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    Not your regular grandfather

    By Xu Junqian in Shanghai | China Daily USA | Updated: 2017-04-14 10:22
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    While Wang Deshun is best-known for his impressive physique, the truly inspirational quality about this octogenarian is

    his tenacity in seeking out and getting through the struggles in life

    Retirement for most senior citizens in China involves playing mahjong, taking care of their grandchildren and just shooting the breeze with peers at the neighborhood park.

    Wang Deshun, however, has other things on his mind.

    The 81-year-old said he prefers to "look for trouble" and take on more unconventional tasks that pose a sterner challenge. Despite having to juggle his time between working out at the gym, appearing at fashion shoots and acting in films and television shows, he claimed that life for him these days is still too easy.

    "Age only becomes a barrier if you think about it. There is biological age and there is another that is determined by your state of mind," he said.

    Wang first shot to international fame in 2015 after he showed off his toned physique on the runway during China Fashion Week in Beijing. Nearly two years after that incident, the octogenarian is still getting inundated with messages on his Sina Weibo page praising him as "inspiring" and being "the ultimate idol". Wang has more than 300,000 followers on the social networking site.

    Today, people refer to him as "China's hottest grandpa", and his admirers extend to even luxury fashion houses. Italian brand Ermenegildo Zegna has featured him in their latest campaign in China called "Defining Moments". It could be considered quite a honor, considering how Oscar-winning actor Robert De Niro is part of the global campaign.

    In the campaign video that was shot in Milan, Wang is flanked by actor Sunny Wang as he talks about the moment in his life that defined him.

    Wang has become such a recognizable figure that his wife has banned him from accepting media interviews in an attempt to maintain their normal lives. As such, his son, who is also his agent, has been secretly arranging for interviews to be done at the gym Wang works out at daily.

    A former colleague and friend of Wang described him as someone who can survive even in the depths of hell. Wang's daughter, Wang Qiu, joked that her father is akin to an imperial concubine when it comes to taking care of his body.

    Wang's unusual penchant for hardship could be traced to the moment he was born.

    A native of Shenyang, Northeast China's Liaoning province, he grew up in a time when his home province was occupied by Japanese troops.

    Despite his father having a job as a cook, he was made to scour the train tracks every morning for coal dust that could be exchanged for pancakes, so as to help his parents feed his eight other siblings. He believes his mother gave birth to more than 10 children but only nine survived the harsh winter and hunger.

    "Every morning when I left for the train station, I would see two people pushing a cart and picking up dead people who either froze or starved to death. They looked just like garbage collectors picking up trash from the street," he said.

    "A biographer once asked me about my relationship with my mother. I told him we didn't have a relationship," he added.

    Before starting his acting career in his early 20s, Wang worked as a bus conductor and a military factory worker. However, he had a yearning to be on a stage and he sought out this calling by signing up for free training classes offered by the local Workers' Cultural Palace, thus beginning his stage career at his hometown that spanned more than 20 years.

    In 1979, after fainting several times on and off the stage, he was diagnosed with autonomic nerve disorder. He attributed it to the Stanislavski's acting system he had embraced. The doctor advised him to stop acting before the disorder developed further into more serious mental problems.

    Wang decided to go with a less emotionally draining alternative - pantomime. At the age of 49, he relocated his whole family to Beijing, the only city in China where he believed pantomime would be appreciated. To prepare himself for the role, he joined the only gym in Beijing.

    "It wasn't about looking good or leading a healthy lifestyle. I was doing it because you need a good body to convey the message in pantomime," said Wang.

    He would labor for hours in the gym every day. He still continues to do so.

    The family soon got in on the pantomime act as well. Wang's wife was the playwright and director. His daughter, a student of the Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing, was the piano obbligato. His son became the anchorman and gaffer.

    While the family's performances were well-received, they nevertheless struggled to make ends meet. Back in 1980s Beijing where it was illegal to rent homes, Wang and his family ended up as vagabonds who had to constantly move between the homes of their friends in the capital.

    "Those were tough times but they were also some of the happiest in my life," he said.

    Things started to look up in 1987 when he became the first Chinese actor to perform at the International Pantomime Festival held in Germany. In 1989, the pantomime characters he created were included in an encyclopedia of Chinese society.

    By the mid 1990s, Wang decided to slow down and do something less physically demanding. He opted to be a body artist who often took to the stage naked and covered in body paint.

    Apart from working out four hours a day, he also trained himself to control his breathing so that he could appear like a living sculpture.

    In 1994, the book A Hundreds Years of History of China in Pictures was published. It opened with Lin Zexu, the Chinese official who fought during China's Opium War. The book ended with Wang's contributions on the stage.

    Wang said that his foray into the fashion world via China Fashion Week in Beijing was not something he had planned - it was simply born out of a favor to an acquaintance who was working with Chinese designer Hu Sheguang.

    Despite being catapulted to stardom, Wang is insistent that fame has not gotten to his head.

    If anything, he is still as frugal as before.

    "Fame has not changed my life. The way I live today is no different from the past," said Wang, who today lives with his son and grandchild in Beijing.

    "A bowl of rice and some tofu will suffice for a meal."

    xujunqian@chinadaily.com.cn

    (China Daily USA 04/14/2017 page9)

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