10: Alan Leong
Alan Leong, born on February 1, 1958 in Hong Kong, with an ancestral origin in Guangdong, is an actor and singer in Hong Kong, China. Graduated from the Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
In 2004, he won the Best Supporting Actor at the 23rd Hong Kong Film Awards for his role in The Great Man, and in December 2005, he returned from a successful expedition to Antarctica, becoming the first Asian artist to land in Antarctica. 2006, he won the Best Actor at the 25th Hong Kong Film Awards for his role in Triad. In 2010, he acted in the movie "Dee's Empire" directed by Tsui Hark. 2013, he won the Best Actor Award at the Hong Kong Film Awards for the fourth time with "Cold War". 2014, he acted in the 3D version of "The Goddess of Fortune".
9: Tony Leung Chiu-wai
Tony Leung Chiu-wai (June 27, 1962 -) was born in Hong Kong, with an ancestral home in Taishan, Guangdong. His parents were divorced when he was young and his family was poor. he dropped out of school at the age of 15 and worked as a newspaper boy, an accountant and sold electrical appliances. Leung and his sister were raised by their mother alone. Introduced by his good friend Stephen Chow, he became a television actor in the 1982 TVB Artiste Practice Course and graduated from the 11th Artiste Training Course of Hong Kong TVB in 1983. [1]
Leung began by hosting a children's program, the Four Thirty Shuttle program. He soon moved into drama. He made dramas such as The Prodigal Son of Fragrant City, The Story of the Deer and the Tripod, The Generals of the Yang Family, The New Zachary, The Legend of the Leaning Heavenly Emperor and the Dragon Slayer, The Greatest Generation, The Challenge, The Grand Canal, and Chivalry. He became famous in TV dramas such as "The Great Canal" and "The Warriors", but he did not limit himself to comedies, and had many performances in films such as "City of Sorrows" (1989) and "Blood on the Streets" (1990).
8: Andy Lau
Andy Lau (Andy Lau), born in September 1961 in Hong Kong, China, is a well-known actor, singer, lyricist, producer, filmmaker, and one of the representative artists of film and television singing.
In 1982, Andy Lau graduated from TVB's Artistic Training Class with a perfect score and signed a contract to start his career, and in the same year, he became popular with "The Falcon", and in 1983, he starred in "The Divine Eagles", which set a record of 62 ratings in Hong Kong, and was later hidden by TVB for refusing to sign a five-year long contract. He also starred in the movie "The Undiscovered", "The Secret War", "Infernal Affairs" and "Blind Detective".
In 1990, he became a singing sensation with his album "Can You Do It", singing songs such as "Water of Forgetfulness", "Chinese People", "Ice Rain", etc. In 1991, he founded a film company, and in 2005, he initiated the Asian New Star Directing Program, which produced films such as "Made in Hong Kong", "Crazy Stone", and "Sister Peach", etc. He became an ambassador for the Chinese Film Media Awards for the Centennial of Chinese Cinema in 2005, and was awarded the Busan Pusan Film Awards in 2006 for his work in the film "The Cinema of the Century". In 2005, he became the ambassador of Chinese Film Media Awards for the Chinese Film Centennial, and in 2006, he was honored with the Most Contributing Filmmaker in Asia Award at the Pusan International Film Festival. In addition to his acting career, Andy Lau is passionate about public welfare and philanthropy, founded the Andy Lau Charitable Foundation in 1994, and was named one of the "Ten Outstanding Young Persons of the World" in 2000, and starred in the films "My Secret Agent Grandpa" and "Saving Mr. Wu" in 2015. On June 24, 2016, he won the 16th Chinese Film Huabiao Award for Outstanding Actor for Lost Orphan.
On July 1, 2016, Andy Lau was awarded the Bronze Bauhinia Medal.
7: Jet Li
Jet Li, born April 26, 1963 in Beijing, is a Chinese-Singaporean film actor, kung fu star, martial artist, philanthropist, and entrepreneur.
He won the National All-Around Wushu Championship for five consecutive years from 1975 to 1979, and starred in the movie Shaolin Temple in 1982, which raised his popularity, and the Wong Fei Hung series after 1991, which did well, portraying classic roles such as Fong Sai Yuk, Zhang San Fung, Huo Yuanjia, Chen Zhen, and Ling Fuchong, etc. He went to the United States to develop in Hollywood after 1997, and during that time, he starred in The Deadly Romeo, The Kiss of the Dragon", "Daredevil" 1, 2, 3 and many other blockbusters.
In 2013, he was awarded the title of "Chinese Wushu 30 years of the most influential people in martial arts"
6: Chow Yun Fat
Chow Yun Fat (Chow Yun fat), born May 18, 1955 in Hong Kong, Lamma Island, origin: Kaiping, Guangdong. He is a Chinese movie and television actor, photographer, and a first-class actor.
In 1974, he graduated from the TVB artist training class, starred in more than 20 episodes of "The Man in the Net", "Frenzy", "Shanghai Tang", etc. He started his career in the movie industry in 1976, and in the 80's, with the "Heroes", "The God of Gamblers" and other films in Hong Kong's cinematic heyday opened up the genre of gunfighting films, gambling films, etc., and became the representative figure of Hong Kong's "aesthetics of violence" style of film. "In the 1990s, he was known as "Double Chow Yat-sing" together with Jackie Chan and Stephen Chow, and went to Hollywood in 1995. He starred in "Anna and the King", "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" and many other movies of different styles, and has twice served as an Oscar guest of honor. 1999, he left his handprints on the "Central Plaza" in Chinatown, Los Angeles, and was awarded the Special Achievement Award at the Deauville Asian Film Festival in France in 2000, and became one of America's most popular gunfighters for his portrayal of "Bloodshed" and other films in 2004.
In 2004, he became one of the top three actors with the most DVD collections in the U.S. In 2005, he was honored by Hong Kong netizens as the No. 1 "Classic TV Drama Star"; in 2007, he was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award by AZN TV's "Asian Excellence Awards Ceremony".
In addition, Chow Yun Fat is also passionate about public welfare, in 2000 by the United States "Time" Weekly selected as one of the seven "Earth celebrity heroes", in 2003 was awarded the HKSAR Government Silver Bauhinia Star, the same year, its struggle was written into the first year of secondary school language textbooks published by Hong Kong Kai Si Publishing House. In the same year, his struggle was written into the first grade language textbook of secondary school published by Hong Kong Keith Publishing Company.
5: Jackie Chan
Jackie Chan, born on April 7, 1954 in Hong Kong's Central and Western District, with an ancestral home in Wuhu, Anhui Province, is a first-class actor, a Greater China film industry and an international kung fu movie star. He specializes in kung fu films, with the film's harmonic style and Yuen Woo-ping's design of lively, dexterous and vaudevillian martial arts movements, and his starring films have grossed more than $20 billion at the global box office.
In 1960, he entered the Chinese Theatre School to study opera, and then entered the film industry as a martial arts teacher. 1978, Jackie Chan shot "Snake Difficult Hands" and "Drunken Fist", and became famous. 1994, he starred in the movie "The Red Zone", which was released in the U.S., and was a huge hit, which made him successfully break into Hollywood. 1997, Hong Kong's return to the country, when Jiang Zemin toasted Jackie Chan at a banquet as "big brother", he was called "big brother", which was the first time that he had been in Hong Kong in the past. "In 2006, he was named one of Forbes magazine's "Top 10 Stars of Philanthropy". 2007, Jackie Chan was elected by the Korean people as the representative of the "Big Brother". In 2007, Jackie Chan was voted by the South Korean people as one of the "Greatest People of China" after Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping, and ranked No. 3. 2012 On August 24th, 2012, the New York Times named Jackie Chan the No. 1 in the list of the 20 Greatest Action Stars of All Time. 2013 Jackie Chan was elected as a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC). 2014 Jackie Chan was elected as the President of the Hong Kong Performing Artists Guild. President of the Hong Kong Performing Artists Guild. Jackie Chan and Chow Yun-Fat, Stephen Chow, and known as "double week one into".
On August 30, 2016, Jackie Chan was awarded the Oscar Lifetime Achievement Honorary Award, the first Chinese to win.
4: Stephen Chow (Stephen Chow), born June 22, 1962 in Hong Kong, China, Chinese comedy actor, director, screenwriter, producer, producer, producer.
Because of his unique "nonsensical" (illogical) personal interpretation; through his comedy film and television works, and is widely accepted by the Chinese in Hong Kong and overseas, and even as far as the North American region. His representative film and television works include "Tong Pak Fu Po Po", "Journey to the West", "Ling Ling Paint", "God of Food", "The King of Comedy", "The Runaway", etc. In 2003, he was elected as Time Magazine's "Person of the Year", and selected as the cover character of "Asian Heroes". In 2004, "Kung Fu" set box office records for Chinese-language films in dozens of countries and regions, and was named one of the "Top Ten Best Films of 2005" by Time Magazine.
In 2013, he directed "Journey to the West", which set a new record for the highest-grossing Chinese-language film in the world, and was elected as a member of the Guangdong Provincial Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) in the same year.
2015 directed the sci-fi film The Mermaid; the digitally remastered Kung Fu 3D returned to the big screen on January 15, 2015, for the 10th anniversary of the release of Kung Fu.
3: Leslie Cheung
Leslie Cheung (September 12, 1956 - April 1, 2003), whose real name is Cheung Fat Chung, is one of the most successful representatives of the singing and movie industry in the Greater China region, and is a Hong Kong-born singer, actor, record and film producer, widely influential in the Greater China region, and one of the most successful representatives of the multi-disciplinary development of the acting circle. He is one of the most successful representatives of Hong Kong's music industry in the 1980s. He has worked as a record producer, concert art director and line dancer, soundtrack, movie scriptwriter, movie director and movie producer.
In 1978, he began acting in TV dramas, showing his delicate acting style in "The Women in My Family", and in the late 80s, he shifted his career to the movie industry, successfully interpreting different types of roles, such as Ning Choi San, Xuk Tsai Chai, Ching Dieyi, and Ouyang Feng, etc. He was elected as the best actor of the Hong Kong Film Awards in 1991 for "Legend of Alfie", and starred in the movie "Farewell My Concubine", which is the first movie to be awarded the Cannes International Film Award, and the first to be awarded the Cannes International Film Award for the first time. In 1993, he starred in "Farewell My Concubine", which was the first film in Chinese film history to win the Palme d'Or at the Cannes International Film Festival, breaking the box office record for a Chinese literary film in the U.S. With this film, he also attracted widespread attention from the international film industry, winning the Best Actor Award at the Japan Film Critics Awards and the Special Contribution Award at the China Film Performing Arts Society Awards. In 1998, he became the first Asian actor to serve as a jury member at the Berlin International Film Festival; in 2005, he was selected as one of the 100 Outstanding Actors of the Centennial of Chinese Cinema; and in 2010, he was selected as one of the 25 Greatest Asian Actors of All Time by CNN.
April 1, 2003 at 6:43 pm, Zhang Guorong depression attack from the Mandarin Oriental Hotel, Hong Kong, twenty-fourth floor fall, emergency sent to the Queen Mary Hospital, by the doctor's test before admission has died (18:45), the Queen Mary Hospital at 19:06 minutes declared that the resuscitation is ineffective, the end of the year 46 years old.
2: Xu Guanjie
Xu Guanjie was born on September 6, 1948 in Guangzhou, Hong Kong singer, actor, musician, music composer, in the Hong Kong music industry is honored as the "God of Song", "Hong Kong pop music grandfather" and "Guangdong song originator". In the Hong Kong music industry, he is honored as the "God of Song", the "Grandmaster of Hong Kong Pop Music" and the "Ancestor of Cantonese Song". He starred in the movie "Ghosts and Stars", which broke the highest box office record for a Hong Kong movie. The movie "Half a Catty" was ranked second among the top 100 Hong Kong movies of the last century. The "Best Buddies" series is the most successful series of films in the history of Hong Kong cinema.
1: Bruce Lee
Bruce Lee (Bruce Jun Fan Lee,) formerly known as Li Zhenfan, was born in 1940 in San Francisco, California, United States, and is originally from the town of Junan, Shunde, Guangdong, China. He was a pioneer of change in the world of martial arts, martial arts technician, martial arts philosopher, UFC pioneer, father of MMA, martial arts master, pioneer of kung fu films and founder of Jeet Kune Do, Chinese martial arts movie actor, the first global promoter of Chinese kung fu, and the first Chinese actor in Hollywood.
In 1962, Bruce Lee opened the Zhenfan Martial Arts School, and in 1967, he created his own version of Jeet Kune Do, and died in Hong Kong on July 20, 1973, at the age of 33. In 1979, the city of Los Angeles designated the opening day of the remake of The Game of Death, June 8, as "Bruce Lee Day" (July 7), which is a day of celebration for Bruce Lee, and a day to celebrate the death of Bruce Lee. Bruce Lee Day" (July 8 is a mistranslation). 1993, the United States issued a commemorative bill for the 20th anniversary of Bruce Lee's death, and the Hollywood Walk of Fame was paved with a commemorative Bruce Lee star emblem. In the same year, he was awarded the "Lifetime Achievement Award" by the Hong Kong Film Awards, and in November 1998, he was awarded the "Wushu Movie Superstar Award" by the Chinese Wushu Association; in 1999, Time Magazine listed the heroes and icons of the 20th century, and Bruce Lee was one of them. In 1999, Time Magazine published a list of heroes and icons of the 20th century, in which Bruce Lee was listed together with the late Princess Diana of England and President John F. Kennedy of the USA. In 2000, the U.S. government announced the issuance of a set of stamps commemorating the 60th anniversary of Bruce Lee's birth, which was the third anniversary of Bruce Lee's birth after Marilyn Monroe and James Bond. -In November 2008, the world's largest Bruce Lee Memorial Hall opened in his hometown of Shunde Junan Town, with a total site area of 37,000 square meters. The total land area is 37,000 square meters.