Mao Amin

Ah Man Amy Leotta Mo[1]
Native name 毛阿敏
Born Mao Amin
1962 (age 5354)
Shanghai
Residence Hong Kong
Shanghai
Nationality Chinese (Hong Kong)
Occupation Singer
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Mao.

Ah Man Amy Leotta Mo[1] (Chinese: 毛阿敏; pinyin: Máo Āmǐn born 1962), as known as Mao Amin,[2] is a Chinese singer known by the "honorific title" of Dajieda ("Big Sister"), "was one of China's most famous and senior female pop stars" by "the mid-1990s."[3] In 2001, she was one of 36 Chinese athletes and entertainers who were depicted on a series of postage stamps issued "in support of Beijing's bid for hosting the 2008 Olympic Games."[4]

Musical background in the mid-1980s

Mao along with fellow singer Liu Huan, "both household names among Chinese around the world," were "disciples" of "renowned vocal educator" Deng Zaijun.[5]

Popularity in the late 1980s

While Nimrod Baranovitch writes that Mao became famous because of her "powerful and uninhibited" voice,[6] All China Women's Federation contends that she "became famous after winning third place in the Yugoslavian International Musical Eisteddfod with Green Leaf and the Root. It was the highest honor a Chinese pop singer had ever been given in an international competition. But Mao became even more well known by singing in the Spring Festival Gala."[7] Moreover, her performance in 1988 for the Chinese New Year TV Celebration "made both song and singer extremely popular in Mainland China."[2] By the late 1980s, Mao "earned two thousand yuan for a single performance as China's biggest pop star..."[8] The New Straits Times described her as "China's most popular singer," who "retains a nationalistic flavour in her songs," and "China's top pop singer for the past four years" before 1990.[9]

In 1989, "Mao, China's biggest pop star, was caught lying to the Beijing Evening News about under-the-table payments for performances in Harbin. In the ensuing scandal, she was fined 34,000 yuan and forced to pay 15,000 yuan in back taxes."[10]

Transformation in 1990s

Following her legal troubles, Mao underwent a transformation towards seemingly feminist music, such as her 1994 single "Real Woman" off of her self-titled album. These mid-1990s efforts received criticism as lacking the spirit and power of her 1980s work.[3]

Family life in the 2000s

In December 2006, "Chinese media has reported that...well-known Chinese singer, Mao Amin and her husband welcomed a second child into their family, a little brother for their two-year-old daughter."[11]

Filmography

See also

References

  1. 1 2 (traditional Chinese (HK)) 那英師姐毛阿敏 以特區護照「快速」成立BVI, Hong Kong 01, 10 May 2016
  2. 1 2 Zu-yan Chen, Robert Daly, and Hong Zhang, Chinese Through Song (2001), 1994.
  3. 1 2 Nimrod Baranovitch, China's new voices: popular music, ethnicity, gender, and politics, 1978-1997 (2003), 146
  4. "Chinese Stars to Be on Stamps to Support Olympic Bid," People's Daily (June 04, 2001).
  5. Lin Shujuan, "SWEET NEW SINGER," China Daily (07/22/2005): 6.
  6. Nimrod Baranovitch, China's new voices: popular music, ethnicity, gender, and politics, 1978-1997 (2003), 145
  7. 10 Epoch-making Women Singers in China over the Past Three Decades," All-China Women's Federation (November 14, 2008).
  8. Richard Curt Kraus, The party and the arty in China: the new politics of culture (2004), 195.
  9. ST, "China's Best Artistes," New Straits Times (Feb 8, 1990): 10.
  10. Deborah Davis, Urban spaces in contemporary China: the potential for autonomy and community (1995), 186.
  11. Meg Jalsevac, "China’s Wealthy Citizens Find Ways to Side-Step One Child Policy: Chinese government confirms that policy will continue to be enforced," LifeSiteNews.com (January 9, 2007).
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