Empress Wu (TV series)

Empress Wu is a 1984 Hong Kong television serial based on the biography of Wu Zetian (Cantonese: Mou Zak-tin), the only woman in Chinese history to assume the title of "Empress Regnant", starring Petrina Fung as the title character. The serial was produced by ATV and was first aired in Hong Kong on ATV Home from 6 August to 28 September 1984.[1]

Empress Wu
Traditional武則天
Simplified武则天
MandarinWǔ Zétiān
CantoneseMou5 Zak1-tin1
LiterallyWu Zetian
GenreHistorical drama
StarringPetrina Fung
Tony Liu
Savio Tsang
Lo Chun-shun
Pat Poon
Lau Hung-fong
Theme music composerKwan Sing-yau
Opening themeChi Ngo Mou Ching Yau Ching (知我無情有情) performed by Cheung Nam-ngan
Ending themehung guk juei yam (空谷足音) performed by Cheung Nam-ngan
Country of originHong Kong
Original language(s)Cantonese
No. of episodes40
Production
Executive producer(s)Lee Siu-wah
Production location(s)Hong Kong
Running time45 minutes per episode
Production company(s)ATV
Release
Original networkATV Home
Original release6 August (1984-08-06) 
28 September 1984 (1984-09-28)

It was shown with English subtitles in Australia on SBS from 1987 to 1990.[2]

A dubbed English version of the serial was broadcast in the United Kingdom on Channel 4 in sixty-five weekly 30-minute episodes from 4 October 1987 to 21 January 1989.[3]

Cast

Note: Some of the characters' names are in Cantonese romanisation.
gollark: That sounds mean and thus impossible.
gollark: It's a "perceptual hash", yes. And I do not think it does anything to videos.
gollark: It seems like they would require complex balance things also.
gollark: I dislike bikes, so I never learned to use one.
gollark: The only good cult is a cult of personality surrounding me as eternal supreme world dictator.

References

  1. HKATV.com. "HKATV.com Archived 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine." Page 1. Retrieved on 2010-01-02.
  2. Michael Visontay, "Star Wars", Sydney Morning Herald, The Guide (9 February 1987), p. 1.
  3. "Sunday," The Times (London, England: 3 October 1987), p. 23. "Television and Radio," The Times (London, England: 21 January 1989), p. 42.
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