Lau Kar Wing | |||||
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Chinese name | 劉家榮 (Traditional) | ||||
Chinese name | 刘家荣 (Simplified) | ||||
Pinyin | Liú Jiārong (Mandarin) | ||||
Jyutping | Lau4 Gaa1 Wing4 (Cantonese) | ||||
Born | 1944 (age 67–68) Jiangmen, Guangdong, China |
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Other name(s) | Liu Chia Yung Bruce Lau |
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Occupation | actor, director, action choreographer | ||||
Years active | 1964 - present | ||||
Children | Lau Wing Kin | ||||
Parents | Lau Cham (father) | ||||
Awards
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Lau Kar Wing (simplified Chinese: 刘家荣; traditional Chinese: 劉家榮; pinyin: Liú Jiārong, Liu Jiayung; born 1944) is a Hong Kong martial arts film director, action choreographer and actor.
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Born in the Xinhui District of Jiangmen in Guangdong, China, Lau Kar Wing was the fourth child of Lau Cham (劉湛), a martial arts master who studied under Lam Sai Wing, pupil of the legendary Chinese folk hero, Wong Fei Hung.
Lau began learning kung fu in his early teens. He actually began learning at his father's school, in secret. However when his older brother Lau Kar-Leung saw this, he began teaching Kar Wing himself.
Before becoming famous, Lau worked as an extra and choreographer on the black & white Wong Fei Hung films, which starred Kwan Tak Hing as the titular hero. Lau was given his start working under his father and brother in these films, and followed his brother to become a stuntman and assistant choreographer.
In the 1960s he became one of the Shaw Brothers Studio's main action choreographers, working with many directors on films such as King Boxer (1972). Lau evolved to become a director in the late 1970s. By this time he was already an accomplished actor and action choreographer outside of Shaw Brothers.
In the 1970s, Lau formed a partnership with Sammo Hung and Karl Maka. The trio started their own film production company in 1978, Gar Bo Motion Picture Company. They made just two films, before Maka left to start Cinema City. Both films starred Lau, Hung and Maka, Dirty Tiger, Crazy Frog (1978) and Odd Couple (1979). During this period, Lau continued to make films for Shaw Brothers Studio. He moved with the times, in the 1980s he alternated between his own work, and that of Sammo Hung. He also found the time to appear in several of his brother, Lau Kar-leung's films.
During the late 1980s and early 90s, Lau's output slowed down. Since 1994 he has virtually retired from the industry. One of his best known efforts from this period is Skinny Tiger, Fatty Dragon (1990), alongside his old collaborators, Sammo Hung and Karl Maka.
Kar-Wing recently worked alongside his brother Lau Kar-Leung as martial arts choreographer on the film Drunken Monkey, and was an uncredited martial arts advisor on Tsui Hark's Seven Swords. Rumors circulating suggest Kar-Wing's possible re-emergence into the film industry, as he is reportedly tied to many of his brothers' future projects.
Lau is also a skilled lion dance performer, and has demonstrated this ability in at least two films Why Me? (1985) and Once Upon a Time in China and America (1997).