Yuen Biao

@Actors, Timeline and Childhood

Yuen Biao is a seasoned Hong-Kong actor, stunt director, action choreographer, and a martial artist

Jul 26, 1957

CanadianFilm & Theater PersonalitiesActorsMartial ArtistsLeo Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: July 26, 1957
  • Nationality: Canadian
  • Famous: Film & Theater Personalities, Actors, Martial Artists
  • Nick names: Bill Yuen, Jimmy Yuen
  • Spouses: Didi Pang (1984–present)
  • Childrens: Ha Ming Chak, Ha Yi Pui
  • Birth Place: Castle Peak Road, British Hong Kong

Yuen Biao born at

Castle Peak Road, British Hong Kong

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Birth Place

Yuen Biao dated actress Didi Pang for sometime in the early 80s before getting married to her in 1984. The couple has two sons together.

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Personal Life

Yuen lives in Hong Kong with his family but he also happens to have a house in Canada, where he visits during his holidays. He is an avid golfer.

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Personal Life

Yuen Biao was born Ha Lingchun on July 26, 1957 in British Hong Kong at his parents’ residence in Castle Peak Road to parents Ha Kwong-Tai and Ha Sau-Ying. He was the fifth child in the massive middle class Chinese family of eight children. Like most of his elder brothers and sisters, he was not sent to a regular school and was enrolled into the China Drama Academy in the Peking Opera School at the age of 5.

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Childhood & Early Life

His parents were heavily influenced by China’s heritage of Kung Fu and Bruce Lee was a renowned name back when he was growing up. Growing up in Hong Kong, Yuen became a major fan of martial artists and became determined to follow the same path as his ideals. During his time at the academy, he was the youngest student there and hence he was named Yuen Biao, which meant Little Tiger in English.

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Childhood & Early Life

Since his very early days at the academy, he showed immense interest in learning Kung Fu and by the time he was a teenager, he was better at it than many older students. Jackie Chan later stated in his biography that Yuen was fastest learner among them all and had the natural skills for Kung Fu. He gave example of an instance when Yuen was asked to perform a back flip on his first day at the academy and he did it.

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Childhood & Early Life

There at the academy, he studied alongside Jackie Chan, Corey Yuen, Yuen Wah and several other people who later went on forge successful careers as martial artists in the Hong Kong film industry. Yuen finished his basic education from the school till the age of 16. After that, he went on looking for work in the Hong Kong film industry, following the footsteps of several of his seniors from the academy.

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Childhood & Early Life

During the early stages of his career, Yuen found it very difficult to find acting roles in films and he resorted to doing extra roles and became assistant to stunt directors. He made his debut with the 1972 film ‘Fist of Fury’ starring Bruce Lee in the leading role. In the film, Yuen worked as a stuntman. In his second film of the year titled ‘Hapkido’, he repeated his role as a stuntman and also played a small role.

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Career

In his last film of the year titled ‘The Fourteen Amazons’, he shrugged off his image as a mere stuntman and played a supporting role for the first time in his career. He followed it up with small roles in low budget films such as ‘Death Blow’ and ‘The Master of Kung Fu’. In 1973, for the film ‘Enter the Dragon’, he became the stunt double for Bruce Lee.

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Career

For the next few years, Yuen carried on doing more than half a dozen films each year where he either did a supporting role or worked as a stuntmen and in some instances, he did both. Some of the most notable of his titles from the mid 70s are ‘The Shrine of Ultimate Bliss’, ‘The Man From Hong Kong’, ‘Secret Rivals’, ‘Challenge for the Master’ and ‘Broken Oath’.

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Career

Keeping up with the traditions of Chinese actors using English names as their maiden names for the international prints of their films, Yuen decided to change his first name to Bill. He also used the name Jimmie on some films. This was mostly pushed by the producers who wanted to encash the success of Jackie Chan and Bruce Lee. But it did not sit down well with Yuen and he later decided to keep his Chinese name as his first name on screen.

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Career

Towards the late 70s and early 80s, his former classmates Jackie Chan and Sammo Hung, who were enjoying a significant success in the national and international film industry, supported him. As a result of several recommendations, Yuen started getting bigger roles in films. Sammo Hung also ended up directing an action comedy film ‘Knockabout’, where he casted Yuen in the first leading role of his career.

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Career