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Pai Ping ping

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Chinese name
  
白冰冰 (traditional)

Role
  
Singer

Name
  
Pai Ping-ping


Birth name
  
白月娥

Chinese name
  
白冰冰 (simplified)

Children
  
Pai Hsiao-yen

Pai Ping-ping img5cacheneteasecoment20154152015041508105

Pinyin
  
Bai Bingbing (Mandarin)

Origin
  
Republic of China (Taiwan)

Born
  
17 May 1955 (age 68) Keelung, Taiwan, Republic of China (
1955-05-17
)

Occupation
  
Singer, Actress, Media personality, Social activist

Spouse
  
Ikki Kajiwara (m. 1979–1981)

Movies
  
Comedy Makes You Cry, Lonely Hearts Club, Yours & Mine

Similar People
  
Pai Hsiao‑yen, Ikki Kajiwara, Yee Chin‑yen, Wang Shaudi

AI CHENG THI TO CHUE PAI PING PING HOKIAN


Pai Ping-ping (Chinese: 白冰冰; pinyin: Bái Bīngbīng; born May 17, 1955) is a Taiwanese singer, actress, media personality and social activist.

Contents

Life and career

Born to an impoverished family in Keelung, Pai dropped out of formal education in her teenage years. In 1973 she won a prize in a singing contest held by Taiwan Television and following this success she pursued a career in the local entertainment business. In 1975 she moved to Japan to study singing and acting. At this time she had a relationship with Japanese comics writer Ikki Kajiwara and they later married. Their daughter Pai Hsiao-yen was born in 1980 but their marriage was quickly dissolved the next year after Kajiwara engaged in an extramarital affair and committed domestic violence. Pai Ping-ping had to return to Taiwan and raised Hsiao-yen as a single mother. Since mid-1980s, Pai has been gaining popularity for her bantering style, becoming one of the best-known Taiwanese entertainers. Richard Lloyd-Parry of The Independent described Pai as the "Cilla Black of Taiwan". Besides her entertainment career, Pai also had significant investments in local catering service industry.

In 1997 Pai Hsiao-yen, then 16 years old, was kidnapped, raped, tortured and murdered. This event subsequently made the elder Pai into a social activist to advocate the use of death penalty; Pai founded the Swallow Foundation and chaired it to date to advocate capital punishment as well as provide legal support to local crime victims. Lloyd-Parry described the attention around the murder of Pai's daughter as giving Pai "a greater, though more terrible, fame than she had as an entertainer." In 2010, in the wake of the global anti-capital punishment movement, Pai successfully held a protest against former ROC Minister of Justice Wang Ching-feng, resulting in Wang's resignation and the resumption of executions in the Republic of China.

References

Pai Ping-ping Wikipedia