Famous broadcasting artist Fang Ming dies

Has rebroadcast the National Day military parade and won many awards at home and abroad in 62 years of professional career

  On November 29, the famous broadcasting artist Fang Ming died of illness at the age of 80.

  Fang Ming's real name is Cui Mingde, born in Hebei Province in 1941.

In 1956, Fang Ming, who graduated from junior high school, joined the Central Broadcasting Bureau, and since then began his indissoluble bond with broadcasting.

During his 62-year broadcasting career, Fang Ming’s programs have won many awards at home and abroad.

"Rigorous and self-discipline" has always been Fang Ming's principle. He rarely makes mistakes and is regarded as a model for learning by industry insiders.

5 times to broadcast on Tiananmen Gate

  In Fang Ming's broadcasting career, he has served as deputy director and director of the National Radio and Television Department, and has undertaken the main broadcasting tasks during the funerals of leaders such as Chen Yi, Zhou Enlai, and Mao Zedong. He has also boarded the Tiananmen Gate 5 times to broadcast.

  On October 1, 1984, my country once again held a grand National Day military parade 25 years after 1959. It was also the first time that my country publicly demonstrated its armed forces after the reform and opening up.

Against the historical background of the time, this military parade created many firsts. It was regarded as a new starting point for the Chinese people and a symbol of a new era, and it attracted widespread attention from all over the world.

When television is not yet popular, most Chinese can only listen to the grand occasion of the National Day military parade on the radio.

  As representatives of the Central People’s Broadcasting Station, the 43-year-old Fang Ming and Wang Huan took on the important task of explaining the National Day military parade and the mass parade on the Tiananmen Square, which could be regarded as the highest honor belonging to the radio announcer at the time.

In more than two hours of broadcasting, Fang Ming broadcasted more than 10,000 words, which was a good word. It clearly and accurately spread the grand occasion of the military parade to the whole of China and the world.

In addition to participating in the Tiananmen National Day parade and the live broadcast of the military parade many times, Fang Ming has also participated in the broadcast and broadcast of important party and state meetings for many times. He has witnessed the progress of New China's history time and time again in the airwaves.

Praised as "lyrical baritone"

  Fang Ming has also created countless classic recitation works with his rich life experience, profound literary cultivation and superb recitation skills, such as "The Road to Shu", "A Hundred Years of Xiaoping", "Qingyuan Spring·Snow", "Answers to Aging", " "Sleepwalking Tianma Yin Staying Goodbye" etc.

  Qi Yue, a veteran broadcaster in my country, once called him a "lyrical baritone"-"His voice is clean, pleasing, and expressive and infectious. His range is very wide, reaching about two. Octave (generally speaking, the announcer can reach one octave). His voice can change freely in the high, middle and low range, and the tone is smooth, concentrated and bright. He is Fang Ming."

Pursue "the beauty of artistic conception" on the basis of standard expression

  On the basis of pursuing normative expression, Fang Ming also pursues the "beauty of artistic conception" in his works.

A prose poem, a paragraph of text, as long as teacher Fang Ming's vigorous and surging expression can be called an immortal work.

  When talking about recitation works, he said: "A good recitation work is the art of sound, which enables the audience to experience the dynamics of emotions in the audio language symbolized by auditory symbols, enter the scene described by the text, and even travel through the sound. The realm of expression is to achieve the beauty of the artistic conception of'purpose outside the text','image outside the image', and'view outside the scene'."

  Text/Reporter Zu Weiwei Coordinator/Man Yi