Prada cuts ties with Chinese actor after surrogacy controversy

Zheng Shuang accused of abandoning two surrogate children by former partner

Prada made the announcement, a week after appointing Ms Zheng a brand ambassador, after coming under heavy criticism on Chinese social media. Photograph: iStock
Prada made the announcement, a week after appointing Ms Zheng a brand ambassador, after coming under heavy criticism on Chinese social media. Photograph: iStock

Italian luxury label Prada has ended all co-operation with Chinese actor Zheng Shuang, a week after appointing her as a brand ambassador, after she was engulfed in a surrogacy controversy that has enthralled the Chinese public.

The actor’s former partner, Zhang Heng, has accused her of trying to abandon two young children the couple had through a surrogate based in the United States.

Prada made the announcement late on Tuesday after coming under heavy criticism on Chinese social media for working with Ms Zheng.

The controversy erupted on Monday after Mr Zhang said on social media that the couple had turned to a surrogate to birth two children in the US. He released voice recordings of a woman he said was Ms Zheng lamenting that the children could not be aborted.

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Mr Zhang said he was stranded in the US because he had to take care of the two children, who were born in 2019 and 2020.

Ms Zheng quickly became the target of public criticism, with Weibo users calling her “irresponsible” and “vicious”.

The controversy has over the past three days been a top trending item on the site, which is similar to Twitter, with 600 million views and more than 100,000 comments.

Public pressure

Thousands of users also left comments on Prada’s Weibo account to question and ridicule the brand for hiring her.

The company is the latest global brand to succumb to public pressure in China, where customers have become increasingly vocal about their expectations for the behaviour of companies and celebrities, especially foreign ones.

“The Prada group has terminated all co-operation with Ms Zheng Shuang,” the company said on its official Weibo account, without providing further details.

China has become an increasingly important market for luxury labels during the global pandemic and its shoppers are expected to account for about half of all global spending on high-end brands in 2020, up from 37 per cent in 2019, according to McKinsey & Company. Prada has said the group’s China sales jumped 60 per cent in June and 66 per cent in July.

“The hit to Prada’s image is huge,” said Prof Huang Shengming from the Communication University of China in Beijing. “Their decision to stop working with Zheng is an effort to cut their losses and it’s the right move.”

‘Private matter’

On Tuesday, the actress said on her account that she had not violated laws in either China or the US but did not comment on whether any of the accusations were true. “It’s a very sad and private matter for me,” she said.

Surrogacy is forbidden in China but going abroad to have surrogate children in countries such as the US has increasingly become an option for some Chinese couples, especially wealthy ones.

Chinese state media have weighed in on the controversy. Changan Sword, an online media site backed by the central political and legal affairs commission, criticised her for taking advantage of the law and “corrupting human ethics”.

Prada did not respond to queries on Wednesday. Ms Zheng and Mr Zhang also did not answer requests for comment. – Reuters