South China Morning Post

Why popular actress is worshipped as sea goddess Mazu

- Fran Lu fran.lu@scmp.com

Ask people from Fujian province who is their favourite celebrity, it is almost certain the answer will be Liu Tao.

The 45-year-old actress is seen in Fujian as a living Mazu, the sea deity worshipped in the coastal province, after she portrayed her in the eponymousl­y titled 2012 Chinese television drama.

Legend has it that Mazu is a young woman who lived in the area in the 10th century. She could predict the weather and protect fishermen from disasters.

She is said to have died trying to rescue people from shipwrecks, then ascended to heaven and became a deity.

Fujian people’s reverence for Mazu is legendary. There are many taboos when worshippin­g the deity at temples, such as not exposing skin, commenting on images and looking around while kneeling before her.

Mazu is so respected that many police stations in the province have named mediation rooms after her because they believe Fujian people do not lie in front of Mazu.

Liu, who made her acting debut in 2000, had been known as the “nation’s daughter-in-law” thanks to the idealised wives she played in television dramas.

She successful­ly moved on from that typecastin­g in the 2016 hit drama, Ode to Joy, by playing a former Wall Street executive.

However, in the minds of many in Fujian, Liu is actually Mazu. One person said that her husband told her: “Mazu gives a fantastic performanc­e in Ode to Joy.”

Some even hang photograph­s of Liu as the Mazu character in their homes, and worship her.

A Fujian resident said if Liu ever visited his hometown, she would be greeted with aunties holding incense and firecracke­rs, which are used to attract blessings from the gods.

Another said that even if Fujian people did not like Liu, they would never say anything negative about her, because it was wrong to speak ill of “Mazu”. Before she played the role, Liu reportedly went to the Mazu temple to ask for the deity’s blessing.

She threw poe – a traditiona­l Chinese divination method in which two small wooden pieces, known as jiao bei in Mandarin, are thrown on the floor to interpret the divine answer from the positions of the pieces – to ask for her permission. She reportedly received a positive response.

The director of the television series, Lu Qi, said that when they shot sea scenes, it was always sunny even when the weather forecast had predicted rain.

When Liu, who was born in Jiangxi province, appeared in a video to promote tourism in her hometown, it was reported many Fujian people were confused, insisting that “Mazu is ours”.

Today, Mazu is still so widely revered across coastal areas in China and Southeast Asia that she has an ID number for travelling.

Some people buy plane and train tickets for her statues so they can travel and bless her worshipper­s far and wide.

Mazu gives a fantastic performanc­e in Ode to Joy FUJIAN RESIDENT

 ?? ?? Liu Tao as Mazu in a 2012 drama.
Liu Tao as Mazu in a 2012 drama.

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