New parents star in horror movie

New parents star in horror movie

Getai host Liu Lingling and Taiwan actor Jacko Chiang Wei-wen are in Bring Back The Dead

As a mother for the first time during the Chinese Hungry Ghost period, veteran getai host Liu Lingling should be exhausted, given that she has to work every night this month.

But the 51-year-old, whose son will be one year old next month, says: "I've wanted to be a mother for so long and now that I am one, there's really nothing that can make me feel tired.

"When you have so much love for your baby, how can you feel tired? Even after I return home after a long night of work at a getai show and my baby wakes up and wants to be fed, I'll be more than happy to do it. I see it as having more time to spend with my son."

Liu was speaking to Life! yesterday at a press session to promote her upcoming horror flick Bring Back The Dead. In the film, she plays a confinement nanny who forms a close bond with Jia En (Jesseca Liu), a young mother who is distraught when her son dies in a car accident.

Liu says she was a lot more exhausted during the Hungry Ghost period last year, when she had been pregnant - in secret - and filming the movie Everybody's Business at the same time. "Last year, I would be filming the movie in the day and then hosting getai shows at night - all while being pregnant. So that was a lot tougher. This getai season is no problem for me - at least I get to rest during the day," she says with a chuckle.

Sitting beside her at this interview is Everybody's Business director Lee Thean-jeen, who also helms Bring Back The Dead.

He says sheepishly: "If I had known she was eight months pregnant while filming my movie last year, I would not have made her do so many takes. But Lingling is really a professional and worked really hard."

Liu, who does not talk about her marital status, had reportedly kept her pregnancy a secret as she did not want anyone to feel disappointed should the pregnancy go wrong. She made headlines for giving birth to her boy, whom she calls Xiang Xiang, at the age of 50.

The baby was conceived via in-vitro fertilisation, though she has declined to reveal the identity of the father. It was her second attempt at artificial insemination after the first ended in a miscarriage in 2011.

"I'm just very happy being a mother, you know? And I can tell everyone is very interested in my son. Everywhere I go, the first question that people ask me is no longer 'How are you?', but 'How is your baby doing?'"

The film also stars Taiwanese actor-host Jacko Chiang Wei-wen, 42, as Jia En's increasingly frustrated and impatient husband.

He is also a new parent - he and his wife Lisa Kao have a one-year-old son Jackson - but says he and Liu did not exchange any parenting tips.

"We didn't even get the chance to get past the point of my utter shock about her being a new parent to talk about tips. When she said that she has a son, I assumed that he would already be in high school.

"When I found out that he's just an infant, I couldn't believe it. It's just incredible so I ended up asking all sorts of questions about her and her well-being, rather than about how to raise kids. Looking at Liu Lingling as inspiration, I told my wife that we could wait for quite a while before having the second child."

Bring Back The Dead, which was shot for a budget of $1.1 million over 19 days in June, is slated for release either later this year or early next year.

yipwy@sph.com.sg


This article was first published on August 16, 2014.
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