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AI Hub makes debut at top film industry trade show in Hong Kong
AI Hub makes debut at top film industry trade show in Hong Kong

South China Morning Post

time17-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South China Morning Post

AI Hub makes debut at top film industry trade show in Hong Kong

A dedicated artificial intelligence zone highlighting cutting-edge film production solutions is a feature of Hong Kong's Filmart, Asia's largest movie trade show, for the first time as the city embraces AI to boost high-quality productivity and upgrade traditional industries. Advertisement The 29th Hong Kong International Film and TV Market, or Filmart, opened on Monday at the Convention and Exhibition Centre in Wan Chai as part of the Trade Development Council's annual Entertainment Expo. Filmart has put together an AI Hub pilot programme featuring exhibitions from the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, Sony and Lenovo, with industry leaders sharing insights, including the production team of mainland Chinese animated blockbuster Ne Zha 2. 'Each company possesses its own AI technologies. There is a lack of opportunity for everyone to come together and understand each other's capabilities,' said Mak Chun-hung, president of the Association of Motion Picture Post Production Professionals. 'This time, the organiser wants us to take on the role of creating a platform to showcase what they have. Advertisement 'It's like a general catalogue where you can list what you have, and then everyone can come together at this opportunity to start testing and developing AI in filmmaking.'

Rika Woo juggles life as Cantonese opera and J-Pop artiste
Rika Woo juggles life as Cantonese opera and J-Pop artiste

Gulf Today

time06-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Gulf Today

Rika Woo juggles life as Cantonese opera and J-Pop artiste

Appealing to a younger audience, Rika Woo dons a white J-pop-style sleeveless top and a long white skirt embroidered with lace as she performs Japanese songs for an energetic group of fans in Hong Kong. On a starkly different stage, Woo paints her face with bright theatrical make-up, wears striking, colourful costumes embroidered with purple flowers and head-dresses adorned with pearls and lace veils, to perform Cantonese opera. The 31-year-old local entertainer is rare in Hong Kong for trying to appeal to audiences — old and young — as a cross cultural artiste in both the centuries-old art form of Cantonese opera and the modern music phenomenon of J-pop, in which she performs with her all-girl group Otome Syndream. 'I want to be the bridge between both cultures' said Woo. 'I hope people can appreciate the beauty of tradition and be open to pop culture.' Both are struggling to draw crowds in Hong Kong amid an economic downturn and competition from overseas events. Although there are up to 1,000 Cantonese opera performances in Hong Kong each year, the art form has been on a steady decline since its golden era in the 1950s and 60s. The city's iconic Cantonese opera house, Sunbeam Theatre — open since 1972 — closes in March. For artistes, the cost of performing is high because the elaborate costumes can set them back several thousand dollars, so often outfits are borrowed. Waiting at the exit of Sunbeam Theatre, dozens of Woo's fans flocked to take pictures with her during a performance interval. 'Although they might not fall in love with Cantonese opera because of my performance, at least they are not resistant to it now,' Woo said, referring to signs of interest from younger people. While Cantonese opera has deep roots in Chinese culture, the underground J-pop scene only emerged in the city in 2015. For opera, Woo was influenced by her grandfather who worked on lighting for Cantonese operas. She now also teaches Cantonese opera in schools. In 2015, she studied Cantonese opera at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts and joined a competition organised by a J-pop entertainment company in 2015. 'It was the stage that gave me this confidence and also made me look forward to the future,' Woo said. She was asked to join the city's first J-pop group in 2015, although it broke up after five years. Woo and three others — whose stage names are Ai, Rinka and Maho — established their underground J-pop-style idol group in Hong Kong in 2017 and officially debuted in Japan in 2019. Their performances were upended by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, when they swapped live shows for online streaming. Woo and her group finally grabbed the public eye in 2021 after performing at two local music festivals — Tone Music Festival and Unison Fest. 'It's the first time we were invited to 'above-ground' events. Surprisingly, Hong Kongers started to accept this underground Japanese idol culture,' Woo said. This year marks the 10th anniversary of Woo becoming a J-pop entertainer. 'I had many difficult times and there were times that I wanted to give up,' she told fans at an anniversary event. But she has the support of her mother, Emma Cheung, 64, who said her daughter's ambitions reflected generational change. 'Time has changed. People now don't want to date, to get married, or to buy a flat,' she said. 'Our generation is more traditional, but I won't give any pressure to her, as long as she is happy.' Woo is chasing her dream. 'There's no age limit in chasing a dream. Today is always the youngest day of our life,' she said.

Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts looks inside to find its new director
Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts looks inside to find its new director

South China Morning Post

time03-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts looks inside to find its new director

The Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts (HKAPA) has named Professor Anna Chan Chung-ying its next director following a global search for a successor to Gillian Choa, who retired on January 1. Advertisement Chan, the dean of dance at the academy, said in a statement: 'It is an incredibly exciting moment to step into the role of director at HKAPA as we mark [40 years] of nurturing talent in the performing arts and film industries this year. 'I am eager to … imagine new possibilities for the academy and strengthen … career opportunities for our students.' She will assume the role on April 18. Chan is a respected dance educator and administrator who has a long association with the academy, which she initially joined as a lecturer in 2003 after professional dance training in Hong Kong, Australia and the UK. Professor Gillian Choa, who retired as director of the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts on January 1, 2025. Photo: May Tse She took a four-year break from the academy when she ran the dance programmes of the West Kowloon Cultural District Authority from 2014 onwards, during which she launched international exchange programmes and was involved in the design of the Freespace black box theatre and the coming Lyric Theatre Complex. She returned to head the dance school at the HKAPA in 2018. Advertisement Founded in 1984, the HKAPA is publicly funded and has around 900 full-time undergraduate students a year in its six schools, which offer undergraduate and postgraduate studies in Chinese opera, dance, drama, film and television, music and theatre and entertainment art.

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