View Shopping Cart Your Famous Chinese Account Shopping Help Famous Chinese Homepage China Chinese Chinese Culture Chinese Restaurant & Chinese Food Travel to China Chinese Economy & Chinese Trade Chinese Medicine & Chinese Herb Chinese Art
logo
Search
March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Samuel Hui

Wikipedia

 
Image:S p8sam.jpg|frame|right|Sam Hui performing a concert in Kuala Lumpur

Samuel Koon-kit Hui (許冠傑, pinyin: Xǔ Guānji?) (born September 4, 1948) was a star in cantopop and film|movie industry in Hong Kong's 60's to 90's. He and his brothers Michael Hui|Michael and Ricky Hui|Ricky made several comedy blockbusters in the 70's. Many credited Sam for popularizing Cantonese music into Cantopop that we know today.

He started his career as a host to a youth music TV show on TVB. At the time, he was the lead musician of his band named The Lotus. In the early years of his career, he sang Western songs from Britain and the US. He started on Cantonese songs when he wrote and sang the theme songs for the comedy movies produced by his brother Michael Hui.

His music appealed to the Hong Kong masses and working class people with its simplistic nature and easy-on-the-ears type of music without the hassle of interpreting any subtle meanings of the lyrics which was also the rage in Hong Kong music in the late 1970s. His style was mostly predictable but undoubtedly unique as he penned most of the compositions and personally wrote most of the humorous lyrics that generally encompassed current issues in Hong Kong such as the song 话知你97 Could Not Care Less About 1997 which literally encourages the Hong Kong public to throw caution to the wind and enjoy their life instead of worrying about the imminent takeover from China in 1997.

Sam also collaborated with several popular singers like Leslie Cheung both musically and on the silver screen culminating in the hit single co-written by both Sam and Leslie Cheung titled 沉默是金 Silence is Golden which Leslie Cheung also sung in solo form and is a track in his album Hot Summer.

Sam also starred in the Aces Go Places series of Hong Kong action?comedies in the 1980s, with Karl Maka.

He also had a farewell concert in 1993 where he invited other music celebrities and officially declared that he would not be active in the movie industry nor in Cantopop in the future.

He was once seriously injured during a filming an action movie in Tibet due to lack of oxygen.

Sam came back for a short stint in the movie Winner Takes All co-starring Nicholas Tse and Ruby Lin.

Apparently, the life as a retiree from the entertainment industry in Hong Kong proved to be too uncomfortable for someone who was widely acknowledged as the God of Song in Hong Kong. He decided to come out of his retirement recently in 2004 and held many concerts where he was still warmly received from musically fickle Hong Kong public where every concert had a sold-out turnout.In these concerts, he cited the recent deaths of close colleagues, Leslie Cheung and Anita Mui in 2003 influenced his decision to retract his earlier retirement affirmation.

He recently performed a concert in Kuala Lumpur on the February 19 and February 202005 with his sons and his brother Ricky Hui.

zh:許冠傑

Category:Chinese actors|Hui, Sam
Category:Hong Kong actors|Hui, Sam
Category:Cantopop|Hui, Sam
Category:1948 births|Hui, Sam

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Samuel Hui".


Last Modified:   2005-03-09


Search
All informatin on the site is © FamousChinese.com 2002-2005. Last revised: January 2, 2004
Are you interested in our site or/and want to use our information? please read how to contact us and our copyrights.
To post your business in our web site? please click here. To send any comments to us, please use the Feedback.
To let us provide you with high quality information, you can help us by making a more or less donation: