Chui Tien-you

This is a Chinese name; the family name is Chui.
Chui Tien-you
Chinese name 徐天佑
Pinyin Xú Tiānyòu (Mandarin)
Birth name Chui Man-kin (徐文健)
Born (1983-05-16) May 16, 1983
Hong Kong
Other name(s) Tien You, TY
Occupation Actor, Singer, Writer, Director
Years active 2002 - present

Chui Man-kin (徐天佑, born May 16, 1983), better known as Chui Tien-you or Tien You or "TY", is an Hong Kong actor, singer, writer and director.

Early life

Chui was invited by Director Fruit Chan,[1] for a beverage commercial shooting in 1999, when he was studying Form 4. He then signed a management contract and made his debut in Chan's Little Cheung as a guest actor.

Acting career

Following secondary school graduation in Hong Kong and a half-year further education in Tokyo Japan, Chui began his onscreen acting career in 2000 in Lawrence Au Mon’s film "Gimme, Gimme” and Lau Miu Suet’s Glass Tears. Glass Tears entered the Cannes Film Festival 2001 where Chui celebrated his 18th birthday in Cannes.

Chui appeared in several films for instance Summer Breeze of Love and Sound of Colors by Joe Ma, and The Mummy, Age 19 by Wilson Yip. He played a supporting role as a director in Pang Ho-cheung’s A.V. in 2005.

He starred as the grown-up son and attracted the most attention in Patrick Tam’s After This Our Exile. In the movie Magic Boy by Adam Wong and La Lingerie by Chan Hing-kai and Janet Chun, Chui’s sentimental roles brought him many compliments from film critics. He was then awarded the 2008 Rising Star in the 13th Pusan International Film Festival in Korea.

Chui became known to Southeast Asian audiences when he collaborated with Malaysian director Yuhang Ho in the movie At The End of Daybreak, which won the Asian Film Award in 2009 Locarno International Film Festival and 2009 Hong Kong Asian Film Festival closing film. In this breakthrough role, Chui portrayed a teenager who is psychological imbalanced, which caught international attention. In 2010, after rounds of audition, Chui was offered an important role in Contagion directed by the Academy Award-winning film Director Steven Soderbergh. This was also his debut appearance in a Hollywood film, released in 2011.

Filmography

Singing career

In 2002, Chui together with his partner Wong You-nam set out Shine, a band that enjoyed tremendous local success. They immediately swept through a combination of the major Music Awards and turned them into popular teen idols of the year. They have released eleven albums, shot a number of TV commercials as the spokesman for many brands.

Despite the success, Chui decided to separate with his partner temporarily and pursued his acting career. Chui has teamed up with his partner Wong You-Nam again in 2012 after a significant performance at “Concert YY.” Shine had two major concerts in 2012 “Shine Again” and “Shine Passion Live”, in which the latter was a year-end count down show at the Hong Kong Coliseum.

Director

2013, Chui directs “Bullet Man”, a novel he wrote which is made into a short film. As a singasong writer, musician, singer, composer, artist, book writer, actor and now a director – Chui believes creativity is limitless and borderless; he is always excited to explore every possibility.

Other works

Apart from acting, Chui also involves in other creative genres. He has written a thriller book series called “Marson Studio”, screenplays, as well as various columns for newspapers and magazines. In 2006, he was invited to shoot a short film “Ten” for Phoenix Television, and became deeply interested in film directing. Since then, Chui has not stopped preparing for his first feature film where he writes, directs and acts.

Written works

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, May 06, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.