Bowie’s ‘China Girl’ recalls music video
One-time acting role led to brief, life-changing romance with ‘otherworldly’ musician
WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND— In 1983, New Zealander Geeling Ching was 23 years old and waiting tables at a Sydney café when she was chosen to play the lead role in David Bowie’s “China Girl.”
She says the music video and the brief romance with Bowie that followed in the 1980s were like a surreal dream and a life changer.
The death of the British rock star from cancer this week at age 69 stunned fans worldwide. Ching was watching a tennis tournament in Auckland, where she lives, when her phone started buzzing: Is it true?
She was already a fan when she met Bowie. As a teenager, she’d put Bowie’s posters up on her bedroom wall and bought one of his albums.
“There was something quite otherworldly about him,” she told The Associated Press. “He was beautiful. Just beautiful.”
The video parodies Asian stereotypes and went on to win an MTV Music Video Award. At the time, the unedited version was banned from New Zealand and some other coun- tries for a raunchy scene on a beach.
Ching said she and Bowie, then in his mid-30s, were naked for the scene, but it wasn’t romantic.
“We got up at 3 in the morning to shoot that, to catch the sunrise, and it’s the least sexy I’ve ever been in my life,” she said.
She said she was freezing and struggling with salt water getting into her mouth. Some crew kept away curious joggers while others stood by with bathrobes. In another scene, she said, she accidentally head-butted Bowie but thankfully didn’t break his nose.
Areal-life romance did develop, she said. She was struck by Bowie’s intelligence, his charm and how he was so relaxed in chatting with fans.
After the shoot, she said, Bowie invited her to join him on tour in Europe. She travelled on a private jet and saw the frenzied fans.
“It was completely surreal,” she said.
It didn’t last long and Ching, who these days uses the Anglicized version of her family name Ng, returned Down Under.
“It’s had the biggest influence on my life that I could have ever imagined,” she said.
Her role in the video opened doors and she took some acting roles, including one in Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. But she loves the hospitality industry and now works as a restaurant manager.
In 2007, she ran the New York City Marathon, listening to Bowie’s Heroes album as she crossed the finish line.
Ching didn’t make contact with Bowie again until he played in New Zealand in 2004. He was doing a photo shoot with executives backstage when he saw her.
“His face lit up,” she said. “He walked away from the photos and said, ‘Geeling, you’re here! Fantastic.’ ”