Times Colonist

Model-actor Godfrey Gao’s death sparks outpouring of grief

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Fans and fellow artists are rememberin­g Taiwanese-Canadian model-actor Godfrey Gao as a gentle soul whose charm and strong work ethic earned him a devoted following around the world.

Gao died after suffering an apparent heart attack while filming a sports reality show in the eastern Chinese city of Ningbo on Wednesday. His agency, JetStar Entertainm­ent, confirmed his death on its official Facebook page.

The 35-year-old was filming Chase Me, a Chinese variety series, when he reportedly fell while running. He was rushed to a hospital where he was pronounced dead, according to his agency.

Born in Taiwan’s capital of Taipei, Gao moved to Vancouver as a child and went on to study at Capilano University.

His career took off when he returned to Taiwan, where he appeared in TV shows, films, fashion ads and magazine covers.

He rose to internatio­nal prominence in 2011 when he became the first Asian male model for the luxury brand Louis Vuitton.

In 2013, Gao starred in the big-budget fantasy flick The Mortal Instrument­s: City of Bones, based on the series of young-adult novels.

Its Toronto-based producer, Don Carmody, remembers fans of the books “went crazy” when Gao was cast as cateyed warlock Magnus Bane.

“You needed somebody who was a bit androgynou­s, but really good-looking,” Carmody said by phone on Wednesday.

“[The fans] were really, really for it. He’d been in their imaginatio­ns.”

Carmody described Gao — who went by the nickname “G” on set — as a charmer, recalling that Gao often indulged autograph requests from starry-eyed extras.

Despite his gentle demeanour, Gao was “willing to do anything” for the sake of a scene, Carmody said. When the director made a last-minute decision that Gao should go pantless on screen, the actor stripped down to his boxers without complaint.

Paul Eberhardt, who was Gao’s basketball coach at Capilano University in 2004 and 2005, said the one-time aspiring athlete was always a team player.

Gao left for Taiwan with plans to pursue a basketball career, said Eberhardt, but ended up surprising his teammates when he found his stride in front of the camera.

“When he would come back, they’d tease him about it … because it was so unexpected,” Eberhardt said by phone.

The coach said it’s been hard for him to square how Gao could die so young. “It’s very shocking,” Eberhardt said. News of Gao’s death sparked waves of grief across social media.

“My heart is absolutely shattered,” tweeted Chinese-Canadian actor Simu Liu, who has been cast as Marvel’s first bigscreen Asian-American superhero.

Kevin Zegers, Gao’s Canadian co-star in Mortal Instrument­s, tweeted the actor was the “kindest guy I’ve ever had the pleasure to work with.”

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