Maria Cordero
This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (January 2013) |
Maria Cordero | |||
---|---|---|---|
Born | |||
Nationality | Portugal, Hong Kong, Macau | ||
Occupation | Singer, actress, tv host, dj | ||
Spouse(s) | Rick da Silva (m. 1999 - 2020) | ||
Relatives | Saffren Colbourne | ||
Chinese name | |||
Traditional Chinese | 瑪俐亞 | ||
Simplified Chinese | 玛俐亚 | ||
| |||
Musical career | |||
Also known as | Fat Mama (肥媽) | ||
Origin | Hong Kong | ||
Genres | Cantopop | ||
Maria Cordero, MH (Chinese: 瑪俐亞), nicknamed Fat Mama (Chinese: 肥媽), is a singer, actress, TV Host and DJ from Hong Kong. She grew up in Hong Kong. She also has her own cooking show, Maria's Kitchen (肥媽私房菜) on Cable TV. Her fans nicknamed her "Fat Mama" (肥媽; Fei4 Maa1).
Biography[]
Cordero was born to a Macanese family of Portuguese-Chinese heritage at the Hospital Conde S. Januário in Macau in 1954. She is of paternal Portuguese descent. Her family moved to Shelley Street, Hong Kong when she was ten years old. When she was eleven her father died, and she began working to support her seven brothers and sisters. She resorted to using identity cards from friends, because the legal working age in Hong Kong was 14. Her first job was as an usher for a local cinema.
While working as a hotel telephone operator, Cordero came across the opportunity to learn the bass guitar. The hotel resident band found out and hired her to play at night after she auditioned. For several years she worked a triple job of telephone operator in the day, band player at night, and working as a cashier. But she also worked as a line cook for takeaway contractors for office workers, thus having excellent cooking skills, which led to her having hosted 3 food and cuisine shows.
Cordero married a widowed Filipino pianist and bandmate 22 years her senior when she was in her late teens. She and her first husband have been divorced since 1989 and now married to Portuguese engineer.[1] She is the mother of six children (two boys with her ex-husband, two boys and two girls from her ex-husband's previous marriage). Her eldest son Alfonso Bibi Cordero (Chinese: 高進一) is a member of the Hong Kong Hockey Team which won the bronze medal in the 2009 East Asian Games.[2]
Singing and movie career[]
Cordero's singing career began after word spread about her singing ability at a newly opened disco in 1985. Offers of recording contracts, movie roles, and stage performances came after a string of hits which began with a tailor-made song written for her by director and songwriter Teddy Robin, titled "Sai Hei". Parts of this song were also used in one of Edison Chen's track 嘥氣 (Waste of breath).
Filmography[]
- City on Fire (龍虎風雲, 1987)
- (1988)
- (1988)
- Walk on Fire (1988)
- Women Prison (1988)
- (1988)
- Vampire Vs. Vampire (1989)
- Mr. Coconut (1989)
- Crocodile Hunter (1989)
- (1989)
- (1989)
- Aces Go Places 5 (1989)
- Pedicab Driver (1989)
- The Little Mermaid (1989) (voice-over for Pat Carroll) – Ursula (Cantonese dub)
- (1989)
- (1990)
- (1990)
- The Banquet (1991)
- Second To None (1992)
- Gangs '92 (1992)
- (1993)
- (1993)
- (1993)
- (1994)
- (1996)
- Street Angels (1996)
- Lost and Found (1996)
- Thanks for Your Love (1996)
- 97 Aces Go Places (1997)
- Chinese Box (1997)
- Knock Off (1998)
- (2001)
- (2002)
- (2002)
- (2003)
- Men Suddenly in Black (2003)
- (2004)
- (2004)
- Invisible Waves (2006)
- Look for a Star (2009)
- From Vegas to Macau (2014)
- Delete My Love (2014)
- From Vegas to Macau III (2016)
- Lucid Dreams (2018)
Songs[]
- 救命 (Save My Life)
- 友誼之光 (The Light of Friendship)
- 媽媽 I Love You (Mama I Love You)
- You Can't Stop Me Loving You
- Old People
- 肥媽有話兒 (Maria Has Something to Say)
Personal[]
Cordero has been married twice and was married to her second spouse Rick da Silva from 1999 until his death on November 5, 2020.[5] Her children (including step children) are from her first marriage.
References[]
- ^ Singer was abused by ex-hubby, June 3, 2017
- ^ "嚤囉香港精神 Mingpao 2010-05-29". Archived from the original on 20 June 2019. Retrieved 1 June 2010.
- ^ "Maria Cordero". IMDb. Retrieved 17 April 2010.
- ^ "Maria Cordero". chinesemov.com. Retrieved 17 April 2010.
- ^ https://www.todayonline.com/8days/sceneandheard/entertainment/hongkong-singer-maria-corderos-husband-passes-away-lung-cancer
External links[]
- Maria Cordero brns.com
- Maria Cordero at IMDb
- 1954 births
- Living people
- Hong Kong people of Macanese descent
- Hong Kong people of Portuguese descent
- English-language singers from Hong Kong
- 20th-century Hong Kong actresses
- 21st-century Hong Kong actresses
- Macau people
- Macanese people
- Macau people of Portuguese descent
- Macau emigrants to Hong Kong
- Recipients of the Bronze Bauhinia Star