Lao She lived in Norland
Lao She
Lao She was one of the outstanding Chinese writers of the 20th century. He is commemorated with a blue plaque at St James’s Gardens in Notting Hill.
Lao She, the pen name of Shu Qingchun, was born in Beijing to a poor family from the Manchu ethnic minority. He travelled to England in 1924 to teach Mandarin at London University’s School of Oriental Studies (now the School of Oriental and African Studies). Here he developed a love of English literature and of the work of Dickens in particular. His first novel Mr Ma and Son (1929), an evocative account of London life in the 1920s from the viewpoints of a Chinese father and son.
Lao She lodged at St James’s Gardens – then St James’s Square – between 1925 and 1928 with the scholar Clement Egerton. He assisted Egerton in his translation of one of the best-known Chinese erotic novels, The Golden Lotus.
Lao She was heavily involved in the resistance against the Japanese after war broke out in 1937 and was initially well regarded by the Communist regime after the People's Republic of China was established in 1949. However, soon after the Cultural Revolution began in 1966, he was tortured and persecuted by the paramilitary youth movement, the Red Guards. On 25 August 1966, his body was discovered in Beijing’s Lake of Great Peace. It is widely believed he took his own life.
The rehabilitation of Lao She’s reputation in China was demonstrated by the presence of the Chinese Ambassador to Britain, Mr Zha Peixin, at the plaque’s unveiling ceremony in 2003. It is the only blue plaque, so far, to feature Chinese characters.
So highly revered is he still in his homeland that the house is still a popular destination for tourists and visitors to the capital. In February 2019, on the 120th anniversary of his death, the owners were surprised, delighted and very touched to receive a number of cards from well-wishers in China to mark the event.