China Daily Global Edition (USA)

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uring a telephone interview, Tsai Chih-chung suddenly stops to ask me: “What is your date of birth?” I tell him the date and the year and without a moment’s hesitation he says: “It was a Sunday.”

The 68-year-old artist from Taiwan is both sharp and versatile. So It is difficult to do him justice with a brief introducti­on.

An author, who has published several books since May 2015, he is also an animator who has won a Golden Horse, one of the most coveted awards in Chinese cinema, for kung fu comedy Older Master Q in 1981.

A bridge champion, he even spent a decade studying theoretica­l physics. But, above all, he is a cartoonist. More than 40 million copies of his books have been sold in more than 40 countries and regions.

Speaking of his pursuits, he says: “Many people ask me: ‘If you could turn back the clock, would you have done something else instead of being a cartoonist?’. Well, is there anything sweeter than realizing your dream?”

For Tsai, who quit school at the age of 15 to move to Taipei, his career as a cartoonist did not follow an “orthodox” path.

Inspite of starting his career with four-panel cartoons, the man from Taiwan’s Changhua county, gained fame not by creating a superhero franchise but by using ancient Chinese philosophy and history.

In 1985, he began doing comic books to explain the work of Chinese philosophe­rs, including Laozi, Liezi and Zhuangzi.

Revealing how he ventured into being a cartoonist, Tsai says: “In 1985, I had an animation company that had been in operation for seven years and I owned three properties.

“According to my calculatio­ns then, I would have had enough money to survive till 80 on instant noodles, as long as I did not squander

Wang Kaihao

my money on gambling or undertakin­g risky ventures. But I had to do something more meaningful withmy life.”

The cartoon series, which was introduced to the Chinese mainland in 1989, has since become firmly etched in the collective­memory of children on both sides of the Straits.

Explaining the success of the series, Tsai says: “My roots taught me how to useWestern methods to promote Chinese culture.”

Tsai recently took only 11 days to write his autobiogra­phy that includes 300 cartoons.

The autobiogra­phy, titled Genius andMaster: The Cartoon Guru Tsai Chih-chung’s Legendary Life, was published by China CITIC Press earlier this month.

Speaking of the title, Tsai says: “Every kid is a genius, but not every mother knows it.”

Revealing details of his early life, Tsai, who was born in a Roman Catholic family, says his father was a renowned calligraph­er while his mother was a fan of local operas, and she often took him along to watch performanc­es.

As for his other cultural influences, Tsai, who grewup eating American butter and milk, says he was exposed toHollywoo­d movies in his childhood.

A confession that Tsai makes is that he was a habitual latecomer and often missed the start of the films. “So, when I entered the theater, I would imagine the bit of movie that I had missed.”

Tsai says this habit helped him to hone his imaginatio­n. He also attributed his habit of reading the Bible to helping him understand the blending imaginatio­n, myths and history in his future work.

“The church was my window to the West. But, what flows in my

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