Bow-sim Mark
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麦宝婵 Mark, Bow-sim |
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Born | Guangzhou, China |
Residence | Newton, Massachusetts, USA |
Nationality | American |
Style | Taijiquan Northern Shaolin Wudangquan |
Notable relatives | Donnie Yen |
Bow-sim Mark | |||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 麥寶嬋 | ||||||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 麦宝婵 | ||||||||||
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Bow-sim Mark is a martial arts master (or sifu) who lives in Newton, Massachusetts, USA.[1]
Training
Mark was born in Guangzhou, China. She began studying martial arts at elementary school, training seriously in high school and then at Wushu training schools, specialising in t'ai chi ch'uan and Northern Shaolin. Mark learned Fu Style Wudangquan by training under Fu Wing Fay for 10 years; Wing Fay was the eldest son and top student of Grandmaster Fu Chen Sung. She was an instructor at Wing Fay's school from 1968-74.[2]
Career
After living for years in Hong Kong, Mark emigrated to Brighton, Massachusetts in 1975, and founded the Chinese Wushu Research Institute in July 1976.[3][4] She still teaches and performs in the Boston area. She was one of the first to provide Chinese wushu instruction in the West[5] and is credited with popularizing the term Wushu outside of China. She gave the first demonstration of Combined Tai Chi Chuan in the United States, and published the first description of the technique in 1975.[2] Mark won a gold medal at the first International Tournament of T'ai chi ch'uan in Wuhan City in 1984.[6] She was named Black Belt magazine's Kung-Fu artist of the year for 1995.[7]
One of her specialities is her Wudang sword dance.[2] She played the part of a 'kung fu diva' in a play, Mum and Shah at the Lyric Stage theater in Boston in 1995.[8]
Black Belt Magazine named her one of the most influential martial artists of the 20th Century.[9]
Personal life
Mark is married to Klyster Yen[2] and has two children,[3] including her son, martial arts movie star Donnie Yen,[10] and a daughter, Chris Chi-ching Yen, who placed All-round Third division in the First International Wushu tournament in 1986 as the youngest competitor,[11] and who has also joined the film industry.[12][13]
References
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External links
- Articles containing traditional Chinese-language text
- Articles containing simplified Chinese-language text
- Year of birth missing (living people)
- Chinese t'ai chi ch'uan practitioners
- Chinese emigrants to the United States
- Living people
- Sportspeople from Guangzhou
- Sportspeople from Boston, Massachusetts
- American people of Chinese descent