Shu Qi
Shu Qi was born in New Taipei, Taiwan on April 16th, 1976 and is the Movie Actress. At the age of 48, Shu Qi biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, movies, and networth are available.
At 48 years old, Shu Qi has this physical status:
Lin Li-hui (born 16 April 1976), also known as Shu Qi on stage, is a Taiwanese-Hong Kong actress and model.
Shu was ranked 18th on Forbes China's top paid actors in 2014, fifth in 2015, 48th in 2017, and 90th in 2019.
Early life
Shu Qi, a native of Taiwan's Taipei County (now New Taipei City), moved to Hong Kong at the age of 17 to pursue a film career. She later came under the custody of Hong Kong film producer Manfred Wong, who appeared in numerous Hong Kong Category III films, such as Sex & Zen II (1996).
Personal life
In 2016, Shu married Hong Kong actor-director Stephen Fung. The two met on the set of the romance drama Bishonen in 1997 and dated for four years.
Career
Shu Qi appeared in Derek Yee's 1996 film Viva Erotica about Hong Kong's burgeoning film industry, alongside Karen Mok and Leslie Cheung. At the 16th Hong Kong Film Awards in 1997, she was named Best Supporting Actress for her role in Viva Erotica. She has appeared in Hong Kong films since 1997, including Portland Street Blues (1998), City of Glass (1998)), Stanley Kwan's The Island Tales (1999), and Hou Hsien's Millennium Mambo (2001), converting her to mainstream acting.
Shu appeared in The Transporter, the first installment of the Transporter franchise, in French. This was her first foray into the American market. I Love You, an American romantic comedy, was she small but memorable role in 2008.
The Foliage (2004), a romance film set in Yunnan during the Cultural Revolution, was one of Shu's older works. For her appearances, she was named Best Actress at the 13th Shanghai Film Critics Awards. Shu performed with Hou in Three Times (2005), which attended the Cannes Film Festival and took home the Best Actress award at the Golden Horse Awards.
Shu appeared in the third installment of the gangster film My Wife Is a Gangster starring Korean actor Lee Beom-soo in 2006. In the crime drama Confession of Pain, she appeared alongside Tony Leung Chiu-wai and Takeshi Kaneshiro.
Shu was a member of the Berlin International Film Festival in 2008 and the Cannes Film Festival in 2009. In the same year, she was praised at the Huabiao Awards as Best Actress for Taiwan and Hong Kong for her role in the Taiwan and Hong Kong region's romantic comedy film If You Are the One, directed by Feng Xiaogang. The romantic comedy was the year's highest-grossing Chinese film.
Shu starred in Journey to the West (2013), directed by Stephen Chow and loosely based on the Chinese literary classic Journey to the West. The film surpassed Lost in Thailand to become the highest-grossing Chinese film.
In his first wuxia film, The Assassin (2015), Shu starred as the title character. The film received largely favorable feedback at the Cannes Film Festival, and Shu Shu won the Best Actress award at the Asian Film Festival. She appeared in the blockbuster film Mojin: The Lost Legend, which was based on the popular adventure book series Ghost Blows Out the Fire.
Shu, Feng Shaofeng, and Victoria Song appeared in the Chinese version of My Best Friend's Wedding in 2016. She appeared in The Village of No Return, a fantasy comedy that premiered at the first day of the Spring Festival in 2017. Shu appeared in Stephen Fung's The Adventurers in 2017 alongside Jean Reno and Andy Lau.
Shu appears in Shanghai's 2019 science fiction film Shanghai Fortress, which is based on the 2006 book Once Upon a Time.