Who is Sammy Leung? A look at one of Hong Kong’s most well-known radio DJs and TV hosts

By then he had already hosted his first radio show, in 1995, as a result of his performance in a 1994 competition organised by Commercial Radio Hong Kong (CRHK)’s CR2 FM 90.3 channel.
Leung at an interview with the Post in 2001. From 2001 to 2009, he was host of the radio show Sammy Moving. Photo: SCMP

“During one of my early radio shows, someone phoned in to say that he liked my show and I realised that I could give people two hours of happiness, and that became my mission – to make people happy,” said Leung in a 2007 interview with the Post. “I want to make it a profession.”

His stage name, Sum-mei, comes from his early days in radio. In a 2009 talk show for Hong Kong broadcaster TVB, he revealed the nickname came from a staff member at CRHK who had pronounced his English name, Sammy, with a Cantonese twist.

In 1997, he arrived at a turning point in his radio hosting career: he got Kitty Yuen Siu-yee as a co-host. The popular duo have been entertaining listeners ever since with their playful dynamic and ruthless banter.

From 2001 to 2009, Leung hosted Sammy Moving, a radio show that contained various comedic segments which produced what were essentially Hong Kong Cantonese memes before memes were really a thing – some of which are still referenced today; 2001 also saw him begin teaching radio production and media studies at his alma mater.

Leung (left) and his long-time co-host Kitty Yuen at an interview with the Post in 2000. Photo: SCMP

In January 2006, he co-hosted TVB’s Miss Chinese International Pageant, which expanded his hosting experience to the screen.

That same year, in June, Leung’s career took a hit – one that was seen as being of his own doing. On So Fab, a radio show Leung and Yuen co-hosted from 2005 to 2009, the duo asked listeners to nominate “the most popular female artistes for indecent assault”.

It earned them reprimands from Hong Kong’s Equal Opportunities Commission, the city’s Education Bureau and several women’s organisations; and around 200 listeners filed complaints to the then-Hong Kong Broadcasting Authority.

CRHK made a public apology and suspended the co-hosts for two months without pay, during which time they were not allowed to take other work. The incident brought an end to Leung’s five years as a media studies lecturer at Chinese University of Hong Kong.

(From left) Kitty Yuen, Leung and pop singer Edmond Leung perform at a press conference in 2000. Photo: SCMP

Leung said later that the incident changed his view “of many things”, but maintained that he was not generally known as being outspoken. “I wouldn’t worry about the reaction. I have actually been very careful all the time,” he said.

He also said he found it “very difficult to establish a career in the entertainment business if you are too serious”.

After his mandated two-month break, his career bounced back – radio hosting was, after all, not his only show business endeavour; he was breaking into acting.

Leung’s first lead role in a movie was in Patrick Kong Pak-leung’s debut romantic comedy My Sweetie (2004).
His earlier film appearances were mostly comedic, although he did later take on more complex roles, such as in Herman Yau Lai-to’s True Women for Sale (2008), in which he played a photographer focusing his lens on a drug-addicted sex worker’s plight.
Fiona Sit and Leung in a still from Love Undercover 3 (2006).

Discussing his acting with the Post in 2007, Leung said: “I’m happy that audiences will get to see a different side of me [ …] the amusing side of me is like my thumb, maybe it’s shorter but it’s the one that audiences want to see. It’s not all of me, but it’s still me and the media exaggerates that side of me.”

Leung continues to appear frequently as a show host – in 2017, he began hosting his own reality series, Sammy on the Go, in which he travelled to various parts of Japan. The TVB programme wrapped in 2019.

Despite having worked for almost three decades in Hong Kong’s entertainment industry, Leung has kept his personal life largely out of the public eye.

Leung at a promotional event in 2018. Photo: Edward Wong

In 2003, he revealed that he was soon to become a father for the first time – to the surprise of the Hong Kong public, which did not know that three years earlier he had married former child actress and television host Veronica Chan.

Asked later about his marital status, Leung – a devout Christian – said: “How can one have children before marriage? That’s not OK.” It has been said that he kept his marriage private out of respect for his wife. The couple welcomed their second child in 2006.

In a 2017 interview, Leung cried when talking about his father, who worked as a firefighter and a taxi driver, and his son, who had just left to study in the UK. He recalled being reminded of how his father must have felt driving him to school interviews in his teens.

Leung remains a presence on radio – he and Yuen host Good Morning King, one of CRHK’s most popular programmes, every weekday, as well as The Playtoy Mansion every Saturday night.

Want more articles like this? Follow SCMP Film on Facebook

FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Chronicles Live is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials, please contact us by email – chronicleslive.com. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.

Leave a Comment