South China Morning Post

STAR ROSE ABOVE FAMILY WOES TO FIND HAPPINESS

Ada Choi won praise for her versatilit­y in TV and film portrayals but her personal life was rocky before she moved to the mainland and married

- Lisa Cam lisa.cam@scmp.com

Ada Choi Siu-fan, known for her compelling performanc­es on television and in film, establishe­d herself as one of Hong Kong’s more versatile actresses since getting her start at city broadcaste­r TVB.

Born in 1973 in Hong Kong, she got her big break as an actress after being named second runner-up in the 1991 Miss Hong Kong beauty pageant. She was just 17 at the time.

Choi underlined her star status when she was named best actress in the second TVB Anniversar­y Awards in 1998 for her part in the high-society melodrama series Secret of the Heart.

She was lauded as one of the four divas of TVB in the early 2000s alongside Kenix Kwok Ho-ying, Jessica Hsuan and Flora Chan Wai-shan. The actress’ versatilit­y has seen her take on roles in a variety of genres, from period dramas to modern thrillers.

At TVB, Choi had roles in dramas such as The File of Justice V (1997), Healing Hands (1998) and Where The Legend Begins (2002) – but it was in the Chinese television series Empresses in the Palace (2011) that she gave what is arguably her best performanc­e. Choi captivated audiences with her portrayal of an evil empress.

Critics have generally praised Choi’s ability to immerse herself fully in her roles and to bring depth and complexity to the character she portrays.

One review from the Hong Kong Film Critics Society website commended Choi’s performanc­e in Empresses in the Palace, stating: “Ada Choi’s portrayal of the conniving empress is nothing short of mesmerisin­g, capturing the character’s ambition and ruthlessne­ss with nuance and intensity.”

Behind the glitz and glamour of her career is a chequered family history. Choi’s parents divorced when she was five, and her memories of her childhood with her brother revolve around constantly moving – which meant changing schools – to avoid debtors and loan sharks; they are said to have spent nights under bridges and in abandoned houses. It has been widely reported that Choi’s mother, Wong Su-mui, has been a gambling addict since the actress was a young girl.

When Choi was thrown a million-dollar birthday party at the Regent Hong Kong hotel when she turned 18 a few months after the beauty pageant, it was headline news. It was reportedly then that Choi embarked on a six-year relationsh­ip with property tycoon Joseph Lau Luen-hung, who showered her with gifts.

Lau was subsequent­ly reported to have repaid over HK$80 million in gambling debts racked up by Choi’s mother and to have given Choi four flats, all of which were sold to repay her mother’s debts.

In the year 2000, Choi held a press conference to announce she was severing ties with her mother.

She revealed that in the almost 10 years that she had been in the entertainm­ent business, she had accumulate­d zero assets because she had been repaying her mother’s debts the entire time. Choi said her mother had recently disappeare­d and left her with a HK$5 million debt.

She urged people not to lend her mother any more money because she would no longer be responsibl­e for repaying it.

Still in her 20s and with such turmoil in her life, it was ultimately the former beauty queen’s talent and achievemen­ts that kept her going.

Her life took a turn for the better after she looked towards the mainland for acting opportunit­ies in the 2000s. There, Choi met Max Zhang Jin, her co-star in The Legend of Magic Mirror (2003) and Eight Charts (2005).

After secretly dating for four years, the two tied the knot in a private ceremony in 2008, with Choi announcing the marriage in a handwritte­n letter to the media and requesting privacy. The celebrity couple’s two daughters, Zoe and Chloe, were born in 2011 and 2013 respective­ly.

The couple stood strong in spite of tabloid gossip columnists frequently describing Choi as the breadwinne­r of the family, with Zhang mostly playing supporting roles on screen at the time.

Everything changed, at least to those outside the Zhang household, when Zhang took a notable part in The Grandmaste­r, art-house auteur Wong Kar-wai’s years-in-the-making martial arts epic. He won the best supporting actor prize at the 2014 Hong Kong Film Awards for his turn.

In his acceptance speech, Zhang said: “A lot of people said that I will rely on my wife for the rest of my life and they are right – I will rely on my wife for my happiness for the rest of my life.”

His words brought Choi, who was in the audience, to tears.

After The Grandmaste­r, Zhang took roles in other high-profile martial arts films such as SPL2: A Time for Consequenc­es and Ip Man 3, both of which earned him best supporting actor nods in the 2016 Hong Kong Film Awards.

Meanwhile, it was reported that Choi’s father had reached out to her and her brother in an attempt to reconnect with them and asked for forgivenes­s for his absence from their lives.

Choi’s mother has reportedly found God and is recovering from her gambling addiction, with Choi choosing to forgive her. Both Choi and Zhang are Christians.

The couple’s third child, a son they named Joey, was born in November 2019. With her rocky past behind her, Choi, Zhang and their three children now live happily in Shanghai, with Choi saying on a variety show in 2022 that her life in mainland China was “so good, it could not get any better”.

Ada Choi’s portrayal of the conniving empress is nothing short of mesmerisin­g

HK FILM CRITICS SOCIETY WEBSITE

This is the 18th instalment in a biweekly series profiling major Hong Kong pop culture figures of recent decades.

 ?? Photos: Instagram, SCMP Pictures ?? Ada Choi, Max Zhang and their children last year; and Choi in Justice Pao.
Photos: Instagram, SCMP Pictures Ada Choi, Max Zhang and their children last year; and Choi in Justice Pao.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Max Zhang and Michelle Yeoh in Master Z: The Ip Man Legacy.
Max Zhang and Michelle Yeoh in Master Z: The Ip Man Legacy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China