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Yuen Wah

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Chinese name
  
元華 (traditional)

Other name(s)
  
Sam Yuen

Chinese name
  
元华 (simplified)

Name
  
Yuen Wah


Pinyin
  
Yuan Hua (Mandarin)

Role
  
Film actor

Jyutping
  
Jyun4 Waa4 (Cantonese)

Spouse
  
Evina

Yuen Wah Yuen Wah Hong Kong Cinema39s Splendid Screen Villain

Birth name
  
容志 (Traditional)Rong Zhi (Mandarin)Yung Chi (Cantonese)

Born
  
2 September 1950 (age 73) Hong Kong (
1950-09-02
)

Awards
  
Hong Kong Film Award for Best Supporting Actor

Nominations
  
Hong Kong Film Award for Best Action Choreography

Movies
  
Kung Fu Hustle, Monk Comes Down the, The Master, Dragons Forever, Mr Vampire

Similar People
  

Kid with a tattoo yuen wah vs yuen bun spear vs double broadsword


Yuen Wah (born 2 September 1950) is a Hong Kong action film actor, action choreographer, stuntman and martial artist who has appeared in over 160 films and over 20 television series.

Contents

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Yuen wah tribute


Early life

Yuen Wah Yuen Wah Hong Kong 1950 is an action film actor action

Born Yung Chi on 9 September 1950 in Hong Kong, Yuan attended the China Drama Academy, a Peking opera School in Hong Kong in the late 1950s and 1960s. He was instructed by Master Yu Jim Yuen and became a member of the Seven Little Fortunes along with fellow students including Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung, Yuen Biao, Yuen Qiu and Corey Yuen. Like the other students, he took his sifu's given name – "Yuen". In his biography, Jackie Chan stated that Yuen Wah's martial arts ability was well respected among his fellow students. After leaving the opera school, many of the students entered the Hong Kong film industry. Yuen Wah was given an anglicised stagename, Sam Yuen, but like Yuen Biao (Bill Yuen / Jimmy Yuen), the name was not used. Rather than reverting to their birth names, both retained their opera school names, as did several other former students.

Career

Yuen Wah Actor Index

Known for his agility and acrobatic skills, Yuen Wah began his film career working as Bruce Lee's stunt double in the films Fist of Fury (1972) and Enter the Dragon (1973). He also made his acting debut in Fist of Fury, as a Japanese who asks Bruce Lee's character to crawl like a dog and is soundly beaten for it. He began to receive a number of roles in Shaw Brothers films.

Yuen Wah Actor Index

Yuen's versatility, his lean, wiry frame and later, his distinctive moustache often saw him cast as the villain in most films. During the 1980s, he worked on several films with former classmates Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao, both in an action director / stunt co-ordinator capacity, and in acting roles as villainous characters. The films included Mr. Vampire (1985), My Lucky Stars (1985), Millionaire's Express (1986), Eastern Condors (1986), and Dragons Forever (1988).

Yuen Wah Yuen Wah Good Or Bad Guy He Always Delievers

During the 1990s, whilst still appearing in a number of films, Yuen began to focus on television series roles for TVB. In 1996, he starred as a Taoist priest fighting jiangshi vampires in the series The Night Journey. His comical and endearingly scrooge-like image earned him popularity on the Hong Kong television circuit. Since then, he has appeared in over 20 different television series.

In 2004, Yuen was cast as The Landlord in Stephen Chow's comedy film Kung Fu Hustle. During the 2005 Hong Kong Film Awards, his colleagues took the opportunity to award him with the award for Best Supporting Actor.

Yuen made his debut in English language film in Aiming High (1998). He appeared in another English language production, the Baz Luhrmann period film, Australia (2008), alongside Nicole Kidman and Hugh Jackman.

Filmography

Yuen Wah has starred in more than 60 films and worked on over 160. In the early 1970s, Yuen worked as a stuntman and extra, later progressing to stunt co-ordinator / action director roles, as well as full-fledged acting parts.

During the 1980s he made a number of appearances, primarily as villainous characters in the films of his former-Peking Opera school friends, Sammo Hung, Jackie Chan and Yuen Biao.

From the mid-1990s, Yuen embarked on a television career in Hong Kong. To date, he has appeared in 23 different series for broadcaster TVB. He also appeared in a show for Taiwanese channel CTS - a remake of the film A Chinese Ghost Story, entitled Eternity: A Chinese Ghost Story.

References

Yuen Wah Wikipedia


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