Ying Ruocheng's childhood home near the Forbidden City in Beijing stood next
door to the city's Roman Catholic Cathedral--a fitting location since the
family was both Manchu and Christian. It was also an intellectual family.
Ying's reform-minded grandfather founded Beijing's Catholic Furen
University; his father, who was English-educated and went by the name of
Ignatius, later lectured there. Ying Ruocheng himself was born in 1929.
China's struggle with Japan and its great civil war framed his entire youth.
By the time he completed a degree in Western Literature at Qinghua
University in 1950, communism had triumphed. Ying was hopeful. At the time,
he wrote years later, "China was full of dreams."
Theater was his love. In 1952, he and other young artists founded the
Beijing People's Art Theater to transform drama in light of the country's
bright hopes. In heady years of experimentation, Ying mastered his craft in
Chinese and Western plays. The Cultural Revolution caught the People's Art
Theater in a dangerous power struggle. Ying was jailed for three years and
then sent to the countryside to plant rice with other artists and
intellectuals. His re-education lasted ten years. When the mayhem subsided,
he returned to the People's Art Theater and reestablished his career.
A period of remarkable productivity followed. Ying appeared in play after
play and explored anew the East-West dialogue that had engaged him since his
youth. He translated into Mandarin Shakespeare's "Measure for Measure" and
other Western works. As a visiting professor at the University of Missouri,
he staged Chinese plays for American audiences, including his own
translation of Ba Jin's modern classic, "The Family." He also appeared as
Kublai Khan in an English-language television series. Then, in 1983, a
seminal event: the production in Beijing of Ying Ruocheng's acclaimed
translation of Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman," with Ying playing the
lead role and Miller himself directing. The play's flawed hero and moral
ambiguities stood in sharp contrast to the morality tales typical of China's
official theater at the time. Yet Ying knew that the story of a family in
crisis would speak to Chinese audiences. Moreover, a play about the failure
of the American Dream also spoke to the dreams of his own generation in
China. These, he said, had disintegrated in the Cultural Revolution.
Between 1986 and 1990, Ying served as vice minister of culture. His office
embraced three thousand government-supported arts troupes. Striking a blow
against bureaucratization, Ying reduced or ended many government subsidies
and initiated other reforms to promote independence and artistic freedom.
The effect was bracing. Standing on their own, theater companies were free
to make money or go bankrupt. Although Ying made enemies in the post, China
is now reaping the rewards of his bold reforms.
Ying's ability to work in both the Chinese and Western mediums has made him
something of a cultural ambassador. And of course he is famous now, having
appeared prominently in films such as Bernardo Bertolucci's "The Last
Emperor" and "The Little Buddha" and in other English-language movies and
television programs.
Today, as chair and president of the China Arts Festival Foundation, the
tall, urbane Ying carries on his work nurturing China's theater arts and
exposing Chinese audiences to plays and performances from abroad. There are
still a lot of stereotypes to break down, he says. Yet the key to a
successful inter-cultural exchange is simple. It is treating the work of
others "with respect, with understanding, and with commitment."
In electing Ying Ruocheng to receive the 1998 Ramon Magsaysay Award for
Journalism, Literature and Creative Communication Arts, the board of
trustees recognizes his enhancing China's cultural dialogue with the
world-at-large and with its own rich heritage through a brilliant and
persevering life in the theater.
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