HONG KONG (AP) — Run Run Shaw
built a Hong Kong movie and TV empire that nurtured rising talents like
actor Chow Yun-fat and director John Woo, inspired Hollywood filmmakers
such as Quentin Tarantino and produced the 1982 sci-fi classic "Blade
Runner."
Shaw's prolific
studio helped bring kung fu films to the world but he also passed on the
chance to sign one of the biggest names in that genre: the young Bruce
Lee.
The missed opportunity
was a rare misstep for Shaw, who died at age 107 on Tuesday, according
to a statement from Television Broadcasts Limited (TVB), which he helped
found in 1967. No cause of death was given.
His
Shaw Brothers Studios, once among the world's largest, churned out
nearly 1,000 movies and gave young directors like Woo their start. He
produced a handful of U.S. films that also included the 1979 disaster
thriller "Meteor."
His
television empire, which remains a dominant force in Hong Kong, was
where stars like Chow got their first breaks. Wong Kar-wai, the director
behind critically acclaimed art-house movies like "Chungking Express"
and "In the Mood for Love," got his start through a TVB training course
and worked at the station briefly as a production assistant.
Shaw
(pronounced Shao in Mandarin) led TVB until retiring as chairman in
December 2011 at the age of 104. He is survived by his second wife and
four children from his first marriage.
Shaw
was born near Shanghai to a wealthy textile merchant. His exact
birthdate is unclear, and different Shaw-related websites say he was
born in 1906 or 1907.
One of
his six siblings, elder brother Runme Shaw, set up a silent film studio,
Unique Film Production Co. Shaw and a third brother, Runje, went to
Singapore in 1923 to market films to southeast Asia's Chinese community
and eventually opened 139 movie theatres across the region.
After
surviving World War II, the company was faced with growing competition
from rivals in Hong Kong and Singapore, so Shaw moved to Hong Kong in
the late 1950s to modernize the company. He shifted focus from
exhibiting films to producing them and renamed the company Shaw
Brothers.
His path to Asian
moviemaking dominance began in earnest in 1961 when he opened Movie
Town, a vast, state-of-the-art studio in Hong Kong's rural Clearwater
Bay. With 1,500 staff working on 10 soundstages, Movie Town was reputed
to be the most productive studio in the world. At its busiest, actors
and directors churned out 40 movies a year, most of them featuring kung
fu, sword fighting or Asian gangsters known as triads.
The result
was a library of nearly 1,000 movies such as "The One Armed Swordsman"
and "The Five Fingers of Death," the latter being one of Shaw's most
successful in the United States.
The
studio's logo — the initials SB on a shield — was inspired by the
Warner Brothers emblem, in a nod to its Hollywood aspirations. It came
full circle when Tarantino appropriated the Shaw Brothers logo for use
in his two "Kill Bill" movies, which were in homage to the studio and
other Hong Kong martial arts movies.
"For a year, I'd watch one
old Shaw Brothers movie a day — if not three," Tarantino told the Los
Angeles Daily News in 2003, discussing his preparation for filming.Films were produced with assembly-line methods and stars and technical staff lived in dorms on site. Budgets were low and production schedules were quick — 35 days to three months, according to a 1976 Time magazine report.
The producer acknowledged that the quality of the films was not his foremost concern. "We're here to make money," he told Time. Even Shaw protege Raymond Chow complained about the B-movie quality of the films when he was first hired to work in the publicity department.
"I told Sir Run Run to forget it," Chow told Asiaweek magazine in 1983. "I said I did not think I could keep my job because the pictures were so bad," said Chow, whose comments earned him a promotion to the production department.
While Shaw didn't
create the kung fu movie, he was quick to capitalize on the genre's
trendiness and used a modernized studio system and centralized
production techniques to pump out films quickly, beating out rivals to
satisfy audience demands.
In their heyday, Shaw films were
reportedly seen by 1.5 million people a week, many of them in the
cinemas owned by Shaw and his brothers in southeast Asia.The movie mogul failed to spot the potential of an up-and-coming Bruce Lee, who had returned to Hong Kong after a stint in Hollywood. Lee wanted a bigger salary and creative control of his films. But Shaw wouldn't budge from the standard contract given to all his actors.
Lee signed instead with rival upstart Golden Harvest, founded by Chow to get away from his former boss's standardized factory-like studio system. Other up-and-coming stars like Jackie Chan also spurned Shaw's factory-like approach.
Movie
audiences moved on to grittier, more realistic or contemporary action
fare, though Shaw movies still have a solid cult following globally. The
Shaw film library was eventually sold in 2000 to Celestial Pictures,
which has been restoring them and re-releasing them digitally.
Film
production ceased in 1983, but by then Shaw had switched his focus to
television. In 1973 he took control of TVB, which remains Hong Kong's
dominant TV station. It served as the launching pad for the careers of
talents including Chow Yun-fat, Wong Kar-wai, heartthrob Andy Lau and
comedian Stephen Chow.
The
broadcaster's Chinese language channel is also popular in southern China
and its Chinese programs, many dubbed into other languages, are seen by
300 million households around the world. Shaw, knighted by Queen
Elizabeth II in 1974, was also a philanthropist. In 2002 he founded the
annual Shaw Prizes, Asia's version of the Nobel Prizes. The honor offers
US$1 million annually to winners in mathematics, medicine and
astronomy.
Shaw preferred to
stay out of the spotlight and rarely gave interviews, even about his
philanthropy. A journalist for the South China Morning Post newspaper
recounted mentioning during a 1984 interview that a medical team
fighting leprosy in southwestern China had trouble traveling over the
rugged, mountainous terrain. On hearing this, Shaw immediately decided
to donate off-road vehicles but demanded there be no publicity.
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