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Jimmy Wang Yu

Jimmy Wang Yu (Chinese: 王羽; born Wang Zheng Quan; 28 March 1943 – 5 April 2022)[1] was a Hong Kong-Taiwanese martial artist, actor, film director, producer, and screenwriter. Initially a contract player for Shaw Brothers, he rose to fame for his starring role in One-Armed Swordsman (1967) and its sequels, and was one of the first major stars of martial arts and wuxia cinema. At the height of his fame in the 1970s, he was the highest-paid martial arts actor in the world. According to The New York Times, Wang was "the biggest star of Asian martial arts cinema until the emergence of Bruce Lee."[2]

Jimmy Wang Yu
王羽
Wang in 1970
Born
Wang Zhengquan

(1943-03-28)28 March 1943
Died5 April 2022(2022-04-05) (aged 79)
Cheng Hsin Hospital, Beitou District, Taipei, Taiwan
NationalityTaiwanese
Occupations
  • Actor
  • director
  • producer
  • screenwriter
Years active1960–2013
Spouse(s)
Jeanette Lin Chui
(m. 1969; div. 1975)

Wang Kaizhen
(m. 1978; div. 1997)
Children3, including Linda Wong
Chinese name
Chinese王羽
Wang Zhengquan
Traditional Chinese王正權
Simplified Chinese王正权
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinWáng Zhèngquán
Wade–GilesWáng Chèng-ch'ǘan
Tongyong PinyinWáng Jhèngcyuán
Yale RomanizationWáng Jèngchywán
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationWòhng Jeng Kyùhn
JyutpingWong4 Zeng3 Kyun4
IPA[wɔ̏ːŋ tsɛ̄ːŋ kʰy̏ːn]
Southern Min
Hokkien POJÔng Chèng-kôan

Off-screen, Wang Yu was notorious for his temperamental personality and his links to organized crime. He was a suspected member of the Bamboo Union triad, and was charged in the 1981 murder of several Four Seas Gang members, though he was acquitted due to a lack of evidence.

Early life

Born Wang Zheng Quan (王正權) in Shanghai in 1943, Wang and his family moved to Hong Kong when he was still a child. From a young age, he trained in karate, tai chi, Wudang quan and taijijian. For a time he served in the National Revolutionary Army, and was also a competitive swimmer and a car racing enthusiast.

Film career

Wang joined Shaw Brothers Studio in 1963 as a stunt performer, and had his first acting role in the 1965 film Temple of the Red Lotus. In 1968, he acted with Cheng Pei-pei in the wuxia film Golden Swallow, directed by Chang Cheh.[3] Following that, Wang starred in many other wuxia films, including One Armed Boxer (1971), Master of the Flying Guillotine[1] (1976) and Return of the Chinese Boxer (1977).

If One-Armed Swordsman was the movie that launched Wang's acting career, The Chinese Boxer was the film that sealed his fame in Hong Kong cinema. The latter has been credited[citation needed] as being the first Hong Kong martial arts film that kickstarted the unarmed combat genre, mainly kung fu. It also triggered a phenomenon that filled the ranks of many Chinese martial arts associations across Southeast Asia. Chinese youths, in their bid to emulate Wang, took to punching sandbags, and reading up on the history of Shaolin Kung Fu.

Controversy dogged Wang after the fame that exploded with The Chinese Boxer. He broke his contract with the Shaw Brothers Studio, and was promptly slapped with a lawsuit. The legal tussle that ended in the studio's favour led to Wang being banned from making films in Hong Kong. Wang then looked to Taiwan for better career prospects, linking up with Golden Harvest and other independent film outfits. His subsequent works were mostly filmed in Taiwan.

With the success of The Chinese Boxer, Wang stood unchallenged in Southeast Asia for a short time, as the Chinese actor with the most formidable fists and legs. But beginning in the 1970s, Wang's star began to be eclipsed with the entry of new actors, many with superior martial arts training such as Ti Lung, David Chiang, and especially Bruce Lee, whose role in The Big Boss (1971) revolutionised the martial arts film genre.

In 1975, Wang starred in the Australian action film The Man from Hong Kong.[4] In 1976, Wang appeared alongside Jackie Chan in Lo Wei's Killer Meteors. In the late 1970s, Wang helped Chan when then the latter sought his help in settling a dispute with Lo Wei that allegedly involved Triads. Chan eventually repaid the favour with his roles in Wang's films, Fantasy Mission Force (1982) and Island of Fire (1990).

In 1986, Sammo Hung cast Wang as Wong Kei-ying (the father of Chinese folk hero Wong Fei Hung) in Millionaire's Express. In the years that followed, Wang kept a low profile, making a rare public appearance in 2002 at the funeral of Chang Cheh.

Organized crime

Wang often associated with members of the Bamboo Union, a Taiwan-based triad, though his status as a made man was never confirmed.[5][6]

In a 2007 interview with the Liberty Times, Wang claimed that Bai Wan-hsiung, the Kuomintang Director of Mainland Affairs, had asked him and another Bamboo Union member to assassinate Democratic Progressive Party chairman Hsu Hsin-liang in 1979.[7] The Kuomintang long held ties to Bamboo Union. At the time, Hsu was living in exile the United States. In the same interview, Wang implicated the Kuomintang in the murder of Henry Liu.[8]

Xinghua Pavilion incident

On April 23, 1976, Wang invited Hong Kong film mogul Charles Heung and several friends, including Bamboo Union members, to the Xinghua Pavilion restaurant in Taipei. Several members of the Four Seas, a rival triad, were also present. Wang allegedly instigated a fight between the two groups that ended in the deaths of Four Seas members Qiu Wenxiang and Gao Wenzhang.

The incident attracted much media attention, and Wang fled to Hong Kong to avoid arrest. He was eventually arrested and sentenced to a five months in prison, which was reduced to a fine on appeal.[9]

Tianchu Restaurant case and murder trial

On January 10, 1981, Wang and a group of friends were eating at the Tianchu Restaurant on Nanjing Road, when they were ambushed by members of the Four Seas triad in an apparent assassination attempt. Wang survived, but three of his friends were killed. Wang had previously had a falling out with the Four Seas after losing 1 million Yuan at a casino owned by Four Seas leader Liu Weimin, and his life had been repeatedly threatened.[10] Wang reached out to Bamboo Union leader Chen Chi-li, requesting protection.[11] Following a meeting between Bamboo Union leadership and Wang, the Union carried a string of retaliatory killings against the would be assassins. One of the targeted perpetrators, Liu Tieqiu, survived albeit with significant injuries.

The murders led to a crackdown on triads by Taiwanese authorities. Chen Yonghe, a Four Seas higher-up, asked Flying Eagle Gang member Liu Taisheng to act as an intermediary between the Four Seas and Wang, but Wang berated him and offered 400,000 Yuan for Liu's leg.

On May 8, Wang and Bamboo Union members Huang Shaocen was charged by the Taipei District Court for first-degree murder. The hearing was attended by Bamboo Union, Four Seas, and Flying Eagle members. During a recess, Liu Taisheng attempted to negoitiate with Wang. The conversation escalated into a fistfight, and Liu was stabbed by one of Wang's bodyguards. Wang and the other Bamboo Union members were subsequently taken into custody.[12]

Wang was eventually acquitted due to a lack of evidence, though Huang Shaocen was sentenced to two years in prison for the attempted killing of Liu Tieqiu.

Personal life

In 1969, Wang married actress Jeanette Lin Chui , who was nine years his senior. Before that, Wang had an affair with the wife of film director Chun Kim. Chun Kim hanged himself before a divorce took place. Jeanette Lin, who had a high profile in Hong Kong cinema in the 1950s and 1960s, left the industry almost immediately after her marriage. Marriage turned out to be tumultuous for both Wang and Lin. Amid allegations of domestic violence by Wang, the marriage crumbled in 1975. Wang and Lin had three daughters; their eldest daughter Linda Wong became a popular Cantopop singer in the 1990s. Lin migrated to the United States in 1977 and died in 1995 from an asthma attack.

Wang later remarried in 1978 to air hostess Wang Kaizhen. This marriage too proved to be a stormy relationship, and Wang Kaizhen filed for divorce. Possibly out of frustration, Wang Kaizhen started an affair with a young businessman Zhang Zhao (張昭). Having gotten wind of it, Wang, accompanied by reporters and the police, surprised the couple at their lodging and publicly exposed his wife. After public humiliation was heaped on the couple, Wang divorced his second wife in 1997.

Wang's involvement in public brawls also made headlines from time to time.

Health issues and death

In 2011 Wang suffered a stroke which caused him to lose much of his strength in the left side of his body. However, he worked vigorously in physical therapy, even exceeding the doctor's recommended pace. He would reportedly lift his arm 1000 times a day instead of 200, and walk three times the suggested distance. As a result of his efforts he regained most of his ability to walk and talk, and he could lift his left arm, though he could no longer use its full strength. Since then he tried to live as normal a life as possible, and has even returned to film work. He admitted to even driving to his physical therapy session with the use of only one arm, but explained that his daughter put a stop to that when she found out and hired a driver for him.

Wang died on April 5, 2022 in Cheng Hsin Hospital, Beitou District, Taipei at the age of 79.[13][14]

Filmography

Actor

  • Temple of the Red Lotus [fr] (1965) - Kuei Wu
  • The Twin Swords (1965) - Kuei Wu
  • Tiger Boy (1966) - 'Tiger Boy' Lei Hu
  • The Magnificent Trio [fr] (1966) - Fang Lu
  • Kuai lo qing chun (1966)
  • Asia-Pol [fr] (1966) - Yang Ming-Hsuan
  • Auntie Lan [fr] (1967) - He You-Wen
  • Trail of the Broken Blade (1967) - Li Yueh
  • The Sword and the Lute (1967) - Kuei Wu
  • One-Armed Swordsman (1967) - Fang Kang / One-armed Swordsman
  • The Assassin (1967) - Nieh Cheng
  • Golden Swallow (1968) - Silver Roc Hsiao Peng
  • The Sword of Swords (1968) - Ling Tseng-hsiao
  • Qing guan (1968)
  • Return of the One-Armed Swordsman (1969) - Fang Gang / One-armed Swordsman
  • My Son (1970) - Yang Kuo-Liang
  • The Chinese Boxer (1970) - Lei Ming
  • Zatoichi and the One-Armed Swordsman (1971) - Wang Kong / One-armed Swordsman
  • The Desperate Chase (1971)
  • Xia yi shuang xiong (1971)
  • The Magnificent Chivalry (1971)
  • Jian (1971) - Hsia Ho Wei
  • Zhui ming qiang (1971) - Lung Ti / The White Dragon
  • The Invincible Sword (1971) - Ling Yu Fong
  • Wei zhen si fang (1971) - Tiger Wong
  • The Professional Killer (1971)
  • Morale and Evil (1971) - Iron palm Bai Si-Feng
  • Shogun Saints (1972)
  • Furious Slaughter (1972) - Ma Yung Shen
  • Kuang feng sha (1972) - Ti Si-Guan
  • Ma Su Zhen bao xiong chou (1972)
  • The Adventure (1972) - Guan Dong-Shan
  • Chow Ken (1972) - Shi Ling Shu
  • One-Armed Boxer (1972) - Yu Tien Lung
  • Yi shen shi dan (1972) - The Gallant (parts 1, 2, 3)
  • The Invincible (1972) - Li Mu-Bai
  • The Last Duel (1971) - Yi Chun
  • Ten Fingers of Steel (1972)
  • Royal Fist (1972)
  • Boxers of Loyalty and Righteousness (1972) - Li Yu / Yeh Tian-Hsin
  • A Man Called Tiger (1973) - Chin Fu
  • Knight Errant (1973) - Lin Hao-Shan
  • Ai de tian di (1973) - Professor
  • Seaman No. 7 (1973) - Wang Hai-Lung
  • Black Friday (1973) - Chen Ah Kwang
  • Beach of the War Gods (1973) - Hsia Feng
  • The Two Cavaliers (1973)
  • King of Boxers (1973) - Hong Ching Pau / Red Lantern
  • Kung Fu Mama (1973) - Ma Yung-Chen
  • The Tattooed Dragon (1973) - Tattooed Dragon
  • Flying Fists of Death (1973)
  • Si da tian wang (1974) - Hsiao Pao
  • My Father, My Husband, My Son (1974)
  • The Iron Man (1974) - Chin
  • The Hero (1974) - Kang
  • Four Real Friends (1974)
  • Rage of the Masters (1975)
  • The Man from Hong Kong (1975) - Inspector Fang Sing Leng
  • A Cookbook of Birth Control (1975)
  • The New Spartans (1975) - Material arts movie star Wang Fu
  • Great Hunter (1975)
  • Master of the Flying Guillotine (1976) - Liu Ti Lung, The One-Armed Boxer
  • Tiger & Crane Fists (1976) - Ching Sing Chen
  • Killer Meteors (1976) - Mei Xing He
  • A Queen's Ransom (1976) - Jimmy
  • One-Armed Swordsman Against Nine Killers (1976) - Liu Ching Wu / Liu Yi Su / One Armed Swordsman
  • One-Arm Chivalry Fights Against One-Arm Chivalry (1976) - Fong Ping / One-armed Swordsman
  • Point of the Finger of Death (1977) - Ziqiang Ji (AKA Ziqiang Chi)
  • Return of the Chinese Boxer (1977) - Sau Pai-lung
  • The Criminal (1977)
  • Brotherly Love (1977)
  • Revenge of Kung Fu Mao (1977) - The Mayor
  • Deadly Silver Spear (1977) - Lung Fei Yung / Silver Spear
  • Blood of the Dragon (1978)
  • Big Leap Forward (1978)
  • Ma Su Chen (1979)
  • Prisoners of Mao (1979)
  • The Battle of Ku-ning-tou (1979)
  • Fantasy Mission Force (1983) - Don Wen
  • Shanghai (1984) - Black Hat
  • Chuang jiang (1985)
  • Millionaire's Express (1986) - Master Wong Kei Ying
  • Thundering Ninja (1987) - David Wong
  • Island of Fire (1990) - Kui / Lucas
  • Once Upon a Time in China (1991)
  • The Beheaded 1000 (1991) - Executioner Ren De Tie
  • Shogun & Little Kitchen (1992) - Lam Chung Yuen
  • Requital (1992) - Wai's hired assassin
  • Kyokutô kuroshakai (1993) - Hong - Yan-Sheng
  • Kung Pow! Enter the Fist (2002) - (archive footage) (uncredited)
  • Dragon/Wu Xia/Swordsmen (2011) - The Master (Jiaozhu)
  • Let's Go! (2011)
  • The Guillotines (2012) - Gong-E
  • Soul (2013) - Wang (final film role)

Producer

Director

Action director

Screenwriter

Awards and nominations

Year Award Category Nominated work Result
1977 15th Golden Horse Awards Best Actor Brotherly Love Nominated
2011 48th Golden Horse Awards Best Supporting Actor Dragon Nominated
2012 31st Hong Kong Film Awards Best Supporting Actor Nominated
2013 15th Taipei Film festival Best Actor Soul Won
2013 50th Golden Horse Film Awards Best Leading Actor Soul Nominated

References

  1. ^ a b . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2015. Archived from the original on 2015-05-24.
  2. ^ Sandomir, Richard (2022-04-21). "Jimmy Wang Yu, Seminal Figure in Kung Fu Films, Dies at 79". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  3. ^ Dan Pavlides (2015). . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2015-06-30.
  4. ^ Mark Deming (2015). . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2015-05-25.
  5. ^ Films, Follow mePhil MillsSupreme dark overlord of Far East. "Taiwanese actor Jimmy Wang Yu dies at the age of 80". Far East Films. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  6. ^ . web.archive.org. 2019-08-07. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  7. ^ "Prosecutors launch investigation into Jimmy Wang `murder contract\' case - Taipei Times". www.taipeitimes.com. 2007-10-17. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  8. ^ "Chen wants apology for assassinations - Taipei Times". www.taipeitimes.com. 2007-10-16. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  9. ^ . web.archive.org. 2018-02-13. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  10. ^ . web.archive.org. 2019-09-14. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  11. ^ . web.archive.org. 2018-04-01. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  12. ^ . web.archive.org. 2019-06-11. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  13. ^ ""独臂刀王"王羽今晨病逝享寿80岁". 聯合早報. 2022-04-05. Retrieved 2022-04-05.
  14. ^ Chang, Ya-chin; Wang, Hsin-yu; Yeh, Kuan-yin; Shih, Hsiu-chuan (April 5, 2022). "Veteran Taiwanese martial arts actor Jimmy Wang dies at 79". Central News Agency. Retrieved April 5, 2022.

External links

  • Jimmy Wang at IMDb
  • Cinemasie.com
  • Jimmy Wang at Lovehkfilm.com

jimmy, wang, this, chinese, name, family, name, wang, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspape. In this Chinese name the family name is Wang This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Jimmy Wang Yu news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Jimmy Wang Yu Chinese 王羽 born Wang Zheng Quan 28 March 1943 5 April 2022 1 was a Hong Kong Taiwanese martial artist actor film director producer and screenwriter Initially a contract player for Shaw Brothers he rose to fame for his starring role in One Armed Swordsman 1967 and its sequels and was one of the first major stars of martial arts and wuxia cinema At the height of his fame in the 1970s he was the highest paid martial arts actor in the world According to The New York Times Wang was the biggest star of Asian martial arts cinema until the emergence of Bruce Lee 2 Jimmy Wang Yu王羽Wang in 1970BornWang Zhengquan 1943 03 28 28 March 1943Shanghai Republic of ChinaDied5 April 2022 2022 04 05 aged 79 Cheng Hsin Hospital Beitou District Taipei TaiwanNationalityTaiwaneseOccupationsActordirectorproducerscreenwriterYears active1960 2013Spouse s Jeanette Lin Chui m 1969 div 1975 wbr Wang Kaizhen m 1978 div 1997 wbr Children3 including Linda WongChinese nameChinese王羽TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinWang YǔWade GilesWang YǚIPA wa ŋ y Yue CantoneseYale RomanizationWohng YyuhJyutpingWong4 Jyu5IPA wɔ ːŋ jy ː Southern MinHokkien POJOng UWang ZhengquanTraditional Chinese王正權Simplified Chinese王正权TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinWang ZhengquanWade GilesWang Cheng ch ǘanTongyong PinyinWang JhengcyuanYale RomanizationWang JengchywanYue CantoneseYale RomanizationWohng Jeng KyuhnJyutpingWong4 Zeng3 Kyun4IPA wɔ ːŋ tsɛ ːŋ kʰy ːn Southern MinHokkien POJOng Cheng koanOff screen Wang Yu was notorious for his temperamental personality and his links to organized crime He was a suspected member of the Bamboo Union triad and was charged in the 1981 murder of several Four Seas Gang members though he was acquitted due to a lack of evidence Contents 1 Early life 2 Film career 3 Organized crime 3 1 Xinghua Pavilion incident 3 2 Tianchu Restaurant case and murder trial 4 Personal life 5 Health issues and death 6 Filmography 6 1 Actor 6 2 Producer 6 3 Director 6 4 Action director 6 5 Screenwriter 7 Awards and nominations 8 References 9 External linksEarly life EditBorn Wang Zheng Quan 王正權 in Shanghai in 1943 Wang and his family moved to Hong Kong when he was still a child From a young age he trained in karate tai chi Wudang quan and taijijian For a time he served in the National Revolutionary Army and was also a competitive swimmer and a car racing enthusiast Film career EditWang joined Shaw Brothers Studio in 1963 as a stunt performer and had his first acting role in the 1965 film Temple of the Red Lotus In 1968 he acted with Cheng Pei pei in the wuxia film Golden Swallow directed by Chang Cheh 3 Following that Wang starred in many other wuxia films including One Armed Boxer 1971 Master of the Flying Guillotine 1 1976 and Return of the Chinese Boxer 1977 If One Armed Swordsman was the movie that launched Wang s acting career The Chinese Boxer was the film that sealed his fame in Hong Kong cinema The latter has been credited citation needed as being the first Hong Kong martial arts film that kickstarted the unarmed combat genre mainly kung fu It also triggered a phenomenon that filled the ranks of many Chinese martial arts associations across Southeast Asia Chinese youths in their bid to emulate Wang took to punching sandbags and reading up on the history of Shaolin Kung Fu Controversy dogged Wang after the fame that exploded with The Chinese Boxer He broke his contract with the Shaw Brothers Studio and was promptly slapped with a lawsuit The legal tussle that ended in the studio s favour led to Wang being banned from making films in Hong Kong Wang then looked to Taiwan for better career prospects linking up with Golden Harvest and other independent film outfits His subsequent works were mostly filmed in Taiwan With the success of The Chinese Boxer Wang stood unchallenged in Southeast Asia for a short time as the Chinese actor with the most formidable fists and legs But beginning in the 1970s Wang s star began to be eclipsed with the entry of new actors many with superior martial arts training such as Ti Lung David Chiang and especially Bruce Lee whose role in The Big Boss 1971 revolutionised the martial arts film genre In 1975 Wang starred in the Australian action film The Man from Hong Kong 4 In 1976 Wang appeared alongside Jackie Chan in Lo Wei s Killer Meteors In the late 1970s Wang helped Chan when then the latter sought his help in settling a dispute with Lo Wei that allegedly involved Triads Chan eventually repaid the favour with his roles in Wang s films Fantasy Mission Force 1982 and Island of Fire 1990 In 1986 Sammo Hung cast Wang as Wong Kei ying the father of Chinese folk hero Wong Fei Hung in Millionaire s Express In the years that followed Wang kept a low profile making a rare public appearance in 2002 at the funeral of Chang Cheh Organized crime EditWang often associated with members of the Bamboo Union a Taiwan based triad though his status as a made man was never confirmed 5 6 In a 2007 interview with the Liberty Times Wang claimed that Bai Wan hsiung the Kuomintang Director of Mainland Affairs had asked him and another Bamboo Union member to assassinate Democratic Progressive Party chairman Hsu Hsin liang in 1979 7 The Kuomintang long held ties to Bamboo Union At the time Hsu was living in exile the United States In the same interview Wang implicated the Kuomintang in the murder of Henry Liu 8 Xinghua Pavilion incident Edit On April 23 1976 Wang invited Hong Kong film mogul Charles Heung and several friends including Bamboo Union members to the Xinghua Pavilion restaurant in Taipei Several members of the Four Seas a rival triad were also present Wang allegedly instigated a fight between the two groups that ended in the deaths of Four Seas members Qiu Wenxiang and Gao Wenzhang The incident attracted much media attention and Wang fled to Hong Kong to avoid arrest He was eventually arrested and sentenced to a five months in prison which was reduced to a fine on appeal 9 Tianchu Restaurant case and murder trial Edit On January 10 1981 Wang and a group of friends were eating at the Tianchu Restaurant on Nanjing Road when they were ambushed by members of the Four Seas triad in an apparent assassination attempt Wang survived but three of his friends were killed Wang had previously had a falling out with the Four Seas after losing 1 million Yuan at a casino owned by Four Seas leader Liu Weimin and his life had been repeatedly threatened 10 Wang reached out to Bamboo Union leader Chen Chi li requesting protection 11 Following a meeting between Bamboo Union leadership and Wang the Union carried a string of retaliatory killings against the would be assassins One of the targeted perpetrators Liu Tieqiu survived albeit with significant injuries The murders led to a crackdown on triads by Taiwanese authorities Chen Yonghe a Four Seas higher up asked Flying Eagle Gang member Liu Taisheng to act as an intermediary between the Four Seas and Wang but Wang berated him and offered 400 000 Yuan for Liu s leg On May 8 Wang and Bamboo Union members Huang Shaocen was charged by the Taipei District Court for first degree murder The hearing was attended by Bamboo Union Four Seas and Flying Eagle members During a recess Liu Taisheng attempted to negoitiate with Wang The conversation escalated into a fistfight and Liu was stabbed by one of Wang s bodyguards Wang and the other Bamboo Union members were subsequently taken into custody 12 Wang was eventually acquitted due to a lack of evidence though Huang Shaocen was sentenced to two years in prison for the attempted killing of Liu Tieqiu Personal life EditIn 1969 Wang married actress Jeanette Lin Chui who was nine years his senior Before that Wang had an affair with the wife of film director Chun Kim Chun Kim hanged himself before a divorce took place Jeanette Lin who had a high profile in Hong Kong cinema in the 1950s and 1960s left the industry almost immediately after her marriage Marriage turned out to be tumultuous for both Wang and Lin Amid allegations of domestic violence by Wang the marriage crumbled in 1975 Wang and Lin had three daughters their eldest daughter Linda Wong became a popular Cantopop singer in the 1990s Lin migrated to the United States in 1977 and died in 1995 from an asthma attack Wang later remarried in 1978 to air hostess Wang Kaizhen This marriage too proved to be a stormy relationship and Wang Kaizhen filed for divorce Possibly out of frustration Wang Kaizhen started an affair with a young businessman Zhang Zhao 張昭 Having gotten wind of it Wang accompanied by reporters and the police surprised the couple at their lodging and publicly exposed his wife After public humiliation was heaped on the couple Wang divorced his second wife in 1997 Wang s involvement in public brawls also made headlines from time to time Health issues and death EditIn 2011 Wang suffered a stroke which caused him to lose much of his strength in the left side of his body However he worked vigorously in physical therapy even exceeding the doctor s recommended pace He would reportedly lift his arm 1000 times a day instead of 200 and walk three times the suggested distance As a result of his efforts he regained most of his ability to walk and talk and he could lift his left arm though he could no longer use its full strength Since then he tried to live as normal a life as possible and has even returned to film work He admitted to even driving to his physical therapy session with the use of only one arm but explained that his daughter put a stop to that when she found out and hired a driver for him Wang died on April 5 2022 in Cheng Hsin Hospital Beitou District Taipei at the age of 79 13 14 Filmography EditActor Edit Temple of the Red Lotus fr 1965 Kuei Wu The Twin Swords 1965 Kuei Wu Tiger Boy 1966 Tiger Boy Lei Hu The Magnificent Trio fr 1966 Fang Lu Kuai lo qing chun 1966 Asia Pol fr 1966 Yang Ming Hsuan Auntie Lan fr 1967 He You Wen Trail of the Broken Blade 1967 Li Yueh The Sword and the Lute 1967 Kuei Wu One Armed Swordsman 1967 Fang Kang One armed Swordsman The Assassin 1967 Nieh Cheng Golden Swallow 1968 Silver Roc Hsiao Peng The Sword of Swords 1968 Ling Tseng hsiao Qing guan 1968 Return of the One Armed Swordsman 1969 Fang Gang One armed Swordsman My Son 1970 Yang Kuo Liang The Chinese Boxer 1970 Lei Ming Zatoichi and the One Armed Swordsman 1971 Wang Kong One armed Swordsman The Desperate Chase 1971 Xia yi shuang xiong 1971 The Magnificent Chivalry 1971 Jian 1971 Hsia Ho Wei Zhui ming qiang 1971 Lung Ti The White Dragon The Invincible Sword 1971 Ling Yu Fong Wei zhen si fang 1971 Tiger Wong The Professional Killer 1971 Morale and Evil 1971 Iron palm Bai Si Feng Shogun Saints 1972 Furious Slaughter 1972 Ma Yung Shen Kuang feng sha 1972 Ti Si Guan Ma Su Zhen bao xiong chou 1972 The Adventure 1972 Guan Dong Shan Chow Ken 1972 Shi Ling Shu One Armed Boxer 1972 Yu Tien Lung Yi shen shi dan 1972 The Gallant parts 1 2 3 The Invincible 1972 Li Mu Bai The Last Duel 1971 Yi Chun Ten Fingers of Steel 1972 Royal Fist 1972 Boxers of Loyalty and Righteousness 1972 Li Yu Yeh Tian Hsin A Man Called Tiger 1973 Chin Fu Knight Errant 1973 Lin Hao Shan Ai de tian di 1973 Professor Seaman No 7 1973 Wang Hai Lung Black Friday 1973 Chen Ah Kwang Beach of the War Gods 1973 Hsia Feng The Two Cavaliers 1973 King of Boxers 1973 Hong Ching Pau Red Lantern Kung Fu Mama 1973 Ma Yung Chen The Tattooed Dragon 1973 Tattooed Dragon Flying Fists of Death 1973 Si da tian wang 1974 Hsiao Pao My Father My Husband My Son 1974 The Iron Man 1974 Chin The Hero 1974 Kang Four Real Friends 1974 Rage of the Masters 1975 The Man from Hong Kong 1975 Inspector Fang Sing Leng A Cookbook of Birth Control 1975 The New Spartans 1975 Material arts movie star Wang Fu Great Hunter 1975 Master of the Flying Guillotine 1976 Liu Ti Lung The One Armed Boxer Tiger amp Crane Fists 1976 Ching Sing Chen Killer Meteors 1976 Mei Xing He A Queen s Ransom 1976 Jimmy One Armed Swordsman Against Nine Killers 1976 Liu Ching Wu Liu Yi Su One Armed Swordsman One Arm Chivalry Fights Against One Arm Chivalry 1976 Fong Ping One armed Swordsman Point of the Finger of Death 1977 Ziqiang Ji AKA Ziqiang Chi Return of the Chinese Boxer 1977 Sau Pai lung The Criminal 1977 Brotherly Love 1977 Revenge of Kung Fu Mao 1977 The Mayor Deadly Silver Spear 1977 Lung Fei Yung Silver Spear Blood of the Dragon 1978 Big Leap Forward 1978 Ma Su Chen 1979 Prisoners of Mao 1979 The Battle of Ku ning tou 1979 Fantasy Mission Force 1983 Don Wen Shanghai 1984 Black Hat Chuang jiang 1985 Millionaire s Express 1986 Master Wong Kei Ying Thundering Ninja 1987 David Wong Island of Fire 1990 Kui Lucas Once Upon a Time in China 1991 The Beheaded 1000 1991 Executioner Ren De Tie Shogun amp Little Kitchen 1992 Lam Chung Yuen Requital 1992 Wai s hired assassin Kyokuto kuroshakai 1993 Hong Yan Sheng Kung Pow Enter the Fist 2002 archive footage uncredited Dragon Wu Xia Swordsmen 2011 The Master Jiaozhu Let s Go 2011 The Guillotines 2012 Gong E Soul 2013 Wang final film role Producer Edit Boxers of Loyalty and Righteousness 1973 One Armed Swordsman Against Nine Killers 1976 Return of the Chinese Boxer 1977 Island of Fire 1990 The Beheaded 1000 1991 Stand Behind the Yellow Line 1997 Eighteen Springs 1997 Director Edit The Chinese Boxer 1970 One Armed Boxer 1971 Dragon Squad a k a Four Real Friends 1974 The Man from Hong Kong 1975 Australian Brian Trenchard Smith was principal director w Wang Yu doing some 2nd unit work Tiger amp Crane Fists 1976 Master of the Flying Guillotine 1976 Return of the Chinese Boxer 1977 One Arm Chivalry Fights Against One Arm Chivalry 1977 Action director Edit Boxers of Loyalty and Righteousness 1973 Screenwriter Edit The Chinese Boxer 1970 One Armed Boxer 1971 Beach of the War Gods 1973 Master of the Flying Guillotine 1976 Awards and nominations EditYear Award Category Nominated work Result1977 15th Golden Horse Awards Best Actor Brotherly Love Nominated2011 48th Golden Horse Awards Best Supporting Actor Dragon Nominated2012 31st Hong Kong Film Awards Best Supporting Actor Nominated2013 15th Taipei Film festival Best Actor Soul Won2013 50th Golden Horse Film Awards Best Leading Actor Soul NominatedReferences Edit a b Jimmy Wang Yu Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2015 Archived from the original on 2015 05 24 Sandomir Richard 2022 04 21 Jimmy Wang Yu Seminal Figure in Kung Fu Films Dies at 79 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 10 09 Dan Pavlides 2015 Golden Swallow Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Archived from the original on 2015 06 30 Mark Deming 2015 The Man From Hong Kong Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Archived from the original on 2015 05 25 Films Follow mePhil MillsSupreme dark overlord of Far East Taiwanese actor Jimmy Wang Yu dies at the age of 80 Far East Films Retrieved 2022 10 09 王羽自爆刺許案難善了 時報周刊 雜誌頻道 新浪網 北美 web archive org 2019 08 07 Retrieved 2022 10 09 Prosecutors launch investigation into Jimmy Wang murder contract case Taipei Times www taipeitimes com 2007 10 17 Retrieved 2022 10 09 Chen wants apology for assassinations Taipei Times www taipeitimes com 2007 10 16 Retrieved 2022 10 09 國家圖書館數位影音服務系統 web archive org 2018 02 13 Retrieved 2022 10 09 當年遭四海幫追殺 陳啟禮出面相助 王羽爆秘辛 因欠陳恩情 焦點 自由時報電子報 web archive org 2019 09 14 Retrieved 2022 10 09 刀王豪落魄 陳啟禮拉入竹聯 富豪男星被砍了7刀沒事 鏡週刊 web archive org 2018 04 01 Retrieved 2022 10 09 兩場喋血案 武打天王光環褪色 焦點 自由時報電子報 web archive org 2019 06 11 Retrieved 2022 10 09 独臂刀王 王羽今晨病逝享寿80岁 聯合早報 2022 04 05 Retrieved 2022 04 05 Chang Ya chin Wang Hsin yu Yeh Kuan yin Shih Hsiu chuan April 5 2022 Veteran Taiwanese martial arts actor Jimmy Wang dies at 79 Central News Agency Retrieved April 5 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jimmy Wang Yu Jimmy Wang at IMDb Cinemasie com Libarts ucok edu Jimmy Wang at Lovehkfilm com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jimmy Wang Yu amp oldid 1136476174, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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