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Andy Lau attends first premiere after fall

News Desk (The Straits Times/Asia News Network)
Hong Kong
Thu, August 24, 2017

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Andy Lau attends first premiere after fall Actor Andy Lau poses at the 'Tao Jie' photocall during the 68th Venice Film Festival at Palazzo del Cinema on Sept. 5, 2011 in Venice, Italy. (Shutterstock/File)

T

yphoon Hato was moving towards Hong Kong on Tuesday night, but it did not stop Andy Lau from attending his first film premiere in the city after a January horse-riding accident.

The 55-year-old actor said he had recovered 95 per cent from his low-back injuries, but his doctor was not in favor of him attending public events such as the premiere of The Adventurers at Festival Walk mall, reported Apple Daily. Stephen Fung, who directed the movie, and Shu Qi, who co-stars, were also present.

"This time, I persuaded the doctor to let me do this," Lau said of the premiere.

"The doctor was afraid I would be pushed."

He had been out of action for more than six months after being thrown off a horse during a shoot for a tea commercial in Thailand. He returned to work this month, beginning with a publicity stop in Beijing for The Adventurers.

He said he had injured his L5 and L6 vertebrae, cracking one and breaking the other, which would "take one to two years to completely heal".

He said he had physiotherapy soon after the accident because there are 28 steps to climb to reach his house, reported Ming Pao Daily News.

His doctor would not let him go home before he could climb 120 steps a day and had learnt to go to a toilet and shower while in a wheelchair.

Read also: Andy Lau is not too interested in Hollywood

 

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It also took Lau four months - and many squats and dumbbell exercises - to build up his strength and hold his five-year-old daughter, who weighs 20kg, again, he said.

He is now fit enough to run on a treadmill at home and do strenuous exercises, but is less flexible.

"I haven't done a leg press in six months. I can do it only in a physiotherapist's presence. I can't do it at home on my own, so I can't do a split either."

Recalling the accident, he said it was fated. He had actually dismounted, but then got back on the horse because a few more shots were needed, he said.

The accident had traumatised him and he said he might need a stunt double for future horse-riding shoots.

After all the trouble, the horse-riding shots were cut from the commercial because "the advertisers didn't want to bring back my memories of this", he added.

He had cancelled year-end concerts in the Hong Kong Coliseum after the accident. On Tuesday, he said he hoped to hold concerts in the second half of next year, or later.


This article appeared on The Straits Times newspaper website, which is a member of Asia News Network and a media partner of The Jakarta Post
 

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