Deng Chao
Deng Chao (simplified Chinese: 邓超; traditional Chinese: 鄧超; pinyin: Dèng Chāo, born 8 February 1979) is a Chinese actor and director. Deng received recognition for the television series The Young Emperor (2003) and Happiness as Flowers (2005). He later shifted his focus to films, starring in the box office hits Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame (2010), American Dreams in China (2013), The Dead End (2015), for which he won the Golden Rooster Award for Best Actor,[1] The Mermaid (2016), Duckweed (2017), and Shadow (2018). He also directed and starred in The Breakup Guru (2014), Devil and Angel (2015) and Looking Up (2019). He was a cast member of variety show Keep Running from 2014 to 2019. He has been a cast member of web show HAHAHAHAHA since 2020. Early lifeDeng was born into a second marriage family in Nanchang, Jiangxi, on 8 February 1979.[2] His father was a museum secretary, and his mother was a factory cadre.[2] His father has a son and a daughter, and His mother has a daughter.[2] After they got married, they had Deng Chao.[2] Since 1995, Deng studied in the theater program at the Jiangxi Vocational Academy of Art for three years.[2] In 1998, he entered the Central Academy of Drama in Beijing.[2] CareerBeginningsDuring his junior year at college, Deng was cast in the hit play Cuihua Shang Suancai, a student production presented by the Central Academy of Drama, through which he knew script-writer Yu Baimei, who would be his long-time professional partner. After graduation, he started filming dramas. He rose to fame with the 2003 historical drama The Young Emperor[3] and further gained popularity with director Gao Xixi's military drama romance Happiness as Flowers, co-starring Sun Li.[4] 2008–2010: Increasing recognitionDue to his rising popularity, Deng scored a role in Feng Xiaogang's war film Assembly.[5] For the film, Deng won the Best Supporting Actor at the Hundred Flowers Awards, successfully making his crossover to the big screen.[6] The same year, he co-starred in Cao Baoping's romantic thriller The Equation of Love and Death[7][8] and was awarded the Society award at the Golden Phoenix Awards for his performance.[9] In 2010, he starred in Tsui Hark's action-mystery film Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame, playing an albino detective named Bei Dong Lai.[10] He earned a Best Supporting Actor nomination at the Hong Kong Film Awards.[11] Deng next starred in fantasy film Mural (2011), directed by Gordon Chan and adapted from the renowned ghost novel "Strange Stories from a Chinese Studio".[12] In 2012, he played Cold Blood in the wuxia film The Four, based on Woon Swee Oan's novel series Si Da Ming Bu (The Four Great Constables).[13][14] 2013–2015: Directorial works and Keep RunningIn 2013, Deng starred as one of the three male leads in Peter Chan's film American Dreams in China, about three young men from poor backgrounds who achieved success by establishing an English teaching school.[15] The film was a commercial success[16] and earned positive reviews. Taipei Times called the movie a "a well-executed work of entertainment that preaches about China's growing power" and praised Deng for "delivering a focused performance as an idealist with a defeated ego".[17] Deng made his directorial debut with The Breakup Guru (2014), a romantic comedy co-created by him and Yu Baimei.[18] Though it faced stiff competition from Hollywood blockbusters, the film grossed 180 million yuan in its opening week and ended up as one of the highest-grossing films in China that year.[19] The same year, he joined Keep Running, a remake of the South Korean variety program Running Man.[20] Keep Running enjoyed explosive popularity in China.[21] That year, Deng was chosen as the Most Valuable Chinese Actor.[22] Deng then starred in crime film The Dead End directed by acclaimed director Cao Baoping,[23] and was praised by critics for "breathing life into the role with riveting performances", as well as his chemistry with co-star Duan Yihong. He shared the Best Actor award with co-stars Duan and Guo Tao at the 18th Shanghai International Film Festival,[24] and won another Best Actor trophy at the Golden Rooster Awards.[citation needed] Deng teamed up again with Yu Baimei for the comedy film Devil and Angel, following the success of The Breakup Guru. However, unlike its predecessor, the film was voted the Most Disappointing Film of 2015 and received criticism for its poor approach to comedy.[25] 2016–present: Success on the big screenIn 2016, Deng starred in Stephen Chow's film The Mermaid, where he plays a playboy businessman who falls in love with a mermaid that had been sent to assassinate him.[26] The film broke numerous box office records, including biggest opening day and biggest single-day gross through its seventh day of release. Due to his success on the big screen, CBN Weekly named him the 3rd most commercially valuable celebrity in China;[27] and the most lucrative actor on China's big screen that year.[28] In 2017, Deng starred in Han Han's sleeper hit Duckweed, playing a rebellious car racer who thinks that his parents misunderstood him.[29] He next starred in the suspense crime film, The Liquidator, based on the bestselling crime novel series Evil Minds: City Light and directed by acclaimed TV director Xu Jizhou.[30] In 2018, Deng starred in Zhang Yimou's historical film, Shadow.[31] In 2019, Deng starred in the family drama film Looking Up, which he co-directed.[32] Personal lifeDeng dated Nie Ning since they were both students at the Jiangxi Vocational Academy of Art. Nie was later admitted to the Central Academy of Drama, a year junior to Deng. They broke up after four years of relationship. [33] From 2002 to 2005, Deng dated his The Young Emperor co-star Hao Lei.[34] Deng has been married to actress Sun Li since 2010.[2] They have two children, a son named Deng Han Zhi and a daughter named Deng Han Yi.[35] FilmographyFilm
Television series
Variety show
Discography
Awards and nominationsForbes China Celebrity 100
References
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