Veronica Yip
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Veronica Yip Yuk Hing (simplified Chinese: 叶玉卿; traditional Chinese: 葉玉卿; pinyin: Yè Yùqīng; born 12 February 1966)[1] is a Hong Kong-born actress, singer, and businesswoman who is probably most well known for her roles in "adult" Category III films (while, not pornographic, these films do contain nudity and sexual situations that are more commonly found in softcore American films such as Basic Instinct).
Career
Film career
Veronica Yip was born in Hong Kong and started her career in participating in the 1985 Miss Asia Pageant and received the 2nd runner-up award.[2] Her career breakthrough was when she starred in adult films which previously were considered taboo for mainstream actresses in the Hong Kong market. Yip has starred in a total of three of these Category III films: Take Me (1991), Pretty Woman (1992) and Hidden Desire (1992). All three films were regarded as commercial successes and paved the way for mainstream actresses, such as Loletta Lee and Irene Wan to act in such films.
Aside from these films, Yip has also starred in many films critically acclaimed Chinese movies, including Jeffrey Lau's The Eagle Shooting Heroes and Stanley Kwan's Red Rose, White Rose (1994). Yips ability to escape the soft porn market paving the way for actresses such as Shu Qi and Pauline Chan to do the same.
Musical career
Yip had a singing career when she joined Fitto Entertainment, owned by her brother Yip Chi-Ming, before the company was transitioned into Emperor Entertainment Group, releasing seven cantopop and mandopop albums between 1992 and 1995. Yip received two Best New Artist gold awards from 1992 RTHK Top 10 Gold Songs Awards and 1992 Jade Solid Gold Best Ten Music Awards Presentation.
Family
In 1998, Yip invested a large sum in her brother's project of building a Disneyland in Hong Kong. However, the project was scrapped along with the budget causing a fallout between the two. Yip and her brother later reconciled.
Yip met her husband, Chinese-American businessman Jeffrey Wu (胡兆明) when Yip was hired by Premier Entertainment in New York to perform a concert at the Trump Marina in Atlantic City. After marrying Wu in 1996, Yip retired from entertainment and moved to the United States where Wu runs the Hong Kong Supermarket chain.[2] The couple have a daughter and two sons and currently reside on Long Island. They also have substantial investments in United International Bank, a business jet trading company, and various business-use real estate projects.
Notes
External links
- Articles containing simplified Chinese-language text
- Articles containing traditional Chinese-language text
- 1966 births
- Living people
- American bankers
- American businesspeople in retailing
- American investors
- American real estate businesspeople
- American women in business
- Businesspeople from New York
- Hong Kong bankers
- Hong Kong emigrants to the United States
- Hong Kong entrepreneurs
- Hong Kong female singers
- Hong Kong film actresses
- Hong Kong financial businesspeople
- Hong Kong investors
- Hong Kong real estate businesspeople
- Hong Kong retail businesspeople
- Hong Kong television actresses
- Hong Kong women in business
- People from Long Island
- 20th-century Hong Kong actresses
- Women investors