Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Producer introduced world to Bruce Lee

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FAMOUS Hong Kong film producer Raymond Chow, who introduced the world to Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan and even brought the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles to the big screen, has died at the age of 91.

Hong Kong’s secretary for commerce and economic developmen­t, Edward Yau, said Chow “helped nurture a pool of Hong Kong talents and brought them to the internatio­nal stage”.

Chow was a journalist who became a publicist for Shaw

Brothers Studios, which churned out hundreds of films and popularise­d the kung fu genre.

Studio founder Run Run Shaw soon moved Chow to the production side of the business after he complained that the movies – made on low budgets and short schedules – were not good enough.

“I said I did not think I could keep my job because the pictures were so bad,” Chow told Asiaweek magazine in 1983. Frustrated with Shaw Brothers’ assembly-line ethic, he created his own production company, Golden Harvest, in 1970.

He soon outmanoeuv­red his gigantic old employer to grab the actor who would become synonymous with kung fu movies. Chow signed Bruce Lee in 1971 after seeing him on a Hong Kong television variety show.

“Facing you on the screen, you feel his presence is very strong, very powerful,” Chow told the Associated Press in 2005.

Golden Harvest signed Lee to a three-picture deal, with each breaking all Hong Kong box office records.

Those movies were followed by Enter The Dragon, the first Chinese martial arts film to be produced by a major Hollywood studio, Warner Bros. It cost $500,000 dollars and earned $40 million at the box office.

Lee died days before the film’s release in 1973, and his death left a void for kung fu heroes in Hong Kong’s film industry that young performers were eager to fill. Chow signed one of them, a former stuntman named Jackie Chan, in 1979.

After signing with Chow, Chan made a number of increasing­ly popular Chinese-language action comedy movies that made him a superstar in Asia.

Chow invested plenty of time and effort introducin­g Chan to Western audiences. He arranged for Chan to spend time in Los Angeles learning English and star in his first Englishlan­guage film, 1980’s The Big Brawl, which flopped.

A year later, Chow gave him a minor role alongside top

Hollywood names in The Cannonball Run, but it was 1995’s Rumble In The Bronx that catapulted Chan to worldwide fame.

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