OPINION> Raymond Zhou
|
Public concern, private matters
By Raymond Zhou (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-06-26 08:17 It's an open secret that many of China's entertainment celebrities carry foreign passports. That's not even counting mainlanders who assume Hong Kong residency status or HK stars who are Canadians by nationality. It has become a deceptive veil that camouflages many personal decisions that have nothing to do with loyalty to a country. Jet Li should thank Gong Li for softening a blow so fierce it could have felled a kungfu master. Nearly a year ago, China's reigning queen of drama was reported to have changed her Chinese passport for a Singaporean one. She received a lot of bad press for that - not only in China, but also in Singapore. Media reports said 60 percent of Singaporeans were unhappy because they believed Gong did it to gain residency. It was unclear how many Chinese were displeased but it could easily be more than that. Their reason was clear: How could you give up your Chinese citizenship? It was like an act of treason. This time around, though, people are more rational and understanding. Sure, Jet Li is a much more beloved public figure than Gong Li (due to his charitable work); he has long been rumored to carry an American passport, in which case he is renouncing his American citizenship, or maybe not if Singapore allows dual citizenship. Anyway, online reaction focused on the why rather than the if - Li needs to give his daughter a bilingual education and Singapore is the best place. For someone so high-profile, Jet Li may have been given the most charitable reception given the issue involved. It may be a clich but fans' feelings can be hurt when their favorite celebrities want to become "foreigners". And fans tend to equate themselves with the public at large. So, I can almost hear a voice above pronouncing "You have hurt the feelings of the Chinese people" in the solemn tone of the Foreign Ministry spokesperson. I'm not joining the guessing game as to why Jet Li is applying for Singaporean citizenship. It could be many things but I'm sure whether he loves China a little more or less now is not among them. Celebrities nowadays have careers that span large stretches of the globe and a Chinese passport can be a hindrance in terms of travel because China (the mainland) does not have visa-exemption deals with most countries. Of course the monetary cost of applying for a visa is a pittance for these people. It's the long wait - sometimes many days - and the preparation for documents that can be a big hassle, especially if you have a globe-trotting job.
Fans have the illusion they "own" their favorite movie stars. They may not realize that a star's citizenship is not their business. Much less so than that of a sporting star, in which case he or she may compete for another country and beat the Chinese peers in world games. Movie superstars are among the most multinational of all professions. A big-budget film crew can be made up of members of all nationalities. Do you care that a Roman gladiator was played by an Australian and directed by an Englishman? The Italians didn't protest.
For all the controversy swirling around their change of nationality, Chinese celebrities enjoy much more freedom now than ever before. In the 1980s, you could not have your cake and eat it too. If one decided to go for the American Dream, he or she basically had to give up their career in China. Many high-flying entertainment careers were cut short this way. The only comfort was, being a star in China at that time did not entail a lucrative income. So, one might live a better life as an ordinary citizen in the US than as a celebrity in China.
Others emigrated for the sake of evading China's accursed residency permit (hukou) system. A pair of stars both lived in Beijing in the early 1980s, as it was reported, but they could not obtain Beijing hukou, which meant they could not legally get employed or registered as a married couple. To live legally together, their only choice at the time was to downgrade their hukou to the village where they came from or move to another country, which would sound like an absurdist play to the modern ear. By the 1990s when the economic benefits of being a celebrity was tangible, it was too late for them to resume their careers in China. Many had landed themselves in "the immigration jail", a Chinese nickname for the minimum stay required in the country of naturalization in order to keep their status. Others came back briefly and failed miserably to regain their former glory, as in the case of Gong Xue, a big movie star who left Shanghai to marry her fianc in the US.
The only success stories I can recall are Lang Ping, the women's volleyball coach and Joan Chen, who is entering her "second spring", so to speak, for all the great roles she has been doing in China recently. Chen was China's first bona-fide star in the reform era. But she was also a college student. So it was natural for her to pursue study overseas. Yet many felt betrayed. Some innocuous remarks she said during a TV appearance provoked a deluge of "sharp criticisms", including one from a very official newspaper. This essentially turned her into persona non grata by her home country. Thank God things like that wouldn't happen now even though the public is more vociferous. If the old tradition had continued, people would be mocking at Joan Chen. Her Hollywood career did not really take off, and the rejuvenation is happening back home. People would have said: You should have stayed all along. Your motherland made you who you are and you should repay the debt. As a matter of fact, one can never foretell where one will make it big. It could be your hometown, or a new province or even another country. There are a lot of variables, many of which are beyond human control. The attitude towards emigrants is the result of a subconscious comparison with one's own fate, colored by a modicum of schadenfreude. It's the ambivalence of the less adventurous. On the other hand, those who left and came back to flaunt their wealth, like the Fujian stowaways, contribute the other half of the equation to the stereotype of the boorish but damn lucky black sheep who did not have faith in his own tribe. With globalization come bigger platforms for more people. The world is the young generation's oyster. If you set your eyes on fashion, maybe you want to conquer Paris. If you want to be the biggest film star in the world, Hollywood is the place. And if you want a piece of action in more areas I can name, China offers an abundance of opportunities. Maybe when China loosens up its residency and citizenship rules and allows foreigners to get green cards (only a few now) and passports will people realize that it is more a decision of career than a stand on patriotism. |