Biography
Michelle was born Yeoh Choo Kheng on August 6, 1962, into
a lawyer's family living in Ipoh, Malaysia. She was an active
kid,
swimming most weekends with her friends at the Ipoh Swimming Club
located
next to her house. In fact, Michelle was a tomboy who loved all
kinds
of sports, but she especially loved swimming. She represented
Malaysia
as a teenager at national competitions for swimming, diving and squash
and
was Malaysian Junior Squash Champion one year as well (and, it seems,
begins
a pattern of being strong at physically demanding efforts, luckily for
us!). She also enjoyed playing the piano and practicing Chinese
painting styles, but her real love since before she could walk was
dance.
Michelle was dancing before she was walking, and particularly liked
ballet. She entered ballet school at the age of four. As a
young girl, she was
sent to convent school in Malaysia, learning English among other
subjects, and, at 15, was placed in boarding school in England.
Staying in England, she went to college at the Royal Academy of
Dance in London. She was majoring in dance when she sustained an
injury during ballet practice. Informed by doctors that she had
rotated a disk in her spine which she could only make worse if she
continued her dream, Michelle was forced to switch majors and instead
graduated in 1982, receiving a B.A. degree in Creative Arts with a
minor in Drama.
Things went crazy for her when she got home from graduate school in
1983. Unbeknownst to Michelle, her mom had entered her daughter
in the Miss Malaysia beauty pageant, and had, in fact, gotten Michelle
past
the qualifying rounds before even getting back to Malaysia! Well,
to please her mother, the self-confessed tomboy went ahead with it and
was crowned Miss Malaysia at the age of 21 (later
that year, she also became Miss Moomba in Australia, but I'm not quite
sure
what that one is). Instead of returning to England to continue
her
advanced studies, she stayed in Asia and served out her term as Miss
Malaysia,
which she equates with being a goodwill ambassador.
During this period, she met with a Hong Kong businessman, Dickson Poon,
who was
looking for someone to star in a commercial for a brand of watches with
action star Jackie Chan. Michelle was invited to Hong Kong and
did the commercial, along with another one with another Hong Kong star,
Chow Yun-Fat (as many of you know, these are names that will pop up
again later). Poon then offered her an acting contract to star in
a film in his recently created film
production company, D&B Films (the D stands for Dickson, and the B
is
part of his partner's chinese name, Sammo Hung Kam-Bo). Her first
film
was the frightening Owl Vs Dumbo, in
which Michelle played the damsel
in
distress (see the filmography section for reviews). In reality,
this movie is a comedy, but it was so startling for someone who'd only
seen Michelle kick ass to see her cry when some teen yells at her in a
classroom...well, you get the idea. Also starring
in
the movie was Sammo. During the filming process, Michelle
became interested as she watched the stuntpeople do their work, and
knew she wanted to do that too. She felt it was very close to
dancing, and that meant it wouldn't be all that difficult. So, when
D&B gave her the option
of choosing her next film, she unhesitatingly chose to do an action
movie.
In order to pull this off, Michelle went into intensive physical
training at a gym for ten or twelve hours a day, practicing all kinds
of punches, kicks and the martial arts moves with a bunch of
stunt guys. Finally, in 1985,
she had a cameo role as a karate instructor in Jackie and Sammo's
comedy, Twinkle
Twinkle Lucky Stars. Also in 1985, Michelle had
her second major
film appearance opposite Cynthia Rothrock, a karate champion who was
shifting
into doing movies, in Yes Madam.
For both, this was their first starring role;
for
Michelle, it was her breakout movie, making her one of the most
bankable
female stars in Hong Kong. During filming, Michelle fought for
the
right to do her own stunts, and was allowed to perform her first
dangerous
stunt in it. She flipped backwards on a railing and smashed her
head
through the glass bannister, grabbing two thugs and then yanking and
throwing
them off the balcony! Showing her willingness and ability to do the
difficult
acts, Michelle kicked her way in a male-dominated world of action
movies.
The next year found Michelle in her next actioner, Royal Warriors,
in
which she participated in some of the most grueling and brutal fight
sequences she's
ever done. In her next movie, Magnificent Warriors,
Michelle
broke a major artery in her thigh, a serious enough injury that put her
out
of
action films so she could sufficiently recover. By this time, she
was
engaged to Dickson Poon, and he insisted that her next movie be more
conventional.
Thus, in 1987, she did Easy Money,
which involved no extremely
dangerous
stunts nor any fight scenes (well, no dangerous
stunts unless you
consider
the car chase and then there's that horse jump in front of a speeding
train...but
nothing particularly dangerous...). Easy Money was
the last film
Michelle
was to do for D&B Films.
Michelle and Poon were married in a huge wedding in February of
1988. On the surface, they appeared to be the perfect couple, a
billionaire and former beauty queen. Poon insisted she retire
from acting, and so Michelle became a fixture on the Hong Kong society
pages and fashion boutiques as Dickson
Poon's wife. However, the marriage lasted only 3 years. The
divorce
swirled with rumor and innuendo, but to this day only the two of them
actually
know the reasons behind the seperation (though to this day they remain
friends).
Soon after, Poon dissolved D&B Films.
Looking for her first film in several years, Michelle was approached by
Stanley Tong, who was working with Jackie Chan on the third of the
Supercop
series of movies (which would eventually be called Police Story
III:
Supercop and just Supercop when
released in the US). A Jackie
Chan
vehicle, Michelle matched him stunt for stunt (up until the helicopter
stunt,
which she wanted to do but couldn't because Tong was worried that Chan
would
have to come up with something truly insane to top it). Michelle
stole
the show, though in truth they both shined due to their friendly
competition. The film broke the box office record in Asia.
Later that year, Michelle starred in two more movies: The Heroic Trio
and Butterfly
& Sword. Heroic Trio was
fun for her, since she
starred with her two best friends, Maggie Cheung and Anita Mui.
They stayed long
after shooting was done for the day, often having barbeques on the set
and
having a good time into the night. As for Butterfly & Sword,
well,
she actually sang the ending theme song (something she is always
embarrassed to admit, though personally I thought she sounded
terrific!).
In 1993, she starred in six movies: Project S (a
spinoff of Police
Story III), The
Executioners (the dark sequel to Heroic Trio), Holy
Weapon (an action
comedy), Wonder
Seven (an action adventure), and two movies directed by
Yuen
Woo-Ping, Tai Chi
Master (with Jet Li) and Wing Chun (with
Donnie Yen; as an aside, TNT
(Turner
Network Television), an American cable channel, dubbed and showed Heroic Trio,
Executioners
and Wing
Chun as a Michelle Yeoh Triple Feature in 1997 as a lead up to
Tomorrow
Never Dies). Wing Chun and Wonder Seven
were released in 1994.
At this point, it would be good to remind people that Michelle is not a
delicate flower vase. She does indeed do many, if not all, of her
own
stunts, and has the injuries to prove it. She's been the highest
paid
actress in Hong Kong for quite some time, and has paid the price to get
that
honor. In Hong Kong films, despite the fact that action films
rely
on choreography, editing and cinematography, they throw (and connect)
real
punches and kicks. When you see a fight and you see the strikes
connect,
they really are connecting.
Early in her career, Michelle has revealed that she sustained burns in
one scene in Royal
Warriors, and during Magnificent Warriors
(as
already stated), she popped an artery in her leg when she was kicked
too hard in the thigh. Though 1993 was a very successful year for
her, she triggered her old spinal injury on the last fight sequence for
Holy Weapon.
Not wanting to screw up the schedule for her other
films, she continued after only a brief stay in the hospital and fought
through the pain. In the final filmed scene in Executioners,
the
actor who was lifting her up off the ground accidentally touched the
injured spot in her spine which caused her to convulse and vomit.
During the shooting of Wing Chun, she
dislocated her left elbow.
Later, she again aggravated her back injury by falling off a
horse. For one day during location shooting near Beijing, she
couldn't even move because of the pain.
Returning to Hong Kong, Wonder Seven was
waiting for her, and, despite
what had happened, she decided not to cause problems and went right on
to the set.
During that shoot, she aggravated her back during a stunt in which she
fell
into the bay. When she finally went to the hospital, the doctor
was
shocked she was able to withstand the pain before seeking medical
attention. She was ordered to stay in the hospital for a week.
Michelle had planned to take a break in 1994, but could not stay away
from the hospital. She tore up her right knee in an Alpine skiing
accident, having to undergo surgery to reconnect everything. To
this day, she has a screw in that knee. It took her several
months to recover, and in that year she only made a cameo appearance in
a movie, Shaolin
Popey II: Messy Temple.
Worse was to come. In 1995, during one of the last scenes shot
for Ann Hui's Ah
Kam: Story of a Stuntwoman, Michelle almost broke her
back jumping off a freeway overpass (one of her dramatic/action roles,
she was great in it, though the ending credits are very difficult to
watch as they show the crew rescuing Michelle, carefully carrying her
to a waiting van
on the mattress she landed on). She had two stunts to do: jump
off a 70 foot freeway
overpass onto a passing truckbed loaded with matresses, and then a
similar 18 foot drop for the closeup. Except, on the 18 foot drop
(she did the 70 foot one just fine), she played it like it was the 70
foot drop and came down badly, basically on her face. She says
she recalls seeing her feet in front of her face (ouch!), felt her legs
whack her head, and she heard
something go CRACK! It was a miracle she survived it; she had a
cracked rib and deep tissue bruising in her back. She spent three
weeks in hospital.
During her recuperation, Michelle thought about the next step in her
career. She wanted a more dramatic role, and so she starred in
Mabel Cheung's The
Soong Sisters, a purely dramatic role which she
starred once again with buddy Maggie Cheung. It was Michelle's
first non-action movie, and she was nominated at the Hong Kong Film
Awards for Best Supporting Actress for her performance.
In 1996, Police
Story III was dubbed and released in the United States
as Supercop.
This got her exposure in Hollywood, and
made her the most successful Hong Kong actress in Hollywood. It
led to her role in 1997's James Bond movie Tomorrow Never Dies,
in
which she starred opposite Pierce Brosnan and, once again, stole
the show. Bond got his female equal, able to jump, fight, and spy
at his level. This film brought her to the attention of many
fans, who have been following her ever since.
Also in 1997, Michelle had a cameo appearance in Moonlight Express,
a
film that was being made by a good friend of hers. She did it for
free, and
insisted that she not be
used
for the publicity of the movie. It was another purely dramatic
turn in a film,
and Michelle does a great job (again, see the Filmography section for
reviews).
Meanwhile, Ang Lee approached Michelle during the promotion for Tomorrow
Never
Dies and told her about a movie he was going to do. It was
going
to
be his first martial arts film, and it was (as he described it) martial
arts
meets Sense and
Sensibility. She would star opposite Jet Li (her
costar
from Tai Chi
Master, who eventually declined and was replaced by Chow
Yun-Fat),
and would she like to be a part of it? She jumped at the chance,
and
turned down several Hollywood offers to do the film. Called
Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon, it came out in 2000 to the raves of
critics and
to
major international (and US) success. She was nominated as Best
Actress
at the British Academy Film Awards and won the honor at the AMMY
Awards.
She was also named International Star of the Year at Sho-West, the
world's
biggest motion picture industry convention.
During the TND promotional
tour in London, she met Alan Heldman, a
cardiologist from Baltimore. They began dating, and they got
engaged in 1999. He went with Michelle to many events, and
Michelle travelled between Hong Kong and Baltimore. However, they
broke their engagement in June of 2000.
In 2000, Michelle started her own production company, Mythical Films,
and released Mythical's first movie, The Touch, which
she produced as
well as
starred in. Rights to The Touch for
the US were bought up by Miramax,
which has not released it. This was the period leading up to Kill Bill
and Miramax bought up the distribution rights to a goodly number of
Asian movies and held onto them. The film did fairly well in Hong Kong,
and it did very well in other countries in Asia, but the special
effects company wasn't able to finish the FX shots by the release date
and the final
product was not perfect. The version Miramax has, however, is complete,
and the movie itself is pretty good. It has been released in only a few
Western countries, however. Then Mythical released Silver Hawk
(originally known as Masked Crusader)
in January 2004. Because the
audience didn't go for The Touch in HK,
Hong Kong receipts were very
low. However, it did very well in other Asian countries. It was
released in the US on DVD, and you can find it on the shelves of most
stores or get it on Amazon.com. During this period, Michelle was linked
romantically to her partner, Thomas Chung, by the Hong Kong press, who
made many stories. However, it was also never confirmed, and in any
case, the same press repored that in mid-2004 they
apparently broke up. She apparently met her current boyfriend, Jean
Todt, at an F1
party in Shanghai in the fall of 2004 and they have been dating ever
since. Todt is
the manager of the Ferrari F1 racing team.
After Silver Hawk,
Michelle starred in Memoirs of a Geisha,
based on
the best selling novel by Arthur Golden. After completing Memoirs, she
went to England and filmed Sunshine, which
has a release date in
October 2006 (this date has been changed to March 16, 2007). Memoirs
won 3 Oscars, but was not nominated in the acting
category despite strong performances from Michelle and several other
actors in the film. Currently, however, despite being linked with a
French film, Boarding
Gate, as well as Bitter Sea, a
project she is apparently to star in with Chow Yun-Fat, she recently
started filming her next movie, True North, on
Svalbard, a Norwegian island north of the Arctic Circle. True will
apparently
be a dark romance and investigate the differences between native and
modern
peoples. Once True
North is complete, perhaps sometime in late October or early
November, she will then switch to Prague to work on a French sci-fi
action film titled Babylon
A.D. Based on Maurice
Dantec's Babylon Babies, the
lead will be Vin Diesel. At the same time she's doing Babylon,
she has also signed up to do a Chinese movie titled The
Children of Huang Shi (the Chinese title of which is The
Bitter Sea). Filming for this one starts November 13,
2006 with a release in 2007.
There is also
the possibility she may be involved with the new Indiana Jones movie.
The
Indy movie, known as Indy 4 in most
circles, is having it's script
reviewed a final time. If it happens, casting will take place.
Hopefully we'll hear Michelle's name announced. There was, however, a
very tragic event just before the release of Silver Hawk. One
of Michelle's best friends, Anita Mui, who also costarred with her in
Heroic Trio and
Executioners,
died of cancer at the age of 40 on
December 30, 2003. This was a very sad day for Michelle. Anita was one
of the top singers in Asia, referred to as the Madonna of Asia. She is
greatly
missed.
Here's hoping Michelle continues to have great professional success,
and
we are also hoping she finally gets some satisfying personal
success.
GO MICHELLE!
Last Updated 9/28/06 (this was
culled from
interviews and other
websites, with special thanks to all the hard work that the Michelle
Yeoh Web Theater
did for their bio of Michelle)