Alan Tang

Alan Tang Kwong-Wing (20 September 1946 – 29 March 2011) was a Hong Kong film actor, producer and director. Tang was part of the "Silver Rat Squad (銀色鼠隊)", a 1970s pop band formed in Hong Kong.

Tang was born in Guangzhou, Guangdong, China. He was the youngest of four children, having two older brothers and one older sister.

His secondary education was at the New Method College. After graduation, he received a full scholarship to the University of Hong Kong Law School. He deferred his acceptance to pursue an acting career.

His first starring role was at age 16 in the 1963 film The Student Prince, a role he landed after some school friends showed his picture to the people making a movie at their secondary school. His role in this early movie earned him the nickname of "The Student Prince."

Upon graduation from secondary school, Tang acted in Hong Kong youth films starring Josephine Siao, Chen Chen, and Connie Chan Po-chu throughout the 1960s. Tang was often voted "Best Male Actor" by film magazines.

Tang found fame when he moved to Taiwan during the 1970s, where he had made over 60 feature films. The films he made were often dramas and romances, where he would often pair off with Brigitte Lin in such films as Run Lover Run.

It was reported that Tang made a salary of HK$150,000 per picture because of his popularity. In one 1974 article, Tang said that he was working on six movies at the same time; however, he only worked on one film a day and that made it difficult for producers. In 1974, Tang not only starred in The Splendid Love in Winter with Chen Chen, but he also produced it. Also that same year, the film Dynamite Brothers was released, co-starring with American Football hero Timothy Brown and James Hong. Tang continued his popular film career in both Hong Kong and Taiwan in the late 1970s. In 1977, Tang starred in director John Lo Mar's romance movie Impetuous Fire with up-and-coming teenage star Candice Yu. The movie was primarily shot in Macau, which opened up Tang's business ventures there.

Later in 1977, he formed the production company, The Wing-Scope Company.

With Tang working in Taiwan and his girlfriend at the time (Janet Yim) in Hong Kong, the pair had occasional difficulties, especially since the press reported their every move. Tang and Janet, however, remained together, in spite of living under constant scrutiny.

In 1987, Tang established another production company, In-Gear Film Production Co., Ltd., working alongside his brother, producer/presenter Rover Tang, and continued to produce and act in films, establishing himself as an action star. He appeared in a number of films—generally of the triad genre—such as Flaming Brothers, Gangland Odyssey, Return Engagement, Gun n' Rose and The Black Panther Warriors. He has also produced two films directed by Wong Kar-wai--As Tears Go By and Days of Being Wild.

In the mid-1980s, Wong Kar-wai became a scriptwriter/director at Wing-Scope and In-Gear. He had written the scripts for the films, Return Engagement and Flaming Brothers, which both starred Tang.

Wong's current nostalgic artsy style took shape during his apprenticeship with Tang, who invested in the first movie Wong directed, As Tears Go By. Wong's career took off when he directed the film Days of Being Wild in 1990, despite Tang losing millions of invested dollars.

Following his retirement, Media Asia Group had gained rights to release his In-Gear film titles on DVD. Throughout the 1990s, Tang pursued a second career in the restaurant business.

Tang was an active philanthropist in Hong Kong and mainland China as both an individual and an involved Rotarian. According to the posthumous memoirs of democracy activist Szeto Wah, Tang lent significant financial and material support to help activists flee from China after the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. Szeto said Tang helped out Operation Yellowbird by exerting his great influence in Macau and "got involved personally to save time but he remained low-key and never claimed his share of glory."

On 29 March 2011, Tang died in his home in Ho Man Tin at around 9 pm from a heart attack.

In December 2013, Next Magazine obtained the video of an interview with the late actress Yammie Lam in which she said that she had been raped by two "big brothers" in the Hong Kong entertainment industry more than two decades before. Lam stated that the first man, who had raped her after consuming alcohol, had died recently, no names were mentioned in the original video released in 2013. In January 2018, Chinese tabloid journalist Zhuo Wei [zh] uploaded a self-proclaimed uncensored video of Lam's interview. However, several Hong Kong media outlets cast doubts on the video as it appeared to be altered, including added noise cancellation and re-dubbed with a woman's voice, while Yammie Lam spoke to a male interviewer. In the re-dubbed video, Eric Tsang and Alan Tang's names were spoken by the questioner, not Yammie Lam herself. Tsang has denied the allegation and taken legal actions. According to video expert analysis, the original interview was recorded in 2006, and the video released in 2018 was proven fabricated. Tsang said the alleged incident was already the subject of a 2006 defamation suit that he won. “We already cleared our name. But after all these years, people still bring this up, I want to put the cyber-bullying to an end,” he said.

Details

Vorname:Alan
Geburtsdatum:20.09.1946 (♍ Jungfrau)
Geburtsort:Guangzhou
Sterbedatum:29.03.2011
Sterbeort:Ho Man Tin
Alter:64Jahre 6Monate 9Tage
Nationalität:Hongkong
Geschlecht:♂männlich
Berufe:Filmregisseur, Schauspieler,

Merkmalsdaten

GND:N/A
LCCN:N/A
NDL:N/A
VIAF:41636651
BnF:N/A
ISNI:N/A
LCNAF:no2008002238
Filmportal:N/A
IMDB:N/A
Datenstand: 28.04.2024 05:03:35Uhr