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A legendary
Hong Kong choreographer/actor/director whose first exposure to many
stateside moviegoers came with his work in the Wachowski Brothers'
1999 breakthrough action flick
The Matrix, Yuen Wo Ping has subsequently
crafted an impressive international career with work on such high-profile
efforts as Ang Lee's
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) and Quentin
Tarantino's
Kill Bill (2003). Born the eldest of 12 children in Guangzhan in 1945, young Wo Ping was schooled in the art of Peking
Opera and kung fu by his highly regarded father, Yuen Siu Tin (who
also served as something of a mentor to international action superstar
Jackie Chan). It was at his father's behest that the young martial
artist was brought to the attention of the "Wong Fei Hung" series'
producers in the 1960s, and Wo Ping's martial arts skills served
him well as he rose through the ranks with stunt work in such
Shaw
Brothers classics as
The Chinese Boxer (1970).
A year
later, Wo Ping received his first credit as choreographer for director
Ng See Yuen's Mad Killer, and through the remainder of the decade
he would work frequently with both Yuen and the Shaw Brothers. Of
course, it wasn't long before Wo Ping was looking to advance his
skills behind the camera, and in 1978, he made his directorial debut
with the wildly popular
Snake in Eagle's Shadow. Quickly following
with
Jackie Chan's
Drunken Master and
Dance of the Drunk Mantis
(which featured his brother Sunny), Wo Ping's subsequent work with
Golden Harvest found him again in the director's chair for such
"Wong Fei Hung" efforts as
Magnificent Butcher and
Dreadnaught.
After
forming his own production company in 1979, Wo Ping's prominence
on the Hong Kong screen would skyrocket and his influence expand
with the efforts of
Donnie Yen; and though the popularity
of traditional kung fu films would wane somewhat in the 1980s, Wo
Ping's output never slowed. In 1991, the genre received something
of a shot in the arm thanks to Tsui Hark's popular
Jet Li vehicle
Once Upon a Time in China (again featuring the enduring Wong Fei
Hung and choreographed by Wo Ping), and subsequent work on
Iron
Monkey (1993),
Wing Chun (1994), and
Fist of Legend (also 1994)
would yield some of the best martial arts films of the decade. After
witnessing his jaw-dropping work on
Fist of Legend, the Wachowski
Brothers hired Wo Ping for
The Matrix, and following its 1999 release,
his life would be forever changed. Soon faced with an unfathomably
large fan base that was hungering for more of the same, video stores
across the country were swarming with new fans eager to dive into
his impressive body of work. Of course,
Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon would not disappoint, and after work on Tsui Hark's
Zu Warriors
and
Black Mask 2, he returned to American films for
The Matrix Reloaded,
The Matrix Revolutions, and
Kill Bill.
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