Known For
Acting
Known Credits
93
Gender
Male
Birthday
September 12, 1956 (69 years old)
Place of Birth
Hong Kong, British Crown Colony
Cheung Kwok-Wing (Chinese: 張國榮, English name: Leslie, September 12, 1956 – April 1, 2003) was a Hong Kong Canadian singer and actor. Born in Hong Kong, Leslie Cheung moved to the United Kingdom in 1971, settling in Leeds, where he enrolled at university to study fashion design. After completing his studies, he returned to Hong Kong and, in 1977, took part in an amateur singing competition—the ATV Asian Music Contest—where he won second prize. The following year, he released his first album, I Like Dreaming. He soon began appearing on television and quickly landed his first film role in Erotic Dreams of the Red Chamber (1978), an erotic production that Cheung himself later described as a “shameful disaster.”
Throughout a 26-year career from 1977 until his death, Cheung released over 40 music albums and acted in 56 films. He was one of the most prominent pioneers that shaped the identity of Cantopop during the 1980s. His studio albums Summer Romance (1987) and Most Beloved (1995) each sold over 300,000 copies and are among the best-selling albums of all time in the territory. In addition to music, Cheung achieved pan-Asian fame with such films as A Better Tomorrow (1986) and A Chinese Ghost Story (1987). He won the Best Actor at the 1991 Hong Kong Film Awards for his role in Days of Being Wild (1990). His venture into acting in the 1990s was recognized for his portrayal of queer characters in the then-conservative film industry, he was one of the few Hong Kong actors willing to take on gay roles—such as in Wong Kar-wai’s Happy Together—or to play a cross-dressing opera performer in Chen Kaige’s Farewell My Concubine, which won the Palme d'Or at Cannes in 1993. Leslie Cheung died by suicide on April 1, 2003, at the age of 46, by jumping from the 24th floor of the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in Hong Kong. In the note he left behind, he stated that he had been suffering from depression.
| 2000 | From Ashes to Ashes...Director | |
| 2000 | From Ashes to Ashes...Writer | |
| 2000 | From Ashes to Ashes...Story | |
| 2000 | Okinawa Rendez-vous...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1999 | The Kid...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1999 | Left Right Love Destiny...Director | |
| 1999 | Left Right Love Destiny...Writer | |
| 1996 | Who's the Woman, Who's the Man?...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1996 | Who's the Woman, Who's the Man?...Assistant Director | |
| 1995 | The Phantom Lover...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1995 | The Phantom Lover...Producer | |
| 1995 | The Phantom Lover...Assistant Director | |
| 1994 | He's a Woman, She's a Man...Writer | |
| 1994 | He's a Woman, She's a Man...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1993 | The Bride with White Hair...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1993 | Farewell My Concubine...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1992 | Girls Without Tomorrow...Songs | |
| 1991 | Once a Thief...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1989 | Aces Go Places V: The Terracotta Hit...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1988 | Fatal Love...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1988 | The Other ½ & the Other ½...Songs | |
| 1987 | A Better Tomorrow II...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1987 | A Chinese Ghost Story...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1986 | A Better Tomorrow...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1985 | For Your Heart Only...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1985 | Leslie Cheung: Surprise...Director | |
| 1985 | Leslie Cheung: Surprise...Writer | |
| 1984 | Behind the Yellow Line...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1984 | Double Trouble...Songs | |
| 1983 | On the Wrong Track...Songs | |
| 1983 | The Drummer...Theme Song Performance | |
| 1982 | Nomad...Theme Song Performance |