Remembering Leslie Cheung: 20 years have passed, but Hong Kong fans’ devotion to Cantopop legend lives on
- Concert, exhibition among events to mark April 1 death anniversary of award-winning singer and actor
- Star’s suicide at 46 stunned fans across the region, raised awareness of mental health struggle

Zoey Wang missed the heyday of Hong Kong’s “King of Cantopop” Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing, but she says the award-winning actor and singer shaped the way her life turned out.
Originally from Changsha in mainland China, she said: “Because of my love for Leslie, I started to dream of becoming a Hong Kong citizen at the age of 16. It led me to come to Hong Kong to study, work and live.”
Now 25 and working for a non-profit in the city, she is among Cheung’s legion of loyal fans who will mark the 20th anniversary of his death on April 1, with several events that have been lined up.
Affectionately known as Gor Gor – “big brother” in Cantonese – the tailor’s son became a star during Cantopop’s golden era in the 1980s and 1990s.

His breakthrough film role was in the 1986 hit A Better Tomorrow, and he went on to star in many more through the 1990s, including the award-winning Farewell My Concubine, Days of Being Wild, Ashes of Time and Happy Together.