- Source: The Legends of Jigong
The Legends of Jigong is a Singaporean television series based on legends about Ji Gong (1130–1207), a Chinese Buddhist monk who is revered as a deity in Chinese folk religion and folk hero in Chinese culture. It was produced by the Television Corporation of Singapore (TCS) and was first aired in Singapore on TCS Eighth Frequency (now MediaCorp Channel 8) in 1996. Xie Shaoguang, who portrayed Ji Gong and sang the theme song for the series, was nominated for the Best Actor award at the 1997 Star Awards.
Plot
Ji Gong was originally the Taming Dragon Arhat, one of the Eighteen Arhats. His apprentice, Golden Boy, accidentally allowed the unruly White Tiger Star under his watch to escape from the celestial realm into the human world to cause trouble. Through cunning manipulations and machinations, the White Tiger Star causes the death of the patriotic Song dynasty general Yue Fei, absorbs the energy from Yue Fei's guardian star, and becomes more powerful in the process. As a punishment for his failure to stop the White Tiger Star, Ji Gong is banished to the human world, where he is reincarnated as Li Xiuyuan. In the human world, he is destined to do good deeds such as fighting injustice and helping the poor, as well as to continue his quest of taming the White Tiger Star. He has various allies and friends, including Golden Boy, all of their romantic relationships often intertwining with the problem of the day that Ji Gong intends to solve.
Cast
See also
Ji Gong, the main character in the series.
Other media about Ji Gong:
Ji Gong (TV series), a 1985 Chinese television series starring You Benchang and Lü Liang
The Mad Monk, a 1993 Hong Kong film starring Stephen Chow
The Legend of Crazy Monk, a 2009–2011 three-season Chinese television series starring Benny Chan
External links
The Legends of Jigong on MediaCorp's website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- The Legends of Jigong
- Ji Gong
- Xie Shaoguang
- The Legend of Crazy Monk
- Ryan Choo
- The Mad Monk
- Ji Gong (TV series)
- Zhu Xiufeng
- Star Awards 1997
- Ann Kok