Wang first became interested in the theatre and acting while working as a teacher in her hometown of Nanjing.
A Doll’s House, which ultimately ends with the lead woman leaving her husband and children to find herself, was considered to be antagonistic to the virtues that the New Life Movement was promoting. Wang was subsequently fired from teaching in 1935 by the Education Bureau of Nanjing Municipal Government and was banned from teaching anywhere in Nanjing. before joining the Shanghai Amateur Dramatists Association, a leftist theatre group, in 1937. Wang toured the country with the Association, performing in politically oriented plays that supported the Chinese resistance during the Second Sino-Japanese War. She would continue to act in patriotic plays across the country up until the end of the war in 1945. After the war she found work as a supporting actress with the
Kunlun Film Company, a Shanghai-based company which produced several important leftists films in the late 40s. Despite having no previous directorial experience, her appointment was widely supported and she became a successful mainstream socialist filmmaker. It was not unusual in the years following the revolution to appoint novice film directors, partly because there were few professional directors working at that time, and partly because the new
Communist government significantly financed the film industry. The film industry was seen as an art form that could reach the masses and could be used to effectively spread the party's political message. Accordingly, Wang's work fit into the mainstream socialist cinema and had an explicit pro-communist message. Her work was not particularly associated with
women's film. Although some of her films featured leading women, the narrative focused on class struggle and the communist revolution. When gender struggles were depicted, it was often to reinforce communism as a solution. Her work was financially supported by the state, which provided her with significant access to filmic resources, allowing her to learn the techniques of filmmaking through practice and experiment with film form. Wang made her directorial debut in 1952 with an instructional film for the army. Her first feature film,
Darkness Before Dawn, was released in 1956. In 1963,
Zhou Enlai, the first Premier of the People's Republic of China, appointed Wang to co-direct the film adaption of the popular play
Sentinels under the Neon Lights. She remained active until 1985, during her career she directed feature films, musical stage plays, and military instructional videos. She died at the age of 74 on December 2, 1990. == Filmography ==