Butterfly Wu: Queen of the Movies

Shanghai Center Of Photography
Exhibition
Butterfly Wu: Queen of the Movies:

Organizers: Shanghai Center of Photography, Institute of Asia Art at Vancouver Art Gallery

Co- organizer: Taikang Space, Beijing

Curator: Zheng Shengtian, Diana Freundl, Li Zhen

Exhibition Opening: 4pm, 20 January, 2018

Exhibition Dates: 21 January to 18 March, 2018

Address: Shanghai Center of Photography, 2555-1 Longteng Avenue, Shanghai

The enormous world-wide film industry today pumps out stars at a record rate. Or so it seems. Just under a century ago, Shanghai was poised to witness the emergence of an extraordinary film industry that produced a huge number of famous figures in tandem with its great volume of films. One of these famous figures was the legendary actress Hu Die(Butterfly Wu), who came to fame in Shanghai in the Republican era (1912-1949). Her fame and popularity were such that she is described as one of a handful of actresses who made a major contribution to the film industry; and to the modernizing society that was Shanghai in the 1920s and 1930s.

 

In the 1920s, Hu Die emerged just as a new accent on realism in film saw women permitted to play lead female roles for the first time. Hu Die’s roles included aunt, mother, teacher, prostitute, celebrity, and working woman. She was the star of China’s first talking picture, Songstress Red Peony, 1931, and the first to wow audiences with martial arts skills. Her sophisticated acting skills and fine temperament earned her widespread popularity among local audiences, such that in 1933 Hu Die was publicly anointed “Queen of the Movies”. Today, Hu Die is still credited as one of the best actresses of early cinema in China.

Hu Die in Berlin, Germany, 1935.

© Poon Family

Artfully riding the turning tides of the era, in 1935, Hu Die was invited to play the role of cultural ambassador being chosen to be part of a Chinese delegation to tour the USSR, beginning with the Moscow International Film Festival and on to Europe. The role of cultural ambassador, together with dispatches from her travels published at home in China, propelled Hu Die’s reputation to new heights.

 

Following her marriage in November 1935, Hu Die continued to make films through the 1960s. She settled in Canada in 1967 where she passed the remainder of her life with her family.

 

“Butterfly Wu: Queen of the Movies” presents more than 200 photographs selected from hundreds of images that were collected and preserved by the actress and covering several decades of her acting career together with others from her personal life and travels. To film buffs in Shanghai and beyond, Hu Die will always be remembered as the original Shanghai’s Queen of the Movies.

 

About Hu Die

 

“Hu Die” is the stage name of Hu Ruihua (1908-1989) who was born in Shanghai, and raised across China as the family travelled with her father, who worked for the railroad company. Returning to Shanghai in 1924, she enrolled in the inaugural class of film studies at Zhonghua Film School, the first educational institution in China dedicated to film. Hu Die’s first movie was Victory, produced by Zhonghua Film Company in 1925. In the coming years, she worked with Tianyi, appearing in almost twenty films between 1925 and 1927. By 1928, when she joined Mingxing Film Company, Hu Die owned a reputation as a hard-working professional.


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