Jackie Chan
Maggie Q’s Hands Cut While Filming `Die Hard’
June 16th, 2007
Hong Kong-based actress and martial artist Maggie Quigley said Friday that her hands were badly cut while filming car stunt scenes for the coming film “Die Hard 4.0.”
The latest installment in the “Die Hard” series, titled “Live Free or Die Hard” in the United States, revolves around a planned cyber-terror attack on the United States.
In the film, Bruce Willis teams up with Justin Long, who plays a computer hacker, to thwart the evil Mai, played by Quigley.
Audiences will get to see Quigley beat Willis up.
The movie opens in Japan on June 23. It opens in the United States and elsewhere on June 27.
Quigley made her name in the Hong Kong film industry before moving on to Hollywood projects such as the recent action flick “Mission: Impossible III,” the comedy “Rush Hour 2″ and Jackie Chan’s “Around the World in 80 Days.”
The actress grew up in Hawaii, the daughter of a Polish-Irish American father and a Vietnamese mother.
Ayumi Hamasaki upsets villagers on Hong Kong seafood quest
April 12th, 2007
Japanese pop queen Ayumi Hamasaki upset locals in a Hong Kong fishing village when she made a surprise visit for a seafood meal with 22 aggressive bodyguards and flunkies, witnesses said.
Hamasaki, known as “Ayu” to her fans and the biggest-selling solo pop star in Japan, was cocooned by her entourage who prevented locals from getting near her table or fans from taking photographs.
She popped over to Sok Kwu Wan village on Lamma Island, about two miles (three kilometres) from downtown Hong Kong, on Sunday after she had completed a series of sold-out concerts at the city’s Coliseum arena.
Contributors to local website forums complained that the diminutive singer, whose unusually large round eyes and fair hair are believed to have sparked a fad for eye-lid cosmetic surgery among Japanese girls, had upset locals.
“The most famous J-pop star of all time was having a post concert bite accompanied by no less than 12 bodyguards and another 10 strong entourage,” wrote one anonymous subscriber to Lamma.com.hk, the blog for island residents.
“(I) didn’t have a phone to photo with and the table next to me was prevented from taking pictures anyway,” the writer added.
A spokesman for the Rainbow Restaurant, where Hamasaki ate, confirmed the singer had dined at the eatery but wouldn’t comment on her entourage’s behaviour.
“She had lots of bodyguards with her,” he said. “She came over on her own chartered boat.”
According to her website, Hamasaki has had 27 number one hits in Japan, more than any other solo artist.
Leafy Lamma Island’s seafood restaurants regularly attract celebrities. Most recently action star Jackie Chan and Philippine President Gloria Arroyo were spotted eating there. Lamma native “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” star Chow Yun-fat also makes regular return trips.
