] to record the theme song for the critically acclaimed film ''[[Hero (film)|Hero]]''. |
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One of the biggest pop stars in the Chinese-speaking world, Wong has also gained followings in Japan and Southeast Asia. In the West she is perhaps best known for starring in [[Wong Kar-wai]]'s films ''[[Chungking Express]]'' (1994) and ''[[2046 (film)|2046]]'' (2004).<ref name="mitchell" /><ref name=huangyan>{{cite news |title=China's Pop Queen Faye Wong Plans Comeback |author1=Huang Yan |author2=Blanchard, Ben |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE66P10R20100726 |newspaper=[[Reuters]] |date=26 July 2010 |access-date=23 January 2011}}</ref> While she has collaborated with international acts such as [[Cocteau Twins]], Wong has recorded only a few songs in English, including "[[Eyes on Me (Faye Wong song)|Eyes on Me]]" (1999), the [[theme song]] of the video game ''[[Final Fantasy VIII]]'' (1999). Upon her second marriage in 2005, she withdrew from the limelight, though sporadically returned to the stage.<ref name="sunxi">{{cite web |author=Sun Xi |date=5 November 2010 |title=Return of the Inimitable Faye Wong |url=http://www.womenofchina.cn/html/report/113737-1.htm?node=113737 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170810211157/http://www.womenofchina.cn/html/report/113737-1.htm?node=113737 |archive-date=10 August 2017 |access-date=23 January 2011 |publisher=Women of China}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Faye Wong Moments Live 2016 delights Shanghai[3]- Chinadaily.com.cn |url=https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/culture/2016-12/31/content_27831032_3.htm |access-date=17 March 2024 |website=www.chinadaily.com.cn}}</ref> |
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==Early Years== |
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Born in [[Beijing]], [[People's Republic of China]], she was originally named 夏琳 (Xia Lin), adopting her mother's maiden name because the Wong family was persecuted during the [[Cultural Revolution]] (her grandfather was once a congressman during the [[Republic of China]]). At the age of 15, several years after the turmoil ended, her name was changed to Wong Fei (王菲). She inherited a talent for music from her mother, who was a [[soprano]], and recorded several low-cost albums in high school covering the songs of [[Teresa Teng]], her personal idol. |
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Wong is known to be a "diva with few words" in public, and has gained a reputation for her [[Cool (aesthetic)|"cool" personality]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Smith |first1=Jeff |url=http://chinabusinessreview.com/public/0407/smith.html |title=China's Business Reforms |last2=Wylie |first2=Jean |journal=The China Business Review |publisher=US-China Business Council |year=2004 |isbn=978-0203537039 |editor1-last=Smyth |editor1-first=Russell |volume=7 |doi=10.4324/9780203537039 |quote=The April 2004 'China Cool Hunt' survey polled 1,200 18- to 22-year-old students from 64 universities in Beijing and Shanghai about the who, what, and why of cool ... Asian, not Western, musicians are viewed as cool by this generation. No international pop stars were among students' top 10 favorites. China's Wang Fei was the most popular singer, with 17 percent of the votes. |access-date=23 January 2011 |editor2-last=Tam |editor2-first=On Kit |editor3-last=Warner |editor3-first=Malcolm |editor4-last=Jiuhua Zhu |editor4-first=Cherrie |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110708144545/http://chinabusinessreview.com/public/0407/smith.html |archive-date=8 July 2011 |url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="coolness">{{cite news |date=16 July 1999 |script-title=zh:上海電台選最酷藝人, 王菲應份得獎 |trans-title=Faye Wong fittingly wins Shanghai radio station's 'Coolest Celebrity Award' |url=http://cecilia.tophk.net/fayenews/faye0799/fayenew160799.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111002125144/http://cecilia.tophk.net/fayenews/faye0799/fayenew160799.htm |archive-date=2 October 2011 |access-date=1 April 2011 |newspaper=[[Apple Daily]] |language=zh}}</ref> In ''Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture'', Jeroen de Kloet characterised her as "singer, actress, mother, celebrity, royalty, sex symbol and diva all at the same time".<ref name="dekloet">{{cite book |year=2005 |last=de Kloet | first=Jeroen |editor-first=Davis| editor-last=Edward L. |title=Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture |pages=659–660 |chapter=Wong Fei |publisher= [[Routledge]] | isbn=0-415-24129-4 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YL4GS9zju10C&pg=PA1870|access-date=19 April 2013}}</ref> In 2000, she was recognised by [[Guinness World Records]] as the best selling [[Cantopop]] female artist, having sold an estimated 9.7 million copies of her albums by March 2000.<ref name="guinness">{{cite web |title=Best Selling Canto-Pop Female |url=http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/content_pages/record.asp?recordid=54458 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050323175527/http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/gwr5/content_pages/record.asp?recordid=54458 |archive-date=23 March 2005 |access-date=23 January 2011 |publisher=[[Guinness World Records]]}}</ref> |
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In [[1987]], she moved with her family to [[Hong Kong]] and began her musical career after a brief stint as a model. She signed a contract with [[Cinepoly]] and released three albums under the stage name '''Shirley Wong''' (王靖雯, [[pinyin]] Wang Jingwen). Containing a large number of covers of songs by artists from [[the US]] and [[Japan]], these albums attracted little attention and a lukewarm response from critics. Frustrated with her career direction, she decided to take some time off in [[1991]] and travel to [[New York City|New York]] for vocal studies and cultural exchange. This brief hiatus would prove to be important for her artistic development. |
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== Life and career == |
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During her absence, Cinepoly released a few compilations repackaging songs from her three albums, thereby keeping her somewhat visible at the record stores. |
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=== 1969–1987: Early life and career beginnings === |
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==Rise to Fame== |
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Faye Wong was born at [[Peking Union Medical College Hospital]] in Dongcheng District, Beijing in the midst of the [[Cultural Revolution]].<ref>{{cite news |date=28 May 2006 |title=三母女同一醫院出生 王菲剖腹誕八斤肥嬰 |url=https://hk.entertainment.appledaily.com/entertainment/daily/article/20060528/5966339 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200614204641/https://hk.entertainment.appledaily.com/entertainment/daily/article/20060528/5966339 |archive-date=14 June 2020 |access-date=15 January 2024 |work=Apple Daily |agency=Next Digital}}</ref> Her father is Wang Youlin (王佑林), a [[mining engineer]] and second son of Wang Zhaomin aka Wang Molin (王兆民; 王墨林) (1901-1985), member of [[Legislative Yuan|the Legislative Yuan of the Republic of China]]. Wang Youlin was parentally betrothed to Li Min (李珉), sister of Taiwanese writer [[Li Ao]], but when Wang Zhaomin left for Taiwan by the Communist takeover, Wang Youlin, then a left-leaning college student, stayed in the Mainland and later wed Xia Guiying (夏桂影), a [[Guoyue#Revolutionary songs|revolutionary music]] [[soprano]] with China Coal Mine Art Troupe, who would be Wong's mother.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=15岁成为"小富姐" 王菲:妈妈不喜欢我唱歌 |url=http://music.yule.sohu.com/20041226/n223648850.shtml |access-date=2024-06-09 |website=music.yule.sohu.com}}</ref><ref name=spaeth>{{cite magazine |last1=Spaeth |first1=Anthony |year=1996 |title=She Did It Her Way |magazine=[[Time (magazine)|Time]] |edition=International |volume=148 |issue=16 |url=http://taipei-taiwan.org/wongfaye.html |access-date=23 January 2011}}</ref> Wong has an elder brother named Wang Yi (王弋).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wongfei.org/gb/intro.htm|script-title=zh:介绍王菲|date=25 January 2009|work=菲迷府 www.wongfei.org|language=zh|access-date=12 July 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090125184056/http://www.wongfei.org/gb/intro.htm|archive-date=25 January 2009}}</ref> |
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===Back to Hong Kong=== |
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A year after returning to Hong Kong, she burst into the spotlight with her new album ''Coming Home'', which incorporated [[R&B]] influences like her previous two and was a drastic change in musical direction from the more traditional [[Cantopop]] fare of her earlier albums. On this album, she covered the song "Fragile Woman," originally sung by the [[Japan]]ese music diva [[Miyuki Nakajima]]. While this song had been covered by other Chinese singers, her angelic version nonetheless swept over Hong Kong and singlehandedly lifted her to superstardom. Also, she sang her first English-language song, "Kisses in the Wind," and starred in [[TVB]] shows such as ''Files of Justice II'' (壹號皇庭II) and ''Legendary Ranger'' (原振俠). |
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As a student, Wong already was involved in singing and attracted interest from several [[Music publisher (popular music)|publishers]].<ref name=":1" /> On occasions, the school had to hide her artistic activities from her strict mother,<ref name="leidan">{{cite news |script-title=zh:王菲 – 她来自北京 | language=zh | trans-title = Faye Wong: She Came From Beijing |author=Lei Dan (雷丹) |url=http://ent.sina.com.cn/2004-08-23/1115481364.html |newspaper=Beijing News |date=23 August 2004 |access-date=5 February 2011}}</ref> who as a professional saw singing as a dead-end career.<ref name="autobiography">{{cite journal |last1=Faye Wong (王菲) |year=1994 |title=王菲:我的故事 |trans-title=Faye Wong: My Story |journal=Oriental Sunday |volume=183–191 |url=http://blog.yam.com/kiyo2046/article/3479905 |access-date=1 April 2011 |archive-date=9 February 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140209204435/http://blog.yam.com/kiyo2046/article/3479905 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Despite her mother's opposition, Wong released 6 low-cost [[cover version|cover albums]] from 1985 to 1987 while still in high school, all in the form of [[cassette tape|cassettes]], mostly consisting of songs by her personal idol, iconic Taiwanese singer [[Teresa Teng]]. For the last of these early recordings, the producer Wei Yuanqiang chose the title ''Wong Fei Collection'', intending to show that he recognised a distinctive talent in the teenager.<ref name="xiaosheng">{{cite news |script-title=zh:天后王菲16岁出道 首张珍藏集重见天日 | language=zh | trans-title = Diva Faye Wong Debuted at the Age of 16; First Collection Album To Be Reissued |author=Xiaosheng (小生) |url=http://music.yule.sohu.com/20041012/n222439519.shtml |newspaper=[[Sohu]] Entertainment |date=12 October 2004 |access-date=5 February 2011}}</ref> |
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===Changing her Style=== |
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Not satisfied to rest on her laurels, she also wrote her own Mandarin ballad "No Regrets" (執迷不悔) in [[1993]], which led many people to praise her not just as a talented singer but as a gifted songwriter as well; in February, the similarly titled album was released and became an instant best-seller. Although the songs were mostly more soft contemporary arrangments, like most of what was being traditionally released in Hong Kong, it also had a few dance songs and two versions of the title track: one in Mandarin and the other in Cantonese, with new lyrics by [[Chen Shao Qi]] (the Mandarin version is by far the more popular one). |
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In 1987, after being accepted to [[Xiamen University]] to study biology, she migrated to Hong Kong to join her father, who had been working there for a few years. The plan was for her to stay there for a year to fulfill the [[Right of abode in Hong Kong|permanent residency]] requirement, and go to a university abroad thereafter.<ref name="autobiography" /> However, since Wong did not know a word of [[Cantonese language|Cantonese]], the language spoken in Hong Kong, she experienced great loneliness.<ref name="spaeth" /> Following a brief modeling stint, she began taking singing lessons as a distraction with Tai See-Chung (戴思聰), an Indonesian-born Chinese who had gone to school in [[Mainland China]] and had previously tutored Hong Kong superstars [[Anita Mui]], [[Andy Lau]], [[Leon Lai]] and [[Aaron Kwok]].<ref name="tai">{{cite news |title=Sad Refrain as Cantopop 'Starmaker' Tai Dies at 69 |url=http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=11&art_id=100678&sid=28946964&con_type=3 |newspaper=[[The Standard (Hong Kong)|The Standard]] |date=19 July 2010 |access-date=23 January 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629202624/http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=11&art_id=100678&sid=28946964&con_type=3 |archive-date=29 June 2011 }}</ref> With Tai's recommendation, the 19-year-old signed with [[Cinepoly Records]] after winning third place in an [[Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union|ABU]] singing contest in 1988.<ref name="autobiography" /> It was not only an unplanned move on the part of Wong, since her mother disapproved of a singing career, but also a risky move on the part of Chan Siu-Bo (陳小寶), Cinepoly's general manager, since [[Mainland Chinese|Mainlanders]] were stereotyped as "backwards" in Hong Kong.<ref name="wuqi">{{cite journal |year=2010 |script-title=zh:王菲从艺之路盘点 香港不曾改变过她 | language=zh | trans-title = Looking Back at Faye Wong's Career: Hong Kong Never Changed Her |author=Wu Qi (吴琪) |url=http://ent.sina.com.cn/y/2010-08-12/18043050020.shtml |journal=Life Week Magazine |volume=33 |access-date=5 February 2011}}</ref> |
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Since then, she has completely shed any R&B influence and has moved on to produce works of considerable originality and a more alternative flavor, epitomized in her next album ''100,000 Whys'' (released in September 1993). Before this album was released, a few of its tracks were mainstream enough to air in radio transmissions among listeners. Therefore, it became another instant best-seller in the same year with ''No Regrets'' and people's recognition of her first introduction to the alternative rock from the West. |
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As a result, Cinepoly asked Wong to change her "Mainland-sounding" name to a "sophisticated" stage name Wong Jing Man. (Her English name was to be "Shirley".)<ref name=fungcurtin>{{cite journal |last1=Fung |first1=Anthony |last2=Curtin |first2=Michael |year=2002 |title=The Anomalies of being Faye (Wong): Gender politics in Chinese popular music |journal=International Journal of Cultural Studies |volume=5 |issue=3 |pages=263–290 |publisher=Sage Publications |url=http://www.sagepub.com/rpc2study/articles/Chapter04_Article01.pdf |access-date=24 January 2011 |doi=10.1177/1367877902005003005|s2cid=143556750 }}</ref> |
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In [[1994]], she changed her stage name back to her original name "Wong Fei" (王菲) for all subsequent releases in [[Standard Cantonese|Cantonese]] Hong Kong, one year later in the Mandarin market. |
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=== 1989–1991: the Shirley Wong period === |
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It was around this time that she began experimenting with alternative music styles from the West. The ethereal [[Scottish people|Scottish]] post-punk group [[Cocteau Twins]]' influence on her was clearly shown in her next Cantonese album, ''Random Thoughts''. She learned the unique vocal stylings of [[Dolores O'Riordan]] of the [[Ireland|Irish]] band [[The Cranberries]], which culminated in her covering their song "Dreams" in ''[[Chungking Express]]'' (retitled as "Dream Person" for Faye's ''Random Thoughts'' (胡思亂想)) and other songs by such other artists as [[The Sundays]] and [[Tori Amos]]. Besides covering songs and learning distinct vocal techniques, Wong recorded her own compositions like "Pledge" (誓言), co-written by and featuring [[Dou Wei]] on [[Di Zi]], and her first and only rap song "Exit" (出路). She also sang songs written by others, such as "Pure Love" (純情) and "Sleepwalk" (夢遊). |
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In 1989, her debut album ''[[Shirley Wong (album)|Shirley Wong]]'' sold 25,000 copies and won her bronze at the "Chik Chak New Artist Award". Two more albums (''[[Everything (Faye Wong album)|Everything]]'' and ''[[You're the Only One (album)|You're the Only One]]'') followed, similarly featuring many cover songs by artists from the US and Japan. They sold 10,000 copies each, despite relentless promotions by the company. Many in Hong Kong perceived her to be "backwards", lacking personality.<ref>{{Cite web |title=王菲情路回顾:曾因初恋与母亲闹僵 离开北京_娱乐频道_凤凰网 |url=https://ent.ifeng.com/idolnews/special/wangfeiliyapeng/content-3/detail_2013_09/17/29675110_0.shtml |access-date=2024-06-06 |website=ent.ifeng.com}}</ref> |
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At the time, both Wong and her then-agent Leslie Chan (陳健添) were in conflicts with Cinepoly under Chan Siu-Bo's successor Lal Dayaram (林振業).<ref>{{Cite web |title=明報周刊Online |url=http://emag.mingpaoweekly.com/cfm/archive_demo.cfm?DocFile=MPW_WEB_TC/2356/S00134/text/1388899025029 |access-date=2024-06-12 |website=emag.mingpaoweekly.com}}</ref> Leslie Chan then sold Wong's contract for 2 million HKD to Taiwanese singer [[Lo Ta-yu]]. Under the arrangement of Lo, who founded Music Factory in 1990 (later becoming the Hong Kong subsidiary of [[Rock Records]]), Wong went to the United States for professional training at the end of 1991. She initially went to Los Angeles with plans to learn keyboards, but missed the class registration deadline. She then moved to New York, living with [[Wawa (Taiwanese singer)|Wawa]], another new artist signed by Lo, at the house of Lo's sister, Jennifer, in Flushing. Wong attended classes at [[Barbizon Modeling and Acting School|the Barbizon School]], [[Martha Graham Center of Contemporary Dance|the Martha Graham School]] and with personal singing tutors for about two months. <ref>{{Cite web |last=自由時報電子報 |date=2018-06-07 |title=金智娟同居王菲 蜜戀情事全都露 - 自由娛樂 |url=https://ent.ltn.com.tw/news/breakingnews/2451444 |access-date=2024-06-12 |website=ent.ltn.com.tw |language=zh-TW}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=王菲的假"留学生涯"--细数天王巨星背后故事(图) |url=https://yule.sohu.com/90/65/earticle164486590.shtml |access-date=2024-06-12 |website=搜狐娱乐 |publisher=南方都市报}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last= |date=2016-10-03 |title=王菲为什么与罗大佑分道扬镳老死不相往来? |url=https://k.sina.cn/article_1198503091_476fb4b30190018ax.html |access-date=2024-06-06 |website=k.sina.cn}}</ref> In 1996, she explained New York's influence on her: |
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Because of the diversity of musical and aesthetic styles contained in these releases, they became quite influential among singers (old and new) as well as consumers in the Asian markets. To Wong's credit, each album still carried a balance between her preferred artistic taste and Cinepoly's commercial preference. |
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{{blockquote|I wandered around, visited museums and sat at cafes. There were so many strange, confident-looking people. They didn't care what other people thought of them. I felt I was originally like that too, independent and a little rebellious. But in Hong Kong I lost myself. I was shaped by others and became like a machine, a dress hanger. I had no personality and no sense of direction.<ref name="spaeth" />}} |
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===Mandarin Market=== |
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Besides two Cantonese albums in [[1994]], Wong released another two in [[Mandarin (linguistics)|Mandarin]] in [[Taiwan]], ''Mystery'' (迷) and ''Sky'' (天空). The runaway hit "I'm Willing" (我願意) became her trademark song throughout the Chinese-speaking world for years to come. Deemed as one of the greatest Chinese songs of the late 20th century, it has been covered by many other Chinese singers, such as [[Gigi Leung]], [[Sammi Cheng]], [[Jay Chou]], and more. |
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Even though Wong found the experience enlightening, her less than tactful communication led Lo to decide to end the contract with her by the time she returned to Hong Kong. The two never collaborated or shared the stage thereafter.<ref name=":0" /> With the help of her teacher Tai See-Chung, Wong found a new agent in Katie Chan (陳家瑛), who has remained her agent as well as her daughter's ever since. |
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While her music in Hong Kong had gone remarkably away from the mainstream, these two Mandarin albums, as her first attempt to enter the Taiwan (and later the mainland) market, were nonetheless the warmest and most traditional during her entire career and are especially cherished by her old fans. Critics generally agree that [[Yang Minghuang]], the producer of these albums, made them achievingly successful; although Faye Wong would still have climbed to the top, her music style would have been completely different from how it turned out, that is to say: exquisite and romantic as opposed to exotic, sharply distinctive and peculiarly artistic. |
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=== 1992–1995: ''Coming Home'', ''No Regrets'', ''100,000 Whys'', ''Random Thoughts'', ''Mystery'', ''Sky'', ''Decadent Sounds of Faye'' and ''Di-Dar'' === |
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Four best-selling albums both in the Cantonese and Mandarin-speaking regions, a record-breaking series of 18 consecutive concerts in Hong Kong and a widely acclaimed film (''Chungking Express'') all in [[1994]]: these achievements together made her the single most eminent female Hong Kong singer at that time. However, as a northern girl with an upbringing at odds with the way of life in Hong Kong, her distaste for the profit-oriented entertainment industry became more and more apparent. Meanwhile, she was frequently in touch with the [[Chinese rock|rock]] circle back in [[Beijing]]. Due to her somewhat reticent and nonchalant attitude, some began to consider her a defiant and arrogant superstar. For example, Wong would often give terse, direct, and somewhat unexpected answers when asked personal questions. |
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The 1992 album ''[[Coming Home (Faye Wong album)|Coming Home]],'' the first release since her return from New York, prominently featured on the cover her new English name "Faye", a [[homophone]] to her given Chinese name, and the Chinese character "Jing", a reference to her hometown Beijing. From then on she changed her stage name back to "Wang Fei" ({{linktext|王|菲}}).<ref>{{Cite web |last=Ziyi |first=Toh |date=June 2, 2023 |title=ChatGPT fooled by Faye Wong's old stage name, Wong Jing Wen; insists the two have different faces and singing styles |url=https://www.todayonline.com/8days/chatgpt-fooled-faye-wongs-old-stage-name-wong-jing-wen-insists-two-have-different-faces-and-singing-styles-2184556 |access-date=2024-06-06 |website=[[Today (website)|Today]] |language=en}}</ref> ''Coming Home'' incorporated [[R&B]] influences and was a change in musical direction from the more traditional [[Cantopop]] fare of her earlier albums. ''Coming Home'' also included her first English-language number, "Kisses in the Wind". Wong stated in a 1994 concert that she very much liked this song,<ref>Soundtrack video/CD of 1994–95 concert in Hong Kong</ref> after which various websites listed it as her personal favourite;<ref name="sina">[http://ent.sina.com.cn/s/h/f/wfei.html Faye Wong] at [[Sina Corporation|Sina.com]] {{in lang|zh}}</ref><ref name="JoshBio">[https://web.archive.org/web/20091027165940/http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/8598/faye/bio.html Josh's Faye Wong Biography Page]</ref><ref>This is also stated in the sleeve notes of the 2003 re-issue of her 1985 album, ''[http://8t8t.com/product_info.php/manufacturers_id/85/products_id/172 Enchanting Kaler] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071013085055/http://8t8t.com/product_info.php/manufacturers_id/85/products_id/172|date=13 October 2007}}''.</ref> however, in a 1998 CNN interview she declined to name one favourite song, saying that there were too many,<ref name="CNN" /> and in 2003 she stated that she no longer liked her old songs.<ref name="straitstimes2003">[http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/en/doc/2003-12/02/content_286599.htm "China diva, Faye Wang, changes her Ice Queen image?"], ''[[The Straits Times]]'', 2 December 2003. Cited at ''China Daily''. Retrieved 25 September 2010.</ref> |
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One of the songs on ''Coming Home'', "Fragile Woman" (容易受傷的女人), a cover of a Japanese song "[[Rouge (song)|Rouge]]" originally composed by [[Miyuki Nakajima]] and sung by [[Naomi Chiaki]], became Wong's first hit after being featured in the popular [[TVB]] drama ''[[The Greed of Man]]'' (1992). (Thanks to Wong's cover, this 1972 song—in different language versions—would in the early 1990s become a huge regional hit in Thailand, Vietnam, the rest of Southeast Asia and even Turkey; the most popular English version was titled "Broken-Hearted Woman".) The favourable reception of "Fragile Woman" led Wong to abandon her original plans to return to Los Angeles to continue her studies. Instead, she stayed in Hong Kong to build on her newfound success.<ref>{{Cite news |last=阿瑟 |first= |title=十万个为什么 十万个回答——访王靖雯 |work=音像世界1994年第二期}}</ref> |
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==Alternative Experiments== |
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===A Tribute to Teresa Teng=== |
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In [[1995]], she released ''The Decadent Sound of Faye'' (菲靡靡之音), a cover album containing unique renditions of songs originally done by her idol [[Teresa Teng]], one of the most revered Chinese singers of the 20th century. Because of the unfortunate death of Teng before the release of the album, Wong considered scrapping the project due to her respect. Teng's music remains extremely popular in [[Japan]], [[Taiwan]], Hong Kong, [[Southeast Asia]] and later mainland China. The title of this album is a pun: during the [[Cultural Revolution]], Teng's songs were condemned as "decadent sounds" (靡靡之音) by the [[CCP|communists]]. The album title is literally translated as ''Faye's Decadent Sound'' (菲靡靡之音) where the character "菲" (Faye) has the same pronunciation as "非" (no/not). ''Decadent Sounds'' sold quite well despite initial negative criticism. It has come to be recognised as a classic by her fans and is held as an example of imaginative covering by recent critics. |
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In February 1993, she wrote the Mandarin lyrics for her ballad "No Regrets" (執迷不悔) which led many to praise her as a gifted lyricist. In February, it became the title track to her album ''[[No Regrets (Faye Wong album)|No Regrets]]''. ''No Regrets'' features soft contemporary numbers, a few dance tracks and two versions of the title ballad: Wong's Mandarin version, and a Cantonese version (lyrics by [[Keith Chan Siu-kei|Keith Chan]]). In September 1993, her next album ''[[100,000 Whys]]'' showed considerable [[alternative pop|alternative music]] influences from the West, including the popular song "Cold War" (冷戰), a cover of "Silent All These Years" by [[Tori Amos]]. In 1992–93 she also appeared in [[TVB]] shows such as ''[[File of Justice II]]'' and ''[[The Legendary Ranger|Legendary Ranger]]''. |
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===Further Releases=== |
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In December, she released her last-to-date Cantonese album ''Di-Dar'' (there is no Chinese name) which mixes various feelings of hollowness, languor, apathy and desperation with a touch of [[Indian music|Indian]] and [[Middle Eastern music|Middle Eastern]] flavor. Having composed several songs in previous albums expressing a desire to release herself, she was now finally fed up with the hypocritical industry. [[Music video]]s show her doing all kinds of meaningless things, playing and dancing by herself, apparently bored to death. Nevertheless, this album was a success, partly because it was so different from the mainstream [[Cantopop]] music and, ironically, a couple of very traditional romantic songs topped the charts. |
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Wong has named the Scottish post-punk group [[Cocteau Twins]] among her favourite bands,<ref name=CNN>1998 interview on [[CNN]] (Mandarin with English translation), available on YouTube.</ref> and their influence was clear on her next Cantonese album, ''[[Random Thoughts (Faye Wong album)|Random Thoughts]]''. Her Cantonese version of [[The Cranberries]]' "[[Dreams (The Cranberries song)|Dreams]]" was featured in [[Wong Kar-wai]]'s film ''[[Chungking Express]]'', and gained lasting popularity.<ref name=encore>[http://www.china.org.cn/arts/2009-12/11/content_19048983.htm "An encore for Faye Wong"], ''[[China Daily]]'', 11 December 2009</ref> Besides covering songs and learning distinctive vocal techniques, Wong recorded her own compositions: "Pledge" (誓言), co-written with her then-boyfriend (and later husband), Beijing rock star [[Dou Wei]], as well as her first and only spoken-word song "Exit" (出路). The latter is a rare window into her outlook on life, including her worries about her future marriage with Dou, her conversion to Buddhism, her self-criticism, and her cynicism about the show business. |
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[[1996]] saw the release of what many would consider her boldest and most artistically coherent effort to date, ''Restless'' (浮躁). Faye was not at all satisfied with producing albums that the company demanded of her, so this Mandarin album was the result of her own will. This was risky for the relatively conservative Chinese [[pop music]] market, Cantonese and Mandarin alike, where the majority of audience are interested only in sugary love songs. This being her last album with Cinepoly, Wong felt she could take on more artistic risks. The album contains mainly her own compositions, with an aesthetic inspired by [[Cocteau Twins]], who also contributed two original songs to the album. Since Faye had previously covered their work in 1994, they had established a remote working relationship, laying down vocals for a track on the Asian version of the group's 1995 album, ''[[Milk And Kisses]]''. [[Simon Raymonde]] & [[Robin Guthrie]] further contributed two other compositions, but only one of them showed up on her 1997 self-titled follow-up. |
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Besides two Cantonese albums in 1994, Wong released two other albums in [[Standard Chinese|Mandarin]] in Taiwan, ''[[Mystery (Faye Wong album)|Mystery]]'' and ''[[Sky (Faye Wong album)|Sky]],'' which propelled her to fame in the Mandarin-speaking world. The song "I'm Willing" (我願意) in ''Mystery'' would become her trademark Mandopop song till this day, and has been covered by other singers such as [[Gigi Leung]], [[Sammi Cheng]] and [[Jay Chou]]. ''Sky'' was seen by fans as a successful amalgam of artistic experimentation and commercialism. While her hits in Hong Kong were noticeably alternative, her two Mandarin albums were more lyrical and traditional. Critics generally credit Taiwanese producer Yang Ming-huang (楊明煌) for their success. |
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Critics loved and still love this impatience-themed album that presents a bright picture of joy, carefreeness, anxiety, fear and decadence under a sunny [[autumn]] sky. A [[Buddhist]] herself, Faye weaves in teachings of transience and disengagement that can also be found in her previous and later albums. Although this is Faye's personal favorite, the response from Hong Kong and Taiwan was less than desirable. Many fans who loved her previous three Mandarin albums turned their back on ''Restless'' (浮躁), which they considered to be weird, self-absorbed, and too brief. However, hardcore fans, or Fayenatics, worship it and use this album to distinguish who is a "real" Fayenatic. Wong has not released another fully artistic album ever since. After the release, Faye became the second Chinese artist (after [[Gong Li]]) and the first Chinese singer to be featured on the cover of ''[[TIME]]'' magazine. |
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With four best-selling albums in Cantonese and Mandarin, a record-breaking 18 consecutive concerts in Hong Kong, and a widely acclaimed film, ''[[Chungking Express]]'' (1994), Wong had established herself as a diva, or "heavenly queen" (天后) as she is commonly known in the Chinese world, by the mid-1990s. Meanwhile, her distaste for Hong Kong's entertainment industry and media environment only grew. She was frequently in touch with the Beijing [[Chinese rock|rock]] scene, where [[Dou Wei]] was a leading light and whose influence distinguished her from the mainstream pop music in Hong Kong. |
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==Cinepoly [[Extended Play|EP]]s== |
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In [[1993]]-[[1995|95]], each EP was released annually: ''Like Wind'' (如風), ''Faye Disc'' (菲碟), and ''One Person, Two Roles'' (一人分飾兩角). Then in [[1996]]-[[1997|97]], Faye took a break of her songwriting talents for a while and sang ten original songs in Cantonese all written by lyricist Lin Xi and various composers, such as [[Wong Ka Keung]], Adrian Chan, and Chan Xiao Xia, before her departure from Cinepoly. Afterwards, she decided not to release anymore Cantonese albums in the future. Under these circumstances, the company published eight of them in the next two EPs entitled ''Toy'' (玩具) and ''Help Yourself'' (自便) (five in ''Toy'' ((玩具)), leaving other two inserted in a few compilations (one of them became available first). |
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In 1995, she released ''[[Decadent Sounds of Faye]]'', a cover album of songs originally recorded by her idol [[Teresa Teng]] (whose songs had been banned during Wong's formative years in mainland China for being "decadent sounds" from Taiwan). A duet with Teng was planned for the album, but she died before this could be recorded.<ref>[http://ent.sina.com.cn/y/2006-02-15/1251986336.html Xiaobao Chen], ex-CEO of [[Universal Records]] Hong Kong {{in lang|zh}}</ref> ''Decadent Sounds'' sold well despite initial negative criticism, and has come to be recognised as an example of imaginative covering by recent critics. |
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Although the EPs contained new songs and were welcomed by fans, they received cool critical responses. Unlike the other EPs, ''Toy'' (玩具) contained neither remixes nor songs from other personal albums. The package was itself heavily criticised, e.g. as 20 minutes of dull, inept artwork, or as cardboard with nothing to commend it; but it was nonetheless successful among the sales and acclamations alike way better than her previous album did in the past season. |
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Faye Wong and [[Dou Wei]] were the winner and the runner-up to the 1995 [[MTV Video Music Award for International Viewer's Choice|MTV International Viewer's Choice Award]], with the music videos "Chess" and "Black Dream" respectively. In December, she released her Cantonese album ''[[Di-Dar]]'' which mixes an alternative [[yodelling]] style with a touch of [[Music of India|Indian]] and [[Middle Eastern music|Middle Eastern]] flavour. This album was a success, partly because it was so different from the mainstream [[Cantopop]] music, but—ironically—a couple of very traditional romantic songs topped the charts. |
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==First Marriage: [[Dou Wei]]== |
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Ever since her rise to fame, Wong had been frequently cooperating with musicians back in Beijing's rock circle. She consequently fell in love with fellow Beijinger Dou Wei, her musical partner and a prominent musician/rock star in his own right. One morning, Hong Kong [[paparazzi]] captured a picture of her dumping a chamber pot with disarrayed hair and sleepy eyes in a slummy neighbourhood. This photo caused a stir in the HK entertainment industry in whose eyes the contrast between her diva status in Hong Kong and a life in a small, shabby, less than sanitary house in Beijing was quite astonishing. Many from then on saw Wong as a woman who would sacrifice anything for love. In June [[1996]], after being pregnant for several months, she finally married Dou. |
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=== 1996: ''Fuzao'' and Cinepoly extended plays === |
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Their daughter, Dou Jingtong (竇靖童, lit. meaning "child of Dou and Jing [from Wong's first stage name Jingwen]") was born on [[January 3]], [[1997]]. The baby's voice appears in the song "Tong" on the [[1998]] album ''Scenic Tour'' (唱遊), as well as the title track of the album ''Only Love Strangers'' (只愛陌生人) released in [[1999]]. |
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1996 saw the release of what many would consider her boldest and most artistically coherent effort to date, ''[[Fuzao]]'', usually translated as ''Restless'' or ''Impatience''. This was her last album with Cinepoly, and Wong felt she could take more artistic risks. The album contains mainly her own compositions, with an aesthetic inspired by the [[Cocteau Twins]], who penned two original songs for the album, "Fracture" (分裂) and "Spoilsport" (掃興). As Wong had covered their work in 1994, she had established a remote working relationship with them—even laying down vocals for a special duet version of "Serpentskirt" on the Asian release of the group's 1996 album ''[[Milk & Kisses]]''. |
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Although the album was Wong's personal favourite, the response from Hong Kong and Taiwan was less supportive. Many fans who enjoyed her previous three Mandarin albums turned their back on ''Restless'', which they considered to be too alternative and self-absorbed. There were few ballads which were radio-friendly and some became disenchanted with her experimental style of recording. However, hardcore fans, known as Fayenatics,<ref>The term "Fayenatics" was derived from a popular Internet fan [[mailing list]] back in 1997. Some members of the mailing list recorded a double disc album in 1998 called [https://web.archive.org/web/20091027165940/http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/8598/faye/fayenaticscd.html ''Fayenatics – The Album'']. In a CNN interview that year, Wong mentioned that she had received a copy of this album.</ref> adored the album and it became a cult hit. Wong has not released another fully artistic album since. After the release, Wong became the second Chinese artist (after [[Gong Li]])—and the first Chinese singer—to be featured on the cover of ''Time'' magazine.<ref>{{cite magazine |url=https://content.time.com/time/covers/asia/0,16641,19961014,00.html |title=The Divas of Pop |magazine=[[Time (magazine)|Time]] |date=14 October 1996 |at=cover}}</ref> |
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However, the paparazzi, particularly those from Hong Kong, were the first to detect alienation between the two, especially during Wong's concert tour of Japan in March 1999. Several days later, they caught Dou with another woman inside a restaurant in Beijing. Asked who she was, Dou immediately answered, "She is Gao Yuan (高原). My lover". Wong was already famous in the mainland by 1999, so this news caused a shock in the entertainment industry across the Chinese-speaking world. Due to the relatively conservative social values in Chinese society, overwhelming media coverage appeared, ferociously condemning Dou's infidelity. Reports and rumours were flying around, including one that said Gao admitted she and Dou had been lovers for years and had never really separated even after the wedding. Wong's enormous group of multinational fans maintained relentless attacks on Dou for a long time. However, he declared that all had been set up by Wong's agent and company from the very beginning. Their friends in the Beijing music circle also declined to comment. On the other hand, Wong remained silent and secluded during the whole time and never talked about it in public later on, with a few exceptions when she mentioned the future life of her daughter, whom she won custody of after the following divorce. |
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From 1993 to 1995, Cinepoly released an [[Extended play|EP]] of Wong's songs each year: ''Like Wind'' (如風), ''Faye Disc'' (菲碟) and ''[[One Person Playing Two Roles|One Person, Two Roles]]''. Then in 1996–97, she recorded ten original songs in Cantonese, all written by lyricist [[Albert Leung]] and various composers, such as [[Wong Ka Keung]], Adrian Chan and Chan Xiao Xia, before her departure from Cinepoly. After her contract with Cinepoly expired, the company released eight of these songs in the two subsequent EPs entitled ''[[Toy and Help Yourself#Toy|Toy]]'' (玩具) and ''[[Toy and Help Yourself#Help Yourself|Help Yourself]]'' (自便). Although the EPs contained new songs—ballad hits like "Undercurrent" (暗湧), "Date" (約定) and "On Time" (守時)—and were welcomed by fans, they received lukewarm critical responses. The other two songs were included in later compilations; the last to be released was "Scary" (心驚膽顫) in 2002. |
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== [[EMI]] Period (1997-2001)== |
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Wong signed with the recording industry magnate EMI in [[1997]] after her daughter was born, at a price of (according to the media) 60 million [[Hong Kong dollar]]s (appox. 7.7 million [[US dollar]]s) for 55 songs to be released in 5 albums. While most of her earlier albums prior to 1996 were sung in [[Standard Cantonese|Cantonese]], Wong has almost consistently sung in Mandarin, her mother tongue, ever since. Although the Mandarin market, which includes mainland China, Taiwan and Singapore, is a much larger market than the Cantonese one, Faye also recorded a couple of Cantonese songs in each of the last four albums with EMI in order to retain her Hong Kong audience. Having gone through a stage of experimentation, Wong stated that she wished to produce "music that I like. I do not care if others don't, though I would be delighted if they do". |
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=== 1997–1998: ''Faye Wong'' and ''Sing and Play'' === |
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Wong signed for the recording giant [[EMI]] in 1997 after her first daughter was born, in a contract worth HK$60 million (approx. US$7.7 million), to release 55 songs in five albums. While most of her earlier albums were in Cantonese, Wong has since sung more in Mandarin, her mother tongue. Having gone through a period of experimentation, Wong stated that she wished to make "music that I like. I do not care if others don't, though I would be delighted if they do". |
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Her first album with EMI is ''Faye Wong (1997)'' (王菲), released in autumn 1997. Critics had been expecting that she could offer another ground-breaking artistic piece of work after her critically acclaimed yet commercially frustrating ''Restless'' in 1996, but much to their dismay, ''Faye Wong'' was almost completely pleasant and commercial in music. The only thing unordinary about it is her [[panda]]-eye makeup and strange clothes in the booklet and the music videos. Wong put away all her distinctive vocal techniques, thus forming a brand new "natural" style. |
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Her first album with EMI was [[Faye Wong (1997 album)|''Faye Wong'']] (王菲 1997), released in autumn 1997. Critics expecting another artistic breakthrough after 1996's ''Restlessness'' found—much to their dismay—a much more inoffensive and commercially oriented musical album. [[Simon Raymonde]] and [[Robin Guthrie]] of the Cocteau Twins wrote two original compositions for the album, but only one, "The Amusement Park" (娛樂場), was used. This release included an acoustic cover of the Cocteau Twins' "Rilkean Heart", renamed "Nostalgia" (懷念).<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20040410162520/http://hem.passagen.se/violaine/FayeWong.htm Cocteau Twins Atlas.]</ref> |
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This album is filled with feelings of lethargy, languor, drowsiness and disengagement, yet most of the songs sound warm and sweet, as opposed to those sharp self-centered ones before her motherhood. Reporters also noticed that she began to smile more in public and was not so icy or aloof as before. However, this album came out during the [[Asian financial crisis]] that swept [[East Asia|East]] and [[Southeast Asia]], among which Hong Kong was heavily hit. Wong's old boss Cinepoly has all the copyrights of her previous songs, and released a Mandarin compilation at the same time in 1997 to counteract (and indeed outperformed) her new album with EMI. Later on, Cinepoly would release a couple of compilations every year to fight Wong's new albums, which has come under strong criticism from her multi-national fans. ''Faye Wong'' didn't sell well in Hong Kong and other damaged areas in Asia, but it did quite well in other Mandarin markets such as Taiwan and mainland China. Although Wong gained some popularity with her previous 4 Mandarin CDs, it was this sweet yet slightly alternative album that really got the Chinese listeners' attention. From here on, her stature began to rise sharply in Asia. |
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This album is filled with feelings of lethargy, languor and disengagement, yet most of the tracks sound warm and sweet, as opposed to those piquant self-centered ones before her motherhood. Reporters noticed that she began to smile more often in public and was not as icy or aloof as before. However, the album was released during the [[Asian financial crisis]] which swept East and Southeast Asia. Wong's former company Cinepoly, which retains the copyright on her previous records, released a Mandarin compilation at the same time in 1997 to counteract her new EMI album (and indeed outperformed it). Later, Cinepoly would release two compilations each year to compete with Wong's new releases, a tactic which has come under fire from her international fans. ''Faye Wong'' did not sell well in Hong Kong, but did quite well in Taiwan and mainland China. Although Wong had garnered some popularity with her 4 previous Mandarin albums, it was really this sweet yet slightly alternative album which had the mainland Chinese audience listening. Her profile began to rise sharply in Asia. |
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===1998 ''Scenic Tour''=== |
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{{sect-stub}} |
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At the beginning of [[1998]], Wong was invited to sing "Meet in '98" with her personal friend [[Na Ying]], a prominent mainland pop singer, at the 1998 [[Spring Festival]] Gala hosted by [[China Central Television]], an annual show that enjoys a stunning average rating over two decades since its first broadcast on the eve of 1983's [[Chinese Lunar New Year]]. This national recognition immediately boosted her career in the mainland, her name spreading from the young generation keen on pop music from Hong Kong and Taiwan to a far wider range of audience. |
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In 1997, singer [[Na Ying]] signed with [[EMI]] and struck a lasting friendship with Wong. Na had been a regular at the annual ''[[CCTV New Year's Gala]]'', the most-watched TV show in mainland China and the world, and she invited Wong to do a duet with her on the upcoming show in 1998. The collaboration by the "Mainland Diva" and "Hong Kong Diva", titled "Let's Meet in 1998" (相約一九九八), became an instant hit and arguably the most played song in mainland China that year.<ref>[http://www.china.org.cn/arts/2010-02/13/content_19421954.htm Chinese A-list entertainers to perform in CCTV gala], Xinhua, 13 February 2010.</ref> Thanks to this exposure{{#tag:ref|In 2009, former [[China Central Television|CCTV]] president Yang Weiguang revealed that Faye Wong had been "banned" by the station for some time, after refusing to change the lyrics of a song when the station invited her once before (which she did not participate as a result).<ref>[http://www.infzm.com/content/29286/2 杨伟光:解密央视] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140209202600/http://www.infzm.com/content/29286/2 |date=9 February 2014 }}"杨伟光:《相约九八》我们审完后,有一天晚上那英给我打电话,问我为什么要把节目拿下。我就去问了这个事情,他们告诉我过去有一台晚会,想让王菲把歌词改了,王菲不改,然后还不唱了,这次就要惩罚她。我说,这个节目很好,还是该上。我们一定要有胸怀,人家不愿意改也要尊重别人。《相约98》这么好的歌,那英跟王菲一起演出,形式多好,为什么要因为过去的事拿下。我一直主张不要“封杀”人家。"</ref>|group=fn|name="CCTV_ban"}}, in late 1998 Wong finally held her first concert in her native mainland, and continued her tour in 9 cities. |
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===1999 ''Only Love Strangers''=== |
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{{sect-stub}} |
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''[[Sing and Play]]'' was released in October, and contained four songs composed by Wong: the opening track "Emotional Life", "Face", "A Little Clever" and "Tong" (both written for her daughter, the latter produced by Dou Wei). Amongst other songs were "Give Up Halfway" (sung both in Mandarin and Cantonese), which was one of the more commercially successful tracks from the album, along with the successful ballad "Red Bean" (紅豆). |
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===2000 ''Fable''=== |
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The new millennium saw a ground-breaking shift in Wong's musical career with the album ''Fable'' (寓言). The prominent feature of this album is its segregated and distinguishable 『halves』 – songs in the first half of the album running in an almost continuous manner and in a format that is akin to a song-cycle, and the second half of discrete, chart-friendly numbers. The album itself derives its artistic merits from the first half, notable for its unique thematic and continuous sequencing of songs unprecedented in the Chinese music industry. The theme itself is ambiguous and the lyrics subject to multiple interpretations, though it is quite certain that the theme of ''Fable'' forms the main thematic reference, derived from the motivic elements of the prince and princess in fables and fairytales of European origins. Elements of spirituality, metaphysics and Buddhism hold an important place in the lyrics as well, penned by Lin Xi who has by then, been unanimously identified as Faye’s lyricist ''par excellence''. Musically the arrangements display influences of drum and bass, electronica, east-west collage and lush string orchestral infusions. |
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It was the best selling Chinese album in Singapore in 1999. Together with ''[[Lovers & Strangers]]'' and the compilation album ''Wishing We Last Forever'', it gave Wong 3 albums in the Singapore top 10 selling Chinese albums of 1999,<ref>http://www.wongfei.org/discuz/bbs/viewthread.php?tid=32503&extra=page%3D1%26amp%3Bfilter%3Dtype%26amp%3Btypeid%3D10 {{dead link|date=March 2011}}</ref> making her one of the best selling artists in Singapore in 1999.<ref>[http://asia.eonline.com/News/Stories/20000105/20000105004.html?rid=1501 Asia E-Online]{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} {{Dead link|date=July 2022}}, cited at [http://wongfaye.org/news/news0001.htm wongfaye.org], 5 January 2000</ref> In Japan, the album sold close to 90,000 copies in the first three months after its release.<ref name="billboard-990122">[http://www.billboard.com/charts#/news/china-s-wong-is-big-in-japan-946784.story China's Wong Is Big In Japan], ''Billboard'', 22 January 1999. Retrieved 21 March 2012</ref> |
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''Fable'' represents a milestone in Faye's artistic development and constitutes an important album of Faye’s entire opus. It remains indisputably a ground-breaking contribution to the Chinese indie soundscape as well as retaining a special place with Faye fans around the world. |
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=== |
=== 1999: "Eyes on Me" and ''Lovers & Strangers'' === |
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The video game ''[[Final Fantasy VIII]]'' was released in Japan in February 1999, for which Faye Wong recorded the ballad "[[Eyes on Me (Faye Wong song)|Eyes on Me]]" in English. It was the first time that a Japanese video game featured a Chinese singer for its theme. The "Eyes on Me" single sold over 335,620 copies in Japan and 500,000 worldwide,<ref name="sem_sales">{{cite web|last=Greening|first=Chris|title=Square Enix Album Sales|publisher=Square Enix Music Online|url=http://www.squareenixmusic.com/features/editorials/salesfigures.shtml|access-date=5 August 2011}}</ref> making it the best-selling [[video game music]] disc to that date, and winning "Song of the Year (Western Music)" at the 14th Annual Japan Gold Disc Awards.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.riaj.or.jp/data/others/gdlist/pdf/gd1-20_list.pdf |script-title=ja:ゴールドディスク大賞受賞者一覧 |language=ja |publisher = [[Recording Industry Association of Japan]]|trans-title= List of Gold Disc Awards |page=7|access-date=15 February 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Square Enix USA site staff |title=Nobuo Uematsu's Profile |url=http://www.square-enix-usa.com/uematsu/profile/index.html |access-date=10 December 2006 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090312044802/http://www.square-enix-usa.com/uematsu/profile/index.html |archive-date=12 March 2009 }}</ref> When the game was released in North America later that year, the theme song became very popular among gamers in the West; while it was not a mainstream hit there (as Wong had no desire to explore these markets), she gained many fans who were not previously familiar with her music.<ref name=changing-tastes>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/music/4177006.stm The changing musical tastes of China], BBC News, 23 August 2005. Retrieved 10 May 2011.</ref> |
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By this time, Faye had forged a famous alliance with producer/musician Zhang Ya Dong and lyricist Lin Xi, often referred to by the public as the 'iron triangle'. However, due to Zhang Ya Tong's unavailability during this period (he was engaged on other projects), Faye decided to treat this last album with EMI as an experiment whereby she would collaborate with new producers/musicians/lyricists and 'see what their vision of her will be'. |
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In March, she held two concerts in [[Nippon Budokan]], with tickets for the first show on 11 March being sold out in one day and an extra show added on 12 March;<ref name=billboard-990122/> she was the first Chinese singer to perform in that venue.<ref>[http://www.fayefans.com/fayenews/faye0399/fayenew130399.htm 酒井法子與王菲見面] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030509095757/http://www.fayefans.com/fayenews/faye0399/fayenew130399.htm |date=9 May 2003 }} {{in lang|zh}}, "[[Noriko Sakai]] Meets with Faye Wong Backstage", 13 March 1999. Retrieved 6 December 2006.</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=BIOGRAPHY – FAYE WONG | フェイ・ウォン – UNIVERSAL MUSIC JAPAN |url=https://www.universal-music.co.jp/faye-wong/biography/ |access-date=7 January 2024 |website=フェイ・ウォン |language=ja}}</ref> Earlier in the year, [[Pepsi|Pepsi-Cola]] had made Wong a spokesperson, and after these concerts she shot the promotional music video for "Spectacular" (精彩), which Pepsi used in [[commercials]]. |
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Nevertheless, the response from the public and critics alike were lukewarm at best. Die-hard fayenatics felt that it deviated to much from the trademark 'trippy/softrock' style established in her former albums. Even Faye herself admitted that she was not totally satisfied with a some tracks, namely those produced by Taiwan 'father of rock' [[Wu Bai]] which had an industrial electronica flavor reminescent of [[Karen Mok]]'s 'Golden Flower' album. She cited 2 folk-style songs written by Singaporean singer-song writer [[Tanya Chua]] as her favorite picks on her album. The song that generated most noise from the press turned out to be one penned by former love Nicholas Tse. |
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The album ''[[Lovers & Strangers]]'' was released in late September,<ref>[http://www.fayefans.com/fayenews/faye0999/fayenew080999b.htm Faye Wong's new album ''Only Love Strangers'' released] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030524134625/http://www.fayefans.com/fayenews/faye0999/fayenew080999b.htm |date=24 May 2003 }} {{in lang|zh}} [[Apple Daily]], 8 September 1999. Retrieved 6 December 2006. |
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Despite not being her most prominent album, 'Faye Wong' reached number 14 on the Japan Oricon charts - no mean feat for a Chinese singer in a large market that looks more towards the West. |
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</ref> and sold over 800,000 copies, topping the charts in Hong Kong, Mainland China, Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia.<ref name=cantonese-record>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/1994254.stm Cantonese record for Wong], BBC, 17 May 2002</ref> This was her first album after parting from [[Dou Wei]], and her first without any musical collaborations with him since their relationship began. The title track of the album was featured in [[Sylvester Stallone]]'s remake of ''[[Get Carter (2000 film)|Get Carter]]''. The entire album was penned by [[Albert Leung]], who, like Wong, was suffering from a broken heart in his love life at the time. Buddhist philosophy has informed his lyrics since the album, originally as a way to console both Wong and himself. In 2022, Leung picked two of the songs, "Last Blossom" (開到荼靡) and "One Hundred Years of Solitude" (百年孤寂), as his all-time favorites over his prolific career.<ref>{{Cite web |last=自由時報電子報 |date=2022-06-30 |title=(專訪)林夕公開劈腿王菲陳奕迅 不怕遭非議 - 自由電子報影音頻道 |url=https://video.ltn.com.tw/article/piqgwSuG3fg/PLCvAZ9B-QRHM3BU9tFfccVE4VWRqmTjXl |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=video.ltn.com.tw |language=zh-TW}}</ref> Wong also became a spokesperson for [[SoftBank Group|JPhone]] in October, 1999, performing in several commercials which aired in Japan. In addition, she began filming for ''[[2046 (film)|2046]]'' in August, a project she would pursue on and off over the next few years when her schedule permitted. |
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=== 2000–2004: ''Fable'', ''Faye Wong'' and ''To Love'' === |
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==[[Nicholas Tse]]== |
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[[File:Fayewongcropped.png|right|thumb|upright|Faye Wong in concert, Hong Kong, 2003]] |
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In her first public romantic relationship after her failed marriage, Wong took up with Hong Kong singer and actor, [[Nicholas Tse]], whose reputation at the time was the town's leading "bad boy" celebrity. While this [[May-December romance]] (Wong is 11 years his senior) delighted local [[tabloids]] and gossip magazines, which first reported the affair in June 2000, Wong's protective fan base were decidedly confused and upset over this new relationship. Many felt that Tse was not good enough for her, and voiced concerns he would betray her in the end. |
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The new millennium saw a shift in Wong's musical career with the album ''[[Fable (album)|Fable]]''. The prominent feature of this album is its segregated and distinguishable halves—songs in the first half of the album running in an almost continuous manner and in a format that is akin to a song-cycle, and the second half of discrete, chart-friendly numbers. The album itself derives its artistic merits from the first half, notable for its unique thematic and continuous sequencing of songs unprecedented in the Chinese music industry. The theme itself is ambiguous and the lyrics subject to multiple interpretations, though it is quite certain that the theme of ''Fable'' forms the main thematic reference, derived from the motivic elements of the prince and princess in fables and fairytales of European origins. Elements of spirituality, metaphysics and Buddhism hold an important place in the lyrics as well, penned by Albert Leung who has by then, been unanimously identified as Wong's lyricist ''par excellence''. Musically the arrangements display influences of drum and bass, [[electronica]], east-west collage and lush string orchestral infusions. Her other activities during this year included the Pepsi promotional duet and music video of "Galaxy Unlimited" with [[Aaron Kwok]], the filming of ''Okinawa Rendezvous'', as well as several concerts in China and Taiwan. |
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By this time, Wong had forged a famous alliance with producer/musician [[Zhang Yadong]] and lyricist [[Albert Leung]], often referred to as the 'iron triangle'. However, due to Zhang Yadong's unavailability during this period (he was engaged on other projects), Wong decided to treat this last album with EMI as an experiment whereby she would collaborate with new producers/musicians/lyricists and 'see what their vision of her will be'. |
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Her fans' suspicions were confirmed in March 2002 when local news media reported that Tse had been secretly romancing Hong Kong actress and singer, [[Cecilia Cheung]], who is also 11 years younger than Wong. Not long after this affair become public did Tse sever his ties with Wong and his career suffered because of it. However, after Tse's romance with Cheung ended only months later in July 2002, Wong and Tse resumed their on-again, off-again relationship to the great dismay of her fans, until she met her current husband, actor [[Li Yapeng]], in 2003. |
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The response from the public and critics alike were lukewarm at best. Wong herself admitted that she was not totally satisfied with some tracks, namely those produced by Taiwan 'father of rock' [[Wu Bai]],{{Citation needed|date=May 2009}} which had an industrial [[electronica]] flavour reminiscent of [[Karen Mok]]'s album ''Golden Flower''. She cited the two folk-style songs written by Singaporean singer-songwriter [[Tanya Chua]] as her favourite picks on her album. The song that generated most noise from the press turned out to be "Vertigo" (迷魂記), a ballad composed by her then-boyfriend [[Nicholas Tse]]. Tse claimed that his composition was originally for Singaporean singer [[Stefanie Sun]];<ref>{{Cite web |title=谢霆锋:《迷魂记》并不是为王菲写的(附图) |url=https://ent.sina.com.cn/p/i/2001-10-26/61522.html |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=ent.sina.com.cn}}</ref> however, when the song went to Wong, [[Albert Leung]] crafted it as a love song between Wong and Tse from Wong's perspective. Leung followed this with a less known companion piece for Tse, "Angel in White"(白衣天使), from Tse's perspective. "Vertigo" is also [[Leah Dou]]'s favorite song from her mother's body of work.<ref>{{Cite web |last=自由時報電子報 |date=2016-04-20 |title=竇靖童愛聽媽唱《迷魂記》 謝霆鋒做的歌 - 自由娛樂 |url=https://ent.ltn.com.tw/news/breakingnews/1670019 |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=ent.ltn.com.tw |language=zh-TW}}</ref> |
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==[[Sony]] Period (2002-)== |
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While she was under contract with EMI and Sony, she acted in the ensemble movie [[2046 (film)|2046]], which has been in production since [[1999]] and finally wrapped in the mid-[[2000s]]. She performed at fundraising concerts to benefit various charities, including ones that helped those who suffered from [[AIDS]] and [[SARS]]. She sung on tracks with other celebrities such as [[Tony Leung Chiu Wai]], [[Anita Mui]], and [[Aaron Kwok]]. She starred in other movies and TV serials such as ''Usokoi'' and ''Leaving Me Loving You''. Meanwhile, her former record companies released several more compilations and box sets of her records (EMI only released a few). |
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While she was under contract with EMI and later Sony, Wong performed in the ensemble movie ''[[2046 (film)|2046]]'' which had been in production since 1999 and finally wrapped in 2004. She performed at benefit concerts, including ones that helped those who suffered from AIDS and [[SARS]]. She sang on tracks with other celebrities such as [[Tony Leung Chiu Wai|Tony Leung]], [[Anita Mui]], and [[Aaron Kwok]]. She also starred in a Japanese TV serial, ''Usokoi'', and the film ''Leaving Me Loving You'' with [[Leon Lai]]. |
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She recorded several solo, non-album tracks, such as the eponymous hit [[Hero (Faye Wong song)|theme song]] to ''[[Hero (film)|Hero]]'' and a Buddhist song containing similar sounds to some of her work on her album ''Impatience''. In addition, she recorded a recitation of the Heart Sutra. |
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The theme song for ''Usokoi'', titled "[[Separate Ways (Faye Wong album)|Separate Ways]]", was released as a single; it was one of her few Japanese songs (another being "Valentine's Radio").<ref>For the album ''Queen's Fellows: [[Yuming]] 30th anniversary cover album'' (Japan Version), 11 December 2002, Toshiba EMI (JP) TOCT-25001, [http://www.emimusic.jp/yuming/queens/ Queen's Fellows] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110725151908/http://www.emimusic.jp/yuming/queens/ |date=25 July 2011 }}. Retrieved 14 July 2007.</ref> She recorded several other solo non-album tracks, such as the eponymous hit theme song to ''[[Hero (2002 film)|Hero]]'' and a Buddhist song containing similar sounds to some of her work on her album ''Fu Zao''. In addition, she recorded a recitation of the [[Heart Sutra]]. Meanwhile, her former record companies released several more compilations and boxed sets of her records. |
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Meanwhile, she recorded 13 tracks for her album ''To Love'' (將愛), released in November [[2003]]. 10 tracks were sung in Mandarin and 3 in Cantonese. She wrote the music and lyrics for three songs, and the music for 2 others. Before the album's release, her Cantonese song "In the Name of Love" (假愛之名), with lyrics by Lin Xi, was banned in some areas such as [[mainland China]] because the lyrics mentioned opium. At any rate, according to interviews, she said that she preferred the Mandarin version of the song (the title track), which used drug-free lyrics that she penned herself. The album became more successful than her previous self-titled album both financially and critically. Afterwards, she held numerous successful concerts for over a year. |
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For her Sony album ''[[To Love (Faye Wong album)|To Love]]'', released in November 2003, she recorded 13 tracks, 10 in Mandarin and 3 in Cantonese. She wrote the music and lyrics for 3 songs, the title track "To Love" (將愛), "Letting Go" (不留), "Sunshine Baby" (陽寶), as well as the music for "April Snow" (四月雪). The three songs with her own lyrics stirred much speculation about their implications of her personal life, as she was in a love quadrangle with [[Nicholas Tse]], [[Cecilia Cheung]], [[Li Yapeng]], though with Li unknown to the public then. "To Love," short for “To Love to the End" (將愛進行到底), the name of [[Li Yapeng]]'s 1998 breakout show (also known in English as ''Eternal Love'' or ''Cherish Our Love Forever''), describes love as a "war." She explained in an interview: "Love itself is not a war, but my love triggered a war. I'm referring to many things attached to love, such as utilitarian and conspiratorial elements, which involve sacrifices. The environment makes love very cruel."<ref>{{Cite web |title=爱情引发"战争" 王菲直言受过功利阴谋的伤害-搜狐娱乐 |url=https://yule.sohu.com/45/96/article215339645.shtml |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=yule.sohu.com}}</ref> "Sunshine Baby," along with the song "MV" (short for "My Valentine") composed by Tse, is sometimes interpreted as her nostalgia for the relationship with [[Nicholas Tse]], as "baby", or in Beijing dialect "baobei'er," was their term of endearment for each other.<ref>{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5T4MOpWczmY |title=謝霆鋒與王菲互稱寶貝兒 與前妻張柏芝保持友好關係|未睇過陳冠希慾照 謝賢狄波拉離婚成陰影?|男人最痛親情與愛情 學煮鋒味與囝囝享親子樂|最佳男主角 黎芷珊 |date=2022-07-04 |last=HK E News |access-date=2024-06-07 |via=YouTube}}</ref> "Letting Go," especially in retrospect, is an overture to her then little known life decisions to leave Tse for Li, to leave Hong Kong for Beijing, and, as echoed by "Passenger" (乘客), a cover of [[Sophie Zelmani]]'s "Going Home," to leave the entertainment business for a new family. |
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==Second Marriage: [[Li Yapeng]]== |
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Before the album's release, her Cantonese song "The Name of Love" (假愛之名), with lyrics by Albert Leung, was banned in some areas such as [[mainland China]] because the lyrics mentioned opium.<ref>[http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2004-04/23/content_325682.htm "Pop diva Faye Wong performs in Kuala Lumpur"], ''China Daily'', 23 April 2004. Retrieved 25 September 2010.</ref> According to interviews, she said that she preferred the Mandarin version of the song (the title track); she had penned these lyrics herself, and they made no reference to drugs.<ref name="straitstimes2003" /> The album became more successful than her previous self-titled album, both commercially and critically. Afterwards, she held numerous successful concerts for over a year. Faye Wong was awarded pan-Asian female artist of the year at the sixth CCTV-MTV Music Honors.<ref>{{Cite magazine|title=Faye Wong, Pu Shu Win Big At CCTV-MTV Awards|url=https://www.billboard.com/articles/business/1432923/faye-wong-pu-shu-win-big-at-cctv-mtv-awards|access-date=4 February 2021|magazine=[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]}}</ref> At the 2004 [[Golden Melody Awards]], she was awarded Best Female Artist after being nominated multiple times, delivering the now-famous acceptance speech: "I can sing songs. This I know. Now that Golden Melody judges have given me their approval, I approve of their approval."<ref>[http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2004-05/09/content_329024.htm "Asia pop stars sing Golden Melody"]. ''China Daily'', 9 May 2004. Retrieved 28 March 2007.</ref><ref>[http://music.ent.tom.com/1282/1293/200459-34917.html Looking at the 15th GMA Awards through Faye Wong: right to be "rude"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081002084624/http://music.ent.tom.com/1282/1293/200459-34917.html |date=2 October 2008 }} {{in lang|zh}}, [[TOM Online]], 9 May 2004. Retrieved 28 March 2007.</ref> |
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Relying on photos and other sources, the press reported that she began dating and subsequently engaged to actor Li Yapeng. It remained a mere rumor to some until their wedding in [[2005]]. It was her second marriage, after Dou Wei. Around the time of the wedding, her manager confirmed that she might retire from singing and acting. [http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2005-05/28/content_3013220.htm] Later that year, her Hong Kong agent confirmed that Wong is pregnant with the couple's child, her second after daughter Dou Jingtong, whom she had with her previous husband. [http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2005-11/07/content_492029.htm] Li has said that he will support whatever decision his wife makes with regards to her musical career. |
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=== 2005–2009: Hiatus === |
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Wong gave birth to her second daughter on [[May 27]]th, [[2006]], by [[caesarean section]], at the [[Peking Union Medical College]] [http://www.pumch.ac.cn/ Hospital]. [http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2006-05/28/content_4625074.htm] |
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In January 2005, during the last concert of her tour, the usually reticent Faye Wong said something that left her fans wondering: "If I ever retire from [[show business|showbiz]], I hope you all forget about me."<ref>{{Cite news | date = 9 March 2005| title = Faye Wong Longs for Private Life, Rumors of Retirement Loom | periodical = [[Shenzhen Daily]]| url = http://www.newsgd.com/pictures/ent_pic/200503090061.htm| access-date = 12 November 2010}}</ref> In May 2005 her agent Katie Chan confirmed that Wong was "resting indefinitely".<ref>{{Citation | url = http://ent.sina.com.cn/s/m/2005-05-26/1039734702.html | script-title = zh:王菲无限期休息 | language = zh | place = [[China|CN]] | newspaper = Sina | date = 26 May 2005 | access-date = 12 November 2010 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20061103035823/http://ent.sina.com.cn/s/m/2005-05-26/1039734702.html | archive-date = 3 November 2006 | url-status = dead }}</ref> Two months later, Wong wed [[Li Yapeng]] in [[Xinjiang]], with only a small marriage banquet held in Beijing, and their daughter Li Yan was born the following year. |
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In the four years that followed, Wong would not return, ignoring [[Live Nation]]'s offer of 100m-[[Hong Kong dollar|HKD]]<ref>{{Citation | url = http://www.china.org.cn/culture/2008-05/04/content_15057079.htm | title = Faye Wong Tipped to Return | newspaper = China | place = [[China|CN]] | date = 4 May 2008}}.</ref> as well as the 3m-[[Chinese yuan|yuan]] offer for a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to sing at the [[2008 Summer Olympics opening ceremony|Beijing Olympics opening ceremony]] on her birthday,<ref>{{Citation | newspaper = Sina | place = [[Hong Kong|HK]] | url = http://news.sina.com.hk/cgi-bin/nw/show.cgi/15/1/1/412865/1.html | archive-url = https://archive.today/20120629004935/http://news.sina.com.hk/cgi-bin/nw/show.cgi/15/1/1/412865/1.html | url-status = dead | archive-date = 29 June 2012 | script-title = zh:王菲復出唱奧運 全球見證 | language = zh }}.</ref> even though the Beijing native was the choice of over 63% netizens in a [[China Central Television|CCTV]] [[online poll]].<ref>{{Citation | url = http://sports.163.com/07/0812/16/3LN6PMTI00051KMJ.html | script-title = zh:63%网友望王菲唱奥运主题歌 刘欢宋祖英遭冷落 | language = zh | publisher = 163 | access-date = 16 January 2011 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20111129124217/http://sports.163.com/07/0812/16/3LN6PMTI00051KMJ.html | archive-date = 29 November 2011 | url-status = dead }}.</ref> She did, however, come out to sing "[[Wishing We Last Forever]]" in May 2008 at a CCTV fundraising event for [[2008 Sichuan earthquake|Sichuan earthquake]] victims,<ref>{{Citation | url = http://www.udn.com/2008/5/19/NEWS/ENTERTAINMENT/ENTS1/4346637.shtml | title = Faye Wong Returns Late at Night; Sings Wishing We Last Forever | language = zh | newspaper = [[United Daily News]] | date = 19 May 2008 | access-date = 24 May 2008 | url-status = dead | archive-url = https://archive.today/20120629004841/http://www.udn.com/2008/5/19/NEWS/ENTERTAINMENT/ENTS1/4346637.shtml | archive-date = 29 June 2012 }}.</ref> and "[[Heart Sutra]]" in May 2009 for a Buddhist ceremony at the [[Famen Temple]].<ref>{{Cite news| date = 11 May 2009 | title = Faye Wong Sings at Buddhist Event | periodical = The Buddhist Channel | url = http://www.buddhistchannel.tv/index.php?id=46,8164,0,0,1,0 | access-date =12 November 2010}}</ref> |
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== Selected Discography == |
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{{splitsection}} |
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The Chinese titles are official; there are no official English titles (other translations are possible). However, some albums like ''Di-Dar'' and ''Coming Home'' have only English titles. |
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In May 2009, Wong shot an ad for "Royal Wind" shampoo, sparking speculation that it would be the first step in her comeback.<ref>{{Cite news | date = 14 May 2009 | title =Faye Wong's comeback ad released | periodical = China Daily | publisher = CRI English | url =http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/showbiz/2009-05/14/content_7778512.htm | access-date =27 May 2009 }}</ref> In June 2009, a compilation of 3 CDs and 1 DVD of her songs was released by Universal Music.<ref>{{Citation | format = [[JPEG]] | publisher = Facebook | url = http://a2.sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc3/16973_418944320092_365247725092_10606155_5247183_n.jpg | year = 2009 | title = HMV Best Selling Asian Pop Albums }}{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}.</ref><ref>{{Citation|publisher=Amazon |place=[[China|CN]] |url=https://www.amazon.cn/gp/feature.html?ie=UTF8&docId=49708 |script-title=zh:卓越亞馬遜 2010年音樂頻道 年度銷售總排行 |language=zh |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120505004557/http://www.amazon.cn/gp/feature.html?ie=UTF8&docId=49708 |archive-date=5 May 2012 }}</ref> |
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===Albums/EPs=== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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=== 2010–present: Partial comeback === |
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[[File:Faye 2011 Hong Kong - 5531545849.jpg|right|thumb|upright|One of Wong's comeback concerts in Hong Kong in 2011. The concert was directed by [[Wong Kar-Wai]].<ref>[http://www.thesundaily.my/news/204270 Return of the Diva]{{dead link|date=September 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>]] |
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Wong made her comeback at the 2010 [[CCTV New Year's Gala]], covering [[Li Jian (singer)|Li Jian]]'s ballad "Legend" (傳奇).<ref>[http://www.china.org.cn/2010-02/16/content_19429954.htm Faye Wong, Tigers highlight CCTV Spring Festival gala], CRI, 16 February 2010</ref> From October 2010 to June 2012, she embarked on her [[Faye Wong's Comeback Tour 2010–12|Faye Wong Comeback Tour 2010–2012]] across Asia.<ref>[http://english.sina.com/entertainment/p/2010/1029/345900.html Faye Wong kicks off comeback concert in Beijing] (illustrated), sina.com, 30 October 2010. Retrieved 31 October 2010.</ref> Since then, Wong has sporadically released singles, mostly theme songs for Chinese movies. One of these songs is a duet with [[Alibaba Group|Alibaba]] co-founder [[Jack Ma]] titled “Feng Qing Yang” (風清揚), the theme song for Ma’s short film, ''[[Gong Shou Dao]]''.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Ming |first=Cheang |date=2017-11-06 |title=Alibaba founder Jack Ma just added 'recording artist' to his list of accomplishments |url=https://www.cnbc.com/2017/11/06/alibaba-founder-jack-ma-has-released-a-duet-with-mandopop-singer-faye-wong.html |access-date=2024-05-01 |website=CNBC |language=en}}</ref> She also attends fashion shows, shoots advertisements, and makes appearances in gala performances on national TV. |
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On 30 December 2016, Wong hosted her first concert in six years, "Faye's Moments Live 2016" (幻樂一場), at the [[Mercedes-Benz Arena (Shanghai)|Mercedes-Benz Cultural Centre]] in Shanghai, with a VR live webcast via the [[Tencent Video]] website watched by 20 million online audience.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://english.cri.cn/12394/2017/01/01/3521s948649.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170101150418/http://english.cri.cn/12394/2017/01/01/3521s948649.htm|url-status=dead|archive-date=1 January 2017|title=Faye Wong Moments Live 2016 delights Shanghai|website=english.cri.cn|access-date=25 January 2017}}</ref> Her singer-songwriter daughter, [[Leah Dou]], was part of the backing vocalists team. Wong performed several new songs at the concert, opening with "Dust" (塵埃), with her own lyrics comparing herself at this time to a particle of dust: "Blown up and dusted off. Inhaled and exhaled. No meaning, no direction. Don't want anything." She also rendered "Tong's Palace" (童殿), the Mandarin version of Leah's English song "The Way" with the Chinese lyrics by [[Albert Leung]] intended as a sequel to "Mortal World" (人間), Wong's song to Leah back in 1998. |
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However, the highly-anticipated concert received divisive reviews. Singer [[Gong Linna]] criticized Wong's "off-pitch" performance, while music critic Liang Huan accused her of using pre-recorded "live" vocals.<ref>{{Cite web |title=王菲演唱会三大争议:票价高、频走音、疑半开麦-中国新闻网 |url=https://www.chinanews.com.cn/m/yl/2016/12-31/8110780.shtml |access-date=2024-05-01 |website=www.chinanews.com.cn}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=走调与破音:王菲被请下了神坛? |url=https://m.thepaper.cn/newsDetail_forward_1597276?bdchannel= |access-date=2024-05-01 |website=m.thepaper.cn}}</ref> Singer and producer [[Tiger Hu]] stated that Wong did go off-key during the VR live broadcast but explained that the audio fidelity was too high, which is why the stadium audience didn't complain as much as the online audience. Hu believed this highlighted the failure of the VR live broadcast and predicted that fewer singers would attempt it in the future.<ref>{{Cite web |title=汇思想 _ 王菲演唱会走音因为直播?VR直播会不会是"幻乐一场"? |url=https://www.whb.cn/zhuzhan/jiaodian/20170112/80998.html |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=www.whb.cn}}</ref> [[Nicholas Tse]], Wong's boyfriend and the Greater China chairman of [[Digital Domain]], who oversaw the VR live broadcast, defended her on social media, saying, "She sounds great on her own!" <ref>{{Cite web |title=Nicholas Tse defends Faye Wong's off pitch performance |url=https://www.8days.sg/entertainment/asian/nicholas-tse-defends-faye-wongs-pitch-performance-497066 |access-date=2024-05-01 |website=8days |language=en}}</ref> |
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In 2018, Wong participated in two variety shows, [[Hunan Television|Hunan TV]]'s ''PhantaCity (''幻樂之城) and [[CCTV-3]]'s ''National Treasure II'' (國家寶藏第二季). In May, 2020, she was one of the headliners for [[Alibaba Group|Alibaba]]'s Believe In The Future, a three-day online benefit concert for [[COVID-19|Covid-19]] frontline workers.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Kiew |first=Chelsea |date=2020-05-05 |title=Faye Wong sings to cheer Covid-19 frontline workers |url=https://www.straitstimes.com/lifestyle/entertainment/faye-wong-sing-to-cheer-covid-19-frontline-workers#:~:text=She%20is%20one%20of%20the,China,%20Youku,%20and%20Weibo. |access-date=2024-05-01 |work=The Straits Times |language=en |issn=0585-3923}}</ref> In September, Wong hosted a karaoke live broadcast on the [[Alibaba Group|Alibaba]]-owned platform [[Youku]], teaming up to sing a duet with Jack Ma near the end of the broadcast.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-09-11 |title=Alibaba crooner Jack Ma duets with pop diva Faye Wong |url=https://www.scmp.com/abacus/culture/article/3101019/alibaba-founder-jack-ma-joins-canto-pop-queen-faye-wong-live |access-date=2024-05-01 |website=South China Morning Post |language=en}}</ref> |
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== Personal life == |
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=== Vegetarianism === |
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Wong used to be a vegetarian. In 2008 and 2011, she was named Asia's sexiest vegetarian woman by animal rights group [[People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals|PETA]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=25 June 2008 |title=Faye Wong named sexiest vegetarian |url=https://www.scmp.com/article/642874/faye-wong-named-sexiest-vegetarian |access-date=30 March 2024 |website=South China Morning Post |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=PETA |date=26 August 2011 |title=Meet the 2011 Sexiest Vegetarian Celebrity Winners! – News |url=https://www.petaasia.com/news/meet-the-2011-sexiest-vegetarian-celebrity-winners/ |access-date=30 March 2024 |website=PETA Asia |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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=== Social media === |
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Wong used to be an active [[Weibo]] user under the name "veggieg," with a talkative, surprisingly funny presence online.<ref>[http://www.jfdaily.com/a/1815646.htm 貧菲女王馮通社 戴上「圍脖」回人間] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101231203407/http://www.jfdaily.com/a/1815646.htm|date=31 December 2010}}</ref> The Weibo account has not been active since early 2015. Wong also has a private Instagram account under the name “feibeing.” <ref>{{Cite web |title=Photos from Faye Wong's private social media account revealed |url=https://www.8days.sg/entertainment/asian/photos-faye-wongs-private-social-media-account-revealed-375191 |access-date=30 March 2024 |website=8days |language=en}}</ref> |
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=== Religion === |
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Wong has been a Buddhist since the early 1990s, releasing many Buddhist songs over the years. In 2011, Wong, in a Weibo post, associated the power of religion with the survival of a wooden Buddhist object in a fire in Shenyang earlier that year, inciting an online spat with [[Fang Zhouzi]], a popular science writer who ridiculed her belief.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The truth is out there somewhere {{!}}X – Ray {{!}}chinadaily.com.cn |url=https://africa.chinadaily.com.cn/weekly/2014-01/31/content_17266581.htm |access-date=30 March 2024 |website=africa.chinadaily.com.cn}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=王菲方舟子微博斗法 一尊佛像引发"口水战"——中新网 |url=https://www.chinanews.com.cn/cul/2011/02-10/2831351.shtml |access-date=30 March 2024 |website=www.chinanews.com.cn}}</ref> In 2016, Wong, with some other celebrities, was warned by the Chinese government against fraternising with [[Dalai Lama|the Dalai Lama]] after attending a Buddhist assembly in India with members of the [[Central Tibetan Administration|Tibetan government-in-exile]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=7 March 2016 |title=Tibetan official warns Hong Kong stars Faye Wong, Tony Leung against fraternising with 'splittist' Dalai Lama |url=https://www.scmp.com/news/china/policies-politics/article/1921962/tibetan-official-warns-hong-kong-stars-faye-wong-tony |access-date=26 March 2024 |website=South China Morning Post |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=25 February 2016 |title=王菲被官方媒体指控与达赖"核心头目"共同出席法会 |url=https://www.rfi.fr/cn/%E4%B8%AD%E5%9B%BD/20160225-%E7%8E%8B%E8%8F%B2%E8%A2%AB%E5%AE%98%E6%96%B9%E5%AA%92%E4%BD%93%E6%8C%87%E6%8E%A7%E4%B8%8E%E8%BE%BE%E8%B5%96%E2%80%9C%E6%A0%B8%E5%BF%83%E5%A4%B4%E7%9B%AE%E2%80%9D%E5%85%B1%E5%90%8C%E5%87%BA%E5%B8%AD%E6%B3%95%E4%BC%9A |access-date=26 March 2024 |website=RFI – 法国国际广播电台 |language=zh-Hans}}</ref> |
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=== Relationships === |
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In the early 1990s, Wong had a relationship with Luan Shu, the bassist of the Beijing rock band [[Black Panther (band)|Black Panther]]. The relationship prompted [[Dou Wei]], the vocalist, to leave [[Black Panther (band)|Black Panther]] in 1991. Wong then started dating Dou and, in June 1996, married him.<ref name="AP">{{cite web|url=http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/youtube/310759454dc2b7a5f70c54223ab6c2c5|title=Entertainment Weekly: China: Dou Wei|publisher=[[Associated Press]]|access-date=14 December 2019}}</ref> Their daughter, [[Leah Dou|Leah]], was born on 3 January 1997, with the Chinese name Dou Jingtong meaning "child of Dou and Jing" (from Wong's stage name Jingwen). The baby's voice appears in the song "Tong" of the 1998 album ''[[Sing and Play]]'' and in the title track of the 1999 album ''[[Lovers & Strangers]]''. Wong and Dou divorced in late 1999<ref name="AP" /> with Wong claiming the rights to their daughter Leah and waiving [[child support]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=王菲获女儿抚养权 与窦唯正式离婚_娱乐_生活空间_新浪网 |url=http://eladies.sina.com.cn/amusement/news/acternews/1999-12-09/15673.shtml |access-date=2024-05-01 |website=eladies.sina.com.cn}}</ref> |
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Wong had an on-and-off relationship with Hong Kong star [[Nicholas Tse]] from 2000 to 2003.<ref>{{Cite web |date=7 June 2023 |title=Inside Faye Wong and Nicholas Tse's whirlwind romance, from the 2000s to now |url=https://www.scmp.com/magazines/style/celebrity/article/3223265/inside-faye-wong-and-nicholas-tses-whirlwind-romance-hong-kong-superstars-dated-early-2000s-married |access-date=17 March 2024 |website=South China Morning Post |language=en}}</ref> Wong‘s relationship with Chinese actor [[Li Yapeng]] became public in 2004; their wedding took place in July 2005, after which she took a long break from the entertainment business.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20060513205438/http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2005-05/28/content_3013220.htm "Pop diva Faye Wong 'to quit singing for love{{'"}}]. ''China Daily'', 28 May 2005. Retrieved 30 October 2006.</ref> In 2006, Wong gave birth to their daughter, Li Yan. On 13 September 2013, Wong and Li announced that they had divorced, with Li claiming the rights to their daughter Yan.<ref>[http://www.scmp.com/news/china-insider/article/1309256/celebrity-power-couple-faye-wong-li-yapeng-divorce-after-eight Celebrity power couple Faye Wong, Li Yapeng divorce after eight years of marriage] [[South China Morning Post]], 13 September 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2013.</ref> In 2014, Wong and Tse rekindled their relationship.<ref>{{cite news|title=How Vicki Zhao reunited Faye Wong and Nicholas Tse 11 years after they broke up|url=http://www.thestar.com.my/lifestyle/people/2014/09/29/faye-wong-and-nicholas-tse-in-love-all-over-again/|access-date=10 July 2017|newspaper=[[The Star (Malaysia)|The Star]]|date=29 September 2014}}</ref> |
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=== Charities === |
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[[File:Faye wong eternal moment.jpg|thumbnail|Wong (far right) and friends attend the Beijing [[premiere]] of ''[[Eternal Moment]]'' (starring Li Yapeng), all wearing [[red scarf|red scarves]] which symbolizes youth in China, February 2011|left]] |
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In August 2006, Li Yapeng published a public letter, "Gratitude (感謝)", on his [[Sina.com]] blog,<ref>Li Yapeng, [http://blog.sina.com.cn/u/473dc620010005lp Blog] {{in lang|zh}}. 12 August 2006. Retrieved 30 October 2006. Referred to in [http://english.sina.com/life/1/2007/0411/109153.html English language report of second operation], Sina.com, 11 April 2007.</ref> showing Wong and his gratitude towards all concerned parties, and confirming rumours their daughter, Li Yan, was born with a congenital [[cleft lip]]. He expressed their reason for seeking medical treatment in California: due to the severity of Li Yan's cleft, the special reconstructive surgeries she needed were not available in China. Citing a South American [[Folklore|folk tale]], Li described his daughter as a special child and her cleft as a mark of an angel. The couple has since established the [[Smile Angel Foundation]] to assist children with clefts.<ref>[http://ent.sina.com.cn/s/m/2006-11-08/02081318007.html Smileangel Foundation established, to begin operation on the 21st] {{in lang|zh}}. Sina Entertainment, 8 November 2006. Retrieved 18 November 2006.</ref> |
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On 26 December 2006, Wong made her first public appearance since 2005 at the foundation's inaugural [[fundraising]] ball. She opted not to speak or sing, but her new composition "Cheerful Angel" (愛笑的天使) debuted at the event as the official theme song of the charity.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.crcf.org.cn/yanran/admin/news/findnews/shownews.asp?newsid=579 |title= Smileangel Foundation holds Christmas charity ball; over 12 million yuan raised to date |access-date=25 September 2010 |date=27 December 2006 |publisher=[[Red Cross Society of China|Chinese Red Cross]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080513073130/http://www.crcf.org.cn/yanran/admin/news/findnews/shownews.asp?newsid=579 |archive-date=13 May 2008|language=zh}} (with pictures). Retrieved 25 September 2010.</ref><ref>[http://ent.sina.com.cn/s/m/2006-12-26/23291387901.html Smileangel Foundation Fundraising Ball Raised 8.447 Million] {{in lang|zh}} (with pictures). Sina Entertainment, 26 December 2006. Retrieved 30 December 2006.</ref> At the second fundraising ball on 8 December 2007, Wong sang an electronica-infused version of the [[Diamond Sutra]] for the event.<ref>[http://ent.tom.com/2007-12-10/000E/06219864.html Faye Wong Records for Smileangel Banquet] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081212014359/http://ent.tom.com/2007-12-10/000E/06219864.html |date=12 December 2008 }} {{in lang|zh}} (with video). Tom.com, 10 December 2007. Retrieved 10 December 2007.</ref> For the foundation's publicity event on 27–28 November 2008, Wong and her husband visited children in [[Tibet]] who were in various stages of recovery after being cured with the help of the charity.<ref>[http://english.chinatibetnews.com/news/2008-11/28/content_176810.htm "Smile Angel" Flies to Tibet] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081207102136/http://english.chinatibetnews.com/news/2008-11/28/content_176810.htm |date=7 December 2008 }} (with photos). chinatibetnews.com, 28 November 2008. Retrieved 30 November 2008.</ref> |
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In May 2008, following the [[2008 Sichuan earthquake|disastrous earthquake]] in Sichuan, the couple accepted a local girl who lost a leg trying to save her classmates, to their family as she underwent recuperation and treatments in Beijing. The [[middle school]] student returned to her hometown a year later.<ref>[https://archive.today/20120708192802/http://english.cri.cn/6666/2009/05/11/1261s483618.htm Faye Wong's Smiling Angel]</ref> The Lis agreed to continue paying for her medical needs until she turns 22 and visit her at least once a year.<ref>[http://news.xinhuanet.com/ent/2008-06/06/content_8318563.htm 发起"新家庭"助养计划 李亚鹏:还孩子一个家] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080612154522/http://news.xinhuanet.com/ent/2008-06/06/content_8318563.htm |date=12 June 2008 }}</ref> In March 2012, the Smile Angel Foundation donated 15 million [[Japanese yen]] to [[ChildFund]] Japan to help needy children after the [[2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami]].<ref>{{in lang|ja}} [http://j.people.com.cn/94473/7753690.html 李亜鵬、大船渡児童に義援金1500万円] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140108215652/http://j.people.com.cn/94473/7753690.html |date=8 January 2014 }}</ref> |
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In April 2010, the [[Chinese Academy of Social Sciences#Publishing house|China Social Sciences Press]] recognised Wong as one of the 13 "richest souls" in China.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.luxury-insider.com/luxury-news/2010/05/chinas-first-soul-rich-list-published |title=China's First 'Soul Rich List' Published |access-date=9 April 2012 |archive-date=11 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120611024243/http://www.luxury-insider.com/luxury-news/2010/05/chinas-first-soul-rich-list-published |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{in lang|zh}} [http://news.xinmin.cn/rollnews/2010/04/28/4649445.html “心灵富豪” 袁隆平当首富]</ref> In 2012, Smile Angel Foundation established China's first charity paediatric hospital in Beijing. In May 2013, Wong and Li topped the inaugural "China Celebrity Philanthropist List" compiled by the ''China Philanthropist'' magazine.<ref>{{in lang|zh}} [http://www.icixun.com/spec/2013/csmrb/ 美即2013中国慈善名人榜] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131025111302/http://www.icixun.com/spec/2013/csmrb/ |date=25 October 2013 }}</ref> On 19 May 2013, she sang four songs in a memorial concert celebrating [[Teresa Teng]]'s 60th birthday, with a portion of the concert proceeds going to the charity. |
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== Artistry == |
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[[File:Faye 2011 Hong Kong (1) (cropped).jpg|right|thumb|upright|Faye Wong in concert, Hong Kong, 2011]] |
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The focus of Faye Wong's concerts has always been on her vocal performance. She seldom dances or speaks to the audience, and there are generally no supporting dancers. There were two exceptions to the latter in the 1994–95 live concerts; first, many dancers joined her on stage for the lively song "Flow Not Fly". In the second half, Wong and a line of male dancers were menaced by a giant mechanical spider overhead during the song "Tempt Me". |
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Another trademark is her unconventional fashion on stage.<ref>[http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2004-08/08/content_363181.htm "Prelude for Faye Wong Beijing solo concert"], Crienglish.com, 8 August 2004. "the Hong Kong star's eclectic outfits"</ref> Her 1994 concerts were memorable for dreadlocks and extremely long sleeves, as well as for the silver-painted tears. She later said "I wore long sleeves because usually I don't have choreography; I don't know what to do with my hands." Her 1998 concerts saw her sporting the "burnt" cheek makeup, the "Indian chief" look, and the soleless strap-on boots.<ref name=emi_tour>{{cite web |url=http://www.emimusic.com.tw/artists/fayewong/faye_news/faye-20000105.htm |script-title=zh:實況更勝精選,「黃金組合」終極登場 |language=zh |access-date=17 January 2010 |date=5 January 2000 |publisher=EMI Taiwan |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20020126211813/http://www.emimusic.com.tw/artists/fayewong/faye_news/faye-20000105.htm |archive-date=26 January 2002 |title= }}</ref> At the start of her 2003 concerts her headgear was topped by an inverted shoe supporting a very long feather, and her makeup for that concert went through several changes of painted eye-shades. |
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She does not perform encores, and usually exits by sinking below the stage via a platform. After her release of [[Miyuki Nakajima]]'s "Mortal World" (人間) in 1997, she ended her concerts for the next few years with this song while shaking hands with the audience, then taking a deep bow to a horizontal position before leaving the stage. However, during her Comeback Tour from 2010 to 2012, she ended with "Flower of Paradise" (彼岸花), a song from the album ''[[Fable (album)|Fable]]'' (2000). She has also given concerts in North America, Australia and Southeast Asia. |
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== Public image == |
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Dutch scholar Jeroen Groenewegen credits Wong's mass appeal to some of her perceived "cool" traits including [[autonomy]], unique artistry and childishness.<ref name="groenewegen">{{cite journal |last1=Groenewegen |first1=Jeroen |year=2009 |title=Faye Wong: Stardom in Chinese Popular Music |journal=International Journal of Chinese Culture and Management |volume=2 |issue=3 |pages=248–261 |publisher=Inderscience Enterprises |doi=10.1504/IJCCM.2009.029405}}</ref> Katie Chan, Wong's agent, once said "Faye does whatever she wants... it's really quite a miracle that she became a success."<ref name="spaeth" /> |
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Despite being a favorite target of media and paparazzi, Wong is known for giving terse, direct, and somewhat unexpected answers, if she responds at all, when asked questions. One of her many famous interactions with the media occurred at a 1999 press conference:<ref>{{Cite web |last=自由時報電子報 |date=2016-05-09 |title=王菲離婚受訪片段出土 嗆爆記者:跟你有啥關係 - 自由娛樂 |url=https://ent.ltn.com.tw/news/breakingnews/1690944 |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=ent.ltn.com.tw |language=zh-TW}}</ref> |
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{{Blockquote|text=Reporter: "Has your divorce [from Dou Wei] been finalized?"<br/>Wong: "What does it have to do with you?"<br/>Reporter: "Our readers want to know."<br/>Wong: "Nothing to do with them either."<br/>Reporter: "But you're a public figure."<br/>Wong: "I'm a public figure so I have to tell you everything? Again, it has nothing to do with you and nothing to do with your readers."}} |
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Li Yan, Wong's daughter, was once photographed using a cell phone case featuring the meme of Wong saying, "What does it have to do with you?"<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-05-28 |title=王菲女兒的「手機殼」上熱搜!原來是媽媽說過的一句經典語錄:「跟你有什麼關係啊?」 |url=https://www.elle.com/tw/entertainment/gossip/g32693294/faye-wong-daughter-phone/ |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=ELLE |language=zh-TW}}</ref> |
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Wong's devil-may-care attitude is as apparent in her public image as in her love life. In 1994, during one of her many trips to Beijing to see Dou Wei—which already strained her relationship with her agency by distracting her from work—Hong Kong [[paparazzi]] from ''[[Next Magazine (Hong Kong and Taiwan)|Next Magazine]]'' followed her and tracked her down. The photographs taken, showing her entering an unhygienic community toilet in a narrow [[hutong]] to dump urine—in sharp contrast to the modern and glamorous lives Hong Kong celebrities led—caused quite a stir, with some in Cinepoly fearing that her diva image would be tarnished.<ref name="wuqi" /> But many were impressed by what the diva would do for love, as [[Taiwanese people|Taiwanese]] lyricist [[Chien Yao]], who initially declined to write lyrics for Wong because he never met and knew very little about her, recalled in 2012, |
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{{Blockquote|It just happened that I took a business trip to Hong Kong and on the flight back, I saw that tabloid magazine with photos from Beijing, of her coming out in the morning carrying the [[chamber pot]] to dump in the [[public toilet]] ... That piece from the tabloid moved me ... Such a famous female celebrity, willing to do that, and she only had a 2-day break (from work), most of that time must have been spent traveling. Just to be with (him). So the first line (I wrote down) was, "I'm willing to forget even my name". Also "running towards you", they all describe how I felt when I saw those pictures. That's how I wrote "I'm Willing" (for Faye Wong).<ref>{{in lang|zh}} [http://phtv.ifeng.com/program/mrmdm/detail_2012_08/20/16941817_0.shtml 姚谦:看到王菲倒夜壶 来灵感创作出《我愿意》]</ref> |
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}}Wong's relationship with [[Nicholas Tse]], spanning over two decades, has become the stuff of popular romance and cemented her image as a woman dedicated to love. The two dated in the early 2000s, split in 2003, married and had children with other celebrities, divorced, and reunited in 2014 after an 11-year breakup.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-06-07 |title=Inside Faye Wong and Nicholas Tse's whirlwind romance, from the 2000s to now |url=https://www.scmp.com/magazines/style/celebrity/article/3223265/inside-faye-wong-and-nicholas-tses-whirlwind-romance-hong-kong-superstars-dated-early-2000s-married |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=South China Morning Post |language=en}}</ref> Their reunion, revealed by paparazzi photos of them kissing at Wong's Beijing apartment, caused a sensation but received mixed reactions. At a time when traditional media was declining and social media was on the rise, her reunion with Tse was welcomed by the media and other celebrities, but she faced considerable criticism on Weibo from conservative quarters for prioritizing love over family at her age<ref>{{Cite web |title=王菲冒犯了你们凑合的人生 |url=https://www.sohu.com/a/www.sohu.com/a/108391970_413563 |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=www.sohu.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=王菲没那么坏,也没那么好-旗书网 |url=http://www.hongqipress.com/redflag/leftright/201608/t20160825_1870829.shtml |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=www.hongqipress.com}}</ref> and from [[Cecilia Cheung]]'s fans.<ref>{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0sa6rXkpHx0 |title=栢芝fans:你老又醜 微博萬人狂數王菲3宗罪 - FACE即時新聞 |date=2014-10-07 |last=FACE MAGAZINE |access-date=2024-06-07 |via=YouTube}}</ref> Not long after, she quit Weibo after having been one of the platform's most active celebrities for years. |
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== Legacy == |
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[[File:Faye 2011 Hong Kong - 5531849295.jpg|thumb|upright|Wong in 2011]] |
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In 2004 and 2005, Faye Wong was ranked in the top five on the [[Forbes China Celebrity 100|''Forbes'' China Celebrity 100]], as well as in 2011 and 2012 after her hiatus. In a 2011 "most popular celebrity in China" marketing study, she was also ranked in the top 5.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.warc.com/LatestNews/News/Local_endorsers_key_in_China.news?ID=28097 |title=Local endorsers key in China |access-date=7 April 2011 |archive-date=2 April 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110402170739/http://www.warc.com/LatestNews/News/Local_endorsers_key_in_China.news?ID=28097 |url-status=dead }}</ref> In 2008, Wong was voted Asia's sexiest vegetarian woman in a poll run by animal rights group [[People for the ethical treatment of animals|PETA]].<ref>{{Cite news|title=Faye Wong is Asia's sexiest vegetarian |url=https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/entertainment/english/hollywood/news/Faye-Wong-is-Asias-sexiest-vegetarian/articleshow/3142261.cms|access-date=14 November 2020|website=[[The Times of India]]|language=en}}</ref> In 2009, to celebrate the [[60th anniversary of the People's Republic of China]], a government web portal conducted an [[online poll]] on ''The Most Influential Chinese Cultural Celebrity in the Past 60 Years''; out of 192 candidates, Wong received over 7 million votes, second only to the deceased [[Teresa Teng]] from Taiwan, Wong's own personal idol.<ref>[http://www.china.com.cn/culture/zhuanti/60whrw/node_7071322.htm 新中国60年最有影响力文化人物网络评选]</ref> In 2014, she was named one of the 10 most admired female singers in Asia by RHA media.<ref>{{Cite web|title=My Tam named Top 10 Most admired Female Singers in Asia|url=http://hanoitimes.vn/my-tam-named-top-10-most-admired-female-singers-in-asia-17075.html|access-date=20 October 2020|website=Hanoitimes}}</ref> Chen Tao, a [[China Radio International]] DJ, compares Wong's influence in the [[Sinophone world]] to [[Madonna (entertainer)|Madonna]]'s in America: "She represents a certain era of pop music, a certain trend, and a vision of being unique."<ref name=encore /> |
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Numerous artists have released works that paid tribute to her,<ref>{{in lang|zh}} [http://ent.163.com/special/00033STT/waitingfaye09.html 等待王菲(Waiting for Faye Wong)]</ref> including "(I Want to See) Faye Wong" by [[J Church (band)|J Church]],<ref>The song is originally from their 1996 split 7-inch with [[Discount (band)|Discount]]. The record cover is a photo of Wong (see [http://www.j-church.com/records/discountsplit7.html]). Alternate version appeared on ''Cat Food'' in 1998.</ref> "Faye Wong" by Green Club Riviera,<ref>The song is from their 1998 album ''The Boring Days Are Over Now''.</ref> "Wong Fei, Gwanyu Nei Dik Mei" (王菲,關於你的眉) by [[My Little Airport|my little airport]],<ref>The song is from their 2004 album ''[[the ok thing to do on sunday afternoon is to toddle in the zoo]]'' (在動物園散步才是正經事).</ref> "Wang Fei de Hui Mou" (王菲的回眸) by [[YuFeiMen]],<ref>The song is from their 2005 album ''A Logic'' (A逻辑).</ref> ''I Love Faye Wong'' (我愛王菲), debut album of [[Maggie Chiang]],<ref>[https://www.amazon.co.uk/love-Faye-Wong-Maggie-Jiang/dp/B000253J4W ''I love Faye Wong'' on Amazon UK]</ref> and "We are Not Romantic in This Age" (在這個年代我們不浪漫) by Easy Weeds.<ref>{{Citation|title=溫室雜草Easy weeds-在這個年代,我們不浪漫demo| date=17 November 2020 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vEpkphm9WAk |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211212/vEpkphm9WAk| archive-date=12 December 2021 |url-status=live|language=en|access-date=8 May 2021}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|date=17 November 2020|title=【StreetVoice新歌週報】溫室雜草致敬王菲金曲 看日早晚新EP受多方推薦|url=https://blow.streetvoice.com/52179/|access-date=17 May 2021|website=Blow 吹音樂|language=zh-TW}}</ref> Wong's songs have been covered in other languages, including "Meteor" (流星) in Japanese by [[Hanayo]],<ref>The song, "Namida de dekita amanogawa" (涙でできた天の川), is included as "Liulei de yinhe" (流淚的銀河) in composer [[Tats Lau]]'s 1996 album ''Numb'' (麻木) which also included Wong's 1995 original.</ref> "Chanel" (香奈兒) in Korean by [[Lim Hyung-joo]],<ref>The song, "Gieogui sup" (기억의 숲), is from his 2005 album ''The Lotus''.</ref> and "Red Bean" (紅豆) in Vietnamese by various artists.<ref>Vietnamese covers of the song include SIM Band's "Cánh Đồng Mùa Đông", Quỳnh Nga's "Níu Giữ Giấc Mơ", and Phan Hà Anh's "Đồng Cỏ May".</ref> [[Lene Marlin]]'s "Still Here" is an English cover of "I'm Willing" (我願意).<ref>The song is included as a bonus track in many Asian editions of her 2005 album ''[[Lost in a Moment]]''. A music video is also available on DVD.</ref> China's 2007 spacecraft [[Chang'e 1]] played Faye Wong's version of "[[Wishing We Last Forever]]" (但願人長久).<ref>[http://english.people.com.cn/90001/90776/90881/6309557.html China publishes first moon picture]</ref> |
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Japanese director [[Shunji Iwai]] had explained that the titular pop-star character of his 2001 film ''[[All About Lily Chou-Chou]]'' was conceived after attending a Faye Wong concert.<ref>[http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/07/22/1026898972023.html Out of the ether]</ref> Wong's name was also mentioned in the 2003 Japanese film ''[[The Blue Light (2003 film)|The Blue Light]]'' as one of the protagonist's favourites.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20151018004737/http://movie.subtitlr.com/subtitle/show/145479 Blue Light, The (2004): Full transcript in English language]</ref> Hikari MitsushimaThe female protagonist in the 2013 Chinese film ''Beijing Flickers'' was prototyped after Wong, according to director [[Zhang Yuan (director)|Zhang Yuan]]. Zhang remembered when he shot his 1993 hit ''[[Beijing Bastards]]'' with Dou Wei, Wong as Dou's girlfriend would visit the set every day.<ref>[https://archive.today/20131019215524/http://english.cri.cn/6666/2013/10/18/102s792970.htm Zhang Yuan: Faye Wong Casts Light on 'Beijing Flickers']</ref> Japanese singer-actress [[Hikari Mitsushima]] stated that Wong was her idol and muse;<ref>{{Cite web |last=Chen |first=Avril |date=2023-11-23 |title=滿島光其實超搞笑?!來台又轉圈又炒菜,送給大家滿滿的活潑女神! |url=https://www.vogue.com.tw/article/hikarimitsushima-60th-gha-class |access-date=2024-06-07 |website=Vogue Taiwan |language=zh-Hant-TW}}</ref> she performed Wong's Cantopop song "Dreams" at the 2024 Megaport Music Festival, in Kaohsiung, Taiwan.<ref>{{Cite AV media |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z1Am_v6MyLU |title=【女神😍】滿島光《大港開唱》甜秀台語:呷飽未 超仙登場驚喜獻王菲經典〈夢中人〉(eden)|完全娛樂 |date=2024-03-31 |last=NewShowBiz完全娛樂 |access-date=2024-06-07 |via=YouTube}}</ref> |
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== Discography == |
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{{main|Faye Wong discography}} |
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{{col-begin}} |
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{{col-2}} |
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=== Cantonese-language studio albums === |
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* ''[[Shirley Wong (album)|Shirley Wong]]'' (1989) |
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* ''[[Everything (Faye Wong album)|Everything]]'' (1990) |
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* ''[[You're the Only One (album)|You're the Only One]]'' (1990) |
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* ''[[Coming Home (Faye Wong album)|Coming Home]]'' (1992) |
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* ''[[No Regrets (Faye Wong album)|No Regrets]]'' (1993) |
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* ''[[100,000 Whys]]'' (1993) |
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* ''[[Random Thoughts (Faye Wong album)|Random Thoughts]]'' (1994) |
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* ''[[Please Myself]]'' (1994) |
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* ''[[Di-Dar]]'' (1995) |
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* ''[[Toy and Help Yourself#Be Perfunctory|Be Perfunctory]]'' (2015) |
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{{col-2}} |
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=== Mandarin-language studio albums === |
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* ''[[Mystery (Faye Wong album)|Mystery]]'' (1994) |
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* ''[[Sky (Faye Wong album)|Sky]]'' (1994) |
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* ''[[Decadent Sounds of Faye]]'' (1995) |
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* ''[[Fuzao]]'' (1996) |
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* ''[[Faye Wong (1997 album)|Faye Wong]]'' (1997) |
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* ''[[Sing and Play]]'' (1998) |
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* ''[[Lovers & Strangers]]'' (1999) |
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* ''[[Fable (album)|Fable]]'' (2000) |
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* ''[[Faye Wong (2001 album)|Faye Wong]]'' (2001) |
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* ''[[To Love (Faye Wong album)|To Love]]'' (2003) |
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{{col-end}} |
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== Concert tours == |
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{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center" |
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! Title |
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! Dates |
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! Associated album(s) |
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! Location |
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! Shows |
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|- |
|- |
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! scope="row" | Faye Wong Live in Concert |
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| Release Date || Chinese Title || English Title || Note |
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|13 November 1994 – 10 November 1995 |
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|''[[Sky (Faye Wong album)|Sky]]'' |
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|North America and Asia |
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|30 |
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|- class="expand-child" |
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| colspan="5" style="text-align:left" |One of the concerts in Hong Kong was published on CD, VHS and [[LaserDisc]]. The visual designer for the concerts was the film director [[Wong Kar-wai]]. Unlike later series of concerts, these performances included dancers and encores. |
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|- |
|- |
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! scope="row" | Faye Wong Scenic Tour |
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| November [[2003 in music|2003]] || 將愛 || To Love || "In the Name of Love" (假愛之名) is not in the Mainland China editions. |
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|10 October 1998 – 23 March 2001 |
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|''[[Sing and Play]]'' |
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|Asia and Australia |
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|46 |
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|- class="expand-child" |
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| colspan="5" style="text-align:left" |The New Year's Eve concert in Hong Kong was published on CD and VCD. "[[Auld Lang Syne]]" is included in the recording, but was actually sung by the background vocalists rather than Faye Wong. In the Japan concert, she covered "Don't Break My Heart", a Mandarin song originally performed by [[Dou Wei]]. |
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|- |
|- |
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! scope="row" | Faye Wong Tour 2001 |
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| October [[2001 in music|2001]] || 王菲<br>(光之翼) || Faye Wong (2001) || There are various editions of this album; one of them is a Hong Kong edition providing a bonus Cantonese EP. |
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|7 September 2001 – 2 November 2001 |
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|''[[Faye Wong (2001 album)|Faye Wong]]'' |
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|China and Japan |
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|6 |
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|- class="expand-child" |
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| colspan="5" style="text-align:left" |One of the concerts in [[Nippon Budokan]] in Tokyo, Japan was released on VCD and DVD. |
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|- |
|- |
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! scope="row" | No Faye! No Live! Tour |
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| July [[2001 in music|2001]] || N/A || Separate Ways || The EP of the Japanese song for the TV serial, "Usokoi". It includes two bonus tracks. |
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|20 December 2003 – 8 January 2005 |
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|''[[To Love (Faye Wong album)|To Love]]'' |
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|Asia |
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|16 |
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|- class="expand-child" |
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| colspan="5" style="text-align:left" |One of the concerts in Hong Kong was published on CD, SACD, VCD and DVD. The title sponsor was the clothing company [[Baleno (Hong Kong)|Baleno]]. "Those Flowers" (Mandarin song originally performed by [[Pu Shu]]) was covered in the concerts in China. |
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|- |
|- |
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! scope="row" | [[Faye Wong's Comeback Tour 2010–12|Faye Wong Comeback Tour]] |
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| November [[2000 in music|2000]] || 寓言 || Fable || There is a "Deluxe" and "Regular" edition of this album. |
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|29 October 2010 – 9 June 2012 |
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|— |
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|Asia |
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|46 |
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|- class="expand-child" |
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| colspan="5" style="text-align:left" |The Comeback Tour was a concert tour in Asia by Faye Wong, marking her return to public performance after several years of concentrating on her family. |
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|} |
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=== Setlists === |
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The following setlists only include songs published in the concert albums, not all songs performed throughout the tours. |
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{{hidden begin |
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| titlestyle = background: #ccccff; font-size: 100%; width: 65%; text-align:center; |
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| bodystyle = text-align: left; font-size: 100%; width: 75%; |
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| title = Faye Wong Live in Concert (王菲最精彩的演唱會) |
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}} |
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# 夢遊 |
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# 夢中人 |
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# 多得他 |
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# 無奈那天 |
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# 靜夜的單簧管 |
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# Medley: |
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## Miss You Night & Day |
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## Summer of Love |
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## 又繼續等 |
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## Everything |
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## 不再兒嬉 |
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# 從明日開始 |
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# 明天我要嫁給你 |
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# Medley: |
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## 天與地 |
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## 用心良苦 |
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# Medley: |
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## 如風 |
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## 季候風 |
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## 有一天我會 |
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## 浪漫風暴 |
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## Kisses in the Wind |
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# 流非飛 |
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# 愛與痛的邊緣 |
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# 知己知彼 |
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# 胡思亂想 |
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# 誓言 |
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# 誘惑我 |
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# 棋子 |
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# 執迷不悔 |
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# 容易受傷的女人 |
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# 冷戰 |
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# 千言萬語 |
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# 出路 |
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# 我願意 |
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{{hidden end}} |
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{{hidden begin |
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| titlestyle = background: #ccccff; font-size: 100%; width: 65%; text-align:center; |
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| bodystyle = text-align: left; font-size: 100%; width: 75%; |
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| title = Faye HK Scenic Tour (唱遊大世界王菲香港演唱會) |
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}} |
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# Overture |
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# 感情生活 |
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# 浮躁 |
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# 悶 |
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# 暗湧 |
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# 天空 (unplugged) |
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# 臉 |
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# 迷路 |
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# 夢中人 |
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# 夢遊 |
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# 原諒自己 |
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# 末日 |
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# 墮落 |
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# 天使 |
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# 懷念 |
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# 夢醒了 |
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# 但願人長久 |
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# 情誡 |
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# 一人分飾兩角 |
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# 為非作歹 |
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# Di-Dar |
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# 曖昧 |
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# [[Bohemian Rhapsody]] |
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# 你快樂 (所以我快樂) |
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# [[Auld Lang Syne]] |
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# 約定 |
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# 償還 |
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# 我願意 |
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# 執迷不悔 |
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{{hidden end}} |
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{{hidden begin |
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| titlestyle = background: #ccccff; font-size: 100%; width: 65%; text-align:center; |
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| bodystyle = text-align: left; font-size: 100%; width: 75%; |
|||
| title = Faye Wong Tour 2001 (王菲全面體演唱會) |
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}} |
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# Overture |
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# 我願意 |
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# 再見螢火蟲 |
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# 悶 |
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# 矜持 |
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# Medley: |
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## 半途而廄 |
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## 只愛陌生人 |
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# 開到茶靡 |
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# 過眼雲煙 |
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# 流浪的紅舞鞋 |
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# 新房客 |
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# 香奈兒 |
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# 感情生活 |
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# 掙脫 |
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# 推翻 (unplugged) |
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# 你 (unplugged) |
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# 但願人長久 |
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# 天空 |
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# Separate Ways |
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# 天使 |
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# [[Eyes on Me (Faye Wong song)|Eyes on Me]] |
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# Thank You For Hearing Me |
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# 人間 |
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{{hidden end}} |
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{{hidden begin |
|||
| titlestyle = background: #ccccff; font-size: 100%; width: 65%; text-align:center; |
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| bodystyle = text-align: left; font-size: 100%; width: 75%; |
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| title = No Faye! No Live! Tour (菲比尋常) |
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}} |
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# Overture |
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# 天空 |
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# 誓言 |
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# Medley: |
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## 純情 |
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## 背影 |
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## 夢中人 |
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# 流浪的紅舞鞋 |
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# 我願意 |
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# 假如我是真的 |
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# 只願為你守著約 |
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# 但願人長久 |
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# 新房客 |
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# 香奈兒 |
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# 將愛 |
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# 開到荼蘼 |
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# 償還 |
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# 紅豆 |
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# 暗湧 |
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# 光之翼 |
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# 悶 |
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# Heart of Glass |
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# 旋木 |
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# 只愛陌生人 |
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# The Look of Love |
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# 如風 |
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# 愛與痛的邊緣 |
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# 精彩 |
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# Medley: |
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## 尾班車 |
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## 靜夜的單簧管 |
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## 守時 |
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# 約定 |
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# 給自己的情書 |
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# 冷戰 |
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# 人間 |
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{{hidden end}} |
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{{hidden begin |
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| titlestyle = background: #ccccff; font-size: 100%; width: 65%; text-align:center; |
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| bodystyle = text-align: left; font-size: 100%; width: 75%; |
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| title = Comeback Tour (巡唱) |
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}} |
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# N/A (Not yet officially released) |
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{{hidden end}} |
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== Filmography == |
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=== Films === |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|- |
|- |
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!Year |
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| October [[1999 in music|1999]] || 只愛陌生人 || Only Love Strangers || There is a Hong Kong (with VCD) and Japanese edition of this album. The Japanese edition excludes the VCD, but contains a remix of "The Last Blossom". |
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!English Title |
|||
!Original Title |
|||
!Role |
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!Notes |
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|- |
|- |
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| 1991 || ''[[Beyond (band)#Filmography|Beyond's]] Diary'' || BEYOND日記之莫欺少年窮 || Mary || |
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| October [[1998 in music|1998]] || 唱遊 || Scenic Tour || The Hong Kong edition provides a bonus Cantonese EP. The Japanese edition includes a remix of "Anaesthesia" and the previously released "Eyes On Me". It is also packed onto one CD instead of two. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 1994 || ''[[Chungking Express]]'' || 重慶森林 || Faye || Nominated{{snd}}[[14th Hong Kong Film Awards]] for Best Actress <br /> '''Won'''{{snd}}[[Stockholm Film Festival]] for Best Actress <br /> Nominated{{snd}}31st [[Golden Horse Award for Best Leading Actress]] |
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| September [[1997 in music|1997]] || 王菲 (快樂不快樂一直王菲) || Faye Wong (1997) || This album was released in four different album covers. This is the first album to be recorded under her EMI record label. |
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|- |
|- |
||
| 2000 || ''[[Okinawa Rendez-vous]]'' || 戀戰沖繩 || Jenny || |
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| May [[1997 in music|1997]] || 自便 || Help Yourself || This is the second installment of her supposedly final album with Cinepoly and first EP released in the same year of her few other releases. |
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|- |
|- |
||
| 2002 || ''[[Chinese Odyssey 2002]]'' || 天下無雙 || Princess Wushuang || Nominated{{snd}}[[22nd Hong Kong Film Awards]] for Best Actress <br /> '''Won'''{{snd}}[[Hong Kong Film Critics Society Awards|HK Film Critics Society Awards]] for Best Actress |
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| February [[1997 in music|1997]] || 玩具 || Toy || This is the first installment of her supposedly final album with Cinepoly and first EP released in the same year of her few other releases. |
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|- |
|- |
||
| |
|rowspan=2| 2004 || ''[[2046 (film)|2046]]'' || || Wang Jingwen || |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| ''Leaving Me, Loving You'' || 大城小事 || Xin Xiaoyue || |
||
| |
|} |
||
| August [[1995 in music|1995]] || 一人分飾兩角 || One Person, Two Roles || EP of a track from a radio soap opera, composed by short-lived band ''[[AMK (band)|AMK]]''. |
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=== Television === |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
!Year |
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| June [[1995 in music|1995]] || 菲靡靡之音 || The Decadent Sound of Faye || A tribute to her personal favorite songs of idol [[Teresa Teng]] who died the same year. |
|||
!English Title |
|||
!Original Title |
|||
!Role |
|||
!Notes |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 1991 || ''Traces of the Heart'' || 別姬 || Mei-fong || [[TVB]] [[television movie|movie]] |
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| December [[1994 in music|1994]] || 討好自己 || Ingratiate Myself || |
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|- |
|- |
||
| 1992 || ''[[File of Justice|File of Justice II]]'' || 壹號皇庭 II || Mandy Tong Yuk-man || TVB series |
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| November [[1994 in music|1994]] || 天空 || Sky || |
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|- |
|- |
||
|rowspan=2| 1993 || ''[[The Legendary Ranger|Legendary Ranger]]'' || 原振俠 || Hoi-tong || TVB series (20 episodes) |
|||
| June [[1994 in music|1994]] || 胡思亂想 || Random Thoughts || |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| ''Eternity'' || 千歲情人 || Bou Ging-hung || TVB series (20 episodes) |
|||
| May [[1994 in music|1994]] || 菲碟 || Faye Disc || "Reminiscence Is A Red Sky" later appeared in her album "Random Thoughts". |
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|- |
|- |
||
| 1994 || ''Modern Love Story: Three Equals One Love'' || 愛情戀曲:愛情3加1 || Wun-gwan || one part of TVB series |
|||
| April [[1994 in music|1994]] || 迷 || Mystery || Her first Mandarin album with Cinepoly. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 2001 || ''Love from a Lie'' || ウソコイ || Lin Fei || [[Kansai Telecasting Corporation|Kansai TV]] series (11 episodes) |
|||
| [[1993 in music|1993]] || 如風 || Like Wind || Her first EP with Cinepoly. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 2018 || ''Phantacity'' || [[:zh:幻樂之城|幻乐之城]] || Herself|| Hunan Television series (10 episodes) |
|||
| September [[1993 in music|1993]] || 十萬個為什麼 || 100,000 Why's || |
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|- |
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| February [[1993 in music|1993]] || 執迷不悔 || No Regrets || Her first album with a Mandarin track. |
|||
|- |
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| [[1992 in music|1992]] || N/A || Coming Home || Her first official album with an all-English track. |
|||
|- |
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| December [[1990 in music|1990]] || N/A || You're the Only One || |
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|- |
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| August [[1990 in music|1990]] || N/A || Everything || |
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|- |
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| November [[1989 in music|1989]] || 王靖雯 || Shirley Wong || Her debut album with Cinepoly. |
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|- |
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| [[1989 in music|1989]] || N/A || The Longing for Home || Her third unofficial album recorded. |
|||
|- |
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| [[1987 in music|1987]] || N/A || Faye Wong Collection || Her second unofficial album recorded. |
|||
|- |
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| [[1985 in music|1985]] || 風從哪裡來 || Where Does the Wind Come From? || Her first unofficial album recorded. |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
== Awards and achievements == |
|||
===Compilations=== |
|||
{{s-start}} {{s-ach}} |
|||
:Titles in ''italics'' are songs and/or albums within a box set |
|||
|- |
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==== Cinepoly/Universal ==== |
|||
! colspan=3 style="background: #DAA520;" | [[Top Chinese Music Chart Awards]] |
|||
*2005 - 1st Complete Collection From Faye Wong 情·菲·得意 [+''Very Summer'' (非常夏日) with [[Jacky Cheung]]] (2-1/3 CDs + 2/3-DVD) |
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{{s-break}} |
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*2005 - Faye Wong's Story 王菲的故事 [+ bonus track ''Don't Be Shy'' (請勿客氣) with [[Softhard]] (1993)] (2CDs + book) |
|||
{{succession box |
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*2005 - Faye Wong's Mandarin Classical Songs 國語真經典-王菲 |
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| title = Best Female Artist, Hong Kong & Taiwan |
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*2005 - Revelations of Faye Wong 環球影音啟示錄-王菲 (2CDs + DVD) |
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| years = 2004 |
|||
*2004 - Faye Wong from Beginning 從頭認識 王菲 9CDs 套裝 (9 albums in 1 boxset): |
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| before = [[Stefanie Sun]] |
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:''Shirley Wong'' |
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| after = [[Stefanie Sun]] |
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:''Everything'' |
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}} |
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:''You're the Only One'' |
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! colspan=3 style="background: #DAA520;" | [[Golden Melody Awards]] |
|||
:''Coming Home'' |
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{{s-break}} |
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:''No Regrets'' |
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{{succession box |
|||
:''100,000 Whys'' |
|||
| title = Best Female Artist |
|||
:''Random Thinking'' |
|||
| years = 2004 |
|||
:''Ingratiate Oneself'' |
|||
| before = [[Karen Mok]] |
|||
:''Di-Dar'' |
|||
| after = [[Stefanie Sun]] |
|||
*2003 - 王菲最新精選專輯 (Best of Faye Wong) (2CDs + DVD) |
|||
}} |
|||
*2002 - ''Lost & Found'' (2 CDs) |
|||
{{s-end}} |
|||
*2002 - Faye Best [+bonus track ''Scary'' (心驚膽戰, 1997)] (2 CDs) |
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*2001 - 我的王菲時代 (My Faye Wong) |
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*2001 - Great Collection+Music Box 王菲好精選+Music Box |
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*2001 - 王菲音樂盒 (Faye Instrumental) |
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*1999 - Life 菲感情生活 (2 CDs) |
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*1999 - 但願人長久 (Wishing We Last Forever) |
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*1998 - ''Party Mix'' |
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*1998 - 菲舊夢 (Faye's Old Dream) (2 albums + VCD) |
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:''Faye's Decadent Sound'' |
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:''Toy'' |
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*1998 - Faye's '89-'97 Collection 王菲'89-'97 32精選 |
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*1997 - 菲主打 (Faye's Super Hits) |
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*1997 - Faye Selection 菲賣品 [+bonus track ''Unbelievable'' (不得了)] |
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*1996 - 樂樂精選 (Happy Collection) |
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*1994 - 最菲 (Faye Best) [[+ 2 bonus tracks: Mandarin ver. of ''Fragile Woman'' and ''Forgetting You Like Forgetting Me'']] |
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*1992 - ''Complete Shirley'' (2 CDs) |
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:''Shirley Once More'' |
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:''More Shirley'' |
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*1991 - ''More Shirley'' |
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*1991 - ''Shirley Once More'' (+ bonus track ''Can't Have More'' 不可多得) |
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== Footnotes == |
|||
{{Reflist|2|group=fn}} |
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*1st Complete Collection From Faye Wong 情 菲 得意 [+''Fashion Show'' (花生騷) with [[Anita Mui]] (2002)] (2/3-CD + 1/3-DVD, 2005) |
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*Faye Wong's Scenic Tour 王菲唱遊5-in-1 (5 albums in 1 boxset, 2004): |
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:''Faye Wong '97 |
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:''Song Journey (+EP) |
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:''Only Love A Stranger (+VCD) |
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:''Fable |
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:''Faye Wong '01 (+EP) |
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*The Most Fayevourite Faye 你王菲所以我王菲 (2CDs, 2002) |
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== References == |
|||
===Other Songs Not in Faye's Albums=== |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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*''Valentine's Radio'' on Yuming 30th Anniversary Cover Album (2002) |
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*Songs w/ [[Tony Leung]] from [[Chinese Odyssey 2002]] |
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*''Hero'' (英雄) (2002) is a hit theme song of the film [[Hero (film)]]. It is unavailable in the American versions of the film and soundtrack album. |
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*Mand. & Cant. vers. of ''Galaxy Unlimited (aka Ask for More)'' (星空無限) with [[Aaron Kwok]] (2000) |
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*''Let's Meet in '98'' (相約1998) w/ [[Na Ying]] (1998) |
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*''Serpenskirt'' and ''Touch Upon Touch'' with [[Cocteau Twins]] (1996) |
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*''Love Once Doesn't Give'' (愛, 一次給不完) with Jacky Cheung (1994) |
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== Filmography == |
|||
Recently, she put in an acclaimed turn as a robot experiencing its first emotions in Wong Kar-wai's [[art film|art-house]] success, ''[[2046 (film)|2046]]''. |
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* ''[[2046 (film)|2046]]'' ([[2004]]), directed by [[Wong Kar-wai]] |
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* ''[[Leaving Me Loving You]]'' (2004) |
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* ''[[Chinese Odyssey 2002]]'' ([[2002]]) |
|||
* ''[[Usokoi]]'' ウソコイ ([[2001]]) |
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* ''[[Okinawa Rendez-vous]]'' ([[2000]]) |
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* ''[[Chungking Express]]'' ([[1994]]) directed by [[Wong Kar-wai]] |
|||
* ''[[Modern Love Story]] IV: Three Equals One Love'' 愛情戀曲IV: 愛情3加1 ([[TVB]], 1994) |
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* ''[[Eternity]]'' 千歲情人 (TVB, [[1993]]) |
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* ''[[Legendary Ranger]]'' 原振俠 (TVB, 1993) |
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* ''[[Files of Justice II]]'' (壹號皇庭II) ([[1992]]) |
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* ''[[Bie Ji]]'' 別姬 (TVB, [[1991]]) |
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* ''[[Beyond's Diary]]'' (1991) |
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==Trivia== |
|||
She has numerous different ways of saying her name: |
|||
*Shirley Wong |
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*Wong Ching-Man (Another way of saying Shirley Wong) |
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*Jing-Man Wong (Another way of saying Shirley Wong) |
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*Jingwen Wang (Another way of saying Shirley Wong) |
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*Jing-Wen Wang (Another way of saying Shirley Wong) |
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*Faye Wang (Another way of saying Faye Wong) |
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*Wong Fei (Another way of saying Faye Wong) |
|||
*Wang Fei (Another way of saying Faye Wong) |
|||
*Wong Faye (Another way of saying Faye Wong) |
|||
*Wang Bi (Korean pronunciation of Faye Wong) |
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==See also== |
|||
*[[Cantopop]] |
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*[[Nicholas Tse]] |
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*[[Cecilia Cheung]] |
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== External links == |
== External links == |
||
{{Commons category|Faye Wong}} |
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* [http://en.chinabroadcast.cn/349/2005/11/07/Zt44@29105.htm Entertainment CRIEnglish -- Faye Wong] |
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{{Portal|Biography|China|Hong Kong|Pop music|Buddhism}} |
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* [http://www.wongfaye.org/forum All About Ah Faye - English Discussion Forum] |
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* {{IMDb name|id=0910947|name=Faye Wong}} |
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* [http://www.wongfaye.org All About Ah Faye] |
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* [http://www.wongfei.org Wang Fei Chinese Discussion Forum] |
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* [http://www.geocities.com/bigheadphonemusic/female/faye_wong 王菲 Big Headphone] (Chinese) |
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* [http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/Towers/6617 Bunnies Bunnies Everywhere] (Eng/Chi) |
|||
*[http://www.ffmusiconline.net/wong.shtml Final Fantasy Music Online] Mini-Biography about Faye Wong |
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* {{musicbrainz artist|id=692e367d-2846-442d-b13d-1177c3681c65|name=Faye Wong}} |
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* [http://www.karazen.com/reviews/music/fayewong.php Karazen: Faye Wong Album Reviews & Chinese Lyrics] |
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* [http://lfforum.pandela.net LF Forum] |
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{{Faye Wong}} |
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[[Category:1969 births|Wong, Faye]] |
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{{Best Actress HKFCSA}} |
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{{Golden Melody Awards for Best Mandarin Female Singer}} |
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[[Category:Buddhists|Wong, Faye]] |
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}} |
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[[Category:Hong Kong actors|Wong, Faye]] |
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{{Forbes China Celebrity 100}} |
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[[Category:Cantopop|Wong, Faye]] |
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[[Category:Women in electronic music]] |
Latest revision as of 16:25, 3 December 2024
Faye Wong | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
王菲 | |||||||||||||
Born | Xia Lin [fn 1] 8 August 1969 Dongcheng, Beijing, China | ||||||||||||
Citizenship | Chinese (Hong Kong) | ||||||||||||
Occupations |
| ||||||||||||
Years active |
| ||||||||||||
Spouses | |||||||||||||
Partner |
| ||||||||||||
Children | Leah Dou Li Yan | ||||||||||||
Musical career | |||||||||||||
Also known as | Shirley Wong (王靖雯) | ||||||||||||
Origin | Hong Kong | ||||||||||||
Genres | |||||||||||||
Labels | |||||||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||||||
Chinese | 王菲 | ||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
Stage name | |||||||||||||
Chinese | 王靖雯 | ||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
Birth name | |||||||||||||
Chinese | 夏林 | ||||||||||||
|
Faye Wong (Chinese: 王菲; pinyin: Wáng Fēi; born on 8 August 1969) is a Chinese singer-songwriter and actress. Early in her career she briefly used the stage name Shirley Wong (王靖雯). Born in Beijing, she moved to Hong Kong at the age of 18. She debuted with the Cantonese album Shirley Wong in 1989 and came to public attention by combining alternative music with mainstream Chinese pop.[2] Since 1994, she has recorded mostly in her native Mandarin.
One of the biggest pop stars in the Chinese-speaking world, Wong has also gained followings in Japan and Southeast Asia. In the West she is perhaps best known for starring in Wong Kar-wai's films Chungking Express (1994) and 2046 (2004).[2][3] While she has collaborated with international acts such as Cocteau Twins, Wong has recorded only a few songs in English, including "Eyes on Me" (1999), the theme song of the video game Final Fantasy VIII (1999). Upon her second marriage in 2005, she withdrew from the limelight, though sporadically returned to the stage.[4][5]
Wong is known to be a "diva with few words" in public, and has gained a reputation for her "cool" personality.[6][7] In Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture, Jeroen de Kloet characterised her as "singer, actress, mother, celebrity, royalty, sex symbol and diva all at the same time".[8] In 2000, she was recognised by Guinness World Records as the best selling Cantopop female artist, having sold an estimated 9.7 million copies of her albums by March 2000.[9]
Life and career
[edit]1969–1987: Early life and career beginnings
[edit]Faye Wong was born at Peking Union Medical College Hospital in Dongcheng District, Beijing in the midst of the Cultural Revolution.[10] Her father is Wang Youlin (王佑林), a mining engineer and second son of Wang Zhaomin aka Wang Molin (王兆民; 王墨林) (1901-1985), member of the Legislative Yuan of the Republic of China. Wang Youlin was parentally betrothed to Li Min (李珉), sister of Taiwanese writer Li Ao, but when Wang Zhaomin left for Taiwan by the Communist takeover, Wang Youlin, then a left-leaning college student, stayed in the Mainland and later wed Xia Guiying (夏桂影), a revolutionary music soprano with China Coal Mine Art Troupe, who would be Wong's mother.[11][12] Wong has an elder brother named Wang Yi (王弋).[13]
As a student, Wong already was involved in singing and attracted interest from several publishers.[11] On occasions, the school had to hide her artistic activities from her strict mother,[14] who as a professional saw singing as a dead-end career.[15] Despite her mother's opposition, Wong released 6 low-cost cover albums from 1985 to 1987 while still in high school, all in the form of cassettes, mostly consisting of songs by her personal idol, iconic Taiwanese singer Teresa Teng. For the last of these early recordings, the producer Wei Yuanqiang chose the title Wong Fei Collection, intending to show that he recognised a distinctive talent in the teenager.[16]
In 1987, after being accepted to Xiamen University to study biology, she migrated to Hong Kong to join her father, who had been working there for a few years. The plan was for her to stay there for a year to fulfill the permanent residency requirement, and go to a university abroad thereafter.[15] However, since Wong did not know a word of Cantonese, the language spoken in Hong Kong, she experienced great loneliness.[12] Following a brief modeling stint, she began taking singing lessons as a distraction with Tai See-Chung (戴思聰), an Indonesian-born Chinese who had gone to school in Mainland China and had previously tutored Hong Kong superstars Anita Mui, Andy Lau, Leon Lai and Aaron Kwok.[17] With Tai's recommendation, the 19-year-old signed with Cinepoly Records after winning third place in an ABU singing contest in 1988.[15] It was not only an unplanned move on the part of Wong, since her mother disapproved of a singing career, but also a risky move on the part of Chan Siu-Bo (陳小寶), Cinepoly's general manager, since Mainlanders were stereotyped as "backwards" in Hong Kong.[18]
As a result, Cinepoly asked Wong to change her "Mainland-sounding" name to a "sophisticated" stage name Wong Jing Man. (Her English name was to be "Shirley".)[19]
1989–1991: the Shirley Wong period
[edit]In 1989, her debut album Shirley Wong sold 25,000 copies and won her bronze at the "Chik Chak New Artist Award". Two more albums (Everything and You're the Only One) followed, similarly featuring many cover songs by artists from the US and Japan. They sold 10,000 copies each, despite relentless promotions by the company. Many in Hong Kong perceived her to be "backwards", lacking personality.[20]
At the time, both Wong and her then-agent Leslie Chan (陳健添) were in conflicts with Cinepoly under Chan Siu-Bo's successor Lal Dayaram (林振業).[21] Leslie Chan then sold Wong's contract for 2 million HKD to Taiwanese singer Lo Ta-yu. Under the arrangement of Lo, who founded Music Factory in 1990 (later becoming the Hong Kong subsidiary of Rock Records), Wong went to the United States for professional training at the end of 1991. She initially went to Los Angeles with plans to learn keyboards, but missed the class registration deadline. She then moved to New York, living with Wawa, another new artist signed by Lo, at the house of Lo's sister, Jennifer, in Flushing. Wong attended classes at the Barbizon School, the Martha Graham School and with personal singing tutors for about two months. [22][23][24] In 1996, she explained New York's influence on her:
I wandered around, visited museums and sat at cafes. There were so many strange, confident-looking people. They didn't care what other people thought of them. I felt I was originally like that too, independent and a little rebellious. But in Hong Kong I lost myself. I was shaped by others and became like a machine, a dress hanger. I had no personality and no sense of direction.[12]
Even though Wong found the experience enlightening, her less than tactful communication led Lo to decide to end the contract with her by the time she returned to Hong Kong. The two never collaborated or shared the stage thereafter.[24] With the help of her teacher Tai See-Chung, Wong found a new agent in Katie Chan (陳家瑛), who has remained her agent as well as her daughter's ever since.
1992–1995: Coming Home, No Regrets, 100,000 Whys, Random Thoughts, Mystery, Sky, Decadent Sounds of Faye and Di-Dar
[edit]The 1992 album Coming Home, the first release since her return from New York, prominently featured on the cover her new English name "Faye", a homophone to her given Chinese name, and the Chinese character "Jing", a reference to her hometown Beijing. From then on she changed her stage name back to "Wang Fei" (王菲).[25] Coming Home incorporated R&B influences and was a change in musical direction from the more traditional Cantopop fare of her earlier albums. Coming Home also included her first English-language number, "Kisses in the Wind". Wong stated in a 1994 concert that she very much liked this song,[26] after which various websites listed it as her personal favourite;[27][28][29] however, in a 1998 CNN interview she declined to name one favourite song, saying that there were too many,[30] and in 2003 she stated that she no longer liked her old songs.[31]
One of the songs on Coming Home, "Fragile Woman" (容易受傷的女人), a cover of a Japanese song "Rouge" originally composed by Miyuki Nakajima and sung by Naomi Chiaki, became Wong's first hit after being featured in the popular TVB drama The Greed of Man (1992). (Thanks to Wong's cover, this 1972 song—in different language versions—would in the early 1990s become a huge regional hit in Thailand, Vietnam, the rest of Southeast Asia and even Turkey; the most popular English version was titled "Broken-Hearted Woman".) The favourable reception of "Fragile Woman" led Wong to abandon her original plans to return to Los Angeles to continue her studies. Instead, she stayed in Hong Kong to build on her newfound success.[32]
In February 1993, she wrote the Mandarin lyrics for her ballad "No Regrets" (執迷不悔) which led many to praise her as a gifted lyricist. In February, it became the title track to her album No Regrets. No Regrets features soft contemporary numbers, a few dance tracks and two versions of the title ballad: Wong's Mandarin version, and a Cantonese version (lyrics by Keith Chan). In September 1993, her next album 100,000 Whys showed considerable alternative music influences from the West, including the popular song "Cold War" (冷戰), a cover of "Silent All These Years" by Tori Amos. In 1992–93 she also appeared in TVB shows such as File of Justice II and Legendary Ranger.
Wong has named the Scottish post-punk group Cocteau Twins among her favourite bands,[30] and their influence was clear on her next Cantonese album, Random Thoughts. Her Cantonese version of The Cranberries' "Dreams" was featured in Wong Kar-wai's film Chungking Express, and gained lasting popularity.[33] Besides covering songs and learning distinctive vocal techniques, Wong recorded her own compositions: "Pledge" (誓言), co-written with her then-boyfriend (and later husband), Beijing rock star Dou Wei, as well as her first and only spoken-word song "Exit" (出路). The latter is a rare window into her outlook on life, including her worries about her future marriage with Dou, her conversion to Buddhism, her self-criticism, and her cynicism about the show business.
Besides two Cantonese albums in 1994, Wong released two other albums in Mandarin in Taiwan, Mystery and Sky, which propelled her to fame in the Mandarin-speaking world. The song "I'm Willing" (我願意) in Mystery would become her trademark Mandopop song till this day, and has been covered by other singers such as Gigi Leung, Sammi Cheng and Jay Chou. Sky was seen by fans as a successful amalgam of artistic experimentation and commercialism. While her hits in Hong Kong were noticeably alternative, her two Mandarin albums were more lyrical and traditional. Critics generally credit Taiwanese producer Yang Ming-huang (楊明煌) for their success.
With four best-selling albums in Cantonese and Mandarin, a record-breaking 18 consecutive concerts in Hong Kong, and a widely acclaimed film, Chungking Express (1994), Wong had established herself as a diva, or "heavenly queen" (天后) as she is commonly known in the Chinese world, by the mid-1990s. Meanwhile, her distaste for Hong Kong's entertainment industry and media environment only grew. She was frequently in touch with the Beijing rock scene, where Dou Wei was a leading light and whose influence distinguished her from the mainstream pop music in Hong Kong.
In 1995, she released Decadent Sounds of Faye, a cover album of songs originally recorded by her idol Teresa Teng (whose songs had been banned during Wong's formative years in mainland China for being "decadent sounds" from Taiwan). A duet with Teng was planned for the album, but she died before this could be recorded.[34] Decadent Sounds sold well despite initial negative criticism, and has come to be recognised as an example of imaginative covering by recent critics.
Faye Wong and Dou Wei were the winner and the runner-up to the 1995 MTV International Viewer's Choice Award, with the music videos "Chess" and "Black Dream" respectively. In December, she released her Cantonese album Di-Dar which mixes an alternative yodelling style with a touch of Indian and Middle Eastern flavour. This album was a success, partly because it was so different from the mainstream Cantopop music, but—ironically—a couple of very traditional romantic songs topped the charts.
1996: Fuzao and Cinepoly extended plays
[edit]1996 saw the release of what many would consider her boldest and most artistically coherent effort to date, Fuzao, usually translated as Restless or Impatience. This was her last album with Cinepoly, and Wong felt she could take more artistic risks. The album contains mainly her own compositions, with an aesthetic inspired by the Cocteau Twins, who penned two original songs for the album, "Fracture" (分裂) and "Spoilsport" (掃興). As Wong had covered their work in 1994, she had established a remote working relationship with them—even laying down vocals for a special duet version of "Serpentskirt" on the Asian release of the group's 1996 album Milk & Kisses.
Although the album was Wong's personal favourite, the response from Hong Kong and Taiwan was less supportive. Many fans who enjoyed her previous three Mandarin albums turned their back on Restless, which they considered to be too alternative and self-absorbed. There were few ballads which were radio-friendly and some became disenchanted with her experimental style of recording. However, hardcore fans, known as Fayenatics,[35] adored the album and it became a cult hit. Wong has not released another fully artistic album since. After the release, Wong became the second Chinese artist (after Gong Li)—and the first Chinese singer—to be featured on the cover of Time magazine.[36]
From 1993 to 1995, Cinepoly released an EP of Wong's songs each year: Like Wind (如風), Faye Disc (菲碟) and One Person, Two Roles. Then in 1996–97, she recorded ten original songs in Cantonese, all written by lyricist Albert Leung and various composers, such as Wong Ka Keung, Adrian Chan and Chan Xiao Xia, before her departure from Cinepoly. After her contract with Cinepoly expired, the company released eight of these songs in the two subsequent EPs entitled Toy (玩具) and Help Yourself (自便). Although the EPs contained new songs—ballad hits like "Undercurrent" (暗湧), "Date" (約定) and "On Time" (守時)—and were welcomed by fans, they received lukewarm critical responses. The other two songs were included in later compilations; the last to be released was "Scary" (心驚膽顫) in 2002.
1997–1998: Faye Wong and Sing and Play
[edit]Wong signed for the recording giant EMI in 1997 after her first daughter was born, in a contract worth HK$60 million (approx. US$7.7 million), to release 55 songs in five albums. While most of her earlier albums were in Cantonese, Wong has since sung more in Mandarin, her mother tongue. Having gone through a period of experimentation, Wong stated that she wished to make "music that I like. I do not care if others don't, though I would be delighted if they do".
Her first album with EMI was Faye Wong (王菲 1997), released in autumn 1997. Critics expecting another artistic breakthrough after 1996's Restlessness found—much to their dismay—a much more inoffensive and commercially oriented musical album. Simon Raymonde and Robin Guthrie of the Cocteau Twins wrote two original compositions for the album, but only one, "The Amusement Park" (娛樂場), was used. This release included an acoustic cover of the Cocteau Twins' "Rilkean Heart", renamed "Nostalgia" (懷念).[37]
This album is filled with feelings of lethargy, languor and disengagement, yet most of the tracks sound warm and sweet, as opposed to those piquant self-centered ones before her motherhood. Reporters noticed that she began to smile more often in public and was not as icy or aloof as before. However, the album was released during the Asian financial crisis which swept East and Southeast Asia. Wong's former company Cinepoly, which retains the copyright on her previous records, released a Mandarin compilation at the same time in 1997 to counteract her new EMI album (and indeed outperformed it). Later, Cinepoly would release two compilations each year to compete with Wong's new releases, a tactic which has come under fire from her international fans. Faye Wong did not sell well in Hong Kong, but did quite well in Taiwan and mainland China. Although Wong had garnered some popularity with her 4 previous Mandarin albums, it was really this sweet yet slightly alternative album which had the mainland Chinese audience listening. Her profile began to rise sharply in Asia.
In 1997, singer Na Ying signed with EMI and struck a lasting friendship with Wong. Na had been a regular at the annual CCTV New Year's Gala, the most-watched TV show in mainland China and the world, and she invited Wong to do a duet with her on the upcoming show in 1998. The collaboration by the "Mainland Diva" and "Hong Kong Diva", titled "Let's Meet in 1998" (相約一九九八), became an instant hit and arguably the most played song in mainland China that year.[38] Thanks to this exposure[fn 2], in late 1998 Wong finally held her first concert in her native mainland, and continued her tour in 9 cities.
Sing and Play was released in October, and contained four songs composed by Wong: the opening track "Emotional Life", "Face", "A Little Clever" and "Tong" (both written for her daughter, the latter produced by Dou Wei). Amongst other songs were "Give Up Halfway" (sung both in Mandarin and Cantonese), which was one of the more commercially successful tracks from the album, along with the successful ballad "Red Bean" (紅豆).
It was the best selling Chinese album in Singapore in 1999. Together with Lovers & Strangers and the compilation album Wishing We Last Forever, it gave Wong 3 albums in the Singapore top 10 selling Chinese albums of 1999,[40] making her one of the best selling artists in Singapore in 1999.[41] In Japan, the album sold close to 90,000 copies in the first three months after its release.[42]
1999: "Eyes on Me" and Lovers & Strangers
[edit]The video game Final Fantasy VIII was released in Japan in February 1999, for which Faye Wong recorded the ballad "Eyes on Me" in English. It was the first time that a Japanese video game featured a Chinese singer for its theme. The "Eyes on Me" single sold over 335,620 copies in Japan and 500,000 worldwide,[43] making it the best-selling video game music disc to that date, and winning "Song of the Year (Western Music)" at the 14th Annual Japan Gold Disc Awards.[44][45] When the game was released in North America later that year, the theme song became very popular among gamers in the West; while it was not a mainstream hit there (as Wong had no desire to explore these markets), she gained many fans who were not previously familiar with her music.[46]
In March, she held two concerts in Nippon Budokan, with tickets for the first show on 11 March being sold out in one day and an extra show added on 12 March;[42] she was the first Chinese singer to perform in that venue.[47][48] Earlier in the year, Pepsi-Cola had made Wong a spokesperson, and after these concerts she shot the promotional music video for "Spectacular" (精彩), which Pepsi used in commercials.
The album Lovers & Strangers was released in late September,[49] and sold over 800,000 copies, topping the charts in Hong Kong, Mainland China, Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia.[50] This was her first album after parting from Dou Wei, and her first without any musical collaborations with him since their relationship began. The title track of the album was featured in Sylvester Stallone's remake of Get Carter. The entire album was penned by Albert Leung, who, like Wong, was suffering from a broken heart in his love life at the time. Buddhist philosophy has informed his lyrics since the album, originally as a way to console both Wong and himself. In 2022, Leung picked two of the songs, "Last Blossom" (開到荼靡) and "One Hundred Years of Solitude" (百年孤寂), as his all-time favorites over his prolific career.[51] Wong also became a spokesperson for JPhone in October, 1999, performing in several commercials which aired in Japan. In addition, she began filming for 2046 in August, a project she would pursue on and off over the next few years when her schedule permitted.
2000–2004: Fable, Faye Wong and To Love
[edit]The new millennium saw a shift in Wong's musical career with the album Fable. The prominent feature of this album is its segregated and distinguishable halves—songs in the first half of the album running in an almost continuous manner and in a format that is akin to a song-cycle, and the second half of discrete, chart-friendly numbers. The album itself derives its artistic merits from the first half, notable for its unique thematic and continuous sequencing of songs unprecedented in the Chinese music industry. The theme itself is ambiguous and the lyrics subject to multiple interpretations, though it is quite certain that the theme of Fable forms the main thematic reference, derived from the motivic elements of the prince and princess in fables and fairytales of European origins. Elements of spirituality, metaphysics and Buddhism hold an important place in the lyrics as well, penned by Albert Leung who has by then, been unanimously identified as Wong's lyricist par excellence. Musically the arrangements display influences of drum and bass, electronica, east-west collage and lush string orchestral infusions. Her other activities during this year included the Pepsi promotional duet and music video of "Galaxy Unlimited" with Aaron Kwok, the filming of Okinawa Rendezvous, as well as several concerts in China and Taiwan.
By this time, Wong had forged a famous alliance with producer/musician Zhang Yadong and lyricist Albert Leung, often referred to as the 'iron triangle'. However, due to Zhang Yadong's unavailability during this period (he was engaged on other projects), Wong decided to treat this last album with EMI as an experiment whereby she would collaborate with new producers/musicians/lyricists and 'see what their vision of her will be'.
The response from the public and critics alike were lukewarm at best. Wong herself admitted that she was not totally satisfied with some tracks, namely those produced by Taiwan 'father of rock' Wu Bai,[citation needed] which had an industrial electronica flavour reminiscent of Karen Mok's album Golden Flower. She cited the two folk-style songs written by Singaporean singer-songwriter Tanya Chua as her favourite picks on her album. The song that generated most noise from the press turned out to be "Vertigo" (迷魂記), a ballad composed by her then-boyfriend Nicholas Tse. Tse claimed that his composition was originally for Singaporean singer Stefanie Sun;[52] however, when the song went to Wong, Albert Leung crafted it as a love song between Wong and Tse from Wong's perspective. Leung followed this with a less known companion piece for Tse, "Angel in White"(白衣天使), from Tse's perspective. "Vertigo" is also Leah Dou's favorite song from her mother's body of work.[53]
While she was under contract with EMI and later Sony, Wong performed in the ensemble movie 2046 which had been in production since 1999 and finally wrapped in 2004. She performed at benefit concerts, including ones that helped those who suffered from AIDS and SARS. She sang on tracks with other celebrities such as Tony Leung, Anita Mui, and Aaron Kwok. She also starred in a Japanese TV serial, Usokoi, and the film Leaving Me Loving You with Leon Lai.
The theme song for Usokoi, titled "Separate Ways", was released as a single; it was one of her few Japanese songs (another being "Valentine's Radio").[54] She recorded several other solo non-album tracks, such as the eponymous hit theme song to Hero and a Buddhist song containing similar sounds to some of her work on her album Fu Zao. In addition, she recorded a recitation of the Heart Sutra. Meanwhile, her former record companies released several more compilations and boxed sets of her records.
For her Sony album To Love, released in November 2003, she recorded 13 tracks, 10 in Mandarin and 3 in Cantonese. She wrote the music and lyrics for 3 songs, the title track "To Love" (將愛), "Letting Go" (不留), "Sunshine Baby" (陽寶), as well as the music for "April Snow" (四月雪). The three songs with her own lyrics stirred much speculation about their implications of her personal life, as she was in a love quadrangle with Nicholas Tse, Cecilia Cheung, Li Yapeng, though with Li unknown to the public then. "To Love," short for “To Love to the End" (將愛進行到底), the name of Li Yapeng's 1998 breakout show (also known in English as Eternal Love or Cherish Our Love Forever), describes love as a "war." She explained in an interview: "Love itself is not a war, but my love triggered a war. I'm referring to many things attached to love, such as utilitarian and conspiratorial elements, which involve sacrifices. The environment makes love very cruel."[55] "Sunshine Baby," along with the song "MV" (short for "My Valentine") composed by Tse, is sometimes interpreted as her nostalgia for the relationship with Nicholas Tse, as "baby", or in Beijing dialect "baobei'er," was their term of endearment for each other.[56] "Letting Go," especially in retrospect, is an overture to her then little known life decisions to leave Tse for Li, to leave Hong Kong for Beijing, and, as echoed by "Passenger" (乘客), a cover of Sophie Zelmani's "Going Home," to leave the entertainment business for a new family.
Before the album's release, her Cantonese song "The Name of Love" (假愛之名), with lyrics by Albert Leung, was banned in some areas such as mainland China because the lyrics mentioned opium.[57] According to interviews, she said that she preferred the Mandarin version of the song (the title track); she had penned these lyrics herself, and they made no reference to drugs.[31] The album became more successful than her previous self-titled album, both commercially and critically. Afterwards, she held numerous successful concerts for over a year. Faye Wong was awarded pan-Asian female artist of the year at the sixth CCTV-MTV Music Honors.[58] At the 2004 Golden Melody Awards, she was awarded Best Female Artist after being nominated multiple times, delivering the now-famous acceptance speech: "I can sing songs. This I know. Now that Golden Melody judges have given me their approval, I approve of their approval."[59][60]
2005–2009: Hiatus
[edit]In January 2005, during the last concert of her tour, the usually reticent Faye Wong said something that left her fans wondering: "If I ever retire from showbiz, I hope you all forget about me."[61] In May 2005 her agent Katie Chan confirmed that Wong was "resting indefinitely".[62] Two months later, Wong wed Li Yapeng in Xinjiang, with only a small marriage banquet held in Beijing, and their daughter Li Yan was born the following year.
In the four years that followed, Wong would not return, ignoring Live Nation's offer of 100m-HKD[63] as well as the 3m-yuan offer for a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to sing at the Beijing Olympics opening ceremony on her birthday,[64] even though the Beijing native was the choice of over 63% netizens in a CCTV online poll.[65] She did, however, come out to sing "Wishing We Last Forever" in May 2008 at a CCTV fundraising event for Sichuan earthquake victims,[66] and "Heart Sutra" in May 2009 for a Buddhist ceremony at the Famen Temple.[67]
In May 2009, Wong shot an ad for "Royal Wind" shampoo, sparking speculation that it would be the first step in her comeback.[68] In June 2009, a compilation of 3 CDs and 1 DVD of her songs was released by Universal Music.[69][70]
2010–present: Partial comeback
[edit]Wong made her comeback at the 2010 CCTV New Year's Gala, covering Li Jian's ballad "Legend" (傳奇).[72] From October 2010 to June 2012, she embarked on her Faye Wong Comeback Tour 2010–2012 across Asia.[73] Since then, Wong has sporadically released singles, mostly theme songs for Chinese movies. One of these songs is a duet with Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma titled “Feng Qing Yang” (風清揚), the theme song for Ma’s short film, Gong Shou Dao.[74] She also attends fashion shows, shoots advertisements, and makes appearances in gala performances on national TV.
On 30 December 2016, Wong hosted her first concert in six years, "Faye's Moments Live 2016" (幻樂一場), at the Mercedes-Benz Cultural Centre in Shanghai, with a VR live webcast via the Tencent Video website watched by 20 million online audience.[75] Her singer-songwriter daughter, Leah Dou, was part of the backing vocalists team. Wong performed several new songs at the concert, opening with "Dust" (塵埃), with her own lyrics comparing herself at this time to a particle of dust: "Blown up and dusted off. Inhaled and exhaled. No meaning, no direction. Don't want anything." She also rendered "Tong's Palace" (童殿), the Mandarin version of Leah's English song "The Way" with the Chinese lyrics by Albert Leung intended as a sequel to "Mortal World" (人間), Wong's song to Leah back in 1998.
However, the highly-anticipated concert received divisive reviews. Singer Gong Linna criticized Wong's "off-pitch" performance, while music critic Liang Huan accused her of using pre-recorded "live" vocals.[76][77] Singer and producer Tiger Hu stated that Wong did go off-key during the VR live broadcast but explained that the audio fidelity was too high, which is why the stadium audience didn't complain as much as the online audience. Hu believed this highlighted the failure of the VR live broadcast and predicted that fewer singers would attempt it in the future.[78] Nicholas Tse, Wong's boyfriend and the Greater China chairman of Digital Domain, who oversaw the VR live broadcast, defended her on social media, saying, "She sounds great on her own!" [79]
In 2018, Wong participated in two variety shows, Hunan TV's PhantaCity (幻樂之城) and CCTV-3's National Treasure II (國家寶藏第二季). In May, 2020, she was one of the headliners for Alibaba's Believe In The Future, a three-day online benefit concert for Covid-19 frontline workers.[80] In September, Wong hosted a karaoke live broadcast on the Alibaba-owned platform Youku, teaming up to sing a duet with Jack Ma near the end of the broadcast.[81]
Personal life
[edit]Vegetarianism
[edit]Wong used to be a vegetarian. In 2008 and 2011, she was named Asia's sexiest vegetarian woman by animal rights group PETA.[82][83]
Social media
[edit]Wong used to be an active Weibo user under the name "veggieg," with a talkative, surprisingly funny presence online.[84] The Weibo account has not been active since early 2015. Wong also has a private Instagram account under the name “feibeing.” [85]
Religion
[edit]Wong has been a Buddhist since the early 1990s, releasing many Buddhist songs over the years. In 2011, Wong, in a Weibo post, associated the power of religion with the survival of a wooden Buddhist object in a fire in Shenyang earlier that year, inciting an online spat with Fang Zhouzi, a popular science writer who ridiculed her belief.[86][87] In 2016, Wong, with some other celebrities, was warned by the Chinese government against fraternising with the Dalai Lama after attending a Buddhist assembly in India with members of the Tibetan government-in-exile.[88][89]
Relationships
[edit]In the early 1990s, Wong had a relationship with Luan Shu, the bassist of the Beijing rock band Black Panther. The relationship prompted Dou Wei, the vocalist, to leave Black Panther in 1991. Wong then started dating Dou and, in June 1996, married him.[90] Their daughter, Leah, was born on 3 January 1997, with the Chinese name Dou Jingtong meaning "child of Dou and Jing" (from Wong's stage name Jingwen). The baby's voice appears in the song "Tong" of the 1998 album Sing and Play and in the title track of the 1999 album Lovers & Strangers. Wong and Dou divorced in late 1999[90] with Wong claiming the rights to their daughter Leah and waiving child support.[91]
Wong had an on-and-off relationship with Hong Kong star Nicholas Tse from 2000 to 2003.[92] Wong‘s relationship with Chinese actor Li Yapeng became public in 2004; their wedding took place in July 2005, after which she took a long break from the entertainment business.[93] In 2006, Wong gave birth to their daughter, Li Yan. On 13 September 2013, Wong and Li announced that they had divorced, with Li claiming the rights to their daughter Yan.[94] In 2014, Wong and Tse rekindled their relationship.[95]
Charities
[edit]In August 2006, Li Yapeng published a public letter, "Gratitude (感謝)", on his Sina.com blog,[96] showing Wong and his gratitude towards all concerned parties, and confirming rumours their daughter, Li Yan, was born with a congenital cleft lip. He expressed their reason for seeking medical treatment in California: due to the severity of Li Yan's cleft, the special reconstructive surgeries she needed were not available in China. Citing a South American folk tale, Li described his daughter as a special child and her cleft as a mark of an angel. The couple has since established the Smile Angel Foundation to assist children with clefts.[97]
On 26 December 2006, Wong made her first public appearance since 2005 at the foundation's inaugural fundraising ball. She opted not to speak or sing, but her new composition "Cheerful Angel" (愛笑的天使) debuted at the event as the official theme song of the charity.[98][99] At the second fundraising ball on 8 December 2007, Wong sang an electronica-infused version of the Diamond Sutra for the event.[100] For the foundation's publicity event on 27–28 November 2008, Wong and her husband visited children in Tibet who were in various stages of recovery after being cured with the help of the charity.[101]
In May 2008, following the disastrous earthquake in Sichuan, the couple accepted a local girl who lost a leg trying to save her classmates, to their family as she underwent recuperation and treatments in Beijing. The middle school student returned to her hometown a year later.[102] The Lis agreed to continue paying for her medical needs until she turns 22 and visit her at least once a year.[103] In March 2012, the Smile Angel Foundation donated 15 million Japanese yen to ChildFund Japan to help needy children after the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.[104]
In April 2010, the China Social Sciences Press recognised Wong as one of the 13 "richest souls" in China.[105][106] In 2012, Smile Angel Foundation established China's first charity paediatric hospital in Beijing. In May 2013, Wong and Li topped the inaugural "China Celebrity Philanthropist List" compiled by the China Philanthropist magazine.[107] On 19 May 2013, she sang four songs in a memorial concert celebrating Teresa Teng's 60th birthday, with a portion of the concert proceeds going to the charity.
Artistry
[edit]The focus of Faye Wong's concerts has always been on her vocal performance. She seldom dances or speaks to the audience, and there are generally no supporting dancers. There were two exceptions to the latter in the 1994–95 live concerts; first, many dancers joined her on stage for the lively song "Flow Not Fly". In the second half, Wong and a line of male dancers were menaced by a giant mechanical spider overhead during the song "Tempt Me".
Another trademark is her unconventional fashion on stage.[108] Her 1994 concerts were memorable for dreadlocks and extremely long sleeves, as well as for the silver-painted tears. She later said "I wore long sleeves because usually I don't have choreography; I don't know what to do with my hands." Her 1998 concerts saw her sporting the "burnt" cheek makeup, the "Indian chief" look, and the soleless strap-on boots.[109] At the start of her 2003 concerts her headgear was topped by an inverted shoe supporting a very long feather, and her makeup for that concert went through several changes of painted eye-shades.
She does not perform encores, and usually exits by sinking below the stage via a platform. After her release of Miyuki Nakajima's "Mortal World" (人間) in 1997, she ended her concerts for the next few years with this song while shaking hands with the audience, then taking a deep bow to a horizontal position before leaving the stage. However, during her Comeback Tour from 2010 to 2012, she ended with "Flower of Paradise" (彼岸花), a song from the album Fable (2000). She has also given concerts in North America, Australia and Southeast Asia.
Public image
[edit]Dutch scholar Jeroen Groenewegen credits Wong's mass appeal to some of her perceived "cool" traits including autonomy, unique artistry and childishness.[110] Katie Chan, Wong's agent, once said "Faye does whatever she wants... it's really quite a miracle that she became a success."[12]
Despite being a favorite target of media and paparazzi, Wong is known for giving terse, direct, and somewhat unexpected answers, if she responds at all, when asked questions. One of her many famous interactions with the media occurred at a 1999 press conference:[111]
Reporter: "Has your divorce [from Dou Wei] been finalized?"
Wong: "What does it have to do with you?"
Reporter: "Our readers want to know."
Wong: "Nothing to do with them either."
Reporter: "But you're a public figure."
Wong: "I'm a public figure so I have to tell you everything? Again, it has nothing to do with you and nothing to do with your readers."
Li Yan, Wong's daughter, was once photographed using a cell phone case featuring the meme of Wong saying, "What does it have to do with you?"[112]
Wong's devil-may-care attitude is as apparent in her public image as in her love life. In 1994, during one of her many trips to Beijing to see Dou Wei—which already strained her relationship with her agency by distracting her from work—Hong Kong paparazzi from Next Magazine followed her and tracked her down. The photographs taken, showing her entering an unhygienic community toilet in a narrow hutong to dump urine—in sharp contrast to the modern and glamorous lives Hong Kong celebrities led—caused quite a stir, with some in Cinepoly fearing that her diva image would be tarnished.[18] But many were impressed by what the diva would do for love, as Taiwanese lyricist Chien Yao, who initially declined to write lyrics for Wong because he never met and knew very little about her, recalled in 2012,
It just happened that I took a business trip to Hong Kong and on the flight back, I saw that tabloid magazine with photos from Beijing, of her coming out in the morning carrying the chamber pot to dump in the public toilet ... That piece from the tabloid moved me ... Such a famous female celebrity, willing to do that, and she only had a 2-day break (from work), most of that time must have been spent traveling. Just to be with (him). So the first line (I wrote down) was, "I'm willing to forget even my name". Also "running towards you", they all describe how I felt when I saw those pictures. That's how I wrote "I'm Willing" (for Faye Wong).[113]
Wong's relationship with Nicholas Tse, spanning over two decades, has become the stuff of popular romance and cemented her image as a woman dedicated to love. The two dated in the early 2000s, split in 2003, married and had children with other celebrities, divorced, and reunited in 2014 after an 11-year breakup.[114] Their reunion, revealed by paparazzi photos of them kissing at Wong's Beijing apartment, caused a sensation but received mixed reactions. At a time when traditional media was declining and social media was on the rise, her reunion with Tse was welcomed by the media and other celebrities, but she faced considerable criticism on Weibo from conservative quarters for prioritizing love over family at her age[115][116] and from Cecilia Cheung's fans.[117] Not long after, she quit Weibo after having been one of the platform's most active celebrities for years.
Legacy
[edit]In 2004 and 2005, Faye Wong was ranked in the top five on the Forbes China Celebrity 100, as well as in 2011 and 2012 after her hiatus. In a 2011 "most popular celebrity in China" marketing study, she was also ranked in the top 5.[118] In 2008, Wong was voted Asia's sexiest vegetarian woman in a poll run by animal rights group PETA.[119] In 2009, to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the People's Republic of China, a government web portal conducted an online poll on The Most Influential Chinese Cultural Celebrity in the Past 60 Years; out of 192 candidates, Wong received over 7 million votes, second only to the deceased Teresa Teng from Taiwan, Wong's own personal idol.[120] In 2014, she was named one of the 10 most admired female singers in Asia by RHA media.[121] Chen Tao, a China Radio International DJ, compares Wong's influence in the Sinophone world to Madonna's in America: "She represents a certain era of pop music, a certain trend, and a vision of being unique."[33]
Numerous artists have released works that paid tribute to her,[122] including "(I Want to See) Faye Wong" by J Church,[123] "Faye Wong" by Green Club Riviera,[124] "Wong Fei, Gwanyu Nei Dik Mei" (王菲,關於你的眉) by my little airport,[125] "Wang Fei de Hui Mou" (王菲的回眸) by YuFeiMen,[126] I Love Faye Wong (我愛王菲), debut album of Maggie Chiang,[127] and "We are Not Romantic in This Age" (在這個年代我們不浪漫) by Easy Weeds.[128][129] Wong's songs have been covered in other languages, including "Meteor" (流星) in Japanese by Hanayo,[130] "Chanel" (香奈兒) in Korean by Lim Hyung-joo,[131] and "Red Bean" (紅豆) in Vietnamese by various artists.[132] Lene Marlin's "Still Here" is an English cover of "I'm Willing" (我願意).[133] China's 2007 spacecraft Chang'e 1 played Faye Wong's version of "Wishing We Last Forever" (但願人長久).[134]
Japanese director Shunji Iwai had explained that the titular pop-star character of his 2001 film All About Lily Chou-Chou was conceived after attending a Faye Wong concert.[135] Wong's name was also mentioned in the 2003 Japanese film The Blue Light as one of the protagonist's favourites.[136] Hikari MitsushimaThe female protagonist in the 2013 Chinese film Beijing Flickers was prototyped after Wong, according to director Zhang Yuan. Zhang remembered when he shot his 1993 hit Beijing Bastards with Dou Wei, Wong as Dou's girlfriend would visit the set every day.[137] Japanese singer-actress Hikari Mitsushima stated that Wong was her idol and muse;[138] she performed Wong's Cantopop song "Dreams" at the 2024 Megaport Music Festival, in Kaohsiung, Taiwan.[139]
Discography
[edit]
Cantonese-language studio albums[edit]
|
Mandarin-language studio albums[edit]
|
Concert tours
[edit]Title | Dates | Associated album(s) | Location | Shows |
---|---|---|---|---|
Faye Wong Live in Concert | 13 November 1994 – 10 November 1995 | Sky | North America and Asia | 30 |
One of the concerts in Hong Kong was published on CD, VHS and LaserDisc. The visual designer for the concerts was the film director Wong Kar-wai. Unlike later series of concerts, these performances included dancers and encores. | ||||
Faye Wong Scenic Tour | 10 October 1998 – 23 March 2001 | Sing and Play | Asia and Australia | 46 |
The New Year's Eve concert in Hong Kong was published on CD and VCD. "Auld Lang Syne" is included in the recording, but was actually sung by the background vocalists rather than Faye Wong. In the Japan concert, she covered "Don't Break My Heart", a Mandarin song originally performed by Dou Wei. | ||||
Faye Wong Tour 2001 | 7 September 2001 – 2 November 2001 | Faye Wong | China and Japan | 6 |
One of the concerts in Nippon Budokan in Tokyo, Japan was released on VCD and DVD. | ||||
No Faye! No Live! Tour | 20 December 2003 – 8 January 2005 | To Love | Asia | 16 |
One of the concerts in Hong Kong was published on CD, SACD, VCD and DVD. The title sponsor was the clothing company Baleno. "Those Flowers" (Mandarin song originally performed by Pu Shu) was covered in the concerts in China. | ||||
Faye Wong Comeback Tour | 29 October 2010 – 9 June 2012 | — | Asia | 46 |
The Comeback Tour was a concert tour in Asia by Faye Wong, marking her return to public performance after several years of concentrating on her family. |
Setlists
[edit]The following setlists only include songs published in the concert albums, not all songs performed throughout the tours.
- 夢遊
- 夢中人
- 多得他
- 無奈那天
- 靜夜的單簧管
- Medley:
- Miss You Night & Day
- Summer of Love
- 又繼續等
- Everything
- 不再兒嬉
- 從明日開始
- 明天我要嫁給你
- Medley:
- 天與地
- 用心良苦
- Medley:
- 如風
- 季候風
- 有一天我會
- 浪漫風暴
- Kisses in the Wind
- 流非飛
- 愛與痛的邊緣
- 知己知彼
- 胡思亂想
- 誓言
- 誘惑我
- 棋子
- 執迷不悔
- 容易受傷的女人
- 冷戰
- 千言萬語
- 出路
- 我願意
- Overture
- 感情生活
- 浮躁
- 悶
- 暗湧
- 天空 (unplugged)
- 臉
- 迷路
- 夢中人
- 夢遊
- 原諒自己
- 末日
- 墮落
- 天使
- 懷念
- 夢醒了
- 但願人長久
- 情誡
- 一人分飾兩角
- 為非作歹
- Di-Dar
- 曖昧
- Bohemian Rhapsody
- 你快樂 (所以我快樂)
- Auld Lang Syne
- 約定
- 償還
- 我願意
- 執迷不悔
- Overture
- 我願意
- 再見螢火蟲
- 悶
- 矜持
- Medley:
- 半途而廄
- 只愛陌生人
- 開到茶靡
- 過眼雲煙
- 流浪的紅舞鞋
- 新房客
- 香奈兒
- 感情生活
- 掙脫
- 推翻 (unplugged)
- 你 (unplugged)
- 但願人長久
- 天空
- Separate Ways
- 天使
- Eyes on Me
- Thank You For Hearing Me
- 人間
- Overture
- 天空
- 誓言
- Medley:
- 純情
- 背影
- 夢中人
- 流浪的紅舞鞋
- 我願意
- 假如我是真的
- 只願為你守著約
- 但願人長久
- 新房客
- 香奈兒
- 將愛
- 開到荼蘼
- 償還
- 紅豆
- 暗湧
- 光之翼
- 悶
- Heart of Glass
- 旋木
- 只愛陌生人
- The Look of Love
- 如風
- 愛與痛的邊緣
- 精彩
- Medley:
- 尾班車
- 靜夜的單簧管
- 守時
- 約定
- 給自己的情書
- 冷戰
- 人間
- N/A (Not yet officially released)
Filmography
[edit]Films
[edit]Year | English Title | Original Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1991 | Beyond's Diary | BEYOND日記之莫欺少年窮 | Mary | |
1994 | Chungking Express | 重慶森林 | Faye | Nominated – 14th Hong Kong Film Awards for Best Actress Won – Stockholm Film Festival for Best Actress Nominated – 31st Golden Horse Award for Best Leading Actress |
2000 | Okinawa Rendez-vous | 戀戰沖繩 | Jenny | |
2002 | Chinese Odyssey 2002 | 天下無雙 | Princess Wushuang | Nominated – 22nd Hong Kong Film Awards for Best Actress Won – HK Film Critics Society Awards for Best Actress |
2004 | 2046 | Wang Jingwen | ||
Leaving Me, Loving You | 大城小事 | Xin Xiaoyue |
Television
[edit]Year | English Title | Original Title | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1991 | Traces of the Heart | 別姬 | Mei-fong | TVB movie |
1992 | File of Justice II | 壹號皇庭 II | Mandy Tong Yuk-man | TVB series |
1993 | Legendary Ranger | 原振俠 | Hoi-tong | TVB series (20 episodes) |
Eternity | 千歲情人 | Bou Ging-hung | TVB series (20 episodes) | |
1994 | Modern Love Story: Three Equals One Love | 愛情戀曲:愛情3加1 | Wun-gwan | one part of TVB series |
2001 | Love from a Lie | ウソコイ | Lin Fei | Kansai TV series (11 episodes) |
2018 | Phantacity | 幻乐之城 | Herself | Hunan Television series (10 episodes) |
Awards and achievements
[edit]Footnotes
[edit]- ^ It has been reported that before the age of 15 she was called Xia Lin, adopting her mother's surname since her paternal family was persecuted in the Cultural Revolution, but this claim has not been confirmed by her or her family. Some of Wong's former neighbours also could not remember this name.[1]
- ^ In 2009, former CCTV president Yang Weiguang revealed that Faye Wong had been "banned" by the station for some time, after refusing to change the lyrics of a song when the station invited her once before (which she did not participate as a result).[39]
References
[edit]- ^ Huang Xiaoyang (黄晓阳) (2005). 王菲画传 [A Pictorial Biography of Faye Wong] (in Chinese). China Radio & Television Publishing House. ISBN 978-7-5043-4429-8. Archived from the original on 20 December 2009. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
- ^ a b Mitchell, Tony (2006). "Chapter 13: Tian Ci – Faye Wong and English Songs in the Cantopop and Mandopop Repertoire". In Homan, Shane (ed.). Access All Eras: Tribute Bands and Global Pop Culture. Open University Press. pp. 215–228. ISBN 0-335-21690-0. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
- ^ Huang Yan; Blanchard, Ben (26 July 2010). "China's Pop Queen Faye Wong Plans Comeback". Reuters. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
- ^ Sun Xi (5 November 2010). "Return of the Inimitable Faye Wong". Women of China. Archived from the original on 10 August 2017. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
- ^ "Faye Wong Moments Live 2016 delights Shanghai[3]- Chinadaily.com.cn". www.chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
- ^ Smith, Jeff; Wylie, Jean (2004). Smyth, Russell; Tam, On Kit; Warner, Malcolm; Jiuhua Zhu, Cherrie (eds.). China's Business Reforms. Vol. 7. US-China Business Council. doi:10.4324/9780203537039. ISBN 978-0203537039. Archived from the original on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
The April 2004 'China Cool Hunt' survey polled 1,200 18- to 22-year-old students from 64 universities in Beijing and Shanghai about the who, what, and why of cool ... Asian, not Western, musicians are viewed as cool by this generation. No international pop stars were among students' top 10 favorites. China's Wang Fei was the most popular singer, with 17 percent of the votes.
{{cite book}}
:|journal=
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- ^ de Kloet, Jeroen (2005). "Wong Fei". In Edward L., Davis (ed.). Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture. Routledge. pp. 659–660. ISBN 0-415-24129-4. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
- ^ "Best Selling Canto-Pop Female". Guinness World Records. Archived from the original on 23 March 2005. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
- ^ "三母女同一醫院出生 王菲剖腹誕八斤肥嬰". Apple Daily. Next Digital. 28 May 2006. Archived from the original on 14 June 2020. Retrieved 15 January 2024.
- ^ a b "15岁成为"小富姐" 王菲:妈妈不喜欢我唱歌". music.yule.sohu.com. Retrieved 9 June 2024.
- ^ a b c d Spaeth, Anthony (1996). "She Did It Her Way". Time. Vol. 148, no. 16 (International ed.). Retrieved 23 January 2011.
- ^ 介绍王菲. 菲迷府 www.wongfei.org (in Chinese). 25 January 2009. Archived from the original on 25 January 2009. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
- ^ Lei Dan (雷丹) (23 August 2004). 王菲 – 她来自北京 [Faye Wong: She Came From Beijing]. Beijing News (in Chinese). Retrieved 5 February 2011.
- ^ a b c Faye Wong (王菲) (1994). "王菲:我的故事" [Faye Wong: My Story]. Oriental Sunday. 183–191. Archived from the original on 9 February 2014. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
- ^ Xiaosheng (小生) (12 October 2004). 天后王菲16岁出道 首张珍藏集重见天日 [Diva Faye Wong Debuted at the Age of 16; First Collection Album To Be Reissued]. Sohu Entertainment (in Chinese). Retrieved 5 February 2011.
- ^ "Sad Refrain as Cantopop 'Starmaker' Tai Dies at 69". The Standard. 19 July 2010. Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
- ^ a b Wu Qi (吴琪) (2010). 王菲从艺之路盘点 香港不曾改变过她 [Looking Back at Faye Wong's Career: Hong Kong Never Changed Her]. Life Week Magazine (in Chinese). 33. Retrieved 5 February 2011.
- ^ Fung, Anthony; Curtin, Michael (2002). "The Anomalies of being Faye (Wong): Gender politics in Chinese popular music" (PDF). International Journal of Cultural Studies. 5 (3). Sage Publications: 263–290. doi:10.1177/1367877902005003005. S2CID 143556750. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
- ^ "王菲情路回顾:曾因初恋与母亲闹僵 离开北京_娱乐频道_凤凰网". ent.ifeng.com. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
- ^ "明報周刊Online". emag.mingpaoweekly.com. Retrieved 12 June 2024.
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- ^ a b "王菲为什么与罗大佑分道扬镳老死不相往来?". k.sina.cn. 3 October 2016. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
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- ^ Soundtrack video/CD of 1994–95 concert in Hong Kong
- ^ Faye Wong at Sina.com (in Chinese)
- ^ Josh's Faye Wong Biography Page
- ^ This is also stated in the sleeve notes of the 2003 re-issue of her 1985 album, Enchanting Kaler Archived 13 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ a b 1998 interview on CNN (Mandarin with English translation), available on YouTube.
- ^ a b "China diva, Faye Wang, changes her Ice Queen image?", The Straits Times, 2 December 2003. Cited at China Daily. Retrieved 25 September 2010.
- ^ 阿瑟. "十万个为什么 十万个回答——访王靖雯". 音像世界1994年第二期.
- ^ a b "An encore for Faye Wong", China Daily, 11 December 2009
- ^ Xiaobao Chen, ex-CEO of Universal Records Hong Kong (in Chinese)
- ^ The term "Fayenatics" was derived from a popular Internet fan mailing list back in 1997. Some members of the mailing list recorded a double disc album in 1998 called Fayenatics – The Album. In a CNN interview that year, Wong mentioned that she had received a copy of this album.
- ^ "The Divas of Pop". Time. 14 October 1996. cover.
- ^ Cocteau Twins Atlas.
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- ^ 杨伟光:解密央视 Archived 9 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine"杨伟光:《相约九八》我们审完后,有一天晚上那英给我打电话,问我为什么要把节目拿下。我就去问了这个事情,他们告诉我过去有一台晚会,想让王菲把歌词改了,王菲不改,然后还不唱了,这次就要惩罚她。我说,这个节目很好,还是该上。我们一定要有胸怀,人家不愿意改也要尊重别人。《相约98》这么好的歌,那英跟王菲一起演出,形式多好,为什么要因为过去的事拿下。我一直主张不要“封杀”人家。"
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- ^ For the album Queen's Fellows: Yuming 30th anniversary cover album (Japan Version), 11 December 2002, Toshiba EMI (JP) TOCT-25001, Queen's Fellows Archived 25 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 14 July 2007.
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- ^ HK E News (4 July 2022). 謝霆鋒與王菲互稱寶貝兒 與前妻張柏芝保持友好關係|未睇過陳冠希慾照 謝賢狄波拉離婚成陰影?|男人最痛親情與愛情 學煮鋒味與囝囝享親子樂|最佳男主角 黎芷珊. Retrieved 7 June 2024 – via YouTube.
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- ^ "王菲被官方媒体指控与达赖"核心头目"共同出席法会". RFI – 法国国际广播电台 (in Simplified Chinese). 25 February 2016. Retrieved 26 March 2024.
- ^ a b "Entertainment Weekly: China: Dou Wei". Associated Press. Retrieved 14 December 2019.
- ^ "王菲获女儿抚养权 与窦唯正式离婚_娱乐_生活空间_新浪网". eladies.sina.com.cn. Retrieved 1 May 2024.
- ^ "Inside Faye Wong and Nicholas Tse's whirlwind romance, from the 2000s to now". South China Morning Post. 7 June 2023. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
- ^ "Pop diva Faye Wong 'to quit singing for love'". China Daily, 28 May 2005. Retrieved 30 October 2006.
- ^ Celebrity power couple Faye Wong, Li Yapeng divorce after eight years of marriage South China Morning Post, 13 September 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
- ^ "How Vicki Zhao reunited Faye Wong and Nicholas Tse 11 years after they broke up". The Star. 29 September 2014. Retrieved 10 July 2017.
- ^ Li Yapeng, Blog (in Chinese). 12 August 2006. Retrieved 30 October 2006. Referred to in English language report of second operation, Sina.com, 11 April 2007.
- ^ Smileangel Foundation established, to begin operation on the 21st (in Chinese). Sina Entertainment, 8 November 2006. Retrieved 18 November 2006.
- ^ "Smileangel Foundation holds Christmas charity ball; over 12 million yuan raised to date" (in Chinese). Chinese Red Cross. 27 December 2006. Archived from the original on 13 May 2008. Retrieved 25 September 2010. (with pictures). Retrieved 25 September 2010.
- ^ Smileangel Foundation Fundraising Ball Raised 8.447 Million (in Chinese) (with pictures). Sina Entertainment, 26 December 2006. Retrieved 30 December 2006.
- ^ Faye Wong Records for Smileangel Banquet Archived 12 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine (in Chinese) (with video). Tom.com, 10 December 2007. Retrieved 10 December 2007.
- ^ "Smile Angel" Flies to Tibet Archived 7 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine (with photos). chinatibetnews.com, 28 November 2008. Retrieved 30 November 2008.
- ^ Faye Wong's Smiling Angel
- ^ 发起"新家庭"助养计划 李亚鹏:还孩子一个家 Archived 12 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ (in Japanese) 李亜鵬、大船渡児童に義援金1500万円 Archived 8 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "China's First 'Soul Rich List' Published". Archived from the original on 11 June 2012. Retrieved 9 April 2012.
- ^ (in Chinese) “心灵富豪” 袁隆平当首富
- ^ (in Chinese) 美即2013中国慈善名人榜 Archived 25 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Prelude for Faye Wong Beijing solo concert", Crienglish.com, 8 August 2004. "the Hong Kong star's eclectic outfits"
- ^ 實況更勝精選,「黃金組合」終極登場 (in Chinese). EMI Taiwan. 5 January 2000. Archived from the original on 26 January 2002. Retrieved 17 January 2010.
- ^ Groenewegen, Jeroen (2009). "Faye Wong: Stardom in Chinese Popular Music". International Journal of Chinese Culture and Management. 2 (3). Inderscience Enterprises: 248–261. doi:10.1504/IJCCM.2009.029405.
- ^ 自由時報電子報 (9 May 2016). "王菲離婚受訪片段出土 嗆爆記者:跟你有啥關係 - 自由娛樂". ent.ltn.com.tw (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ "王菲女兒的「手機殼」上熱搜!原來是媽媽說過的一句經典語錄:「跟你有什麼關係啊?」". ELLE (in Chinese (Taiwan)). 28 May 2020. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ (in Chinese) 姚谦:看到王菲倒夜壶 来灵感创作出《我愿意》
- ^ "Inside Faye Wong and Nicholas Tse's whirlwind romance, from the 2000s to now". South China Morning Post. 7 June 2023. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ "王菲冒犯了你们凑合的人生". www.sohu.com. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ "王菲没那么坏,也没那么好-旗书网". www.hongqipress.com. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ FACE MAGAZINE (7 October 2014). 栢芝fans:你老又醜 微博萬人狂數王菲3宗罪 - FACE即時新聞. Retrieved 7 June 2024 – via YouTube.
- ^ "Local endorsers key in China". Archived from the original on 2 April 2011. Retrieved 7 April 2011.
- ^ "Faye Wong is Asia's sexiest vegetarian". The Times of India. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
- ^ 新中国60年最有影响力文化人物网络评选
- ^ "My Tam named Top 10 Most admired Female Singers in Asia". Hanoitimes. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
- ^ (in Chinese) 等待王菲(Waiting for Faye Wong)
- ^ The song is originally from their 1996 split 7-inch with Discount. The record cover is a photo of Wong (see [1]). Alternate version appeared on Cat Food in 1998.
- ^ The song is from their 1998 album The Boring Days Are Over Now.
- ^ The song is from their 2004 album the ok thing to do on sunday afternoon is to toddle in the zoo (在動物園散步才是正經事).
- ^ The song is from their 2005 album A Logic (A逻辑).
- ^ I love Faye Wong on Amazon UK
- ^ 溫室雜草Easy weeds-在這個年代,我們不浪漫demo, 17 November 2020, archived from the original on 12 December 2021, retrieved 8 May 2021
- ^ "【StreetVoice新歌週報】溫室雜草致敬王菲金曲 看日早晚新EP受多方推薦". Blow 吹音樂 (in Chinese (Taiwan)). 17 November 2020. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
- ^ The song, "Namida de dekita amanogawa" (涙でできた天の川), is included as "Liulei de yinhe" (流淚的銀河) in composer Tats Lau's 1996 album Numb (麻木) which also included Wong's 1995 original.
- ^ The song, "Gieogui sup" (기억의 숲), is from his 2005 album The Lotus.
- ^ Vietnamese covers of the song include SIM Band's "Cánh Đồng Mùa Đông", Quỳnh Nga's "Níu Giữ Giấc Mơ", and Phan Hà Anh's "Đồng Cỏ May".
- ^ The song is included as a bonus track in many Asian editions of her 2005 album Lost in a Moment. A music video is also available on DVD.
- ^ China publishes first moon picture
- ^ Out of the ether
- ^ Blue Light, The (2004): Full transcript in English language
- ^ Zhang Yuan: Faye Wong Casts Light on 'Beijing Flickers'
- ^ Chen, Avril (23 November 2023). "滿島光其實超搞笑?!來台又轉圈又炒菜,送給大家滿滿的活潑女神!". Vogue Taiwan (in Chinese). Retrieved 7 June 2024.
- ^ NewShowBiz完全娛樂 (31 March 2024). 【女神😍】滿島光《大港開唱》甜秀台語:呷飽未 超仙登場驚喜獻王菲經典〈夢中人〉(eden)|完全娛樂. Retrieved 7 June 2024 – via YouTube.
External links
[edit]- Faye Wong
- 1969 births
- 20th-century Hong Kong actresses
- 21st-century Chinese actresses
- 20th-century Hong Kong women singers
- 21st-century Chinese women singers
- Actresses from Beijing
- Cantopop singers
- Chinese emigrants to British Hong Kong
- Chinese film actresses
- Chinese Mandopop singers
- Chinese mezzo-sopranos
- EMI Records artists
- English-language singers from Hong Kong
- Hong Kong Buddhists
- Hong Kong film actresses
- Hong Kong idols
- Hong Kong Mandopop singers
- Hong Kong mezzo-sopranos
- Hong Kong women singer-songwriters
- Hong Kong singer-songwriters
- Living people
- Mandopop singer-songwriters
- Chinese Buddhists
- 21st-century Buddhists
- 20th-century Buddhists
- Singers from Beijing
- Video game musicians
- Women in electronic music