Background
Chan Sing was born in 1936 in Thailand.
Chan Sing was born in 1936 in Thailand.
He had his education in Wenchang (Chee Wei Village), End of River village. He spent his high school years at Haikou First Middle School. His first appearance was with the Shaw Brothers Studio in Dead End in 1969.
In 1972 he left Shaw Brothers.
He got his first break in the movie The Bloody Fists in 1972. This hit movie led to more promising roles, usually as the villain, in both studio and independent films.
He was one of the pioneers of kung fu movies. Like the actors Pai Ying and Chan Hung Literature, Chen was considered "typecast-right" from the beginning of his acting career for villain roles.
His exotic Southeast Asian features, his mustache, and his strength marked him as different from the smooth-faced, Eurasian-looking actors favored by the big Hong Kong studios.
He was cast against type as an heroic undercover agent battling vicious crooks in Tough Guy (aka Kung Fu the Headcrusher) (1972) or Japanese subversives Yasuaki Kurata (Tiger vs Dragon, 1972, or Rage of the Wind, 1973). When Chen was not acting, he was a karate instructor for Gōjū-ryū & Goju Kai karate. He was also a Hong Kong prison policeman for the prison system and demonstrated for the Singapore police system with Tan.
By the early 1990s, with the end of Hong Kong"s status as a British colony approaching, Chen opted to leave the Hong Kong film industry.
In 1996, moved to Vancouver and Toronto, where he still lives in retirement.