Entertainment


Thursday, 22/12/2016 16:11

Famed actress makes soap opera comeback

Actress Nguyen Minh Trang. Photo nld.com.vn
Viet Nam News

Famous actress Nguyen Minh Trang left Viet Nam in 1998 to live in Singapore with her husband. She recently returned to Viet Nam to take part in a soap opera entitled Chieu Ngang Qua Pho Cu (Walking on Old Street in the Afternoon) produced by the Viet Nam Television Film Centre.

She was born in Ha Noi but moved to HCM City in 1987. Trang was trained as a professional stage artist. Her 1979 debut in the drama Ha Mi Cua Toi (My Ha Mi) catapulted her to fame. She then participated in various films, TV series and dramas. For her devotion, she received the title Excellent Artist and two gold medals at national staging arts festivals.

She talks with Culture Vulture about her return to showbiz.

Why did you decide to take part in the TV series after nearly 20 years living away?

Actually, I joined a few film projects in HCM City in recent years but this is the first time I returned to Ha Noi after many years.

I come from Ha Noi and that’s the reason I decided to take part in this TV series. I was impressed and agreed to join the project immediately when director Trinh Le Phong gave me the screenplay. It’s a story about a family living in Ha Noi’s Old Quarter. When the parents pass away, a conflict develops among four siblings about whether to sell the old house which is full of memories but could fetch a lot of money.

Reading the screenplay, I was overwhelmed with emotions and memories of childhood. I found images of my mother, my generation and myself in this story.

You had to shuttle between Ha Noi and Singapore for this film project. Would you share something about the filming process?

It’s like a child living far from home for a long time and then coming back. I felt like a fish out of water. But thanks to the director’s instruction and support from the cast and crew, I believed that I completed my part well. The soap opera is currently broadcast on VTV1 on Thursdays and Fridays and has high ratings.

In a scene, actor Bui Bai Binh slapped my face rudely. That take was repeated three times to receive the director’s nod. I hurt until now.

You are among the few northern actresses who received accolades from southern audiences. What made you so successful?

At the beginning, I tried to integrate with the community of southern colleagues and audiences by learning to speak in  a southern voice and accent. But I couldn’t. Actually, my instructor liked the northern voice.

I decided that I couldn’t do something which is not me. I preserved the voice and luckily, the audience sympathised and loved my roles. I became a “phenomenon” as the only person speaking with a northern voice and accent in dramas with southern casts.

You were a stage star and a big name on the screen, but you decided to leave your career behind to take care of your family. Have you ever regreted it?

I love acting and I always try to come back to the stage if I have a chance. I felt lucky to have a happy family. Like many other women, I wake up early in the morning to make my husband a cup of coffee and bring my 10-year-old daughter to school. I named her Ha Mi, after my character in the drama Ha Mi Cua Toi to remember the pinnacle of fame in my career. She’s both my past and present and I treasure the happiness I currently have. — VNS

 


Comments (0)


Related content

Statistic