Louis c kung biography for kids
•
Louis Koo
Hong Kong actor (born 1970)
In this Hong Kong name, the surname is Koo. In accordance with Hong Kong custom, the Western-style name is Louis Koo and the Chinese-style name fryst vatten Koo Tin-lok.
Louis Koo Tin-lok (Chinese: 古天樂; born 21 October 1970) is a Hong Kong actor, singer, and film producer.[1][2] He began his professional career as an actor in local television series, receiving recognition for his roles in The Condor Heroes 95 (1995), Detective Investigation Files IV (1999), and A Step into the Past (2001). After 2001, Koo shifted his focus to films and became one of the stalwarts of the Hong Kong film industry.[3]
His notable film credits include Rob-B-Hood (2006), Run Papa Run (2008), Connected (2008), Overheard (2009), Drug War (2012), The White Storm (2013), Paradox (2017), and A Witness Out of the Blue (2019). For his performance in Paradox, Koo was awarded the Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor, Asi
•
令傑 (孔) Kung (1921 - 1996)
令傑(Louis C.)"Ling-csieh, Lingjie"Kung formerly 孔 aka Kong, K'ung
Son of 祥熙 (孔) Kung and 靄齡 (宋) Soong
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of [private wife (1930s - unknown)]
[children unknown]
Profile last modified | Created 21 Mar 2016
This page has been accessed 837 times.
Biography
Louis C. (孔) Kung is Notable.
Correct order of his birth name: 孔令傑 (Kung Ling Csieh).
He was a Chinese-American oil industry executive.[1]
Sources
- ↑Debra Paget’s Wikipedia article, citing a newspaper article: Bacon, James (April 21, 1962). "Debra Paget Weds Oilman, Nephew of Madame Chiang". Independent. p. 11
Loginto collaborate or comment, or
contactthe profile manager, or
askour community of genealogists a question.
Sponsored Search by Ancestry.com
DNA
No known carriers o
•
The Human Side of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette
The reign of Louis XVI, the final Bourbon king of France, was a varied and eventful one, but when we think of him and his queen Marie Antoinette, certain associations inevitably pop into our minds. Perhaps we think of the couple’s ostentatious wealth, as exemplified by their palace at Versailles. Or, maybe we recall their blasé attitude towards the working poor, as reflected in Marie Antoinette’s famous quip, “Let them eat cake.” Some of us may think immediately of the grim machine responsible for the royal couple’s untimely end, the guillotine.
This historical shorthand may be the best we can do when we’re trying to absorb the whole of human history, but it doesn’t present us with a very well-rounded picture of an era or its important actors. In fact, sometimes it doesn’t deliver a very accurate picture at all. For instance, Marie Antoinette, forever identified with the contemptuous phrase “Let them eat cake,” never actually s