Yue-Sai Kan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Yue-Sai Kan (Chinese: 西; pinyin: Jìn Yǔxī; b. Guilin, Guangxi, China, October 1, 1949) is a Chinese American television personality, author, entrepreneur, and humanitarian. People magazine named her "the most famous woman in China."

Contents

[edit] Early life

Kan was born in Guilin, in China's southern province of Guangxi, on the day of the founding of the People's Republic of China. She is the oldest of four sisters, and her father was a traditional painter. She moved as a young girl to Hong Kong, spending most of her childhood there, and then moved to Hawaii where she studied for a degree in music. She joined her sister in New York in 1972, becoming involved in public relations and television production work.

[edit] Work in television

She has created a number of popular television series which are viewed by hundreds of millions of television viewers in the People's Republic of China. Her series, which are often bilingual in Chinese and English, link Eastern and Western cultures by exposing Chinese viewers to American subjects, and vice versa. Her Looking East series first aired in 1978 and ran for twelve years, the last two on the Discovery Channel.

On October 1, 1984, she hosted the first live broadcast from China to the West, on the occasion of the 35th anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic of China; the program was a co-production of PBS and China's CCTV network. The program brought Kan to prominence in China and led the Chinese government to offer her a new television series, One World. The twice-per-week program, which exposed Chinese viewers to cultures around the world, was the first-ever television series hosted by a Chinese-American on national Chinese TV.

Her ABC TV documentary China Walls and Bridges received an Emmy award in 1989. Other of her series include Mini Dragons and Doing Business in Asia. Her newest series, on which she interviews various North American and European celebrities and politicians, is entitled Yue-Sai's World, which airs in 36 provinces of China. Kan's life and career straddle East and West as a scholar, an author, a journalist, a TV host, a charity worker and an entrepreneur. Kan has been credited as being the first TV journalist to link East and West. "Looking East" stayed on the air for 12 years, the last two on the national network of the Discovery channel. Throughout her TV career, Kan has filmed in more than 25 countries.

Her 2006 TV series "Yue-Sai's World" introduced interesting stories from Western cultures, various celebrities and other phenomena to Chinese viewers. Hillary Clinton, Celine Dion and Julio Iglesias were some of the guests on her 45-minute weekly show. "I know there are lots of programs around but they don't have depth. This will be a solid lifestyle program. I have a big team in the United States currently producing it," she said.

"Travel is important," she says. "Your knowledge is supplemented by what you see, sometimes through television, sometimes through travel. That's how I got to know so many great people around the world."

[edit] Cosmetics entrepreneur

In 1989, the Chinese government suggested that Kan establish a business in China, in order to strengthen foreign investment in China; it was believed that her celebrity would ensure the company's success. She eventually founded, in 1992, Yue-Sai Kan Cosmetics Ltd., China's first major cosmetics company. Kan has stated that she chose to start a cosmetics company due to a lack of cosmetics that were suitable for Asian skin tones. At that time, cosmetics were not commonly used by Chinese women, but Kan was confident that this would change. By 2003, the company was generating annual revenues of nearly US$50 million. The company was sold to L'Oreal, the world's largest cosmetics company, in May 2004, although Kan retained a controlling interest.

[edit] Books

Kan has written four books; they include One World, Yue-Sai's Guide to Asian Beauty, and Etiquette for the Modern Chinese.

[edit] Humanitarian work

She has worked with the charity organizations UNICEF and ORBIS International. She has also built five school buildings for poor children in her home city of Guilin.

Kan lives in Shanghai and New York City.

[edit] External links