
Eddy Au Yeung
Acting
Biography
Eddy Au Yeung joined Hong Kong Repertory Theatre (HKRep) in 2012 as a full-time company member. In 2014, he was nominated as Best Supporting Actor (Tragedy/Drama) at the Hong Kong Drama Awards for his performance as Jeremy in The Professor. In 2015, he was also nominated as Outstanding Actor at the 7th Hong Kong Theatre Libre for his performances in Wolf in the House. He was nominated as the Best Actor at the 13th and 15th Hong Kong Theatre Libre with his roles in Theo and The Bucket respectively. In 2023, he won Best Actor (Comedy/Farce) at the Hong Kong Drama Awards for his performance as Master Chi Yuen in Love à la Zen. In 2024, he won Best Actor (Comedy/Farce) again for his performance as the resourceful servent Scapin in Scapin in Jiānghú, Chap. 2023, and was nominated for Best Actor at the Shanghai One Drama Awards. Among his other works are The Tamed and the Tempted, In Between, The Top Restaurant, Lumination of the Forgotten, The Isle , All Good Things, A Winter Funeral, Invisible Men (2020), The Big Meal and A Dream Like a Dream. He was the Assistant Director of The Impossible Trial - a musical, and starred in the film Borrowed Time. Prior to joining HKRep, Eddy’s acting credits included tobe THEATRE’s Twelfth Night (re-run), Prospects Theatre’s Cricket in My Life (third re-run) and the Hong Kong Federation of Drama Societies’ Caught in the Net. Eddy graduated with honours from the School of Drama, Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, majoring in acting.
Known For

A late summer typhoon looms as Ting's wedding approaches. Urged on by her mother, Ting sets out from Guangzhou to Hong Kong to look for her father who has been absent for 20 years. On her trip, Ting's vague memories from the past come back to her. An unexpected encounter leads Ting to find out the truth of her family. She gets in touch with an old friend, Yuseng. They spend a night together at Yuseng's place, both feeling as if they were in a dream, searching for the lost time.
Borrowed Time

Liza, once a notorious mob boss, has always been strategically planning the career of her only son Yan. It is however never in Yan’s intention to follow her mother’s footsteps - instead he aspires to be a filmmaker. As a mob, Yan is highly incompetent, and his disappointing performance already messed up a simple drug deal. Liza desperately tries to save her most sought-after son, but she ends up, along with her son, breaking into her neighbour Mr. Chan's home. They accidentally steal the head of Mrs. Chan, whom they assume was murdered by Mr. Chan. They recklessly decide to blackmail Mr. Chan, and everything goes out of control. Will Liza and her beloved son survive this crisis?
Where's The Head?

Nine works for an old laundry shop due for closure to make way for urban renewal projects. Ordered to return a washed suit and pocket watch to an old customer, Nine starts a journey within the area soon to be transformed beyond recognition. He encounters a number of local residents who treasure and preserve the unique charm of the area. A conversation with his grandfather who repairs old chairs prompted Nine reflections on the values of preservation and the apparent priority of all things new only made possible by sacrificing things and memories from older eras. This observant piece stars veteran actress Lora Lu and stage actors Au Yeung Chun and Sheung Ming-fai.
A Long Ride

A night delivery man meets a woman who works in a publishing house. He helps her deliver books to a warehouse during rainy days, and in each encounter an endearing bond forms between them.
Shelter

Ting and her friends go to Mui Wo where they see cows freely walking around. Someone appears and reminds them not to disturb the cows. The next day comes the news that seven cows were killed in a car accident at Mui Wo, which catches Ting and her friends’ attention. Ting starts a fundraising campaign hoping to build a cows’ shelter but is taken as an act to trick people’s money. The disheartened situation brings Ting to revisit the site, where she meets Sunset, the cow caretaker whom they have met before. She eventually develops a sense of responsibility to protect the cows when one day Sunset asks her to inherit the post of caretaker from him.
The Cow Caretaker

The fairy tale of childhood is that our lives will follow an ideal trajectory. Destiny decides otherwise for Wing-Kai who becomes bedridden, paralysed from the neck down after a car accident. The monotonous hospital life depresses the young man. Years later, he meets a young girl who is caring for her boyfriend in vegetative state, believing that her love will wake him up eventually. Wing-Kai ridicules her innocent optimism. When the young man recovers miraculously, hope reawakens in Wing-Kai who begins rehabilitation training with great fervour. However, time passes and everything remains the same. Sinking into even deeper despair, Wing-Kai tries to regain control over his own destiny.