Five Tiger Generals of TVB

Five Tiger Generals

Five Tiger Generals, 1983.
Top (L-R): Lau, Wong
Bottom (L-R): Miu, Leung, Tong
Background information
Also known as Five Tigers
Origin Hong Kong
Years active 1980s
Associated acts TVB
Members Michael Miu
Kent Tong
Felix Wong
Andy Lau
Tony Leung
Five Tiger Generals of TVB
Traditional Chinese 無綫五虎將
Simplified Chinese 无线五虎将
Literal meaning Wireless Five Tiger Generals

The Five Tiger Generals of TVB (無綫五虎將), more commonly referred to as simply the Five Tigers (五虎), were a group of five of the most popular young male actors of 1980s Hong Kong television. The group consisted of Michael Miu ("Big Tiger"), Kent Tong ("Second Tiger"), Felix Wong ("Third Tiger"), Andy Lau ("Fourth Tiger"), and Tony Leung Chiu-Wai ("Small Tiger"). The group was formed to collectively promote the popularity of the five members, as well as to promote the company's various drama and entertainment productions. Five Tiger Generals was a name given to them by the media. The term is a popular appellation in Chinese culture, meaning a ruler's five best military generals.

Background

While all five members were once trainees of TVB's then all-year Artiste Training Academy, they joined the school at different times—Kent Tong joined in 1978; Michael Miu and Felix Wong in 1979; Andy Lau in 1980, and Tony Leung in 1981. Tong was the first to debut with his first role as the supporting character Wu Wang-yuen in the 1980 drama This Land is Mine. Wong's first role was in the 1981 The Misadventure of Zoo. The other three members had debut roles while they were still trainees at the school: Miu's debut role was the 1980 drama The Adventurer's; Lau's first role was in the sitcom Hong Kong '81and Leung had his first major role in the 1982 Soldier of Fortune, which also starred Wong and Tong.

It did not take long for the Five Tigers to become popular. According to Wong during a 2009 interview for the talk show Be My Guest, TVB's first generation of leading actors at the time, which included Adam Cheng and Chow Yun-fat, were leaving the company, and TVB was in need to round up a new generation of popular idols, thus the members of the Five Tigers quickly rose to fame due to many performing opportunities. Wong said that as soon as he graduated from acting class, he was offered a major supporting role.[1] Wong was offered a leading role in his second drama, The Lonely Hunter (1981), which shot him to instant fame in Hong Kong.

Formation

In September 1983, amidst a ratings competition with Korean and Japanese variety shows, TVB created the show All Star Challenge, which featured almost an entire lineup of the most popular actors and singers of Hong Kong at the time. The five most popular young male idols at the station—Miu, Tong, Wong, Lau, and Leung—were grouped together to perform a variety of stage performances at the show, such as singing and dancing. Their appearances brought in a lot of media attention, and their performances were a selling point for the show.[2] The media then branded them as TVB's Five Tiger Generals, and the term quickly caught on to the public. Since their formation, the five of them consistently made public appearances together as a group; they even expressed that they would like to release an album together under their name.

Legacy and reunion

The popularity of the Five Tigers led TVB to continue with similar group projects even after the members of the Five Tigers left TVB. However, none of them were that successful. Many television dramas that featured the members of the Five Tigers, notably The Legend of the Condor Heroes (1983), The Return of the Condor Heroes (1983), Police Cadet (1984), The Duke of Mount Deer (1984), and Looking Back in Anger (1989), were branded as classics by many in Asia.

On 27 June 2010, during a press conference for a training academy in Panyu, Guangzhou, Tong revealed that the five members are planning for another reunion project. The collaboration between Miu and Wong in the 2010 drama Gun Metal Grey created a heated discussion about a possible reunion of all members in the future. "The Five Tiger Generals will definitely reunite again. The five of us really hope for that day to come; in fact, we are currently planning one right now."[3]

Collaborations

Film
Year Film Miu Tong Wong Lau Leung Notes
1982 Demi-Gods and Semi-Devils No No
Once Upon a Rainbow No No
1983 Mad, Mad 83 No No No
1985 Twinkle, Twinkle Lucky Stars No No
1986 Lucky Stars Go Places No No
1987 Eastern Condors No No
1988 The Dragon Family No No No
Lai Shi, China's Last Eunuch No No
The Crazy Companies II No No
1989 Little Cop No No
City Cops No No
Proud and Confident No No
News Attack No No
1990 The Fortune Code No No
Days of Being Wild No No
1991 Don't Fool Me No No
The Tigers No No No No No Nominated—Hong Kong Film Award for Best Supporting Actor (Tong)
The Banquet No No
1992 Handsome Siblings No No
The Days of Being Dumb No No
1993 Hero - Beyond The Boundary Of Time No No
Lord of East China Sea No No
Lord of East China Sea II No No
Come Fly the Dragon No No No
1994 Drunken Master II No No
2002 Infernal Affairs No No Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor (Leung)
Golden Horse Awards for Best Actor (Leung)
Golden Bauhinia Awards for Best Actor (Leung)
Hong Kong Film Award for Best Original Film Song (Lau with Leung)
Nominated—Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor (Lau)
Nominated—Golden Horse Awards for Best Actor (Lau)
Golden Chicken No No
2003 Infernal Affairs III No No Golden Horse Awards for Best Actor (Lau)
Golden Chicken 2 No No
2004 Jiang Hu No No
Love Is a Many Stupid Thing No No
2006 My Mother Is a Belly Dancer No No
2005 Wait 'til You're Older No No Nominated—Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor (Lau)
2007 Brothers No No No No Nominated—Hong Kong Film Award for Best Original Film Song (Lau with Eason Chan)
2011 I Love Hong Kong No No
2013 7 Assassins No No
Television dramas
Year Title Miu Tong Wong Lau Leung Notes
1981 The Adventurer's No No
Double Fantasies No No
Come Rain, Come Shine No No No
The Lonely Hunter No No
The Young Heroes of Shaolin No No No
1982 A Kid Troupe No No
Demi-Gods and Semi-Devils No No
The Legend of Master So No No
The Wild Bunch No No
Soldier of Fortune No No No
The Emissary No No
1983 The Legend of the Condor Heroes No No
The Return of the Condor Heroes No No
1984 The Duke of Mount Deer No No
The Foundation No No No
Rise And Fall Of A Stand-in No No
The Return of Wong Fei Hung No No
Summer Kisses, Winter Tears No No
1985 Sword Stained with Royal Blood No No
Tough Fight No No
The Yang's Saga No No No No No
1987 The Grand Canal No No
Two Most Honorable Knights No No
2010 Gun Metal Grey No No Nominated—TVB Anniversary Award for Best Actor (Top 15) (Miu)
Nominated—TVB Anniversary Award for Best Actor (Top 5) (Wong)

See also

References

  1. "Be My Guest: Episode 133". TVB (in Chinese). 2009-07-25.
  2. "Chapter 2: Television Stars, TVB's Five Tiger Generals". Big5.china.com (in Chinese). Retrieved 2010-09-25.
  3. "Kent Tong to film comeback: Five Tiger Generals will definitely reunite". 163 (in Chinese). 2010-06-27. Retrieved 2010-10-09.

External links

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