Andy Lau Tak-wah SBS BBS MH JP (Chinese: 劉德華; Jyutping: Lau4 Dak1 Waa4; born September 27, 1961) is a Hong Kong actor, singer-songwriter, and film producer. He was named the "Fourth Tiger" among the Five Tiger Generals of TVB in the 1980s, as well as one of the Four Heavenly Kings in the 1990s. In the Philippines, he was previously given the screen name Ricky Chan.
Lau has won the Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor three times, the Golden Horse Award for Best Leading Actor twice, and was entered into the Guinness World Records for the "Most Awards Won by a Cantopop Male Artist" in 2000, with a total of 444 music awards by 2006. Forbes magazine has ranked Lau as one of the world's highest-paid actors. In 2018, Lau became a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. In 2024, Lau was elected vice chairman of the 11th China Film Association. Over a career spanning four decades, Lau has been one of the most commercially and critically successful artists in the Chinese world.
Lau was born Lau Fook-wing in Tai Po, British Hong Kong, to fireman Lau Lai (1934–2023). He is the fourth of six siblings and has three elder sisters, one younger sister, and a younger brother named Lau Tak-sing. Although his family was wealthy due to his grandfather being a landowner, his father moved them to the slums of Diamond Hill when he was six years old to provide him with a bilingual education. The area was full of wooden houses, which unfortunately burnt down when he was eleven. During his childhood, Lau had to fetch water for his family up to eight times a day as their house lacked plumbing. He graduated from Ho Lap College in San Po Kong, Kowloon. He also practices Chinese calligraphy and hair styling. Lau was raised in a nominally Buddhist household and is a follower of the Lingyan Mountain Temple in Taiwan.
Acting
In 1980, Lau enrolled in TVB's actor training program and graduated the next year, signing a contract with TVB. He was propelled to fame by the TVB series The Emissary (1982). His popularity soared the next year with his role as Yang Guo in the TVB wuxia series The Return of the Condor Heroes. At the end of the year, Lau was featured in the TVB Anniversary Gala Show, alongside Tony Leung, Michael Miu, Felix Wong, and Kent Tong, and they became known as the "Five Tiger Generals of TVB."
Meanwhile, Lau also started his film career. He made a guest appearance in one of Susanna Kwan's music videos in 1981 and caught the eye of manager Teddy Robin, who gave Lau his first minor role in the film Once Upon a Rainbow. Lau then landed a role in Ann Hui's 1982 film Boat People. In 1983, he had his first leading role in the Shaw Brothers-produced action film On the Wrong Track.
TVB insisted on a binding five-year exclusive contract, which Lau declined to sign, leading to his blacklisting by the network. In the late '80s, Lau departed from TVB and shifted his focus towards films. He established himself with performances in films such as The Truth (1988), Wong Kar-wai's As Tears Go By (1988), and Benny Chan's A Moment of Romance (1990). His first major acting prize came with A Fighter's Blues, which earned him his first Golden Bauhinia Award for Best Actor. He won the Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor that year for Running Out of Time. In 2004, he won the Golden Horse Award for Best Leading Actor for his performance in Infernal Affairs III.
Since the early 21st century, Lau has worked with filmmakers from China and beyond, notably in Zhang Yimou's House of Flying Daggers (2004) and Feng Xiaogang's A World Without Thieves (2004). In 2006, he starred in the pan-Asian blockbuster A Battle of Wits, followed by a series of big-budget historical films such as The Warlords (2007), Three Kingdoms: Resurrection of the Dragon (2008), and Tsui Hark's Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame (2010).
In 2005, Lau received the "No.1 Box Office Actor 1985–2005" award in Hong Kong, yielding a box office total of HKD 1,733,275,816 for shooting 108 films in the past 20 years. For his contributions, a wax figure of Lau was unveiled on June 1, 2005, at Madame Tussauds Hong Kong. In 2007, Lau received the "Nielsen Box Office Star of Asia" award by the Nielsen Company.
In April 2017, he starred in the Hong Kong action film Shock Wave, which earned him another Best Actor Award at the 37th Hong Kong Film Awards in 2018. In February 2021, Lau reunited with Tony Leung since the Infernal Affairs series in the action film The Goldfinger.
Film Production
In 1991, Lau set up his own film production company, Teamwork Motion Pictures, which in 2002 was renamed Focus Group Holdings Limited. He was awarded the "Asian Filmmaker of the Year" at the Pusan International Film Festival in 2006. The films Lau has produced include Made in Hong Kong, A Simple Life, A Fighter's Blues, Crazy Stone, Firestorm, and Shock Wave.
Lau released his first album Just Know I Only Love You (1985) under the record label Capital Artists to minimal commercial success. However, he achieved mainstream success in 1990 with the release of the album Would It Be Possible, which won Lau his first RTHK Top 10 Gold Songs Award. The following year, he released the single "The Days We Spent Together," which topped Hong Kong's music charts and became an international hit across Asia. The song was lauded by Time Out, which described its popularity as "practically a national anthem" and "one of the most notable hits" in Lau's career. His subsequent albums brought him further recognition, spawning hit singles such as "Ice Rain" (1993), "Forget Love Potion" (1994), and "Stupid Fellow" (1998). His popularity as a music artist led to Lau being dubbed one of the Cantopop Four Heavenly Kings, alongside Jacky Cheung, Aaron Kwok, and Leon Lai. His album Love Notes Written in Bone Upon My Heart (1997) is certified 2× Platinum in Taiwan and is one of the best-selling albums with 640,305 copies sold. His other albums Because of Love (1996) and Love is Mysterious (1997) also reached 2× Platinum status there.
At the Jade Solid Gold Top 10 Awards, he won the "Most Popular Hong Kong Male Artist" award seven times and the "Asia Pacific Most Popular Hong Kong Male Artist" award 15 times. By April 2000, he had already won an unprecedented total of 292 awards. That same year, he entered the Guinness World Records for "Most Awards Won by a Cantopop Male Artist" and again in 2021 for "Most Douyin Followers Gained in 24 hours" and "Fastest Time to Reach Ten Million Followers on Douyin."
At the 2008 Summer Olympics, Lau sang "Please Stay, Guests From Afar" alongside Jackie Chan and Emil Chau during its closing ceremony. Additionally, Lau, who has been supporting disabled athletes in Hong Kong for more than a decade, was appointed as the Goodwill Ambassador for the 2008 Summer Paralympics. He led other performers in singing and performing the song "Everyone is No.1" at the Beijing National Stadium before the 2008 Paralympics opening ceremony began. He also sang the theme song "Flying with the Dream" with Han Hong during the Paralympics opening ceremony on September 6, 2008.
In 2022, Lau set records when an online concert he held via Douyin attracted more than 350 million viewers. In addition to singing in Cantonese and Mandarin, Lau has also sung in other languages such as English, Japanese, and Taiwanese Hokkien. He has held concerts in Asia, North America, Europe, and Oceania, and continues to tour with an upcoming Mainland China leg set for Summer 2024.
In September 2024, Andy Lau almost fell through an open trapdoor during a concert in Shenzhen but quickly recovered, continuing the show without injury.
Lau has written two books: This Is How I Grew Up (我是這樣長大的) (1995), an autobiography, and My 30 Work Days (我的30個工作天) (2012), a collection of his 30 personal diaries written while working on the 2011 film A Simple Life.
In 2023, Lau opened his debut art show titled the 1/X Andy Lau X Art Exhibition, which ran on August 25 at the Freespace venue located in the West Kowloon Cultural District. The exhibit includes a sculpture designed by Lau, a projection of images from his films and concerts, paintings made by him and his daughter, and works where he collaborated with other artists, such as collaborating with Hong Kong artists Sticky Line on a statue of his character from Running on Karma, collaborating with Beijing artist Xu Zhuoer in glass-covered film props from A Moment of Romance, and a collaboration with an ink painter where Lau showcases his calligraphy.
In 1994, Lau established the Andy Lau Charity Foundation, which helps people in need and promotes a wide range of youth education services. In 1999, he received the Ten Outstanding Young Persons of the World award, being the third person from Hong Kong at that time to receive this distinguished honor. In 2008, Lau took a main role in putting together the Artistes 512 Fund Raising Campaign for relief toward the victims of the 2008 Sichuan earthquake.
Lau had two public relationships. In the fall of 1983, while filming Shanghai 13 in Taiwan, Lau was introduced to actress Yu Ke-Hsin. The two began a relationship that lasted for three years. Following the example of Jackie Chan and Joan Lin, they signed a symbolic “marriage certificate” that held no legal validity in Taiwan. Their relationship ended when Carol Chu appeared, and eight years after their breakup, Lau started dating Chu. In 2005, Yu published a memoir in which she detailed her romance with Lau. She revealed that they had agreed to meet again ten years after their breakup, and Lau honored the pact by visiting her home in Los Angeles, ringing the doorbell, and claiming that media reports about his relationship with Chu were untrue. This led to a brief rekindling of their relationship. Yu's mother later alleged that all 5,000 copies of the memoir sold in Hong Kong were purchased in bulk to prevent them from reaching store shelves. The books were subsequently returned in full, causing a financial loss of HKD 500,000.
In 2008, Lau secretly married Carol Chu in Las Vegas and acknowledged his marriage the following year, ending decades of speculation over their relationship. Both Lau and Chu are vegetarians and Buddhists. On May 9, 2012, Chu gave birth to their daughter Hanna.
In January 2017, Lau sustained a serious pelvic injury after being thrown off and stomped on by a horse during a commercial shoot in Thailand. He made a full recovery by the end of the year.
Lau's handprint and autograph are featured at the Avenue of Stars in Hong Kong. Over the years, he has received numerous awards and nominations, including:
1983: Hong Kong Film Awards - Best New Performer (Boat People) - Nominated
1989: Best Actor (As Tears Go By) - Nominated
1990: Golden Horse Film Festival - Best Supporting Actor (Kawashima Yoshiko) - Nominated
1992: Hong Kong Film Awards - Best Actor (Lee Rock) - Nominated
1998: Best Film (Producer) (Made in Hong Kong) - Won
2000: Best Actor (Running Out of Time) - Won
2004: Hong Kong Film Awards - Best Actor (Running on Karma) - Won
2006: Hong Kong Film Awards - Best Supporting Actor (Protégé) - Won
2011: Golden Horse Film Festival - Best Actor (A Simple Life) - Won
2018: Hong Kong Film Awards - Best Actor (Shock Wave) - Nominated
2021: Huading Awards - Best Actor (Shock Wave 2) - Won
Lau is noted for his highly positive energy, hard work, and active involvement in charity work throughout his 30 years in showbiz. He was honored as a "Justice of Peace" by the Hong Kong SAR government in 2008. In May 2010, he received the "World Outstanding Chinese" award and an honorary doctorate from the University of New Brunswick, Canada. On December 14, 2017, Lau was awarded a Doctor of Letters degree from Hong Kong Shue Yan University, with the citation highlighting his popularity among locals, stating: "His low-key, modest, friendly, and approachable personality has endeared him to millions of fans and ordinary folks alike, who also consider him to be a 'heartthrob' and the 'unofficial Chief Executive of Hong Kong.'"
In 2018, asteroid 55381 Lautakwah, discovered by Bill Yeung at the Desert Eagle Observatory in 2001, was named for Lau. The asteroid measures approximately 8.5 kilometers (5.3 miles) in diameter and is located in the outermost region of the asteroid belt, just inside the Hecuba gap. The official naming citation was published by the Minor Planet Center on July 11, 2018.
In 2023, Lau was presented with a Special Tribute award at the Toronto International Film Festival.
Lau's discography includes numerous albums and singles that have contributed to his status as a leading figure in Cantopop. His music spans various genres and languages, showcasing his versatility as an artist.
Lau's extensive filmography includes a wide range of roles in both television and film, solidifying his reputation as one of Hong Kong's most beloved actors.
Lau has held numerous concert tours throughout his career, including:
Andy Lau First Tour (1991)
Love's Space Tour (1992)
Satchi Tour (1993)
True Forever Tour (1995)
Reverse the Earth Tour (1996)
Love You For Ten Thousand Years Tour (1999)
Andy Lau 2000 Tour (2000)
Summer Fiesta Tour (2001)
Proud of You Tour (2002)
Vision Tour (2004–2005)
Wonderful World Tour (2007–2009)
Unforgettable Tour (2010–2011)
Always World Tour (2013)
My Love World Tour (2018–2020)
Today... is the Day Tour (2024–2025)
Andy Lau continues to be a prominent figure in the entertainment industry, captivating audiences with his talent and charisma.