A Star Rises in the East - The New York Times, February 20, 2005
By Lynn Hirschberg
So when Zhang met Spielberg, she understood only three sentences (''Quiet, please,'' ''Action'' and ''Cut!''), and she knew how to speak just three words: ''Hire. Me. Please.'' Spielberg laughed when she repeated her hire-me-please mantra, but did not hire her. Eventually, Spielberg ceded the direction of ''Geisha'' to Rob Marshall, who was nominated for an Oscar for ''Chicago.'' And Marshall conducted his own global search for the lead, eventually choosing Zhang. ''The word 'geisha' means 'person of the arts' in Japanese,'' Marshall explained. ''And that means everything from the art of conversation to dance to escorting men. Geishas were the supermodels of their day, and Ziyi has that unusual combination of strength and grace. She has a great spirit, but outwardly she can seem fragile. And,'' Marshall said, laughing, ''her English had improved.''
Although Zhang is physically tiny, there is an overwhelming sense of quiet confidence about her. ''I'm not scared easily,'' she said, as she ate breakfast at the Regent Beverly Wilshire in Los Angeles last December. Zhang -- her full name is pronounced Zee-YEE Zhong -- looked like an alert teenager, wearing jeans, a pale green sweater and a newsboy cap pulled low on her forehead. She moved with great delicacy, pouring my tea when the cup ran low, tearing apart a small corner of her croissant without producing a single crumb. Zhang was accompanied by her manager, Ling Lucas, who translated. When speaking to Lucas, her voice would become animated, and she would suddenly seem less serene, but her composure would return immediately. ''I learned to be disciplined and organized at an early age,'' Zhang said. ''I can take a lot of hard work, perhaps more than most. And as a result, I am not surprised when things go well.''
Zhang is the youngest of a generation of Chinese actresses (Maggie Cheung, with whom she starred in ''Hero,'' and Gong Li, who is also in ''Geisha'') to become known outside of China. She recently starred in ''House of Flying Daggers'' as the blind dancer Mei and will soon be seen in ''2046,'' Wong Kar-wai's stunning new film. Chinese actresses, like the Chinese movies that feature them, tend to be reminiscent of old Hollywood: gorgeous faces in a sumptuous setting. Zhang is the most childlike of the group, but she has a toughness in her gaze, a look of complication that is striking. As Ang Lee told The Los Angeles Times, Zhang, after all, was ''the hidden dragon -- the untamed nature in all of us.''
Although they never made the shampoo commercial, Zhang began a professional liaison with Yimou. Their first movie together, ''The Road Home,'' the story of a girl's first romance set against the Cultural Revolution, was applauded in the West. They went on to collaborate on ''Hero'' and ''House of Flying Daggers,'' both of which were hits in the United States. ''But I never really thought about America,'' Zhang said. ''I never considered, how do you enter into this culture?''
Marshall, who comes from the musical theater, was particularly impressed with Zhang's background in dance. ''It gives you a discipline and a way to walk and move,'' he explained. ''We rehearsed for six weeks -- I had six rooms working at all times.'' Even during filming, the rehearsals were particularly rigorous. Said Zhang: ''On a typical day, we shoot from 9 to 6 and then have training for everything we need to do in the movie. I usually start at 6 a.m. and, with all the classes, work to midnight. The language scenes are the hardest for me. You can practice the rest.''
Taking a sip of orange juice, Zhang politely explained her sense of purpose. ''I remember when I dreamed of having this time,'' she said, looking steely but sweet. ''Not just this time, but still more like it. And more, and more. I think I now understand America. Hopefully, they will understand me.''




