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Information About

Anita Mui




  Img AnitaMuiFinalConcert2jpg
  Img Capt Anita Mui in her final concert, 2003
  Background solo_singer
  Born <br> Hong Kong
  Died <br> Hong Kong
  Origin Hong Kong
  Instrument Singing
  Genre Cantopop , C-pop
  Occupation Singer , Actress
  Years Active 1982 - 2003


Anita Mui Yim-fong (; , 1963December 30 , 2003 ) was a popular Hong Kong Pop Singer and actress.


BIOGRAPHY



Background

Mui had one elder sister and two brothers. She had not met her father as he had left the family before she was born and her mother moved in with another man, hoping he would look after her children. However, Mui and her family later discovered he was already married. Mui told a local magazine that her mother became very temperamental from that point and always took it out on them. Mui claimed to have been desperate to get away from her family.

From the early 1980s to 2003, she was close friends with Leslie Cheung , another Hong Kong pop star, who committed suicide in April 2003 . She was devastated by his death.

Anita Mui announced in early September 2003 that she had Cervical Cancer and was undergoing treatment. Some of her friends and the media were baffled as to why she took so long to undergo treatment when it appeared she knew of her ailment when it was in a fairly early stage. It's also possible that it was a late detection like most cases or secretly had treatment.

It was widely believed she forwent early treatment because she wanted to preserve the possibility to , also a Hong Kong singer, died from the same illness in 2000 .

Her death, following Leslie Cheung's, was a great loss to the Hong Kong's entertainment industry.


Music career


Mui first entered show business as a singer when she was five and turned professional when she was seven. Anita and her sister, Ann Mui, performed Chinese Opera s and pop songs in numerous restaurants and nightclubs, until she won the first '' New Talent Singing Awards '' in 1982 with the song "Season of Wind" (風的季節), beating over 3,000 contestants. Despite her title as "new talent" at that time, she had already been a singer for more than ten years.

Mui's first album was released with the ''Capital Artist Record Company'' within a year of the contest. Her debut drew a lukewarm response from the audience. But subsequent albums fared much better, as she developed her personal style and image. Two years later, in 1985 , Mui won her first ''10 Best Solid Gold Best Female Singer'' award. The same award went to her in the following four years. Mui won also best songs awards, both for album songs and movie theme songs.

Mui had her first concert in 1985, lasting 15 nights. Her 28 consecutive concerts at the Hong Kong Coliseum in late 1987 through early 1988 established a world record at the time. By then, her title of "Ever Changing Anita Mui" (百變梅艷芳) had become her trademark.

Mui also gained popularity overseas. She held a concert in Taiwan in 1988 , and became the first artist from Hong Kong to give a solo concert there. That same year, she was invited to sing at the 1988 Summer Olympics opening ceremony in Seoul , Korea .

In 1990 , Mui announced that she would put an end to receiving music awards to give a chance to newcomers. She held farewell concerts for 33 consecutive nights before retiring from stage. She stepped down at only 28 years old, but returned from retirement in 1994 .

Over the years, Mui has released over 40 albums. Possibly her best was her fourth album, released in 1986 and named "Bad Girl" (壞女孩) which sold over 400,000 copies (platinum eight-times over by Hong Kong's standards). She was also the first female artiste to break the record sales of 10 million in Hong Kong. She is extremely well known throughout Chinese communities worldwide. Because of her huge success as a pop singer, and her ever-changing images, she is often referred to as the " Madonna of Hong Kong," a comparison resented by some fans who feel that she deserves to be recognised in her own right. Her singing career was once compared to that of Diana Ross by CNN .

The "Anita Classics Moments Live" Concert, held from November 6 to November 11 , 2003 at Hong Kong Colosseum, was her sixth and last concert series, in which her final symbolic act was to "marry the stage", which was accompanied by her classic hit "Sunset Melody" (夕陽之歌) as she exited the stage for the final time. Her very last song performed on stage was (珍惜再會時), a rendition of Manhattan's 'Let's Just Kiss And Say Goodbye'.


Acting career


Anita Mui was also well-known as an actress across the Asia region. Her films have mainly been of the action thriller and kung fu variety, but she has also taken comedic and dramatic roles. In 1993, she starred in The Heroic Trio with Michelle Yeoh and Maggie Cheung , and it proved to be one of her most popular action films. In 1995, she found some international recognition by starring opposite Jackie Chan in Rumble In The Bronx , the film that was largely responsible for Jackie Chan himself breaking into the American market. Of her performance in Chan's Drunken Master II (released in America as The Legend Of Drunken Master ), Variety film critic Joe Leydon said she "appears to be channeling the spirit of Lucille Ball ."

Apart from singing, Mui won her first acting award as a supporting actress in the movie "Fate" in 1984 . In 1987 , her movie " Rouge " presented her with the Golden Horse Best Actress Award . Later on in 1997 , she also won another best supporting actress award with the movie "Eighteen Springs".

Anita was originally cast for Zhang Yimou 's 2004 movie House Of Flying Daggers . She resigned from her position in the movie only two weeks before her death. Zhang had held her parts of filming to the last due to her poor health condition. The filming was already 80% done when she died. Zhang didn't replace Anita's role with another actress. The screenplay was changed to take the storyline off the original character. The new leader of the "House of Flying Daggers" never appears in the movie because it was Anita's role.


DISCOGRAPHY

  • ''Debts of the Heart 心債'' (1982)

  • ''Crimson 赤色'' (1983)

  • ''Flying Across the Stage 飛躍舞台'' (1984)

  • ''The Years Flow By 似水流年'' (1985)

  • ''Bad Girl 壞女孩'' (1985)

  • ''Manzusawa (Mandarin version) 蔓珠莎華(國語大碟)'' (1985)

  • ''The Temptress 妖女'' (1986)

  • ''Tango of Fire 似火探戈'' (1987)

  • ''Flaming Red Lips 烈焰紅唇'' (1987)

  • ''Drunken Dreams 夢裡共醉'' (1988)

  • ''百變梅艷芳再展光華87-88演唱會'' (1988)

  • ''百變梅艷芳-烈焰紅唇(國語大碟)'' (1988)

  • ''We'll be Together '' (1988)

  • ''The Lady 淑女'' (1989)

  • ''In Brasil'' (1989)

  • ''愛我便說愛我吧'' (1989)

  • ''Cover Girl 封面女郎'' (1990)

  • ''百變梅艷芳夏日耀光華演唱會90'' (1990)

  • ''Wild Streets 慾望野獸街'' (1991)

  • ''親密愛人(國語大碟)'' (1991)

  • ''The Legend of the Pop Queen Part I'' (1992)

  • ''The Legend of the Pop Queen Part II'' (1992)

  • ''情幻一生'' (1993)

  • ''變'' (1993)

  • ''皇者之風'' (1993)

  • ''戲劇人生'' (1993)

  • ''是這樣的'' (1994)

  • ''小心 (香港版 及 台灣版)'' (1994)

  • ''歌之女'' (1995)

  • ''一個美麗的回響演唱會'' (1995)

  • ''鏡花水月'' (1997)

  • ''情歌.梅艷芳(精選大碟)'' (1997)

  • ''芳蹤乍現台北演唱會實錄(國語大碟)'' (1997)

  • ''女人花(國語大碟)'' (1997)

  • ''仲夏變奏'' (1998)

  • ''情歌II (精選大碟)'' (1998)

  • ''床前明月光 (國語大碟)'' (1998)

  • ''Larger Than Life'' (1999)

  • ''沒話說'' (1999)

  • ''I'm So Happy'' (2000)

  • ''眾裡尋芳'' (2001)

  • ''With'' (2002)

  • ''Anita Mui Fantasy Gig 2002 梅艷芳極夢幻演唱會2002 '' (2002)

  • Source: {Link without Title}



FILMOGRAPHY


''#'' Anita Mui was not the leading or supporting actress in the film

  • '' Anitra Mui was the supporting actress in the film



OTHER CONTRIBUTIONS


Anita Mui was actively involved in charitable projects throughout her career.

In 1992 , the Mayor of San Francisco declared April 18 of that year as "Anita Mui Day" to honor her contributions to society by raising funds for the ''Nursing Home'' which bears her name. October 26, 1993 was then again declared as "Anita Mui Day" in San Francisco.

During the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome ( SARS ) outbreak, she initiated a fund raising concert titled "1:99 Concert" which was the second concert allowed to be held at the Hong Kong Stadium.

She was one of the founders of the Hong Kong Performing Artistes Guild (HKPAG, 香港演藝人協會), which was established in 1993, and was its chairlady. She resigned because of her health.


TRIVIA


  • Anita's funeral was the largest in Hong Kong. The largest one before that was of martial arts legend Bruce Lee .

  • The character Anita King from the manga series Read Or Dream and the anime R.O.D The TV was named after her. The other two lead characters were named after Michelle Yeoh and Maggie Cheung respectively, as a tribute to the movie The Heroic Trio , which all three actresses starred in.

  • Anita Mui and Andy Lau were linked for some time during the 90s.

  • She was a close friend of Sammi Cheng , and of Michelle Yeoh , who accompanied her when she made the public announcement about her cancer.

  • Anita mentored several Hong Kong newcomer singers who have since become successful, most notably Andy Hui , Denise Ho , and the band ''Grasshoppers''.

  • Later artists like Cyndi Wang , Elva Xiao and Jolin Tsai are thought to imitate Anita Mui in certain ways.

  • Anita Mui's song " Stand By Me " is a popular Cantonese cover of the Leiber And Stoller song originally recorded by Ben E. King .

  • She was called the Madonna of Hong Kong, as a music star with a comparable style and standing, and because like Madonna she kept changing her image (she was also called the "Diva of Change" because of this). However, many fans resented the comparison, as Anita Mui's fame owed nothing to Madonna.

  • Anita Mui's song "Bad Girl", somewhat similar to Madonna's Song of the same name, was banned in China due to its suggestive content.

  • Anita Mui was originally cast in a major role for the movie '' House Of Flying Daggers '', which was to be her final film appearance. However, she died before any of her scenes were filmed. After her death, director Zhang Yimou decided to alter the script rather than find a replacement. The film is dedicated to her memory.



SEE ALSO



EXTERNAL LINKS (IN CHINESE)



  Before ''Nil''
  Title New Talent Singing Awards winner
  Years 1982


  Title Golden Needle Award of RTHK Top Ten Chinese Gold Songs Award
  Years 1998
  Before Alan Tam