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Liu Guikang was a child star of Hong Kong in his youth. During the Pacific War, Liu Guikang moved to Shaoguan, the temporary capital of Guangdong Province of the Republic of China, and worked in the police headquarters. After the end of the Second World War, he represented the Republic of China to Shanghai to receive territory. After that, he returned to Hong Kong and continued to work as a film actor, especially as a comedian. His posthumous work is the 1955 Hong Kong film "it's hard to be a new man".
On July 3, 1948 (Saturday), he married his wife Yang Yuxiang and held a wedding at 3 pm in St. Teresa hall, Prince Edward Road, Kowloon Tong. At 7 pm, the wedding banquet was held at the "Chinese restaurant" on the sixth floor of the company, Central Des Voeux Road, Hong Kong Island. After marriage, she has two sons and two daughters (first daughter: Liu Lijuan; second son: Liu Gonghua; third daughter: Liu Lifang; fourth son: Liu Zhuoxiang).
At 6:30 am on Sunday, April 24, 1955, he died at St. Teresa hospital, Kowloon City. He was 37 years old. A funeral was held on Monday, April 25, 1955. The body was buried at the Catholic St. Rafael cemetery in Cheung Sha Wan, Kowloon.
Liu Guikang has been involved in more than 360 Hong Kong films in his life, from his screen virgin "female spy" (1936) to his film sequel "new life is hard" (1955). In the spring of the stage (1938), he was combined with the comedian Yang Junxia and lemon to form the "three brothers of Buddha"; he was also paired with the skinny monkey comedian Yang Junxia to form the Oriental "laureland hardy" fat and thin comedian.
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Chinese PinYin : Liu Gui Kang
Liu Guikang