Yao Ming tops China's celebrity ranking (AP) Updated: 2006-03-10 14:08
HONG KONG -- NBA star Yao Ming topped Forbes magazine's annual mainland
Chinese celebrity rankings for the second consecutive year, but "Memoirs of a
Geisha" star Zhang Ziyi dropped a spot to No. 3.
NBA star center Yao Ming tops Forbes' 2006
Chinese mainland celebrity rankings for the second consecutive year.
[sina] |
She was replaced by actress Zhou Xun, the star of the musical movie "Perhaps
Love."
Director Zhang Yimou and pop diva Faye Wong dropped out of the top 10 after
relatively low-profile years in 2005.
Li Yuchun, winner of China's
successful "Super Girls" singing contest in 2005 _ the Chinese equivalent of
"American Idol" _ cracked the top 10, landing at No. 6.
Famed art-house
director Chen Kaige was a big mover, rocketing from outside the top 100 to No.
8, thanks to the buildup for his new epic mythology flick "The Promise." The
Forbes annual ranking, posted on its Web site Friday, is based on income and
media exposure within China.
Rounding out the top 10 are singer-actress
Zhao Wei, at No. 4, Olympic gold medalist hurdler Liu Xiang at No. 5 and actress
Fan Bingbing at No. 7. In ninth and tenth place were singer Sun Nan and actress
Li Bingbing respectively.
Actress Zhang's co-star in "Memoirs of a
Geisha," Gong Li, was No. 13. English Premier League soccer player Sun Jihai was
ranked No. 23.
Mainland actress
Zhou Xun ranked second on the list.
[sina] | According to Forbes, Yao raked in 170
million Chinese yuan (US$21.1 million; euro17.7 million) in 2005. He was showed
on Chinese TV 228 times, mentioned in newspapers 8,050 times and made four
magazine covers. Yao was searched on the Internet nearly 4 million times.
Yao's consolidation of his No. 1 spot was helped by his new deal with
the Houston Rockets. The center signed a five-year contract worth more than
US$75 million (euro63 million) in September.
Yao is a huge source of
national pride after breaking into the upper echelons of a sport mainly
dominated by foreigners.
Super Voice Girl Champion Li Yuchun made the
list at No. 6 for the first time. [sina] | Actress
Zhang, who made her name with the Ang Lee-directed kung fu movie "Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon," out-earned counterpart Zhou and was reported on in
newspapers and searched over the Internet more frequently, but Zhou scored 69
more TV appearances than Zhang's 101.
Zhou was boosted by the popularity
of her new movie "Perhaps Love," in which she delivered a subtle portrayal of a
movie actress caught between her past and present loves. The film was also a
unique pop culture product, blending a Chinese setting, a Western-style musical
and Bollywood dance choreography.
Pop star Wong's decline can be
explained by her decision to stay largely out of the public eye last year.
Director Zhang's ranking, which fell to No. 26, was likely
hurt by the lack of a movie that generated major buzz. After the kung fu epics
"Hero" and "House of Flying Daggers," Zhang followed up with the low-key "Riding
Alone for Thousands of Miles," a heartwarming story about a Japanese father who
travels to China to fulfill his ailing son's wishes.
|