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杨紫琼 | 哈佛法学院2023届毕业演讲
- 2023 -
06/04
11:49
零号员工
发表时间:2023.06.04     作者:inch-k     来源:知乎     阅读:68

哈佛演讲的总结

Summary:Michelle Yeoh offers three tips for success in her keynote speech to the graduating class of 2023: stay loose, know your limits, and find your people. She shares personal stories of how these tips helped her in her career as a dancer and actress, and emphasizes the importance of collaboration and empathy in building a supportive community. Yeoh also reflects on the impact of her recent film, “Everything Everywhere All at Once,” and encourages the graduates to leap into the future with love and courage.

总结:杨紫琼在2023届毕业班的主题演讲中提供了三个成功的建议:保持灵活、了解自己的极限和找到自己的人。她分享了个人的故事,讲述了这些建议如何帮助她成为一名舞者和演员,并强调了合作和共情在建立支持性社区中的重要性。杨紫琼还反思了她最近的电影《瞬息全宇宙》的影响,并鼓励毕业生们用爱和勇气跃入未来。



演讲的英文文稿

Wow. What an introduction that was. Good afternoon. And thank you, Dean Manning, Dean Ball and Dean Bok, for this rare and distinguished honor. And congratulations to the class of 2023. What an incredible day, ladu. No more of an impressive academic journey. Congratulations as well to parents, partners and family members. Of all the students here today, I can only imagine the pride and joy you must have to see your loved ones graduate. From what I understand is the best law school in the country. To the graduating cohort, I consider it a privilege to have been asked to speak to you as you are about to unleash yourself on the world. This moment conjures up the exciting image of a high diver poised to leap into the void. As you know, I am not a lawyer. I can't even say that I have played one on the screen.

So why am I here? Why have I been asked to deliver the keynote speech to you on this pivotal day of in your lives as you dive headfirst into a presumably bright but unpredictable future? While maybe the reason I'm here is because I happen to have some experience leaping off high purchase into scary voids, so do allow me to offer some simple pointers that I've picked up along the way in my career full of leaps and dives. How to survive the Fall in Three Easy Steps by Michelle Yo.

The first one is pretty obvious, but not always easy. Stay loose My journey from Malaysia IPO Malaysia to the Academy Awards stage began with my first love, which was not acting, but dance. I knew at a very young age that my gift was to communicate through movement. In my studies, I found freedom in discipline and focus. I trained tirelessly day and night, drilling my body in every aspect of the craft. More importantly, I trained my mind to be still, to silence the whispers of self doubt. Dance was my safe place, my inevitable future and my undeniable path. So I enrolled in a ballet school in England and began living my dream. Unfortunately, life had other plans. I suffered a spinal injury. And just like that, I watched everything vanish into thin air. Life as I knew it was over with. My dreams of dance crushed. I credit the principal of my school for giving me the encouragement that ultimately led me to a career beyond my imagination. It was she who encouraged me to stay loose about my future. When falling, the tendency is to tighten up, to brace for impact. But in truth, the safest thing one can do is remain calm, even curious, about the shifting world around you. After graduating with a degree in Creative Arts, I returned home more open to other possibilities outside the box. With this awareness came the freedom to make choices I might not have otherwise been able to. This opened the door to doing a commercial in Hong Kong, then to acting roles and the start of my life in film.

Which leads me to my second piece of advice know your limits . Although understanding what you can do is essential, understanding what you can't do is pretty important, too. This works on two levels, both internally and externally. Internally, knowing your limits keep you humble, motivated and focused on a goal to point your finger toward. Externally, knowing the limits that are set for you by others give you a place to point a different finger. I am talking about the middle one. In other words, limitations set by yourself give you boundaries to respect. But limitations set by others give you boundaries to bust through. As a young woman trying to break into a film in Hong Kong, I was confronted with limitations at every turn. Initially cast in stereotypical roles the demure docile damsel in distress I soon realized that what I wanted to play were the action roles. The heroes. Of course, these were then reserved exclusively for men. But I could see that their fight sequences were highly choreographed. And I knew in my bones that my dance training would allow me to excel at them if only I were given the chance. So I went to my producer and said I did say, Please, I want an action role. I was prepared to do everything the men were doing. The choreography, the stunts, taking the blows, the wirework, all of it. What like it's hard. But when the chance finally came, I knew it was make or break. I had that one shot to prove my bank ability as an action star. And if I failed, I would not get that opportunity again. So I seized a moment with everything I had, and as it turned out, thankfully, audiences were more than ready for a female star in action comedies. The film yes, Madam was well received and launched my career. I knew I hadn't made it. Then when I soon after I joined Jet Lee and Jackie Chan as the three people who Hong Kong insurers refused to cover, they took one look at the scenes we were shooting and ran for the hills. I wore that as the badge of honor. Eventually, things progressed, and before I knew it, I was regularly running on rooftops, riding motorcycles onto moving trains and rolling off vans onto oncoming traffic. Don't try that at home, okay? There were injuries, as you can imagine. But with every nick and scratch and bruise and fractured vertebrae, I came back better and braver. Learning how to fall teaches you how to land. And learning to land gives you the courage to jump higher. So when the James Bond producers knocked on my door about a film called Tomorrow Never Dies, I thought, yes, they want me to play James Bond. I was fortunate that the producers, Barbara Broccoli and Michael G. Wilson had a substantial role in mind in the character of Whelyn, a formidable agent who was always one step of her adversaries and equal to Bond. Many regard that character as instrumental in modernizing the franchise and its retrograde portrayals of women. So thank you, Barbara. And Michael. Although Bar Office came in after the Barn movie, I waited two years for the proper role, rejecting scripts that lacked nuance or depth in their character. Honestly, there were times I had doubts as to whether I was doing the right thing in waiting. After all, actors want to act. However, I knew I would not be happy unless I continued to seek out roles that allowed me and like minded creatives to dig deeper and reflect three dimensional humanity on stage. And that was Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. So I must have done something right, because I am busier than ever. These examples illustrate the importance of limitations, because our limitations become our challenges. And there is nothing like a challenge to keep you working, striving and pushing for more. Every demeaning role I was offered, every rejection I was handed, and every time someone underestimated me, I found energy and renewed motivation.

This brings me to the third and final tip find your people . Life is not always a zero sum game for every winner. There doesn't have to be a loser. In fact, most success stories are less about competition and more about collaboration. The truth is, I could not have done any of this alone. My achievements are the results of those around me who offered, and continue to offer, support and belief. There are times where, as much as I don't want to let myself down, I don't want to let them down even more. My definition of community is vast, including my family, loved ones and friends. But it also includes the other actors, directors, producers, sun, people, film crews, dancers, musicians and artists with whom I've crossed paths. My community transcends time in the sense that I stand on the shoulders of those who have come before me, and I am energized and inspired by those who come after me. My community extends beyond people I know personally, which is why representation matters and why diversity on and off the screen have been a major priority for me, particularly for women, and particularly in lead roles. When we shine a light on the rich and varied world around us, we empower the whole of our humanity. I can see no better reason to wake up in the morning and get to work. Lastly, my community is not limited to the film industry. In my work as UNDP goodwill ambassador, I have witnessed the deep inequalities that continue to plague societies around the world. And I have seen up close how women and girls are often the last to get essential services like clean water and vaccines, especially in crisis. For this reason, I have committed myself in walking in locked step with their struggle. The prerequisite the prerequisite to change is empathy. Seeing through other people's perspective activates our compassion, which becomes the driving force for real world demonstrable. Action. Compassion is the ultimate superpower within us. When you are leaping without a safety net, people become your safety net and you become theirs. So those are my tips. Stay loose, know your limits and find your people. But I want to conclude by speaking briefly about that little movie that could everything, everywhere, all at once. This was a film that in many ways brings together all the insights I have shared with you today. It defied genre playing loose with free expectations and defying categorization. It flouted limitation by taking a smaller budget and turning it into an international phenomenon. And it brought together a community of creative and talented individuals working with a common passion to tell a universal human story. This was some wow. I'm creating waves. As I can see, this was a movie made entirely with love that was in many ways the culmination of my life's work. And the reverberations of that love continue to be felt as everything, everywhere, all at once has caused a tectonic shift in the industry, opening the door to more independent efforts and greater Asian representation. When I think of a glorious leap into an unknown void, I think of that movie. So, class of 2023, this is my offering to you. Today you graduate and today you leap. Stay loose, be smart and go with love. And then leap. And then leap again. And leap again. I look forward to living in the world you'll all help build and I am honored to have been one small voice at the beginning of your journey. Thank you all and I wish you every success. Happy graduation.



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