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In Memory of Anita Mui

Medium Quality PC Video / © MuiMusic

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Anita Mui

On December 30th, 2003 at 2am (HK Time) the world lost a great multi-talented performer and film actress. Hong Kong Pop Singer and stage talent Anita Mui Yim Fong passed away a victim to cervical cancer. Her movies were and always will be classics, putting to film creative and magical talent . Her movies; as Tung; one third of the Heroic Trio in 1992 to July Rhapsody and Dance of a Dream in 2002 are all to be cherished. Her charity work for Hong Kong, film and music are all works of art.

Anita recorded 39 albums in Mandarian, Japanese, and Cantonese, ranging from Chinese Opera to CantoPop. The world today is a richer and more beautiful place because of her gifts to us of stage, film and song.

Forever 40, we will miss you Anita Mui


 Richard O'Kelley Productions

Richard O'Kelley

AsianEntertainment.org



11 Jan 2004 18:43 HONG KONG - (Reuters)

Fans bid farewell to Hong Kong

Pop Star Anita Mui

By Carrie Lee

Thousands of grieving fans and celebrities filed through a Hong Kong funeral parlour on Sunday to pay their last respects to pop star Anita Mui, Asia's self-styled Madonna who won the hearts of Chinese across the world.

Prominent Chinese dissident Wu'er Kaixi and action movie stars Jackie Chan and Michelle Yeoh were among mourners from all over Asia, including Korea and mainland China.

Wreaths lined the walls of the funeral home, where fans had begun to queue up from Saturday night. "After hearing about her death, I was so upset I couldn't eat for several days," said Joey Chung, a teacher in her mid-20s. "Her death is a big loss to Hong Kong's music sector."

Not only the young wept for the singer and actress, who died of cervical cancer on December 30, aged 40. "Rather than going to see my grandson today, I've come to attend the funeral, even though I have to walk with a stick," said Tang Foon-yung, 72, her eyes glazed with tears.

Most fans wore black. Some carried flowers and sobbed. Others sang, played Mui's songs, or prayed in silence. Wu'er, who was one of the leaders of the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests, flew in from Taiwan to pay his respects to Mui, who had supported the Tiananmen movement.

It was his first visit to the former British colony since it returned to Chinese rule in 1997. White roses adorned the funeral hall, along with a picture of Mui and screens displaying clips of her performances. Hong Kong leader Tung Chee-hwa was one of the officials who sent wreaths. Organisers said more than 6,000 people bade farewell to Mui on Sunday. Her body will be cremated on Monday. Often compared to Madonna, Mui was one of Hong Kong's hottest stars and won a string of awards, drawing fans with a flamboyant and mutable on-stage persona.

Mui said in September she had cervical cancer and was being treated for it. She gave eight concerts in November and occasionally seemed breathless on stage. Mui began her singing career as a little girl giving shows at an amusement park and shot to stardom as a teenager, winning a singing contest in 1982.

She starred in more than 40 movies over the last two decades.



 FUNERAL PHOTOGRAPHY

In Memory of Anita Mui

MUI YIM FONG

Click Photo above to view funeral photos

Editor Choice, Glutter @ typepad.com


Forever cherished

A Letter to Anita Mui

By Troy Tiong

They say life begins at 40 for a woman. With much sadness, yours ended all too abruptly at 40. The question on everyone’s mind when they heard the bad news was most probably why.

It was only slightly more than a month ago that you staged a sold-out eight-day concert in Hong Kong. You just shot a commercial in Japan, which I happened to catch for the first time in Singapore over Christmas. Things were starting to look up ever since you made the announcement that you had cervical cancer. What happened? Was there something you were hiding? Were you too aggrieved by the passing of your close friend Leslie Cheung? Why was the treatment not working?

When I heard on the car radio about your passing, I nearly stepped hard on the accelerator, unable to believe my ears. My entire body turned cold. I kept telling myself that I had misunderstood the announcer. I kicked myself for not paying closer attention.

But I had not misheard. It was the truth, and like a bitter pill, it was hard to swallow. I remember the first time I heard you a very long time ago. The whole family, my parents, my younger brother and I were all sitting in front of the television watching a variety show. That was when you came on. My mother, who was a huge pop music fan, excitedly directed her two precocious sons attention to the screen. You were swathed in yards of cloth like an Arabian princess except more masculine and with a rather devilish appeal. Surrounded by your dancers, you moved in sync like a sleek panther. I thought you were so cool then. The song was something about breaking the ice mountain. When I found out about the title, I thought it was hilarious but I absolutely adored the beat.

You were so bizarre, so outrageous; you could have shocked the lights out of anyone. But not to me. You were a rebel, out to push the boundaries of acceptability, and you did it with such aplomb you left me with no choice but to fall madly in love with you.

You came at a time when I was doing a little rebelling myself, appealing to my innermost desire to break free from the shackles of conventions and traditions. If I knew the term for it then, I would have shouted, you go, girl.

The chameleon in you was also what got me hooked. Your ever-changing image was a constant source of fascination and had critics branding you the Madonna of Asia? It could not have been easy for you to come up with a new look for each album, but somehow you managed to make every single one of them your own. I tip my hat off to you.

Your theatrical nature often translated into energizing stage performances. You set new standards that are now being emulated by your predecessors, but none, I believe, will come close to your level of ingenuity. But you know what made me stay with you all these years? It was your voice. Deep and expressive with a much lower register than most female vocalists. You have this incomparable knack of turning even the simplest of melodies into an epic performance.

I may not have understood most of what you sang, but I could feel the emotions pouring out of you with such rawness, you never failed to send shivers down my spine whenever you sang. There is one indelible image in my mind, a scene from a movie actually. You played a singer whose lover had gone to war. You were heavily pregnant with his child and recording a mournful song in the studio. Tears rolled down your face as you sang. Each note was treated with such tender sadness. It was the most heartbreaking scene I have ever seen and I could not help but cry along with your character. Now, each time I hear that song, it reminds me of that scene, and how admirable you were to be able to display such vulnerability without descending into self-pity. As I write this, I cannot help but wonder how the Hong Kong entertainment scene will change with your departure. With the passing of Roman Tam, Leslie Cheung, and now you, Hong Kong has lost most of the pioneers of its modern pop culture; the original trailblazers whose legacies shall now forever be etched in Halls of Fame.

On my part, I lost not only someone I have always looked up to, but an influential person throughout my formative years. I thank you for those wacky costumes. I thank you for those brilliant concerts. I thank you for your hilarious turns in many Hong Kong cheesy comedies. I thank you for those exquisite performances you put into art-house pieces such as Rouge and July Rhapsody. I thank you for your deep voice that had soothed, and will no doubt continue to for many more years, a million heartaches. I thank you for the many beautiful songs that I shall forever treasure in my heart. I thank you for the fine examples you had shown in carrying on with your professional duties when you could have easily thrown in the towel.

But most of all, I thank you for the many dreams you inspired in me.

May you rest in peace.




RUMBLE IN THE BRONX


Jackie Chan / Anita Mui

Hong faan kui / Rumble in the Bronx is a Hong Kong - Cantonese Martial Arts Comedy filmed in Vancouver Canada and released in the US in 1995. The movie staring Anita Mui and Jackie Chan introduced Jackie Chan to the North American Market.

Above is the entire Mirimax version.

Full Movie - / © MIRAMAX International Film Group

This Mobile site is a edited down version of AsianEntertainment.org.

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