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}} | image = Sun Weiseh.jpg | image_size = | caption = | birth_date = 1921 | birth_place = Nanxi County, Sichuan | death_date = | death_place = Beijing | death_cause=Unlawful imprisonment (executed by Jiang Qing) | occupation = Writer, director, actor | nationality = Chinese | other_names= Li Lin 李琳 | parents=Sun Bingwen (1885-1927) Ren Rui | relations=Sun Yang (brother) Sun Mingshi (brother) Sun Xingshi (sister) Zhou Enlai (adopted father) Deng Yingchao (adopted mother) | spouse=Jin Shan | party = Chinese Communist Party | alma_mater=Moscow Sun Yat-sen University | notable_works=''How Steel is Made''; ''The Inspector General''; ''Little Rabbit''; ''Uncle Vanya''; ''Joys and Sorrows''; ''Peach Flower Fan''; ''Portrait of One Hundred Clowns''; ''The Hatred of Black Slaves''; ''The Rising Sun'' }} Sun Weishi (1921 – October 15, 1968) was the first female director of modern spoken drama (''Huaju'') in Chinese history. Sun's father was killed by the Kuomintang (KMT) in 1927, and Sun was eventually adopted by Zhou Enlai, who later became the first premier of the People's Republic of China. While in Yan'an Sun aroused the enmity of Mao's wife, Jiang Qing, beginning a rivalry between the two that lasted throughout Sun's life. During World War II, Sun lived in Moscow, studying theatre. Lin Biao was also in Moscow at the time and proposed to Sun before returning to China in 1942, but Sun rejected him. Lin married another woman, Ye Qun, in 1943. Ye held a lifelong grudge against Sun for her earlier relationship with Lin. After the end of World War II, Sun returned to China and became active in acting and directing in Chinese theatre. In 1950, shortly after the founding of the People's Republic of China, Sun was invited to become the director of the China Youth Art Theatre, and married one of the most famous actors then in China the same year. Over the next several years Sun staged a number of performances that were critically well-received, some of which became famous across China. In 1956, Sun became the artistic director and vice-president of the Chinese Experimental Theatre, and staged a number of critically well-received plays over the next decade. When the Cultural Revolution occurred in 1966, Zhou Enlai sent Sun and her husband to work in Daqing to protect them from political persecution, but Jiang Qing and Ye Qun conspired to have Sun secretly arrested while visiting Zhou Enlai in Beijing in 1968. Sun was sentenced without trial, and was tortured in a secret prison for several months before dying. After Sun died, Jiang Qing made arrangements for Sun's body to be cremated before an autopsy could be performed, and for her ashes to be disposed of before Zhou or Sun's other relatives could take possession of them. Sun's husband was not informed of Sun's death until his release, in 1975. ==Biography== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Sun Weishi」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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