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Benedict Wong (born 3 July 1971) [1] [2] is a British actor. He began his career on stage before starring in the film Dirty Pretty Things (2003), which earned him a British Independent Film Award nomination, and the BBC sitcom 15 Storeys High (2002–2004).
Wong returned to Hong Kong after finishing his studies. [2] His ancestors had migrated from China to Vietnam, and used the surname Huỳnh, the Vietnamese reading of the Chinese character pronounced Wong in Cantonese. [3] His brother, François Wong, also took part in Mr. Hong Kong, and became a TVB artiste before becoming an accountant. [2]
James Wong Jim (Chinese: 黃霑; Jyutping: wong4 zim1; Cantonese Yale: wòhng jīm; 18 March 1941 – 24 November 2004, also known as "霑叔" or "Uncle Jim") was a Cantopop lyricist and songwriter based primarily in Hong Kong.
Wong Yue Sang (see #1 above) and Chu Ngai Kong (see #4 above) came up with most of the well-known pieces. Mr. Wong Sum Fan [3] (王心帆 [Note 2] 1896 to August, 1992) refused to write lyrics, disliking those easy to sing modern melodies not written by the two above. (traditional versus easy for beginners, not veterans like Yam who can sing ...
Saddled with huge debts after the pandemic ruined his wedding planner business, 50-something Dominic Ngai (Wong) is offered a half-share in a funeral business by Ming (Paul Chun-pai), the retiring ...
Victor Wong was fluent with both English and Cantonese, which helped lead his acting career to Hong Kong. [2] Wong and his family moved to Courtland, California when he was two years old after his father took a job as teacher and principal at a school for the children of local Chinese laborers. The family would move back to Chinatown within ...
Michael Wong Kong Leong (Chinese: 王光良; pinyin: Wáng Guāngliáng; born 30 August 1970), also known as Guang Liang, is a Malaysian singer and songwriter. He has sung and written many love-themed ballads and love songs , many of which have high popularity.
Tiger Cage 3 (Cantonese: 冷面狙擊手, literally "Cold-Faced Shooter") is a 1991 Hong Kong action film directed by Yuen Woo-ping.Its English title positions it as a sequel to the 1988 film Tiger Cage and its 1990 sequel Tiger Cage 2, which were also directed by Yuen, though this film features a new storyline with none of the main cast members returning.