"Siu Yin Fei" is that people simulate swallow flight posture for limb movement, in order to exercise the back muscle, relieve the waist, neck and shoulder and other parts of the strain and other health purposes. It is similar to yoga. Siu Yin Fei Applies to: lumbar muscle strain, lumbar fasciitis, lumbar disc herniation, lumbar spondylolysis, mild lumbar spondylolisthesis, lumbar surgery. Similar exercises with Siu Yin Fei have breaststroke and other activities. Siu Yin Fei's action is divided into standing and prone two.
Wood Yau Cheung (1909-1985), formerly known as Zhang Gan, Meixian District, Meizhou City, Guangdong Province. In his early years, he studied at the second phase of the Guangzhou Cantonese opera development. After graduation, he participated in "Choi Wan-tien" and "Fung Lai-yi" and other theatrical troupes. Afterwards, he moved to the film and television industry and starred in The West Chamber, Lotus Lights, "Other TV series.
Chufan Wu (1911 - February 23, 1993), formerly known as Wu Hao, was the late Hong Kong Cantonese-language film actor and the famous actor Gao Luquan's brother. Born in Tianjin, he studied at Hong Kong's St. Paul's College. He graduated from Shanghai Jiaotong University and graduated from Peizheng High School in Hong Kong. He worked as a store salesman, factory manager, and hobby apprentice in the early years. He joined Shanghai Lianhua Film Company in 1932 and took part. "Night Shot" sounded and became the actor of the film. The famous work is "Lifeline." In 1937, he was chosen as a "South China movie actor" by the Guangzhou audience because he played two characters, "Father and Son," in "Life Song." During the fall of Hong Kong, the Star Theatre Group performed in Guangzhou Bay and Vietnam. After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, he returned to Hong Kong and starred in the post-war first film "Flame of Love."
Shek Wing-cheung (1 January 1913 – 3 June 2009), better known by his stage name Shih Kien (Cantonese: Shek Kin; Mandarin: Shi Jian), was a Hong Kong-based Chinese actor. Shih is best known for playing antagonists and villains in several early Hong Kong wuxia and martial arts films that dated back to the black-and-white period, and is most familiar to Western audiences for his portrayal of the primary villain, Han, in the 1973 martial arts film Enter the Dragon, which starred Bruce Lee.
Actor Name | Play | Role Introduction |
Siu-Ying Ma | Jia SanYiTai | No introduction |
Gao Luquan | Bai ChengLi | No introduction |
Mei-Mei Den | Jiao Jiao | No introduction |
Man Ai | Bai Jingci / Wang Yunshuang | No introduction |
Chor-Shan Wong | Bai SiYe | No introduction |
(None) | Wang XiaoDong | No introduction |
Man Lai | Wang TaiTai | No introduction |
Floating Hui Mei | San NaiNai | No introduction |
(None) | Lin YuanZhang | No introduction |
He Zhongfang | Er NaiNai | No introduction |
(None) | Wen Qi | No introduction |
Yu Huifen | ---- | No introduction |
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Record information: Henan ICP 17015470 -1