logo
A wonderful life for radio host, musician and educator, Harry Wong

A wonderful life for radio host, musician and educator, Harry Wong

I WAS BORN IN 1963. When I was six years old, Dr Yip Wai-hong (the late composer and music educator) asked me to join the Hong Kong Children's Choir. It was the first children's choir in Hong Kong and at the beginning there were 20 kids. But they rehearsed on a Sunday, so I had to choose between going to choir rehearsal or joining my dad, Calvin Wong, when he did his television programme for kids on Rediffusion. (Wong opted to join his father.) It was called Happy Birthday and he was 'Uncle Calvin'. A lot of poor kids would be invited. And whoever was having a birthday, the (Russian bakery) Cherikoff would sponsor a little cake or a little toy for those children. His co-host, Lai Yuen-ling, would arrive in her high heels just before the show went live. She was one of the 'Three Blossoms of Rediffusion'. My dad would wear white trousers and very colourful shirts, very contrasting, you see, it was black and white TV. I would be in the 'cave', right in the middle of the set, and I'd watch my dad through a slit in the curtain as he entertained the children with puppets, and sometimes I would pass him things.
Harry Wong with his father, Calvin, who provided the first generation of children's TV shows in Hong Kong. Photo: courtesy Harry Wong
I WENT TO ST PAUL'S Co-educational College for a few years. I was often in detention. The teachers liked me but I was way too naughty. One day, my music teacher, Miss Chan, asked us all to bring an item – a favourite toy – to share with the class. I brought in a few puppets and did a show and everyone was laughing. Miss Chan loved that and she asked the principal if I could perform for the whole school at our morning assembly. Miss Chan had long hair and was basically a goddess I worshipped. She put me on stage. Up until that point I had been a loser. That was the moment I found myself and I knew what I was going to do for the rest of my life. I was eight years old.
Harry Wong studied at the Royal Northern College of Music and his son followed suit. Photo: Jocelyn Tam
MY FIRST INSTRUMENT was the recorder and it is still the one I love the most. I always return to it. After the recorder, I learned the clarinet, the flute and then the oboe – it looks like a Chinese instrument, I love the sound. I borrowed an oboe and spent good money on a very expensive reed. You need a different embouchure for these different woodwind instruments but I was able to do it. In England, I first went to study in a small place called Leek, near Stoke-on-Trent, to do my O-levels. I studied at the Royal Northern College of Music and also music education and commercial music at the University of Liverpool. I joined the Society of Recorder Players and they told me they had never had a Chinese player before. Then the French International School here invited me to be a music teacher.
Harry Wong with FM Select host Teresa Norton in 1993. Photo: SCMP Archives
My son, (pianist) Chiyan, also later studied at the Royal Northern College of Music. I got married when I was 24. My ex was a ballet teacher who became an examiner for the Royal Academy of Dance. We established the Hong Kong Children's Arts Academy in 1986, the same year we got married. It is now the Agnes Huang School of Ballet.
ON THE RECORDER I play Renaissance and Baroque music. I created a series of textbooks called 'Music Today' for primary school children that shows them my recorder method. In 1986, I had my first children's TV programme with RTHK. Then in 1991, when Metro (radio station) started, (radio personality and playwright) Teresa Norton invited me to join for the morning show, and I would be bilingual on it. We ended up being the first programme on air for FM Select and the first song I chose was Alan Tam's 朋友, 'Friends'.
Harry Wong and DJ Steve James when they had their first collaboration at Metro Radio. Photo: courtesy Harry Wong
DJ Steve James then came across the road from Commercial Radio and worked with Sandra Lang, and then we created 'Steve and Harry'. (James) has such a great sense of humour, he and I are very different, and there's a lot of energy to it, you never know what to expect. In 2006, one week after my (second) marriage, I joined Steve again. And we still do it. He likes to control the buttons (in the studio) and I just walk in and out and talk!
Harry Wong with his long-time collaborator DJ Steve James. Photo: courtesy Harry Wong
THERE ARE ONLY THREE THINGS I embrace: peace, love and happiness. I've started a thing called the 3M. It's got nothing to do with Scotch tape, it's music therapy, magic therapy and mindfulness. I work with music therapists and also a lady who has been working with children for 20 years. She's a beautiful person who knows exactly how to tell stories and communicate with children with respect and bring out the best in them. We do this 'play shop' with schools, kids, teachers, parents, educators. So, I teach the kids breathing exercises, meditation, magic tricks. But at the heart of it is only one purpose – to bring out that person inside everyone, because a lot of us are a bit lost now and we all have questions we try to seek answers to. I started meditating in 2013 with Brahma Kumaris (a spiritual movement). I began to get up at 4am to meditate. Now I just naturally get up. Maybe it's my age.
Harry Wong at the sixth anniversary celebrations of Metro Broadcast Corporation at Queen Elizabeth Stadium, Wan Chai, in 1997. Photo: SCMP Archives
I'VE DONE A LOT of concerts with symphony orchestras and there's loads of mayhem when I introduce a piece inspired by Danny Kaye and Victor Borge – it's that kind of comedy. We'll do 'Flight of the Bumblebee' and I'll conduct with a fly swat and suddenly all the people on double bass stand up and sing and dance. And then I do 'The Dying Swan' (from Swan Lake). Suddenly I take off my T-shirt and put on a tutu and a straitjacket, and I'll try to get out of that straitjacket during the dying of the swan. I don't know where that idea came from, it's not particularly family material. I think it was The Rocky Horror Show that gave me some ideas. But anyway, I do a lot of really crazy stuff.
A young Harry Wong sitting on his father's lap outside HSBC in Central. Photo: courtesy Harry Wong
WHEN I WAS VERY LITTLE, I used to study all my magic tricks from a Japanese magic book. I didn't understand the words but I somehow got through and knew the secret, don't ask me how. I got married for the second time (to Japanese violinist Ayako Ichimaru). We have a son, Yuji, who is 16. In 2022, we moved to Japan and eventually we bought a piece of land and a farm in Tsukuba. I work three days a week here (in Hong Kong) on Radio 5, so I go to Japan once a month. My daughter Joelle (a lawyer, from his first marriage) is working in Hong Kong now. I can go to her place and cook her salmon and she makes salad. And then on a Friday night, we go and listen to jazz together.
Advertisement
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Your Hong Kong weekend food guide for August 15-17
Your Hong Kong weekend food guide for August 15-17

South China Morning Post

time3 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Your Hong Kong weekend food guide for August 15-17

This weekend, Hong Kong's dining scene is stuffed with unique options. You can enjoy an exquisite six-hands feast celebrating seasonal wild mushrooms, a sumptuous Indian buffet in honour of India's national day, or an innovative afternoon tea that blends fine dining with bespoke fragrances. Whether savouring the rich and earthy flavours of Yunnan fungi or indulging in delicate pastries served high above the city, these curated events offer enticing reasons to explore the city's vibrant hotels. Those hunting for more dining options outside this weekend's offerings can check out our 2025 100 Top Tables Guide Friday, August 15 Chefs Chan Siu Kei, Ricky Cheung and Jayson Tang are teaming up to present the six-hands Yunnan wild mushrooms experience at JW Marriott Hotel Hong Kong. Photo: Handout In an ode to the season for wild mushrooms, Chinese chef Jayson Tang of Michelin-star Man Ho restaurant at JW Marriott Hotel Hong Kong is once again joining forces with master chef Chan Siu Kei and celebrity chef Ricky Cheung for a six-hands Yunnan wild mushroom experience. A tasting platter explores the unique characteristics of matsutake, termite and chanterelle mushrooms, while dishes like steamed Catathelasma mushroom dumplings, braised winter melon stuffed with sliced porcini mushrooms and pan-fried threadfin with chanterelle mushrooms and cashews feature in a six-course tasting menu or are available à la carte. Where: 3/F, JW Marriott Hotel Hong Kong, 88 Pacific Place, Queensway, Admiralty When: Until September 21 Price: HK$1,388 for the tasting menu, plus HK$580 for wine pairing

Japanese mum-daughter duo live in rubbish-filled home despite US$2,700 rent income
Japanese mum-daughter duo live in rubbish-filled home despite US$2,700 rent income

South China Morning Post

time7 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Japanese mum-daughter duo live in rubbish-filled home despite US$2,700 rent income

A mother and daughter in Japan have been living in a rubbish-filled home for years despite earning more than 400,000 yen (US$2,700) a month in rent. After the father of the family died, the pair struggled to live independently and lost direction. In August, the mainland media reported that the mum and daughter duo had featured on the Japanese variety show Can I Come to Your House?. A television crew interviews people who miss the last bus and, in exchange for covering their fare, films inside their homes. The mother and daughter pair allowed a Japanese television crew into their rubbish-strewn home. Photo: Handout Nachiko Tanaka, 83, and her 47-year-old daughter Akane, both from a bustling Tokyo district, are unemployed but own a block of flats with seven units.

Netflix K-drama Beyond the Bar: Lee Jin-wook, Jung Chae-yeon lead cloying legal drama
Netflix K-drama Beyond the Bar: Lee Jin-wook, Jung Chae-yeon lead cloying legal drama

South China Morning Post

time21 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Netflix K-drama Beyond the Bar: Lee Jin-wook, Jung Chae-yeon lead cloying legal drama

Lead cast: Lee Jin-wook, Jung Chae-yeon Advertisement Latest Nielsen rating: 8.3 per cent The year 2025 delivers yet another legal K-drama in Beyond the Bar, a by-the-numbers tale of a capable young woman learning to coexist with a smug lawyer at her new law firm that tugs hard on the heartstrings with a collection of sentimental cases. With a brilliant legal mind, and dashing to boot, Seok-hoon does not play ball when it comes to navigating office politics. Unlike some people at the firm, he is not connected to legal royalty, but despite this, he makes no effort to ingratiate himself with colleagues.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store