Monday, December 1, 2008

Shanghai foundations

Shanghai Daily, while usually not the most...serious...of papers, yesterday had a nice basic if not wildly accurate article about the city's heritage as one of the world's early film capitals. Good to see, since Shanghai's history is usually seen as one of "bankers, gangsters, whores and foreigners" - and culturally barren; in fact it was the cultural compost of China from the late 1800s through 1949 (and even somewhat afterwards), the rich melting pot of Chinese modernity.

I cherish this in the context of what I and my friends and community are attempting and doing now, in creating a flourishing 新海派, New Shanghainese, culture. In film, music, visual art, design, theater and literature, we have this amazing history and tradition to draw from and build upon.


Camera,
lights, action - when Shanghai ruled the silver screen

Created:
2008-12-1
Author:Jessica Chen
Shanghai Daily

ALMOST 80 years ago,
Shanghai was the hub of a thriving film industry. Just as Hollywood was
producing popular movies and big stars, so too was our fair city, writes Jessica
Chen.

As cinema production took off in many Western countries during the
early 1920s, Shanghai was already in its golden period having began to produce
many full-length films depicting domestic themes and subjects.

Shanghai
in the 1920s-30s was a metropolitan city open to fresh cultural ideas. Even
though the first indigenous film making started in Beijing, the core of Chinese
film production resided in Shanghai.

Both national and international
film markets were developed in Shanghai as film companies received continuous
support. Shanghai was a modern city by many measures and thus became a
pacesetter for the rest of China.

"People throughout China got
indications of what might be coming for them in terms of new and modern culture
by paying attention to what was happening in Shanghai, including cinema," says
Paul Pickowicz, a professor in Chinese studies from University of California,
San Diego.

Pickowicz has written many books about Chinese history and
has a special interest in old Shanghai films.

Cinema in Shanghai during
the early 20th century incorporated many themes, ranging from comedies - which
were one of the first developed genres - to martial arts films, to the most
popular genre - melodrama, particularly romance and family melodramas.

Most of the films produced during this time were adaptations from
romantic "butterfly fiction" or scripts written by "butterfly writers."
Butterfly style entailed popular romance in the early 1900s. Most of the 600
feature films made during this period could be labeled as "butterfly films."

Cinema in the city was pioneered by Zhang Shichuan and Zheng Zhengqui,
who set up the Mingxing Film Co in 1921. It ended up being the first major,
long-lasting studio in Shanghai.

In 1926, there were about 145 other
film companies in Shanghai. Mingxing Film Co also founded the Star Film Acting
School to train future stars.

Some popular films created by Mingxing
Studio were "Spring Silkworm" in 1933, about a poor family who suffers hardships
because of selfishness and superstition after their crop of silkworms die.

Another was "Laborer's Love" (also known as "Romance of a Fruit
Peddler") in 1922, the earliest complete film of China's cinematic history which
is still available today.

This movie is a romantic comedy about a fruit
vendor who wins the heart of a doctor's daughter after arranging business
opportunities for his future father-in-law.

As movies made a dramatic
impact on modern Shanghai culture, the introduction of beautiful actresses
became important as well.

The most famous actresses were Ruan Lingyu, Li
Lili, Wang Renmei and Zhou Xuan who received most of the attention as leading
actresses in the 1930s. Today, they remain popular in Chinese culture, mainly
because their films were the few that survived throughout the 20th century.

"From the start, women were at the center of Shanghai film making," says
Pickowicz.

It was the novelty of seeing beautiful women on the screen in
seductive roles that made melodramas so popular. In early Chinese history, women
were banned from the stage so men played female roles in popular entertainment,
such as in Peking Opera.

To finally see women on screen in a variety of
settings was an unprecedented change to Chinese culture. In these popular family
melodramas, many directors incorporated moral messages about glamor and
adventure.

These themes greatly appealed to the Chinese public because
they could see the lavish lifestyles of the elites, the livelihoods of the rural
peasants and their issues and struggles.

At the same time, the film
industry was prospering in the early 20th century as many overseas Chinese
talents and capital contributed to the investment in the film industry.

Most of the movies were shot in major production studios. However, they
also worked outdoors in the streets of Shanghai and in rural areas outside the
city.

The experience of watching movies in the heart of Shanghai was
generally a lavish experience. The first-run domestic and foreign films were
screened in elegant cinemas.

However, the places that catered to the middle and working class were usually located in less central places. By the
beginning of the 1930s, Shanghai alone had housed 53 movie theaters, with a
combined seating capacity of 37,110.

To see restorations of Shanghai's
film industry in the early 20th century, Shanghai Film Archive has dedicated
itself to preserving aspects of old film culture.

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