Background
Kam Fong Chun was born in the Kalihi neighborhood of Honolulu, Hawaii. His father had an affair, which led to his parents" divorce and the splitting of the family.
Kam Fong Chun was born in the Kalihi neighborhood of Honolulu, Hawaii. His father had an affair, which led to his parents" divorce and the splitting of the family.
A 1938 graduate of President William McKinley High School, he worked at Pearl Harbor shipyard in his 20s as a boiler maker and was a witness to the attack by the Japanese on December 7, 1941. He served there for sixteen years. After his retirement from the police force, he worked as a disc jockey and sold real estate in addition to doing community theater.
Chun"s life was filled with tragedies.
Chun watched a brother burn to death as he was painting the family home and someone lit a match. On June 8, 1944, Chun lost his family in a freak air disaster that devastated their home in Honolulu.
Two B-24 bombers collided over the Chun residence, killing wife Esther, four-year-old daughter Marilyn and two-year-old son Donald. Chun later married Gladys Lindo in 1949.
Stage name
Due to confusion as he got older, he later legalized his name to the former.
Columbia Broadcasting System asked him to shorten his name to Kam Fong when he was hired for Hawaii Five-O.
Proposed 1997 Five-O revival
Talk had centered around a remake or a feature film version of the show for years. In 1997, Columbia Broadcasting System and Stephen J. Cannell (The Rockford Files, Baretta, The Commish) collaborated on a pilot for a possible new Five-O series. The pilot would introduce some of the new cast and feature former regulars from the original series, including Fong.
According to Five-O fan and author of a book on the show, Karen Rhodes, Fong was asked to reprise his role and appear in the pilot.
Neither Fong nor any of the other regulars told Cannell that Chinese Ho had been killed off at the end of the tenth season. This was only discovered after all of Fong"s scenes had been shot, and to excise him from the project would have caused delays and overruns in cost.
Hoping that Columbia Broadcasting System executives would not remember the one episode out of hundreds, Cannell screened the pilot. Death
Kam Fong Chun died of lung cancer in Honolulu on October 18, 2002, at the age of 84.