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Faye Wong Filmography
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Faye Wong, or Wong Fei (王菲; pinyin: Wáng Fēi) (born August 8, 1969) is an extremely popular Chinese singer and is very well-known all throughout Asia. She has acted in several films, most memorably in Wong Kar Wai's Chungking Express, a role that got her international acclaim and the award for "Best Actress" at the 1994 Stockholm Film Festival.
Born in Beijing, People's Republic of China she moved with her family to Hong Kong and began her musical career in the late 1980s, releasing a few albums under the stage name
Shirley Wong (王靖雯, py Wáng Jìngwén). In 1991, she made a short trip to New York for vocal studies and returned to the Hong Kong music scene the same year with the album
Coming Home, which incorporated R&B influences and was a drastic change in musical direction from the more traditional Cantopop flare of her earlier albums. Since then, she has shed the R&B influence and had moved on to produce works of considerable originality and a more "alternative" flavor, as well as occasionally penning songs herself. By 1994, she had changed her Chinese name back to "Wong Fei" (王菲) for all subsequent releases.
1996 saw the release of what many would consider her 'boldest' and most 'artistic' effort to date,
Restless. The album contains mainly her own compositions and with an aesthetic largely inspired by the Scottish ambient/etherial trio, Cocteau Twins, who also contributed 2 of their songs for the album. Wong had previously covered the Cocteau Twins on her 1994 album,
Random Thoughts, and had since established a remote working relationship with the band, laying down vocals for a track on the Asian version of their 1995 album, Milk And Kisses. Simon Raymonde & Robin Guthrie further contributed 2 other compositions, but only one of them showed up on Wong's 1997 self-titled follow-up.
She has covered songs in Chinese by western artists such as
Tori Amos, The Cranberries, and The Sundays in the earlier years of her career.
The Decadent Sounds of Faye Wong in 1995 was a covers album containing unique renditions of songs originally done by her childhood 'idol' Teresa Teng, a revered singer in Chinese music active around the 1960s, who died shortly before its release.
While most of her earlier albums prior to 1996 were sung in Cantonese, Wong has most consistently sung in Mandarin ever since.
Wong had a daughter named Dou Jingtong (竇靖童) born on January 3, 1997 with ex-husband and musical partner Dou Wei (竇唯, py Dòu Wéi), a prominent musician in his own right. The baby's voice appears on the title track of the album
Only Love Strangers released in 1999, as well as in the song "Child" (童, py Tóng) on the album
Song Journey (唱遊, py Chàngyóu).
Her 'claim to fame' in the Western world is the end title song "Eyes On Me" for the video game Final Fantasy VIII, which she was reported to have been paid one million dollars to sing. She went on to doing commercials for Pepsi in the 2000s, and continues putting out 'best-selling' albums.
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