The actor Jin Yan
(1921-1983) was known as the Emperor in Chinese cinema circles in the 1930s. His
first success was in Romantic Love, a film directed by Sun Yu in the
1930s. In the film, he portrays in a vivacious, unsophisticated and natural way
and with his vigor and his healthy, well-proportioned body, the role of Qian,
the handsome young master of a family who is completely different from the
impractical, shifty-looking young men then common in films. His performance won
him extensive praise.
Later, he played the leading role in
Love and Duties, Three Modern Women, The Golden Times,
Maternal Brilliance, and The Great Road, most of which have a
theme on the anti-feudalism of the petty bourgeoisie. All the images he
portrayed were small intellectuals, expect for the road builder Jin Ge in The
Great Road. Jin Yan has a handsome, unrestrained appearance and his
performances are genuine and simple.
He gives a lifelike
portrayal of Jin Ge, who is unyielding and optimistic in face of oppression in
the dark society. He also performed in Mother and Brave Eagle in the
Rainstorm before he retired from acting at the end of the 1950s. He reached
the height of his art career in the 1930s and the
1940s.