Connie Chan

Connie Chan Po-chu (born 1 January 1947) was born to impoverished parents, one of at least nine siblings, in Guangdong, China. To increase their children's chances of survival, Chan's birth parents gave away some of their youngest to other families. As a result, Chan was adopted by Chan Fei-nung and his wife, Kung Fan-hung, who were renowned Cantonese opera stars. During the 1960s, Connie Chan was one of Hong Kong cinema's most beloved teen idols.

Connie Chan
Chinese: 陳寶珠
Born (1947-01-01) 1 January 1947
Guangzhou, Guangdong, China
Other namesConnie Chan Po-chu, Chan Poh-Chee, Chan Pao-Chu, Chen Po-Chu, Pearl Chan
OccupationSinger, actress
Years active1956–present
Spouse(s)Jimmy Yeung (1974–1982)
ChildrenDexter Yeung (b. 1975)
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese陳寶珠
Simplified Chinese陈宝珠
Musical career
GenresCantonese opera, Cantopop
InstrumentsSinging

She made more than 230 films in a variety of genres: from traditional Cantonese opera and wuxia movies to contemporary youth musicals; action films to comedies; melodramas and romances. Owing to her popularity she was dubbed "The Movie-Fan Princess". Her godfather is actor Cho Tat Wah. She has a son named Dexter Yeung, who stars in the 2008 TVB Series Wasabi Mon Amour and Moonlight Resonance.

Early life

At the age of 5 and a half she started learning Cantonese opera from her adoptive parents and later became an apprentice of Peking opera master Fen Juhua, who was one of the first wuxia actresses in Shanghai during the 1920s. When Connie was nine, she began performing onstage. One year later she and Leung Bo-chu (the daughter of the great comic actor and opera clown Leung Sing-po) were the leading stars of the Double Chu Opera Troupe. In 1958, Connie made her film debut in the Cantonese opera Madam Chun Heung-lin. The following year she played in two Mandarin-language productions for the MP&GI studio: as a widow's daughter in Yue Feng's melodrama For Better, For Worse and as a young boy in Tao Qin's comedy The Scout Master. That same year she also played the role of a filial son in Breaking the Coffin to Rescue Mother.

During her teenage years, Connie appeared more and more frequently on the silver screen: at first mostly in Cantonese operas (often with the legendary Master Yam Kim-fai, who had taken Connie as her beloved student); but later almost exclusively in wuxia movies (usually in the company of veteran action stars Yu So Chow, Cho Tat Wah, and perennial bad guy Shih Kien). She also joined the Sin-Hok Kong-luen Film Company's stable of young stars (which included Suet Nei, Nancy Sit Ka-yin, and Kenneth Tsang Kong) and took part in director Chan Lit-ban's ground-breaking adaptations of Jin Yong's serialised novels, The Golden Hairpin (1963–64) and The Snowflake Sword (1964). Released in three and four parts, these films were blockbuster extravaganzas popular for their intricate plots, special effects, and complex action choreography. Two films in 1965 would give a boost to Chan's career: The Six-Fingered Lord of the Lute (in which she played the lead male role and which was publicised with the creation of her very own fanclub) and The Black Rose (in which director Chor Yuen had the foresight to change her image by putting her in a contemporary role as a modern-day Robin Hood).

In 1966, her most frequent on-screen partner was Josephine Siao, who had also studied opera under Fen Juhua. The two were often cast as disciples of the same master and sometimes—when Connie played the male lead —as young heroes in love. Capitalizing on their chemistry, veteran director Lee Tit gave them the lead roles in Eternal Love, his remake of a popular opera from the 1950s. Even more successful was Chan Wan's Colourful Youth, which became the box office champ of the year and set the trend for Western-style musicals in Cantonese cinema. From then on, Connie and Josephine appeared increasingly in films with contemporary settings but less frequently in each other's company. Both of them were paired off with a variety of leading men in a profusion of comedies, musicals, romances, and action movies. Movie-Fan Princess was a prototype combo of all four genres and, more significantly, the beginning of Connie's four-year on-screen romance with her most popular leading man, Lui Kei. And then there was Lady Bond, Cantonese cinema's answer to 007 that spawned three sequels and fueled the transition from traditional wuxia pictures to contemporary action movies.

Connie's frenetic film output of the previous two years started to slow down a bit. Her contemporary action films had played themselves out and she settled down on-screen with leading man Lui Kei, who now became her most frequent costar in a medley of comedies, musicals, and romances—most of them directed by Wong Yiu and Chan Wan, who were responsible for the Chi-luen Film Company's signature youth musicals. With the help of her mother, Connie founded her own film company in 1968. Hung Bo's inaugural feature Teenage Love (1968) paired her with Lui Kei. Connie's mother produced the film and she and Connie's father had small roles. Love With a Malaysian Girl (1969) and Her Tender Love (1969), both written and directed by Lui Kei, were the only other films produced through Hung Bo. Within a year, Connie stopped making films altogether and moved to San Francisco to finish her education. When she returned to Hong Kong in 1972, she made one last film with director Chor Yuen, who had recently signed on with Shaw Brothers. The Lizard, a Mandarin-language production, was Connie's final farewell to the silver screen.

After an absence of more than 25 years, Connie Chan emerged from retirement in 1999 to star in a stage production based on the life of her Master, Yam Kim-fai. Sentimental Journey won great acclaim and broke records with its 100-performance run; it was brought back for a six-week revival in 2005. After Sentimental Journey, Connie starred alongside Tony Leung Ka-Fai and Carina Lau in the stage play Red Boat, which ran for 64 performances. The play is an homage to the Cantonese Opera troupes that traditionally travelled by boat through the Pearl River delta region of China. In 2003 she staged a series of spectacular concerts, delighting fans with her cherished film songs and some Cantonese opera classics; her guest stars included Fung Bo-bo, Nancy Sit Ka-yin, and Maggie Cheung Ho-yee (who played the character based on Connie in the TVB television series Old Time Buddy and the film Those Were the Days).

On 4 February 2006 she performed with the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra. Later that year she starred with Adam Cheng in the stage play Only You, which ran for 70 performances. In January 2007 Connie was honoured with a lifetime achievement award at the Hong Kong Drama Awards.

Filmography

  • 1959 For Better, For Worse
  • 1959 Breaking the Coffin to Rescue Mother
  • 1960 The Unroyal Prince
  • 1960 Filial Piety
  • 1960 Good Humanity
  • Han Gong Gate (1961)
  • Beauty (1961)
  • The Monkey King Stormed the Sea Palace (1962)
  • 1962 Battle at Sizhou
  • How the Magic Boy on the Mythical Crane Slew the Dragon and Saved His Mother (1962)
  • 1963 The Golden Coat, Parts 1-2
  • Red Thread Steals a Precious Box (1963)
  • The Golden Hairpin, Parts 2-4 (1963–64)
  • Story of the Sword and the Sabre (1965)
  • The Snowflake Sword, Parts 1-4 (1964)
  • 1964 The Flying Fox (aka The Purple Lightning Sword) [1]
  • 1965 The Black Rose
  • 1965 The Six-Fingered Lord of the Lute, Parts 1-3
  • 1965 The Furious Buddha’s Palm
  • 1966 Eternal Love
  • Movie-Fan Princess (1966)
  • Aftermath of a Fire, Parts 1-2 (1966)
  • Girls Are Flowers (1966)
  • The Dutiful Daughter Zhu Zhu (1966)
  • The Black Killer (1967)
  • Waste Not Our Youth (1967)
  • A Glamorous Christmas Night (1967)
  • Paragon of Sword and Knife, Parts 1-2 (1967–68)
  • Opposite Love (1968)
  • Four Gentlemanly Flowers (1968)
  • The Reincarnation of Lady Plum Blossom (1968)
  • Won’t You Give Me a Kiss? (1968)
  • Teenage Love (1968)
  • Young, Pregnant and Unmarried (1968)
  • The Dragon Fortress (1968)
  • Beauty in the Mist (1968)
  • Love with a Malaysian Girl (1969)
  • Her Tender Love (1969)
  • The Young Girl Dares Not Homeward (1970)
  • I’ll Get You One Day (1970)
  • The Lizard (1972)

Additional sources

  • Chan Po-chu—The Princess of Movie Fans. Hong Kong: Urban Council of Hong Kong, 1999.
  • The Making of Martial Arts Films—As Told by Filmmakers and Stars. Hong Kong: Urban Council of Hong Kong, 1999. ISBN 978-962-8050-06-2
  • The Restless Breed: Cantonese Stars of the Sixties. Hong Kong: Urban Council of Hong Kong, 1996. ISBN 978-962-7040-50-7
  • A Study of the Hong Kong Swordplay Film (1945–1980); Hong Kong: Urban Council of Hong Kong, 1981.
  • Fonoroff, Paul. Silver Light: A Pictorial History of Hong Kong Cinema 1920–1970. Hong Kong: Joint Publishing, 1997. ISBN 978-962-04-1304-9
  • Kar, Law and Frank Bren. Hong Kong Cinema: A Cross-Cultural View. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2004. ISBN 978-0-8108-4986-0
  • Teo, Stephen. Hong Kong Cinema: The Extra Dimensions. London: British Film Institute, 1997. ISBN 978-0-85170-514-9

References

  1. "The Flying Fox". hkmdb.com. 18 March 1964. Retrieved 5 January 2021.

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