Hung Huang
Hung Huang (Chinese: 洪晃; pinyin: Hóng Huàng; 16 July, 1962—) is an American-Chinese media figure. She was the publisher of the now defunct fashion magazine iLook from 1999 to 2015. Personal lifeHung was born to Zhang Hanzhi,[1] who would become the English tutor of Mao Zedong, and Hong Junyan (洪君彦), an economist.[2][3] Her parents divorced in 1973. Zhang then married Qiao Guanhua,[4] the Foreign Minister of the People's Republic of China in the 1970s.[3] Hung's mother was later accused of collaborating with the Gang of Four and was placed under house arrest for two years.[2] In 1974, Hung, at the age of 12, was sent to America to study. She graduated from Vassar College in 1984.[3] Hung married four times, three of them ended in divorce. Her second husband is the film director Chen Kaige. In 2006, Hung adopted a daughter from Sichuan.[5][6] CareerHung worked as a consultant and comprador in both China and the US until 1999, when she took over the fashion magazine Look, later known as iLook, from its founder Jane Huang, wife of Tan Dun.[7] Apart from being the publisher, Hung was also the magazine's editor-in-chief since August 2006. The magazine published its last issue in December, 2015. A CNN article stated that she had been referred to as "China's answer to Oprah Winfrey and Anna Wintour."[2] Since early 2012, she has written a weekly column called ChinaFile for Women's Wear Daily.[8] She has been selected by the Time magazine as one of the world's 100 most influential people in 2011.[9] References
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