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Lai Man Wai

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Chinese name
  
黎民偉 (traditional)

Name
  
Lai Man-Wai

Children
  
Keng Li

Chinese name
  
黎民伟 (simplified)

Role
  
Director

Siblings
  
Beihai Li

Lai Man-Wai httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu
Ancestry
  
Xinhui, Guangdong or Sihui, Guangdong

Died
  
October 26, 1953, Hong Kong

Movies
  
Zhuangzi Tests His Wife, Romance of the Western Chamber, Love and Duty

Spouse
  
Cho-cho Lam (m. 1923–1953), Shanshan Yan (m. 1913–1920)

Similar People
  
Cho‑cho Lam, Bu Wancang, Lee Ya‑Ching

Lai Man-Wai (Chinese: 黎民偉; pinyin: Li Minwei; 1893–1953), considered the "Father of Hong Kong Cinema", was the director of the first Hong Kong film Zhuangzi Tests His Wife in 1913. In the film, Lai played the role of the wife, partly due to the reluctance of women to participate in show business at the time.

Contents

Biography

Born in Japan, of Xinhui, Guangdong origin and raised in Hong Kong, he joined Sun Yat-sen's Kuomintang party in 1911 and helped make anti-warlord movies. He was an active director during the golden years of the Shanghai movie industry from 1921 to 1928. In 1923, he founded the Minxin (China Sun) Film Company with his brother, Lai Pak-Hoi, in Hong Kong which later relocated to Shanghai. In 1930, he co-founded one of the "Big Three" studios of the 1930s, Lianhua Film Company, with Law Ming-yau. Lianhua, together with other leading Shanghai studios, was destroyed when the Empire of Japan attacked Shanghai in 1937. Lai returned to Hong Kong in 1938 and retired.

He was married to Florence Lim, a Vancouver-born Hong Kong actress. His daughter Lai Suen and granddaughter Gigi Lai are both actresses.

Memory

His story was documented in Lai Man-wai: Father of Hong Kong Cinema by Choi Kai-kwong in 2001.

Lai Man-Wai is portrayed in Stanley Kwan's 1992 biopic of actress Ruan Lingyu, Centre Stage by Hong Kong actor, Waise Lee.

Partial filmography

  • Zhuangzi Tests His Wife (1913)
  • Romance of the Western Chamber (Chinese: 西廂記; pinyin: xixiangji) (1927) directed with Hou Yao
  • A Page of History (1941). Documentary. Lai Man-Wai followed Sun Yat-sen during the 1920s.
  • References

    Lai Man-Wai Wikipedia