Lydia Shum(1945-2008)
- Actress
- Music Department
- Director
With her signature wing-tip frame coke bottle glasses and imposing
coif, 'Zaftig' TV-movie comedienne and celebrity personality Lydia Shum
also known as 'Ah-Fay' to her fans stands out as one of the most
recognizable and endearing entertainment icons in Hong Kong society
whose celebrity ubiquity has spanned nearly 5 decades since she began
her career in the early 60s as a teenage contract actress with Shaw
Brothers studios. Like many within the minority Shanghai expatriate
community residing in Hong Kong during the days of the crown colony,
Lydia's versatility landed her supporting roles throughout her vast
public career in both Cantonese and Mandarin dialect film and
television often times playing pillow-talk girlfriends, classmates,
sidekicks, siblings, handmaidens, chorus girls, bridesmaids and of
course visual comic foil for literally the entire cavalcade of Hong
Kong's Golden Age leading ladies including
Connie Chan,
Li Hua Li,
Bo-Bo Fung,
Heung-Kam Lee,
Lily Ho, Meg Lam,
Lin-Lin Li,
Josephine Siao,
Nancy Sit,
Ming-Chuen Wang and
Tina Ti before later graduating to TV
award/variety show MCs and serials roles while still maintaining her
staple of mostly big-screen Cantonese parts playing nosy landladies,
pampered heiresses, neurotic matrons and doting mothers alongside
Carol 'Do Do' Cheng,
Maggie Cheung,
Sylvia Chang
Vivian Chow,
Sharla Cheung,
Cora Miao
Sandra Kwan Yue Ng,
Teresa Sun-Kwan Mo, Anita Mui
and Anita Yuen (not to mention Lydia
being their fourth wind slot for their Mahjong games after work) during
the high-profile commercial success of the Hong Kong New Wave output
through the 1990s. The history of celebrity girl power in the Hong Kong
entertainment scene would not be complete without the mention of Lydia
Shum.