The Star Malaysia

Fan Bingbing last in ‘social responsibi­lity’ rank

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BEIJING: China’s highest paid movie star Fan Bingbing (pic), who has not been seen in public since July, was placed last in an academic report ranking A-list celebritie­s on their social responsibi­lity.

The 36-year-old actress has been a household name in China for years and tasted Hollywood success with a role in the 2014 blockbuste­r X-Men: Days of Future Past.

Last year, she topped Forbes magazine’s list of top-earning Chinese celebritie­s with income of 300 million yuan (RM181mil)).

But she has gone quiet in recent months, following allegation­s of tax evasion.

In the report by Beijing Normal University published earlier this month, 100 Chinese stars including popular actor Jackie Chan and award-winning actress Zhang Ziyi were ranked according to their profession­al work, charity work and personal integrity.

But with a pass requiring a score of more than 60%, only nine celeb- rities made the cut, with Chinese actor Xu Zheng topping the list at 78%.

Fan had a score of zero.

The report’s authors said they studied the celebritie­s’ behaviour to assess the extent of their social responsibi­lity but did not elaborate how they arrived at the results, saying that the findings were based on “research and web-scraping”.

The ranking has split fans online, with many jumping to Fan’s defence.

“What kind of a report is this? Fan has done so much good work in the past!” one user wrote on the Twitter-like Weibo platform.

Fan has been unusually quiet in recent months – with no new posts to her normally active personal Weibo account since May – amid speculatio­n about her whereabout­s.

The actress’s troubles began when Cui Yongyuan, a former presenter for state-run China Central Television (CCTV), posted purported contracts online in May that suggested she had received under-thetable payments.

A statement released by Fan’s studio said she was the victim of “slander” but did not dispute the authentici­ty of the documents Cui released.

So-called “yin and yang” dual contract arrangemen­ts – with one contract for income declared to tax authoritie­s and another kept secret – are reportedly used to evade taxes.

After the documents posted by Cui went viral, the state tax administra­tion was reportedly investigat­ing alleged use of such dual contracts in the entertainm­ent industry in eastern Jiangsu province.

Although Fan was not mentioned by name, she has businesses registered in Jiangsu.

State news agency Xinhua reported in late June that government agencies, including the tax authority and the film and broadcast regulator, would crack down on excessive pay and tax evasion in entertainm­ent.

Last month, nearly a dozen major Chinese film producers and video sites announced they also would boycott “unreasonab­le” pay for actors.

Fan is one of five leading internatio­nal actresses cast in the upcoming Hollywood spy thriller 355, alongside Jessica Chastain and Penelope Cruz.

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