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Leslie Cheung Kwok-Wing   |  |  |  |  | Select Filmography:
* Erotic Dream of Red Chamber (1978) * Teenage Dreamers (1982) * Nomad (1982) * Behind the Yellow Line (1984) * A Better Tomorrow (1986) * A Chinese Ghost Story (1987) * A Better Tomorrow 2 (1987) * Rouge (1988) * A Chinese Ghost Story 2 (1990) * Days of Being Wild (1990) * Once a Thief (1991) * The Bride With White Hair (1993) * The Eagle Shooting Heroes (1993) * Farewell, My Concubine (1993) * He's A Woman She's A Man (1994) * Ashes of Time (1994) * The Chinese Feast (1995) * The Phantom Lover (1995) * Temptress Moon (1996) * Viva Erotica (1996) * Happy Together (1997) * The Kid (1999) * Okinawa Rendezvous (2000) * Double Tap (2000) * Inner Senses (2002)
| Leslie Cheung Kwok-Wing was born in Hong Kong on September 12, 1956; the youngest of ten children, his father was a successful tailorand a largely unsuccessful father, as Leslie later recalled being a lonely and emotionally-neglected child. After receiving his education in both Hong Kong and Britain, Leslie went on to major in Textiles at Leeds University, but was called back to Hong Kong only a year later when his father became ill. Although his father hoped the young Leslie would take over the family business, Leslies destiny was changed forever when his performance of Don McLeans American Pie earned him second place in the 1977 RTV Asian Song Contest. A year later the photogenic Leslie starred in his first movieErotic Dream of Red Chamberand for the next four years he honed his acting skills in RTV television series.
He returned to the big screen in 1982, appearing in films for both the venerable Shaw Brothers and Hong Kongs New Wave filmmakers; his performance in Patrick Tams Nomad as a drifting, uncertain young man earned him his first of eight nominations for Best Actor in the Hong Kong Film Awards. After releasing four CDs, his 1984 song Monica (from the CD of the same name) won nearly every major Hong Kong music award, and his 1985 series of concerts established him as Asias biggest pop star.
Leslie followed that success with his performance in 1986s A Better Tomorrow (directed by John Woo and produced by Tsui Hark), which not only became Hong Kongs biggest film of the year, but also marked the Hong Kong film industrys emergence into global cinema. A year later Leslie received his second Best Actor nomination for A Better Tomorrow 2, and also starred for producer Tsui Hark in A Chinese Ghost Story, which became a worldwide hit. After again winning all of the major music awards in 1987 for his song No Mood to Sleep, Leslie starred in Stanley Kwans 1988 arthouse hit Rouge, and also became the first Asian star signed to represent Pepsi Cola.
In 1989, Leslie was voted number one in Commercial Radios Top Ten Most Beautiful People in Hong Kong, and he shocked his fans when he revealed that he wanted to retire from music to concentrate on acting. His decision seemed to pay off, since in 1990 he won Best Actor for his performance as the sensual womanizer Yuddy in Wong Kar-Wais Days of Being Wild, and in 1993 he starred in Chen Kaiges universally-acclaimed Farewell My Concubine, which earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Foreign Film and set a new standard for gay-themed films. As if to boldly demonstrate his diversity, that same year Leslie played a swaggering swordsman and lover to Brigitte Lins title character in Ronny Yus exquisite period fantasy The Bride With White Hair, and received a Hong Kong Film Awards Best Original Song nomination for Hung Ngaan Baak Faat (Red Face White Hair), which he not only performed but also wrote the music for. In 1994 Leslie was named Best Actor by the Hong Kong Film Critics Society, for his performances in Wong Kar-wais Ashes of Time, as well as Hes a Woman, Shes a Man, Its a Wonderful Life and Long and Winding Road. 1995 and 96 saw Leslie give two of his funniest performances, first in Tsui Harks The Chinese Feast and then in Derek Yees Viva Erotica; 1995 also saw Leslies return to music, as he released four CDs that year alone. As Hong Kong was being handed over from Britain to China in 1997, Leslie played a petulant gay lover adrift in Buenos Aires in Wong Kar-Wais Happy Together, garnering Best Actor nominations from both the Hong Kong Film Awards and Taiwans Golden Horse Awards, and in 2000 he cemented his status as Hong Kongs preeminent gay icon when he dedicated a song during one of his concerts to his longtime partner Daffy Tong.
As the Hong Kong film industry experienced a slump in the early 2000s, Leslie seemed to focus more on music, although his performances as a gun-obsessed psychotic in Double Tap and a troubled psychiatrist in Inner Senses garnered him more Best Actor nominations. On April 1, 2003, Leslie shocked his legions of fans by leaping from a 24th-floor balcony of a luxury hotel in downtown Hong Kong, leaving only a note that cited depression. His funeral services were attended by roughly 10,000 fans, and his passing was mourned by virtually every member of Hong Kongs entertainment community (where he was known simply as Gor-gor, or older brother). As director Chen Kaige wrote in memorium, Leslie was a rare flower in Hong Kongs entertainment world, which only blossoms once in a century.
Lisa Morton
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