Biography
A quick eye would have caught him as one of Han's (Shek Kien) guards (the one held by Prisoners against the bars during Bruce Lee's battle using the Double-sticks). Yet, this veteran funny man can be seen in just about anything that will make you laugh. Somewhat more outlandish than Wong Yu, yet he fits right in with the likes of men just as silly as himself - Dean Shek and Ho Pai-Kuang to name a few.
He's played with the "Just-as-silly-as-they-are-talented" - Yuen Clan, in the excellently choreographed The Buddhist Fist. He's worked with some of the major studios in the business and with the likes of some of their best directors including Liu Chia-Liang (Dirty Ho), Liu Chia-Yung (Dirty Kung Fu) and has even worked with Yung's Golden Harvest buddy - Samo Hung (The Victim).
He and Tu Shiao Ming seem to have that "Eye-Thing" going (crossing of the eyes) all the time, I guess trying to see who's the better man (he wins easily). In The Fists, The Kicks, & The Evils, he hung around with equally insane Chan Lau, who can bring new meaning to the word silly. In the film, The Master Strikes Back, he brought his brand of Comedy and left the (real) fighting to the experts. It's rare, for him to over-do his comedic parts (as that would be too excessive).
He's played with the "Just-as-silly-as-they-are-talented" - Yuen Clan, in the excellently choreographed The Buddhist Fist. He's worked with some of the major studios in the business and with the likes of some of their best directors including Liu Chia-Liang (Dirty Ho), Liu Chia-Yung (Dirty Kung Fu) and has even worked with Yung's Golden Harvest buddy - Samo Hung (The Victim).
He and Tu Shiao Ming seem to have that "Eye-Thing" going (crossing of the eyes) all the time, I guess trying to see who's the better man (he wins easily). In The Fists, The Kicks, & The Evils, he hung around with equally insane Chan Lau, who can bring new meaning to the word silly. In the film, The Master Strikes Back, he brought his brand of Comedy and left the (real) fighting to the experts. It's rare, for him to over-do his comedic parts (as that would be too excessive).
Yet, I was impressed with his dramatic acting in the excellent Opium & The Kung Fu Master, starring Shaw veteran Ti Lung . Here he played a man so caught up in smoking Opium, that it causes him to lose everything (including his life). This was truly one of his finer moments as an actor. As one of the "3 Holy-Fools", in director Tang Chia's other Shaw hit - Shaolin Prince, it's safe to say that this guy will be a fool, until the end.