Michael Hui
Michael Hui (born 3 September 1942) is a Hong Kong actor, comedian, film director, screenwriter, and producer, widely regarded as a pioneer of satirical comedy in Hong Kong cinema and the eldest of the four prominent Hui brothers, alongside Ricky, Samuel, and Stanley Hui.[1][2] Born in Guangzhou, China, he moved to Hong Kong with his family in 1950, attended La Salle College, and earned a degree in sociology from the Chinese University of Hong Kong before entering the entertainment industry.[1][3] Hui began his career in 1971 hosting the television variety show Hui Brothers Show on TVB alongside his siblings, which showcased their comedic talents and laid the groundwork for their film ventures.[2] He made his film debut in 1972 with The Warlord, a top-grossing comedy that earned him the Best Comedy Character Development Award at the 1973 Asian Film Festival, and quickly rose to prominence through collaborations with his brothers in hits like Games Gamblers Play (1974) and The Private Eyes (1976), which blended social satire with relatable everyday humor to define the Hui Brothers' signature style.[2] As a director and screenwriter, Hui helmed successful films such as Security Unlimited (1981), for which he won Best Actor at the 1st Hong Kong Film Awards, and Chicken and Duck Talk (1988), further cementing his influence on the genre with critiques of urban life and bureaucracy.[2] Known internationally as "Mr. Boo" in Japan, he has appeared in over 35 films, directed eight, and written 13, often drawing from his sociological background to infuse works with sharp social commentary.[1][2] In later years, Hui continued to act in diverse roles, including hosting the Hong Kong version of Deal or No Deal in 2006 and starring in international productions like Rob-B-Hood (2006) with Jackie Chan.[1] At age 83, he remains active, recently portraying a Taoist priest in the 2024 blockbuster The Last Dance, a funeral industry drama that grossed HK$122 million and was selected to represent Hong Kong at the 97th Academy Awards for Best International Feature Film.[4] Hui's enduring legacy lies in revolutionizing Hong Kong comedy by making it accessible and reflective of local culture, influencing generations of filmmakers and performers.[2]Early Life and Education
Family and Childhood
Michael Hui was born on September 3, 1942, in Guangzhou, China, as the eldest son in a Cantonese-speaking family originally from Panyu, Guangdong province.[5][6] The majority of biographical sources confirm Guangzhou as his birthplace, with the family immigrating to Hong Kong in 1950 amid post-war refugee movements from mainland China.[3][7] The Hui family consisted of four brothers—Michael, Ricky (born 1946), Sam (born 1948), and Stanley—who grew up together after the relocation, facing the economic challenges of post-war Hong Kong as working-class immigrants.[7] The family settled in the impoverished Diamond Hill area of East Kowloon, where Michael witnessed social injustices firsthand, including his father's exploitation by employers, which instilled in him an early awareness of class struggles and societal inequities.[7] During his formative years in 1950s and 1960s Hong Kong, Hui was exposed to the vibrant local theater and comedy traditions, particularly influenced by Cantonese opera performer Leung Sing-por, whose satirical style resonated with the era's hardships.[7] These experiences, combined with family dynamics in a resource-scarce household, sparked his interest in performance as a means of social commentary and shaped the observational humor that would define his later work. The brothers' close-knit upbringing amid these difficulties laid the foundation for their eventual collaborations in Hong Kong's entertainment scene.[7]Formal Education
Michael Hui attended La Salle College, a prestigious Catholic secondary school in Hong Kong, during the 1950s and early 1960s, where English served as the medium of instruction and the environment exposed him to Western films that shaped his early cinematic interests.[8] He later pursued higher education at United College of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, earning a bachelor's degree in sociology in the late 1960s.[6] His family's support enabled this academic path despite the economic hardships of post-war Hong Kong. The sociological training provided Hui with a critical lens on social structures, influencing his later comedic works by informing satirical portrayals of Hong Kong's class divisions, urban overcrowding, and everyday inequalities, as seen in films like The Private Eyes (1976), where he highlighted exploitation and social disparities.[7] Following graduation, Hui initially worked as a part-time teacher in night schools to make ends meet, reflecting his reluctance to immediately enter the entertainment industry despite his growing interest in performance.[8] This transition from academia to media was gradual, driven by financial needs and an innate draw to comedy, though he approached social commentary in his work more intuitively than as a deliberate extension of his studies.[7]Career
Television and Early Entertainment
Michael Hui entered the broadcasting industry in 1968 while completing his sociology studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, joining Television Broadcasts Limited (TVB) as a host for various programs, including the popular variety show Enjoy Yourself Tonight and the Interschool Quiz Contest. These early roles showcased his quick wit and on-screen presence, helping him gain initial recognition in Hong Kong's entertainment scene before graduating. By the early 1970s, following his university completion, Hui transitioned to more prominent hosting duties at TVB, where he began developing his comedic style through interactive and light-hearted formats.[6] In 1971, Hui teamed up with his younger brother Samuel Hui to launch The Hui Brothers Show, a groundbreaking sketch comedy series produced by TVB that ran for 52 episodes until 1973. This program, featuring the duo's improvised skits and guest appearances, pioneered Cantonese-language sketch comedy on Hong Kong television, moving away from Mandarin-dominated content and appealing directly to local audiences with relatable humor. The show quickly became a hit, establishing the Hui brothers as comedy staples and paving the way for their later collaborations, including the involvement of their brother Ricky Hui in subsequent projects.[9][6] Hui's humor in these television sketches was characterized by his signature deadpan delivery and sharp social satire, often targeting the absurdities of everyday Hong Kong life, such as bureaucratic inefficiencies and familial tensions in working-class households. This approach resonated deeply with viewers navigating rapid urbanization and social changes, blending observational comedy with subtle critiques to highlight common struggles without overt preachiness. The success of The Hui Brothers Show not only boosted Hui's popularity but also influenced the trajectory of local entertainment toward more indigenous, Cantonese-centric content.[1][3][10] Building on this television foundation, Hui founded Hui's Film Production in 1974 as a vehicle to extend his comedic vision beyond broadcasting, marking his initial step into film production while leveraging the momentum from his TV success.[3]Directing and Producing in Film
In 1974, Michael Hui partnered with Golden Harvest to establish the Hui Film Company, a production outfit that became instrumental in revitalizing Cantonese-language cinema through satirical comedies reflecting everyday Hong Kong life.[6][3] The company operated initially as a satellite of Golden Harvest, co-financing and distributing its early output, and by the 1980s had produced a series of box-office successes that collectively grossed tens of millions of Hong Kong dollars, marking a shift from Hui's television sketches to feature films.[6][11] Hui's directorial debut, Games Gamblers Play (1974), set the tone for his filmmaking by satirizing the pervasive gambling culture in Hong Kong society through the misadventures of a cunning convict and his naive protégé.[12] The low-budget production, shot on actual Hong Kong locations to capture authentic urban grit, grossed over HK$6 million at the box office, becoming one of the year's top earners and establishing Hui's formula of blending humor with social observation.[6] This approach carried into later works, such as Security Unlimited (1981), where Hui directed a parody of spy thrillers and security firms, incorporating social commentary on incompetence and urban paranoia through the exploits of a bumbling guard team.[6] The film earned HK$17 million, underscoring Hui's ability to merge genre spoofing with relatable critiques of modern work life.[6] Hui continued this trajectory with Chicken and Duck Talk (1988), directing a sharp critique of capitalism via the rivalry between a traditional roast duck eatery and a encroaching Western fast-food chain, highlighting tensions between local traditions and global commercialization.[8] Throughout his directorial efforts, Hui maintained a signature production style characterized by economical budgets, on-location filming across Hong Kong's streets and neighborhoods to ground the comedy in realism, and close collaboration with his brothers—Samuel for co-writing and music, and Ricky for acting and production input—fostering a family-driven creative process that amplified the films' cultural resonance.[6][8]Acting and Later Projects
Michael Hui achieved a breakthrough in acting through his lead role in the 1981 comedy Security Unlimited, where he portrayed the clever security agent Chow Sai-cheung, earning him the Best Actor award at the 1st Hong Kong Film Awards.[13] That same year, Hui made his Hollywood debut with a cameo appearance as a mechanic and Subaru driver in The Cannonball Run, alongside Jackie Chan, providing early international exposure for the Hong Kong comedian.[14][15] Following a period of reduced prominence in the 1990s, during which Hui stepped back from major screen roles, he staged a comeback in the mid-2000s.[10] In 2006, he appeared as the Landlord in Rob-B-Hood, a family-oriented action comedy co-starring Jackie Chan and Louis Koo, marking his return to mainstream Hong Kong cinema.[16] A decade later, in 2016, Hui delivered a critically acclaimed performance as the world-weary taxi driver Old Hui in the Taiwanese black comedy Godspeed, directed by Chung Mong-hong, which explored themes of desperation and unlikely alliances.[17] Hui's later career has featured selective but impactful roles in high-profile films. In 2021's Where the Wind Blows, he played the principled ICAC investigator Lee Chi-chiu, contributing to the biopic's depiction of 1970s Hong Kong corruption scandals.[18] In 2024, he portrayed the stern Judge George Hui in the legal thriller The Prosecutor, directed by and starring Donnie Yen, where his character clashes with the protagonist over courtroom ethics.[19] That same year, Hui starred as the traditional Taoist priest Master Man Kwok in The Last Dance, a dramedy examining Hong Kong's funeral industry and mortality, which was selected as Hong Kong's entry for the 2025 Academy Awards for Best International Feature Film.[20][21] In October 2025, Hui participated in a public dialogue on life and death at The Chinese University of Hong Kong's Faculty of Medicine, sharing insights from his role in The Last Dance and personal reflections on mortality with medical students and faculty, including Dean Sun Yat-sen. In October 2025, he was conferred an honorary Doctor of Social Science by CUHK, recognizing his contributions to Hong Kong culture.[22][23]Personal Life
Family and Relationships
Michael Hui married Cheng Kit-ying in 1972, and the couple has remained together for over five decades as of 2025.[24] Hui is the eldest of four brothers—Ricky, Sam, and Stanley—who entered the entertainment industry under his influence, with Ricky and Sam frequently collaborating as co-stars and Stanley appearing in supporting roles.[24] Hui and his wife have two children: a son, See-wai Hui, who is a filmmaker, and a daughter.[24][25] Throughout his career, Hui's family has provided personal stability, particularly during the peaks of his fame in the 1970s and 1980s and his semi-retirement in the 1990s, when he stepped back from directing after 1992 to focus on family life.[26][24] In a 2022 acceptance speech, Hui credited his wife as a source of inspiration during his lowest points and noted bouncing creative ideas off his son See-wai, highlighting the family's ongoing role in his emotional and professional resilience.[24] Despite his prominence in Hong Kong entertainment, Hui has maintained a private family life, with limited public details about his children beyond See-wai's professional endeavors in filmmaking.[25]Public Engagements and Views
Michael Hui has demonstrated a commitment to public discourse beyond his film career, particularly through engagements that reflect his philosophical perspectives on life and art. In May 2021, he received the Award for Outstanding Contribution in Arts from the Hong Kong Arts Development Council, recognizing his pioneering role in Hong Kong comedy films that captured local culture and inspired subsequent generations of filmmakers.[27] This accolade highlighted his broader influence on the arts community, encouraging his involvement in educational and inspirational activities. In a notable 2025 public engagement, Hui participated in a dialogue hosted by the Faculty of Medicine at the Chinese University of Hong Kong on September 29, 2025, titled "From Heaven to Hell: Doctors and Comedy Legend Talk Life and Death." The event, featuring Hui alongside medical experts, explored themes of mortality, the meaning of life from scientific and spiritual viewpoints, empathy in healthcare, and the pressing issue of youth suicides in Hong Kong. Drawing from personal experiences, including a near-death encounter with a shark, Hui emphasized the preciousness of life, urging participants to treasure every moment and find joy amid its brevity.[22] These reflections resonated with the themes of his recent role as a Taoist priest in the film The Last Dance, where he portrayed perspectives on death and letting go.[4] Hui has also articulated views on the societal role of cinema, particularly in fostering optimism during challenging times. In a 2022 interview, he expressed that "I want my films to bring hope to spectators," underscoring comedy's capacity to console audiences amid Hong Kong's social upheavals and gloomy periods.[28] This outlook aligns with his career-long approach to filmmaking as a medium for inspiration and cultural reflection.Filmography
Key Acting Roles
Michael Hui began his acting career in the early 1970s, accumulating over 50 credits in film and television through 2025, where he demonstrated remarkable comedic versatility, often portraying clever everyman characters navigating absurd situations.[2][1] His early breakthrough came with a minor role as Marshal Pang Ta Fu/Han Ta Fu in the 1972 comedy The Warlord, marking his entry into Hong Kong cinema.[29] In 1974, he took the lead as the gambler and convict Wen in Games Gamblers Play, a satirical take on Hong Kong's gambling culture that highlighted his deadpan humor and con artist persona.[30] During his peak in the early 1980s, Hui starred as the bumbling security chief Captain Chow Sai-Cheong in the 1981 hit Security Unlimited, a box-office success that blended slapstick with social commentary on blue-collar life.[31] That same year, he made his sole major international appearance as the tech-savvy Subaru engineer Michael Ho alongside Jackie Chan in the American ensemble comedy The Cannonball Run.[32] In later years, Hui continued to take on supporting yet memorable roles that leveraged his timing and wit. He played the opportunistic landlord in the 2006 action-comedy Rob-B-Hood, serving as a foil to Jackie Chan's thief character. His performance as the world-weary taxi driver Old Hui in the 2016 Taiwanese black comedy Godspeed earned critical acclaim for its understated pathos. Most recently, in 2024's The Last Dance, Hui portrayed the curmudgeonly Taoist priest Master Man Kwok, a funeral director grappling with tradition and loss, in a dramatic turn that showcased his range beyond comedy. That year, he also appeared as Judge Hui in the legal drama The Prosecutor.[2]Directorial and Production Works
Michael Hui made his directorial debut with Games Gamblers Play (1974), which he co-wrote with his brothers Samuel and Ricky Hui and produced under their newly established Hui's Film Company; the film satirized gambling culture in Hong Kong and became the territory's highest-grossing release that year, earning over HK$6 million.[6] This breakthrough established Hui as a key figure in revitalizing Cantonese-language cinema, shifting away from Mandarin-dominated productions and emphasizing local humor rooted in everyday working-class struggles.[6] Among his major directorial efforts, The Private Eyes (1976) further showcased Hui's satirical style, poking fun at detective tropes and social pretensions while grossing over HK$8 million and topping the box office charts.[6] He followed with Security Unlimited (1981), a parody of security firms and urban paranoia that broke records by earning over HK$17 million, the highest for a local film at the time and expanding Hui's comedies into international markets like Taiwan and Japan.[6] Later directorial works included Teppanyaki (1984), Happy Din Don (1986), and The Magic Touch (1992), where he continued blending direction, writing, and performance to critique consumerism and family dynamics in Hong Kong society.[6] In production, Hui oversaw numerous Hui Brothers collaborations, including directing The Last Message (1975), a dark comedy on stock market frenzy that led the annual box office.[6] Across his career, he helmed at least eight directorial projects, primarily in the 1970s and 1980s, often through partnerships with Golden Harvest after his company's early successes.[6] As a screenwriter, Hui penned satirical scripts for all his major films, including executive producing and co-writing Chicken and Duck Talk (1988), which highlighted small business rivalries and grossed HK$29.4 million to become 1988's top earner.[33] His writing consistently focused on the absurdities faced by Hong Kong's working class, influencing a generation of local comedies with its sharp social commentary.[6]| Film | Year | Key Roles | Box Office (HK$) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Games Gamblers Play | 1974 | Director, Writer, Producer | Over 6 million | Debut; record-breaker |
| The Last Message | 1975 | Director | Top grosser | Satire on capitalism |
| The Private Eyes | 1976 | Director, Writer | Over 8 million | Box office leader |
| Security Unlimited | 1981 | Director, Writer | Over 17 million | Highest-grossing local film then |
| Chicken and Duck Talk | 1988 | Executive Producer, Writer | 29.4 million | 1988's top film |