South China Morning Post

WHEN MOVEMENT WITHOUT WORDS CAN SPEAK VOLUMES

Hong Kong-raised dancer Lyman Heung won the ViuTV talent quest King Maker V. A year later, his live show ‘Unspoken’ is being staged in the city

- Mabel Lui mabel.lui@scmp.com

For as long as he can remember, Lyman Heung has been restless and full of energy.

In primary school, he found it difficult to sit still and his teachers would lament how loud he was in class. Even while he was doing sports, his parents would notice him singing to himself and looking for a way to express himself.

“I was a kid – I am still a kid – that is overtly energetic,” Heung says. “I’m always just moving about.” It is no wonder then, that Heung became a dancer – something which allows him to move every day.

Born in Honolulu in the US state of Hawaii and raised in Hong Kong, Heung spent several years as a dancer in New York before returning in 2023 to Hong Kong to compete in the ViuTV talent show King Maker V.

He went on to win the competitio­n, following in the footsteps of, among others, Keung To, of Hong Kong boy band Mirror.

Fast forward a year and Heung has just debuted Unspoken, a live dance show centred around the idea of a lost love that promises to reveal a previously unseen side of him. The concept show, which can also be described as a piece of dance theatre, will be staged at the Hong Kong Arts Centre in Wan Chai until May 12.

Heung may have always had an innate talent for movement and dance, but the journey to this point in his career has been one full of ups and downs.

The dancer fell in love with performing arts at the age of nine, when his music teacher encouraged him to take part in a school production of the comic opera The Pirates of Penzance. Two years later, his mum got him to take up ballroom dancing.

“I’m like, ‘Why am I in heels?’” he recalls, laughing. “It was not cool at all. Everyone was playing soccer or doing hip hop, and I didn’t get to do any of that. But it helped me let out my energy because I did have fun in class. I actually liked moving that way.”

From there, Heung delved into musical theatre, while also exploring other dance styles such as jazz, hip hop and contempora­ry dance.

However, as he was not doing particular­ly well in his studies in Hong Kong, Heung’s parents sent him back to Hawaii when he was 16. He spent the next four years there – two in high school and another two studying hotel management.

“I was struggling in Hawaii,” Heung says of not being able to follow his true passion – but, while in community college, he met an English professor who told him to read a book about childhood dreams.

“Because of him, and because of that book, I got to that point of, ‘Why am I not chasing my childhood dream?’” Heung says. Unbeknown to his parents, Heung dropped out of school and bought a ticket back to Hong Kong.

“This is how much I want it. I’m going to go to theatre school,” he told his parents after he landed. The performer spent a year at the Hong Kong Academy of Performing Arts, before heading to the University of Kent in the United Kingdom for three years to study drama and theatre.

After graduation, Heung headed to New York, working as a ballroom dance instructor at Dance With Me, a dance company led by Dancing with the Stars profession­als Maksim and Valentin Chmerkovsk­iy, while auditionin­g for shows.

In 2020, Heung found some success: he was cast as an ensemble member for the national tour of Chicago the Musical, and appeared in the NBC special One Night Only: The Best of Broadway on American television.

Chicago was halted when the pandemic hit and the dancer was left feeling defeated and wondering what he should do next. That was when his wife, Zoe Lau, suggested he audition for King Maker V.

“She was like, ‘Sometimes you don’t get what you want. Sometimes you have to come in from the side. Do you want to give this a shot?’ I’m like, ‘This is a real side door’,” he says with a laugh.

Although he had been away from Hong Kong for a while, was older than most participan­ts and did not specialise in the type of dancing typically seen in the show, he decided to give it a shot anyway.

It was during the competitio­n that Heung met actress Rosa Maria Velasco, who became his mentor along with singer Jay Fung Wan-him.

“[Heung] really stood out in the crowd, because he has this very natural charisma that a performer really needs,” Velasco says of meeting him for the first time. “He is not just a dancer or a singer or a performer – he is an artist.”

However, she adds: “At the beginning of the competitio­n, I could still feel that he was still trying to figure out how he wanted to present himself.”

That is why, during the course of King Maker V, the two worked on showing Heung’s vulnerabil­ity in his performanc­es. “I just wanted to let him know that it’s not all glam. If you want to show yourself, we also need to see the weak side of you,” Velasco says.

Heung also received help from stage director German Cheung Ming-yiu – Velasco’s husband – who directed several of Heung’s King Maker V performanc­es and pushed the dancer to “find the why” in every dance.

“He would really scratch and ask questions and dive in, and then actually make you question: why are you performing the way you’re performing?” Heung says. “That’s what I love, and that’s why I want to be in this industry.”

After becoming “really all-rounded”, as Velasco describes it, Heung won the competitio­n, and in the months after, the trio began establishi­ng a genuine friendship outside the show.

It was then that they began discussing the possibilit­y of creating a dance concept show about a man dealing with grief from losing his wife.

There had been, as they began their discussion­s, a spate of suicide cases that made the headlines in Hong Kong.

“Given that each case has a different reason, what does death mean to us?” Cheung asked. “What does it mean to lose someone? What kind of circumstan­ces would lead a person to not find meaning in their lives any more?

“[Heung and I] thought about how we both have wives – if we lost our other half, what would that be like? If we lost what we loved most, how would we go on?

Unspoken was born from this starting point.”

Unspoken, which lasts about an hour and 45 minutes, follows the protagonis­t as he remains stuck in the day of his late wife’s death, revisiting his memories of her.

While the show mostly consists of dances – choreograp­hed to existing hits and newly composed pieces – it is interspers­ed with scenes with dialogue that feature Cheung and Velasco as husband and wife.

“It’s as if we entered this person’s mind,” Cheung says.

“In this moment, how chaotic is his world? What memories, shadows, fears are affecting him? It’s like we are accompanyi­ng him throughout this process of loss, and slowly finding a way out.” For all three performers,

Unspoken is unlike anything they have ever worked on before. It is a key departure from the dance performanc­es you might see on

King Maker, in Broadway musicals and stage plays – although it combines elements of all three. The result is a layered piece of work, where one singular scene might have several moving components.

The show – speech-free for most of it – places full emphasis on the body as a method of expression.

For Heung, the show has been a huge undertakin­g – but he is optimistic that people will appreciate seeing his new side of him.

“It’s been a process, but I love this process, because it’s art. It’s creating. You have to struggle. It’s not always happy-go-lucky,” he says.

“I hope I get to do more of this for everyone to see. I hope I do the people of Hong Kong proud.”

I love this process, because it is art. It is creating. You have to struggle. It is not always happy-go-lucky

DANCER LYMAN HEUNG

I hope I get to do more … I hope I do the people of Hong Kong proud

LYMAN HEUNG

 ?? Photos courtesy of Lyman Heung ?? Above: Unspoken, Lyman Heung’s dance show, follows the protagonis­t as he remains stuck in the day of his late wife’s death. Below: Heung performing at Plaza Hollywood in Diamond Hill in 2001.
Photos courtesy of Lyman Heung Above: Unspoken, Lyman Heung’s dance show, follows the protagonis­t as he remains stuck in the day of his late wife’s death. Below: Heung performing at Plaza Hollywood in Diamond Hill in 2001.
 ?? Photo: Xiaomei Chen ?? Dancer Lyman Heung (right) with director German Cheung (centre) and actress
Rosa Maria Velasco in Diamond Hill.
Photo: Xiaomei Chen Dancer Lyman Heung (right) with director German Cheung (centre) and actress Rosa Maria Velasco in Diamond Hill.
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