Affair of Half a Lifetime
Affair of Half a Lifetime | |
---|---|
Written by | Eileen Chang |
Directed by | Hu Xue Yang |
Starring | Ruby Lin Patrick Tam Yiu Man |
Country of origin | Taiwan |
Original language | Mandarin |
No. of episodes | 35 |
Original release | |
Release | 2003 |
Affair of Half a Lifetime (simplified Chinese:
Plot
[edit]Affair of Half a Lifetime is set in Shanghai, China, during the 1930s and 1940s. It centers around two sisters from a financially struggling family, Gu Manzhen (Ruby Lin) and her older sister, Gu Manlu (Jiang Qinqin). A college graduate, Manzhen finds true love with one of her colleagues, Shen Shijun (Patrick Tam). Meanwhile, Manlu, the oldest of four children, supports the entire family. At the age of seventeen, Manlu sacrifices her pride and reputation to become a nightclub hostess. The job helps support Manlu's family, but others find her work disgraceful and look down on Manlu. Even her own grandmother does not approve of her job. Originally, before she takes up her work as a nightclub hostess, Manlu was to marry a respected doctor named Zhang Yujing. However, they are forced to part and Manlu eventually marries a comprador (Zhu Hongcai) instead.
Manlu realizes that she is barren, and fearful for her marriage arranges her sister to be raped by her husband after finding out that Zhu is attracted to her sister. Manlu also lies to Shijun, saying Manzhen has rejected his love because of the disparity between their statuses, thus forcing them to be apart. Manzhen eventually escapes from her abusive family after she gives birth to her son with Zhu, but afraid to contact Shijun for fear of the consequences if he finds out, marries his maternal cousin Shi Cuizhi. Having failed to maintain her chastity for Shijun, Manzhen hopes for the best of his marriage with Shi, and settles somewhere as a recluse and becomes a schoolteacher.
Eventually, both Manlu and Zhu feel remorse of their misdeeds toward Manzhen, and Manlu begs her sister to come back to raise her nephew/stepson with her husband after they locate her, asking for forgiveness before she dies. Despite still hating them for the rape, Manzhen stays with Zhu for the sake of their son. By chance, Manzhen and Shijun reunite in Shanghai, and both talk of each other's lives years after their separation. Knowing that they still love each other, but due to the restrictions of their respective obligations, both Manzhen and Shijun realize that they cannot be together.
Cast
[edit]- Ruby Lin as Gu Manzhen (顧曼楨)
- Patrick Tam as Shen Shijun (沈世
鈞 ) - Jiang Qinqin as Gu Manlu (顧曼璐)
- Li Li-chun as Zhu Hongcai (
祝 鴻 才 ) - Hu Ke as Shi Cuizhi (
石 翠 芝 ) - Chang Chang as Xu Shuhui (
許 叔惠) - Xing Minshan as Zhang Yujin (
張 豫 瑾)
Soundtrack
[edit]- Album Title :
半生 缘新歌 +精 选 (Ban Sheng Yuan New + Best Selection)
The original soundtrack was released in April 2004 in China. This soundtrack contains 18 tracks, produced by BMG Ltd (Taiwan). All songs are sung by lead actress Ruby lin. Tracks 1-5 are composed for this series, other songs are from Ruby Lin's album Best Selection.[2]
# | Track title | Running time | More information |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Eighteen Springs |
3:44 | Sung by Ruby Lin ( Opening song of the TV series |
2 | Passed Each Other By |
3:51 | This was the ending theme song of the TV series |
3 | The Past |
4:10 | |
4 | Thinking of You |
3:29 | |
5 | Let Love Move Us Closer |
5:00 | Duet song by Ruby Lin & Kenneth Tong |
Awards
[edit]Year | Event | Category | Recipient(s) | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | China East Wind Music Award | Best Theme Song for a Movie or Television | Ruby Lin | Won |
International broadcast
[edit]- It aired in Vietnam from October 28, 2005 on HTV7 under the title Bán sinh duyên.
See also
[edit]- Eighteen Springs - a 1997 film based on the same novel, directed by Ann Hui
References
[edit]- ^ 张爱
玲 抖开“华丽旗 袍 ” 《半生 缘》爬满“虱 子 ”, Chongqing News 4 October 2003 Archived December 22, 2015, at the Wayback Machine。 - ^
林 心 如:《半生 缘新 歌 +精 选》 , ent.163.com 13 April 2004。
External links
[edit]- (in Chinese) Ruby Station
- (in Chinese) Sina Official Site
- (in Chinese) HK ATV Official Site
- (in Chinese) CCTV Official Site Archived 2016-01-29 at the Wayback Machine
- 2003 Chinese television series debuts
- 2003 Taiwanese television series debuts
- Chinese romance television series
- Chinese period television series
- Taiwanese romance television series
- Television shows set in Shanghai
- Television shows based on Chinese novels
- Mandarin-language television shows
- Television shows filmed in Shanghai
- Television shows set in Nanjing
- Television series by Ciwen Media
- Adaptations of works by Eileen Chang