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  • Beyond Our Ken: Toe to toe with Ken Lo

    Thursday, Sep 4, 2008 10:13AM / Standard Entry / Members only
    15 comments

     

    Like most fans of martial arts action cinema, I first became aware of Ken Lo (AKA Lo Wai-kong) due to his final reel duel with Jackie Chan in Drunken Master 2. In this fight, Lo displays his legendary 180 degree kick amid a display of boot work that harks back to the glory days of Korean bad guys Wong Jang Lee and Hwang In-shik. I actually met him on the set of that film. Back in the day, you could pretty much walk onto the Golden Harvest back lot unhindered and watch them shoot, and I used to do just that.


    I learned that, besides being an actor, Ken was also a key member of Jackie Chan’s team, serving as the Chan man’s personal trainer and bodyguard. He’s a constant presence in Jackie’s films, including Police Story 3 AKA Supercop, which is being prepared, as we speak, for a re-release on my Dragon Dynasty label. It was a great pleasure to catch up with Ken to record his reminiscences about this film, and about his work on a another forthcoming DD title, the Jet Li action classic My Father Is A Hero.


    After our initial meeting on the Drunken Master 2 set, I got to work with Ken on my first kung fu movie (as an actor!). In this lost classic, Circus Kids, I play a vicious drug dealing white guy (is there any other kind in Hong Kong actioners?) and Lo is my bodyguard. In the final reel, I go fist to toe with Donnie Yen and Ken goes foot to face with Yuen Biao. The shoot entailed us being marooned in the Chinese coastal town of Shanwei for weeks at a time. You get to know your co-workers pretty well on a film like Circus Kids, and I came away from the experience knowing that Ken was as sweet a guy in reality as he was a bad ass on-screen.


    On evening, I was relaxing in my hotel room when I got what sounded like an urgent call from Ken. Fearing the worst, I rushed to his room. Had he 180 degreed an overzealous fan and needed help hiding the body? As it turned out, he was on the ‘phone (kind of) with an American girlfriend. She spoke no Chinese and he spoke very little English, so I guess his body language must have been very convincing... I ended up doing my best Cyrano for them, “he says you’re so cute, she says she misses you etc…” During this shoot, by the way, I endeavored to learn more Cantonese and Ken to learn more English. I’m not saying which one of us came out ahead…


    Ken was a constant and welcome presence when we were making the documentaries Jackie Chan: My Story and Jackie Chan: My Stunts. I’m especially proud of the latter; a lot of American stuntmen have told me that this docu became a bible for them, in terms of offering insight into the Jackie Chan method of screen action. I got to observe the bond between Jackie and Ken. They are genuinely like brothers (with Jackie, of course, being ‘dai gor’!).

    I remember running into Ken in Hung Hom, when my eldest son, Ryan, was about three. He painstakingly gave my then-wife and I directions to a near-by kid’s playground we would otherwise never have found. Ryan, who has somehow mysteriously become eleven years old, came along for our video interview, and badgered the good-natured Ken with questions. ‘Who is the tallest man you ever kicked in the head?’ On-camera, Ken offered some great insights into the respective challenges of shooting Supercop and My Father Is A Hero, and provided a unique perspective on the contrast between the two great kung fu heroes Jackie Chan and Jet Li. 

     
    Given his varied and memorable contribution to the industry, I was happy we got to record Ken’s experiences for the Supercop and My Father Is A Hero DVDs. It’s one more unsung hero we get to give his due!

Entry comments (15)

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  • JRS
    posted on Sunday, Sep 7, 2008 3:17PM [Report]
    Another brilliantly written masterpiece containing yet another movie that I'm gonna have to purchase when it is re-released by DD on DVD!  How do ya do it?  How do ya do it.....
  • siu lum fighter
    posted on Saturday, Sep 6, 2008 9:29AM [Report]
    Ken Lo is awesome!!  I have to say, I think Ken and Benny Urquidez are the most skilled bad guys Jackie's ever had to face in any of his movies.  Ken actually seems like a better kicker though (I hope "The Jet" never reads this).
  • nobleterry
    posted on Saturday, Sep 6, 2008 9:13AM [Report]
    great writeup! Thanks for the great insight you're able to provide us!
  • laney1
    posted on Saturday, Sep 6, 2008 1:02AM [Report]
    I had the great pleasure of meeting Ken on my last visit to Hong Kong and he was one of the funniest most charming people I have ever met.

    While I was waiting to meet Jackie at his office Ken continually checked I was ok and kept me supplied with drinks and fruit.

    He is such a cutie
  • Blueamrub
    posted on Friday, Sep 5, 2008 10:02PM [Report]
    i remembered him from most, if not all, of JC's film... very talented indeed... me and my bro used to spot him out in the films..hahaa. hay, maybe he would one day join AnD... tat'll be great.
    <><
  • FredAmbroisine
    Official artist 
    posted on Friday, Sep 5, 2008 2:00AM [Report]
    He's really cool and funny in Dante Lam's  "Runaway"
  • xibanyae
    posted on Friday, Sep 5, 2008 1:15AM [Report]
    ah, ken lo is someone i always wanted to meet.

    needless to say, unhinderedly walking into the Golden Harvest back lot and watch them shoot is another of those dreams many of us could never accomplish either ;)

    those interviews sound very interesting indeed!
  • bleupluie
     
    posted on Thursday, Sep 4, 2008 11:27PM [Report]
    ah, i almost couldn't recognize him!! Ken, i like to watch him in action...=)
  • LClem71304
    posted on Thursday, Sep 4, 2008 11:00PM [Report]
    Oh it's nice to finally see Ken with some hair! He's a funny guy from what I've read. Quite the prankster
  • andy_lau_spain
     
    posted on Thursday, Sep 4, 2008 9:07PM [Report]
    he's gifted indeed, I remember him clearly in Drunken Master 2.
  • Flagday
    posted on Thursday, Sep 4, 2008 9:00PM [Report]
    I understand he's a gracious guy.  And still damned good looking.  Oh, yeah, and I'm sure he's still skilled, in MA and all forms of communication. lol   So glad to hear that you're doing My Father Is a Hero.  That's a fun movie.
  • secondchan
    Official artist 
    posted on Thursday, Sep 4, 2008 1:38PM [Report]
    I worked with him in JC's film before. He is very polite, always smiling, no matter who you are.
  • rottendoubt
    posted on Thursday, Sep 4, 2008 12:52PM [Report]
    i saw him a few times with jackie.  seems like a really nice guy.  has he still been doing any movies?
  • emanzanares
    Official artist 
    posted on Thursday, Sep 4, 2008 12:24PM [Report]
    awesome blog bey! I remember reading a really good interview with him on Screen Power, and he seems like an all around genuine fellow who works very hard. Hope to see how the interviews turn out! That picture of him with ryan is great haha
  • tinlunlau
    posted on Thursday, Sep 4, 2008 10:20AM [Report]
    Hwang In-Shik...
    heheh....

    I knew his son, Daniel.  He was a friend of my friend since high school @ Birchmount Collegiate and I sometimes see him at parties.  From my recollection, I've never really had a proper conversation with him under sober conditions.  We were always drunk/buzzed.

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  • British-born Bey Logan began his professional career as a magazine writer and editor, editing the martial arts magazine Combat for five years before launching the action film publication Impact...

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