The Star Malaysia

Fan Bingbing off social media amid tax rumours

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BEIJING: X-Men actress Fan Bingbing (pic) has disappeare­d from social media amid rumours she has been barred from leaving China during a tax evasion investigat­ion.

Fan, 36, usually maintains a prominent presence on China’s main microblogg­ing service Weibo, where she has more than 62 million followers.

However, her account hasn’t been updated since June 2, when she wrote about the work of her charitable foundation.

Her boyfriend, actor Li Chen, has not updated his account since July 6.

Unconfirme­d reports circulatin­g online say both have been barred from leaving China as the authoritie­s look into claims that Fan was given dual contracts for her work: a public one giving her official salary and a private one stating her actual, much higher, pay.

Chinese media reports say neither Fan, her production company nor agent can be reached, boosting speculatio­n that all have been caught up in the probe.

Police rarely comment on such investigat­ions until a conclusion has been reached.

However, in a June 3 statement, Fan’s production company stated that Fan had never signed any “ying-yang” contract, so named because of their dual natures.

Fan has appeared in dozens of movies and TV series in China, but is best known internatio­nally for her role as Blink in 2014’s X-Men: Days of Future Past.

She is one of China’s wealthiest entertain- ers, pulling down tens of millions of dollars for her roles, along with substantia­l amounts in appearance fees and product endorsemen­ts.

Chinese authoritie­s have sought to rein in high salaries for actors that can eat up much of a production’s budget. In June, regulators capped pay at 40% of a total TV show’s production budget and 70% of the total paid to the actors in films.

Criminal cases can be career-ending for Chinese celebritie­s because the communist authoritie­s, who possess ultimate control over what content is released, have ordered offenders blackliste­d.

China’s last major celebrity scandal was in 2014, when Jaycee Chan, an aspiring entertaine­r and the son of actor Jackie Chan, was sentenced to six months in prison for allowing others to smoke marijuana in his Beijing apartment.

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