Lo Ming Yau
Lo Ming Yau | |
---|---|
Born |
1900 British Hong Kong |
Died |
1967 (aged 66–67) British Hong Kong |
Alma mater | Peking University |
Lo Ming Yau (1900–1967) or Luo Mingyou was a Hong Kong entrepreneur and filmmaker, and a pioneer of Chinese cinema. His uncle Lo Wen-kan (羅文榦, Luo Wengan) was a major politician during the early Republican period.
Lo Ming Yau founded the Hwa Peh Film Company (華北電影公司) in Beijing in 1927. In 1930, Hwa Peh Film Company merged with Lai Man-Wai's China Sun Motion Picture Company and a few other companies in Shanghai to become United Photoplay Service, one of the biggest film studios in China.
Selected filmography
- A Spray of Plum Blossoms (1931), producer
- The Peach Girl (1931), producer
- Little Toys (1933), producer
- The Goddess (1934), producer
- Queen of Sports (1934), producer
- National Customs (1935), co-director and scriptwriter
In popular culture
Paul Chang Chung portrays Lo Ming Yau in the 1991 film Center Stage.
References
- Fu, Poshek (2005). "Rewriting Lo Ming-yau: Between China and Hong Kong". The Hong Kong – Guangdong Film Connection. Hong Kong Film Archive.
External links
- Ming-Yau Lo on IMDb
- Lo Ming-Yau at the Hong Kong Movie DataBase
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