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Ching Li (Chinese: 井莉) (1945-2017) was a Hong Kong actress popular in the 1970s. She appeared in more than 60 films, mostly by Shaw Brothers Studio . [ 1 ]
Li Ching was born in Shanghai as Li Guoying (Chinese: 李國瑛) Her parents moved to British Hong Kong in 1949. She was the youngest in her family, with 5 older brothers and 2 older sisters. [ 1 ] From a young age, she was interested in movies.
In an effort to drive forward divestitures of assets in Hong Kong and the Chinese Mainland, Li agreed to sell The Center, the fifth-tallest skyscraper in Hong Kong. [27] With a value of HK$ 40.2 billion ( US$5.15 billion ), the deal constitutes the biggest ever office space real estate sale in the Asia-Pacific region. [ 27 ]
The Sentimental Swordsman is a 1977 Hong Kong wuxia film written and directed by Chor Yuen and produced by the Shaw Brothers Studio. It stars Ti Lung, Derek Yee, Ching Li, Yueh Hua, Fan Mei-sheng and Ku Feng. The film is based on Duoqing Jianke Wuqing Jian of Gu Long's Xiaoli Feidao Series of novels.
Emily S. C. Ching (程淑姿; fl. 1999–present), Hong Kong theoretical physicist Frank Ching (born 1943), American architecture and design graphics writer and academic Julia Ching ( 秦家懿 ; 1934–2001), Chinese-born professor of religion, philosophy and East Asian studies in Canada
Li Ching (traditional Chinese: 李靜; simplified Chinese: 李静; Jyutping: lei 5 zing 6; born 7 March 1975 in Doumen, Guangdong, China) is a table tennis player from Hong Kong. He is best known for the joint silver medal he won for Hong Kong at the Athens Olympic in 2004.
Lily Li (Chinese: 李麗麗; 14 June 1950 – 27 October 2024) was a Hong Kong film and television actress.She is best known for her films The Wandering Swordsman, Executioners from Shaolin, One Foot Crane and The Young Master, and television series The Bride with White Hair, Blood Debt, Beyond the Realm of Conscience, and Demi-Gods and Semi-Devils.
The four big families of Hong Kong (Chinese: 香港四大家族) [1] [not specific enough to verify] is a term used to describe the four business families that historically rose to prominence and became influential in Hong Kong. [2] In order of influence, they are the Li, Ho, Lo and Hui families. [2]