Profile | How Hong Kong star Deanie Ip went from best actress to banned in mainland China


This is the 52nd instalment in a biweekly series profiling major Hong Kong pop culture figures of recent decades.

For an acclaimed movie star whose accolades include best actress at the Venice Film Festival, Deanie Ip Tak-han has surprisingly little regard for fame and fortune.

Known for standing up for her views even if it affects her career, the actress and singer is one of the most outspoken entertainers in Hong Kong.

She spoke out against the June 4, 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in Beijingโ€™s Tiananmen Square and joined protesters in Hong Kong in 2019 who opposed a law change to allow extraditions to mainland China. As a result, the 77-year-oldโ€™s music has been banned on the mainland.

Ann Hui, director of A Simple Life, poses with Deanie Ip as Ip holds the best actress trophy awarded for her role in the film at the 2011 Venice International Film Festival. Photo: AP
Ann Hui, director of A Simple Life, poses with Deanie Ip as Ip holds the best actress trophy awarded for her role in the film at the 2011 Venice International Film Festival. Photo: AP

This does not appear to have bothered Ip, who is never one for compromise โ€“ she does not accede to directorsโ€™ wishes or chase after scripts, she has said.

Born an illegitimate child in 1947, Ip had two mothers: one was her biological mother, a mistress, the other her fatherโ€™s infertile wife, who detested having to raise another womanโ€™s child.

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