Ying Da

Ying Da
Chinese name 英達 (traditional)
Chinese name 英达 (simplified)
Pinyin Yīng Dá (Mandarin)
Born (1960-07-07) July 7, 1960
Beijing, China
Residence Beijing, China
Ethnicity Manchu
Alma mater Peking University
University of Missouri
Occupation Actor, director
Years active 1988 – present
Agent Beijing Yingshi Visual Arts Limited Liability Company
Spouse(s)
Song Dandan (m. 1989–1997)

Liang Huan (m. 1997)
Children 3, including Ying Rudi and Ying Batu[1]
Parents Ying Ruocheng
Wu Shiliang
Siblings Ying Xiaole (sister)
Relatives Ying Lianzhi (great-grandfather)
Aisin Gioro Shuzhong (great-grandmother)
Cai Rukai (great-maternal grandfather)
Ying Qianli (grandfather)
Cai Baozhen (grandmother)

Ying Da (Chinese: 英达; born July 7, 1960) is a Chinese actor and director, best known in film for portraying Louie Wang in Big Shot's Funeral (2001), Ni Zhengyu in The Tokyo Trial (2006) and Jin Shenghuo in The Message (2009), and has received critical acclaim for his television work, particularly as Zhao Xinmei in Fortress Besieged (1990) and Leng Zixing in The Dream of Red Mansions (2008). As a director, Ying Da is best known for his comedy television series, such as I Love My Family (1993), We Are A Family (2013), Idler: Sister Ma (1999), and Sister Ma and Her Neighborhoods (2000).[2]

Ying Da first garnered recognition for his acting in 1990, when his performance in Fortress Besieged, a television series adaptation based on the novel of the same name by Qian Zhongshu, earned him a Hundred Flowers Award for Best Supporting Actor nomination at the 13th Hundred Flowers Awards. In 2002 he won the Hundred Flowers Award for Best Supporting Actor at the 25th Hundred Flowers Awards for his performance in Big Shot's Funeral. In 2012 Ying Da's performance in You and Me which garnered him a Golden Lotus Awards nomination for Best Actor.

His son Ying Rudi is a member of the China men's national ice hockey team.

Early life and education

Ying Da was born in Beijing on July 7, 1960, to Ying Ruocheng, a director, actor, playwright and vice minister of culture from 1986 to 1990, and Wu Shiliang (吴世良), a translator and interpreter of Zhou Enlai.[3] His sister Ying Xiaole (英小乐) is a Chinese-American painter.[3]

In 1973 Ying Da attended Beijing No. 72 Middle School, Where he studied alongside Jiang Wen.[4] After completing his bachelor's degree in science from Peking University in 1983, he was assigned to Beijing Normal School in Dongcheng District as a teacher. Ying Da received a master's degree in literature and art from the University of Missouri in 1987, that same year he returned to Beijing.

Career

Ying Da made his film debut in Xie Jin's The Last Aristocrats, playing Zhou Daqing.

In 1990, he was director of the People's Arts Theatre of Beijing. That same year, for his role as Zhao Xinmei in Fortress Besieged, he was nominated for the Hundred Flowers Award for Best Supporting Actor at the 13th Hundred Flowers Awards.

In 1993, Ying Da had a cameo appearance in Chen Kaige's Farewell My Concubine, a drama film starring Leslie Cheung, Zhang Fengyi and Gong Li.

In 1997, Ying Da starred with Ng Man-tat, Eric Tsang, Zhao Benshan, Song Dandan in the comedy film Family Harmony. It earned good ratings nationwide.[5] That same year, he starred opposite Ge You, Xu Fan, He Bing, Liu Bei in Feng Xiaogang's comedy film The Dream Factory.

In 2001, he starred in the comedy film Big Shot's Funeral, alongside Rosamund Kwan, Paul Mazursky, Donald Sutherland. The film marked the second collaboration between Ying Da and Feng Xiaogang. He received a Hundred Flowers Award for Best Supporting Actor at the 25th Hundred Flowers Awards for the role.

In 2005, he appeared in Waiting Alone, a romantic comedy starring Xia Yu, Gong Beibi and Li Bingbing.

In 2006, Ying Da portrayed Ni Zhengyu in the historical film The Tokyo Trial, which directed by Gao Qunshu.

In 2008, Ying Da participated in Chen Kaige's Forever Enthralled as Feng Ziguang, a friend of Leon Lai and Zhang Ziyi's characters. That same year, he made a guest appearance as Leng Zixing in The Dream of Red Mansions, adapted from Qing dynasty novelist Cao Xueqin's classical novel of the same title.

In 2009, he starred in an espionage thriller called The Message with Zhou Xun, Li Bingbing, Zhang Hanyu, Huang Xiaoming, Alec Su, and Wang Zhiwen. The film was directed by Chen Kuo-fu and Gao Qunshu and based on Mai Jia's novel. That same year, he had a minor role in Huang Jianxin and Han Sanping's historical film The Founding of a Republic.

In 2010, Ying Da co-starred with Guo Tao, Hu Jing, Ada Choi and Kingdom Yuen in the romantic film The Love Clinic. That same year, he had key supporting role in East Wind Rain, a spy drama starring Liu Yunlong, Fan Bingbing and Li Xiaoran. He co-starred with Zhu Shimao, Chen Peisi, Vivian Wu and Qiao Renliang in the comedy film Under the Influence. Ying Da also hosted the Chinese version of Family Feud from October 2010 to January 2011.

In 2011, he had a supporting role in the horror thriller film The Devil Inside Me. The film was directed by Zhang Qi and starred Tony Leung Ka-fai, Kelly Lin, Huang Weide and Anya Wu. He had a minor role in the romantic comedy Dear Enemy, which starred Xu Jinglei, Stanley Huang, Gigi Leung, Aarif Rahman, Christy Chung, Michael Wong, and Zhao Baogang.

In 2012, he played Mr. Ming, the lead role in Hu Qiang's You and Me, costarring Tarcy Su and Jeff Chang. He was nominated for Golden Lotus Award for Best Actor at the 2nd Macau International Movie Festival.

In 2014, Ying Da played the lead role in the comedy film Hot Blood Band, alongside Chen Xiang, Leon Dai, Anthony Wong, Kathy Chow and Cai Ming.

Personal life

Ying Da has married three times. His first wife was his university alumni at Peking University, they married in 1985 and divorced in 1987.[6]

He married for the second time in 1989 in Beijing, to actress Song Dandan, the couple had a son Ying Batu (英巴图). They divorced in 1997.[6]

On February 24, 1997, Ying Zhuang married Liang Huan (梁欢), 8 years his junior, in Beijing. They have a son Ying Rudi and a daughter.[6][7]

Ancestry

His great-grandfather Ying Lianzhi (英敛之; 1867–1926) was the founder of Takungpao and Fu Jen Catholic University.[8] His great-grandmother Aisin Gioro Shuzhong (爱新觉罗·淑仲) was a member of the Qing dynasty royal family.[9] His great-maternal grandfather Cai Rukai (蔡儒楷; 1867–1923) was president of National Beiyang University.[3] His grandfather Ying Qianli (英千里; 1900–1969) was a professor at National Taiwan University and Fu Jen Catholic University.[3] His grandmother Cai Baozhen (蔡葆真) was president of Beijing Children's Library.[3][7]

8. Ying Lianzhi
4. Ying Qianli
9. Aisin Gioro Shuzhong
2. Ying Ruocheng
10. Cai Rukai
5. Cai Baozhen
11.
1. Ying Da
6.
3. Wu Shiliang
7.

Filmography

Film

YearEnglish titleChinese titleRoleNotes
1988The Last Aristocrats《最后的贵族》Zhou Daqing
1991Family Portrait《四十不惑》Guest
1993Farewell My Concubine《霸王别姬》Boss
1997The Dream Factory《甲方乙方》Bookstore manager
Family Harmony《家和万事兴》Manager
2001Big Shot's Funeral《大腕》Louie Wang
2005Waiting Alone《独自等待》Television director
2006The Tokyo Trial《东京审判》Ni Zhengyu
2008Forever Enthralled《梅兰芳》Feng Ziguang
The Good Luck is High to Shine on 《鸿运高照》Hou Fei
2009The Message《风声》Jin Shenghuo
The Founding of a Republic《建国大业》Guest
2010The Love Clinic《爱情维修站》Jiang Dong
East Wind Rain《东风雨》Laoyi
Under the Influence《戒烟不戒酒》President Niu
2011The Devil Inside Me《夺命心跳》Guest
Dear Enemy《亲密敌人》Amy's father
2012You and Me《我和你》Mr. Ming
2014Hot Blood Band《热血男人帮》Laotie

TV series

YearEnglish titleChinese titleRoleNotes
1990Fortress Besieged《围城》Zhao Xinmei
1991《大路通天》Guest
1992No Way to Love You《爱你没商量》Fang Bo
1998Beijing Woman《北京女人》Guest
2003Romantic Affairs《浪漫的事》Huang Xianwei
《人生几度秋凉》The Marshal
2004In the Age of Blooming Teen《豆蔻年华》
2005《爱如风过》Guest
2007《地下交通站》Ishihara
2008The Dream of Red Mansions《红楼梦》Leng Zixing
2009They Call Her Mom 《美丽的事》Yuan Hang
Women in the Yard《大宅院的女人》Mr. Lin
2010《家庭赛乐赛》Himself (host)Chinese version of Family Feud
2011Be On The Sick List《老病号》Yang Gong
Secret War in Emei《密战峨眉》Mao Shuyi
Confused Love《糊涂的爱》Du Anze
《古今六人行》
《战火西北狼》Hu Zongnan
Legend of Wei Zhenguo《韦振国传奇》Chen Kuangsi
2012Tang Dynasty Romantic Hero《唐朝浪漫英雄》Tao's father
Editorial Department Story《新编辑部故事的故事》The producer
Puzzle《没有硝烟的战斗》Chen Fanxiong

As director

YearEnglish titleChinese titleNotes
1993I Love My Family《我爱我家》
1995《起步停车》
1996《百老汇100号》
1997Story of the Waiting Room《候车室的故事》
《新72家房客》
1998Psychological Clinic《心理诊所》
Chinese Restaurant《中国餐馆》
1999Idler: Sister Ma《闲人马大姐》
2000《一手托两家》
Sister Ma and Her Neighborhoods《马大姐和邻居们》
2001A family in the Northeast of China《东北一家人》
The Joy of Spring《欢乐青春》
2002The Family of Hu in Xi'an《西安虎家》
《全时空接触》
2003Stories of the Sales Office《售楼处的故事》
《带着孩子结婚》
2004Family Harmony《家和万事兴》
Legend of Brother Ba《巴哥正传》
2004Stories of the Tourist Agency《旅行社的故事》
2007《地下交通站》
2013We Are A Family《我们一家人》

Film and TV Awards

YearNominated workAwardResultNotes
1990Fortress BesiegedHundred Flowers Award for Best Supporting ActorNominated
2002Big Shot's FuneralHundred Flowers Award for Best Supporting ActorWon
2012You and MeGolden Lotus Award for Best ActorNominated

References

  1. "First NHL pick Song Andong becomes inspiration for Beijing ice hockey families". sina. 2015-07-08. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  2. Zhao Wei (2014-03-20). "Laughing out loud". sina. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Southern People Weekly (2010-01-22). 关注英氏家族成功奥秘:历代重视中西文化交流. sina (in Chinese).
  4. Li Erwei (2008). "Jiang Wen: The First Step Towards the Art Circle" 《姜文:走向艺坛的第一步》. 《青年文摘》 [Youth Literary Digest] (in Chinese). Beijing: China Youth Press. pp. 117–121. ISBN 978-7-5006-6468-0.
  5. 《家和万事兴》七年熬成“精”. sina (in Chinese). 2004-01-20.
  6. 1 2 3 详解英达三段婚史 [History of Ying Da's Three Marriage]. 163.com (in Chinese). 2011-08-02.
  7. 1 2 英达接受华媒采访谈英氏家族 称婚姻比事业更难. Chinanews (in Chinese). 2010-06-02.
  8. Ying Ruoshi (2007-04-20). 英才辈出凭家风. chinawriter.com (in Chinese).
  9. 英达家族五代传奇经历 慈禧亲赐“英”姓有皇族血统. 67.com (in Chinese). 2012-11-13.
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