Faye Wong, or Wang Fei () (born August 8, 1969 in Beijing) is an extremely popular singer in Asia, especially in mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Japan and to some extent in the West.
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, Taiwan and mainland China often place the title tiānhou, (天后; 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 World Records, she has sold 9.7 millons copies of all her albums as of March 2000, earning her the title of the best selling canto-pop female.* 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, 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.
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 for vocal studies and cultural exchange. This brief hiatus would prove to be important for her artistic development.
During her absence, Cinepoly released a few compilations repackaging songs from her three albums, thereby keeping her somewhat visible at the record stores.
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.
In 1994, she changed her stage name back to her original name "Wong Fei" (王菲) for all subsequent releases in Cantonese Hong Kong, one year later in the Mandarin market.
It was around this time that she began experimenting with alternative music styles from the West. The ethereal 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 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).
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
Their daughter, Dou Jingtong (竇靖童, lit. meaning "child of Dou and Jing 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.
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.
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 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 outperform) her new album with EMI. Later on, Cinepoly would release a couple of compilations every year to compete with Wong's new albums, a tactic which has come under strong criticism from her international 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.
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.
A month after the release of this album, the popular videogame Final Fantasy VIII released in Japan which featured the song "Eyes On Me". It was the first time in videogame history a Japanese title would feature a Chinese singer for its theme. The song was a major breakthrough into the Japanese market, with the "Eyes On Me" single selling over 400,000 copies. Later in the year, Final Fantasy VIII released in North America. The theme for the game became very popular in the West for both non-Asian and Asian gamers who weren't familiar with her music. While it wasn't a breakthrough hit in the West, she did find herself many onlookers who know her, for the most part, for this song only.
In early November she held a concert in Nippon Budokan, making her the first Chinese singer to hold a concert in that venue.
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.
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 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 two 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.
Despite not being her most prominent album, Faye Wong (2001) (王菲) 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.
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.
She recorded several 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 Impatience. In addition, she recorded a recitation of the Heart Sutra.
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. 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.
On May 27th, 2006, Wong gave birth to her second daughter by caesarean section at the Peking Union Medical College Hospital. *
Her name was changed to 王靖雯(WONG Ching-Man)/Shirley Wong early in her career.
Her name was changed to 王菲(WONG Fei)/Faye WONG later in her career.
Other Lanauages
1969 births | Living people | Chinese actors | Chinese musicians | Chinese singers | Chinese Buddhists | Hong Kong actors | Cantopop | Final Fantasy musicians | Beijingers
Faye Wong | Faye Wong | Faye Wong | 왕페이 | Wang Fei | 王菲 | Faye Wong | Wang Fei | 王菲
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