Zhejiang Talent Television & Film, China Film Group Corporation, Evergrande Film Co., Duzhe Publishing Media Co.,
Jilin Television, and Guangxi Television co-financed the TV series. A project-starting press conference held on December 28, 2012. Then, the director was Liu Jiang, who quit the project later due to a busy schedule. The official character posters were released on February 12, 2014. The release of the photos was a gift sent by the crew to the TV audience for the
Chinese New Year. Fan said the role was one she had always dreamed of playing and every generation had different interpretations and she hope she could interpret the character in her own way. and ended on August 16, 2014. Filming locations included
Wuxi,
Hengdian World Studios,
Nanjing, and
Shaoxing. A broadcast press conference was held in Beijing on December 18, 2014. The TV series has more than 260 sets of clothing for Fan Bingbing and more than 3,000 sets of clothing for the whole crew, with the most expensive piece being the dragon robe at over 500,000 CNY. Wu Hongliang, one of the producers, said the crew had more than 600 people, shooting lasted for almost 10 months, and several writers worked on the script for three years. Apart from the costumes,
The Empress of China placed great importance on displaying accurate historical visuals. The crew went to great lengths to recreate the ancient capital of Chang’an, as well as the grand and imposing imperial palace of the
Tang dynasty. The majority of the scenes were filmed using a combination of real-location shoots and special effects. Moreover, the drama established a special warehouse for the design and creation of its many thousand props. The series' Chinese name was initially
Wu Zetian, and then renamed to
The Legend of Wu Zetian. Just two days before the broadcasting date, it was renamed again as
The Legend of Wu Meiniang. This was required by the
State Administration of Radio, Film, and Television (SARFT). ==Soundtrack==