Duncan Chow
Duncan Chow | |
---|---|
Born | Duncan Lai (黎登勤) September 19, 1978 British Hong Kong |
Other names | D.C. |
Education | Sear Rogers International School Auckland University - Major: Psychology |
Occupation | Athlete, Model, Actor |
Years active | 1993-present |
Website | https://www.facebook.com/DuncanchowDC/ |
Duncan Chow (Chinese: 周群達; born Duncan Lai (黎登勤), September 19, 1978) is a Hong Kong-born actor who is popular in Taiwan. Originally he was a professional windsurfer and a fashion show model, but chose acting as a career in 2001. He rose to fame by starring in 2004's Taiwanese Hit Movie "Formula 17", a comedy film about homosexuality.
Early life[]
Duncan was born in Cheung Chau, Hong Kong. His father, Lai Gun, who is one of the first windies in Hong Kong, taught him windsurfing and also established Cheung Chau Windsurfing Center, a famous destination for many lovers of windsurfing. Duncan is the cousin of former Hong Kong olympian Lee Lai Shan. He was former Hong Kong member, won the 1998 Asian Windsurfing Championships.
Duncan began his acting career at the age of 14 as the adolescent version of Bruce Lee in a tribute film called Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story in 1993. His scene appeared at the very beginning of the movie.
At the age of 15, Duncan went to New Zealand to study. In an interview, he said that the reason why he choose New Zealand as a place to study abroad was because it was the country of most extreme sports.[citation needed] When Duncan was 18, he returned to Hong Kong in a vacation and went casting with a friend, then he was chosen to shoot a Television advertisement for FedEx. He became a freelance model and appeared in many different TVCs.
Acting career[]
Duncan officially started his professional acting career with the 2000s film "I Do", co-starred with Ella Koon, Bobo Chan, Raymond Wong. After this film, it was rumoured that he had a relationship with Bobo Chan.
In early 2000s, he decided to move to Taiwan to develop his career. He appeared frequently in many Taiwanese TV Dramas. With the success of Formula 17, he gained popular recognition in 2004. One year later, he starred as Mulang in Tsui Hark's film Seven Swords - which was another box office success. In the same year, he played Smiley Dentist in The Shoe Fairy (Mermaid Blossom), co-starred with Vivian Hsu. Duncan was expected to become a new generation idol of Taiwanese Wave. Unfortunately, because of a scandal in late 2005, his career interrupted for several years. In 2009, he came back to Hong Kong to work as interior designer.
In 2012, he returned to Taiwan to join in TV series "What is love?" at the age of 34. He said in an interview about the comeback that he really missed acting and would like to take time when he was still young. Luckily, since 2012, many TV dramas in which he appeared have been very successful.
In 2014, Duncan starred in Jess Lee's Music Video "Cliff to the Heaven", in which he played a married man who had an affair with his brother's fiancée (played by Xu Naihan). The MV contained a lot of hot scenes between Duncan and Xu Naihan, which made it extremely controversy. This MV has reached over 43 million views on YouTube (April, 2017). Duncan seemed to change to a more mature and seductive image.[1]
Duncan was back to Hong Kong to participate in a Gary Tang's series named "The Hiddens", co-starring many Hong Kong popular actors and actresses (Jessica Hsuan, Lawrence Ng, Michael Tao, William So).
In 2017, Duncan will appear in another Hong Kong TV Series called "反黑" (OCTB).
List of Duncan Chow's TV Series[]
Year | TV Show | Character | Partners | Region |
---|---|---|---|---|
2001 | Devils' Blues | Jade Leung, Tai Ping Hui | Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan | |
Six Friends | Xiao S | Taiwan | ||
Peach Girl | Lu Wu Lang | Vanness Wu, Annie Wu | ||
2002 | Come to my place | Cameo | F4 | |
Purple Corner | ||||
Two-faced Godfather | Bobby Dou, Joyce Tsang | |||
Odyssey | Tang President | , Beatrice Hsu | ||
2003 | Hi! Working Girl | Heavenly King's manager | Ken Chu, Jolin Tsai, Show Lo | |
Heart Train | ||||
2004 | Lover of Herb | Yang Shou Zhi | ||
The legend of speed | Du Bian Si / Ah Si | Rainie Yang | ||
2006 | Hua Yang Shao Nian Shao Nu (Hana Kimi) | Yuan Qiu Ye (Cameo) | ||
2007 | The Gold Convoyers (Biao Hang Tian Xia) | Wang Zhenwei | David Chiang, , Ken Chang, Zhao Liying | Mainland China |
2008 | Prince + Princess 2 | Teacher | Taiwan | |
2008 | Magnolia Flower | Chen Xi | Annie Wu, Stephanie Xiao | |
2010 | The Winner is King | A Mao | Julien Cheung, Ada Choi | Hong Kong |
2011 | Medical Examiner Shinomiya Hazuki (Season 10) | Yusuke Tsuruta | Japan | |
2012 | Mameshiba Ichiro Futen no Shiba Jiro | Gondo Shigeru | ||
What is love | Zhang Shao Qian | Jade Chou, Chris Wu | Taiwan | |
Lady Maid Maid | Luo Jia Liang / "Andy Lo" | |||
2013 | Falling | Zhang Lu Huai | Jade Chou, Esther Liu | |
Happy 300 Days | Jun Jie | |||
2014 | Mr. Right Wanted | Cameo | ||
2014-2015 | Dear Mom | Xu Ji Kuan | Xiao Xun, Linh Hong, Joane Tsang | |
2015 | Love Cuisine | Wen Zhen Yu | Lego Lee, Allison Lin, | |
2016 | Rock Records in Love | Kevin | Lego Lee | |
The Hiddens | Chen Chi Keung | Jessica Hsuan, Lawrence Ng, Michael Tao, William So, Wylie Chiu, Lu Jing-Jing | Hong Kong | |
2017 | OCTB | Jordan Chan, Danny Chan |
- OCTB (2017)
- The Hiddens (TVB, 2016)
- Rock Records in Love (2016)
- Love Cuisine (SETTV, 2015)
- Dear Mom (SETTV, 2014)
- Happy 300 Days (TTV, 2013)
- Falling (PTS, 2013)
- Lady Maid Maid (SETTV, 2012)
- Mameshiba Ichiro Futen no Shiba Jiro (KBS 2012)
- What is love (Supporting role) (2012)
- Medical Examiner Shinomiya Hazuki (TV Tokyo, 2011)
- Hua Yang Shao Nian Shao Nu (CTS / GTV, 2006)
- Hanazakarino Kimitachihe (Guest Star) (2006)
- (CTV, 2004)
- Lover of Herb (TVBS-G, 2004)
- Hi! Working Girl (CTV, 2003)
Filmography[]
- My Missing Valentine (2020)
- High Flash (2018)
- Taste of Life (205)
- (2014)
- (2006)
- Seven Swords (2005)
- Formula 17 (2004)
- Love Me If You Can (2003)
- Leaving in Sorrow (2002)
- I Do (2001)
- Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story (1993)
References[]
- ^ 中時電子報. "周群達MV搞激情 女友吃味下禁令". 中時電子報 (in Chinese). Retrieved 2017-04-29.
- ^ Duncan Chow at hkmdb.com
- ^ Duncan Chow at chinesemov.com
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Duncan Chow. |
- http://blog.sina.com.cn/zhouqunda
- http://www.duncanlai.com
- https://web.archive.org/web/20060503183014/http://ch8c.mediacorptv.com/shows/drama/view/302/1/.html
- https://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http://www.geocities.com/Tokyo/Shrine/2626/dangkan.html&date=2009-10-25+11:34:24
- https://web.archive.org/web/20090810101500/http://duncan.tw.st/
- http://www.twfilm.org/taillyhigh_web/star_5.htm
- Duncan Lai at IMDb
- https://www.facebook.com/TheHiddensHK/
- 1978 births
- Living people
- Taiwanese male film actors
- Hong Kong windsurfers
- Taiwanese male models
- Taiwanese male television actors