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Melvin Wong Kam Sang (born 29 January 1949) is a Hong Kong actor, disbarred barrister and pharmacist. After graduating from the University of California, San Francisco with a PhD in pharmaceutical science.

Mak withdrew from showbiz in 2019 and worked as an associate at McKinsey & Company after she was called to bar in New York. She left McKinsey in 2022 and co-founded Project Melo, a company that focuses on youth empowerment, in the same year. She was also appointed as a director of Legendary Education in 2023.

Television
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Television
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Television
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Television
Eugenie Liu (born 12 November 1990) is a Taiwanese actress. She took on lead roles in the mystery romance series Behind Your Smile (2016), the Netflix romantic comedy series Triad Princess (2019), and the sci-fi series Futmalls (2020). Liu also made her feature film debut with the horror comedy film Mon Mon Mon Monsters (2017), and starred as Lin Chen-chen in the drama film Old Fox (2023), earning a nomination for Best Supporting Actress in the 60th Golden Horse Awards with the latter. --

 Maggie Lee is a Hong Kong-based film critic. She formerly served as the Asia chief critic for The Hollywood Reporter and Variety.

Biography
Lee graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (later promoted to Master of Arts by seniority ) in English Language and Literature from University College, Oxford. After completing her studies at Oxford, she moved to Hong Kong and worked as a writer for the Hong Kong International Film Festival and the Hong Kong Film Archive. In 2007, she became a film critic for The Hollywood Reporter, basing in Hong Kong alongside fellow critic Elizabeth Kerr, and eventually advancing to the role of Asia chief critic. She joined Variety in 2012 and was appointed as the chief Asia film critic in 2015. Her focus has been on covering Asian cinema, including the Cannes Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival, Busan International Film Festival, and Shanghai International Film Festival. She wrote reviews on films from China and Korea,  as well as Asian-themed Hollywood films, such as Crazy Rich Asians. She had also served as an adjudicator of the 54th Golden Horse Awards, and a curator at the 2018 Vancouver International Film Festival and the 27th Busan International Film Festival. She left Variety prior to 2024, planning to debut as a screenwriter.

Early life
Tseng was born in 1993 or 1994 in the Tamsui District of New Taipei City, Taiwan, to a Taiwanese father and Hunanese mother. She began practicing martial arts at a young age due to the influence of her grandfather, including learning Northern Praying Mantis and nunchucks. She split her childhood time between Taiwan and China, and later moved to the United States, where she completed high school. Tseng continued her studies at the USC School of Dramatic Arts in 2013 and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in theater. From 2017 to 2019, she starred in David Henry Hwang's play Chinglish on the invitation of a friend, which sparked her interest in acting. Instead of returning to Taiwan to start a cafe in Taitung City as initially planned, she enrolled at USC again to pursue a Master of Fine Arts in acting and intended to pursue a career in stage performances. However, she deferred her studies for a year in 2021 due to COVID-19 and ultimately quit the program in her second year when she was cast in 3 Body Problem.

Career
Tseng made her onscreen acting debut with the 2024 Netflix sci-fi series 3 Body Problem, adapted from the Chinese novel of the same name. She shared a main role with Rosalind Chao, portraying the younger version of Ye Wenjie, a Chinese astrophysicist living through the Cultural Revolution who contacted extraterrestrial beings. While still enrolled at USC in 2021, Tseng was approached by a friend who majored in directing to audition for the role, and she was selected by director Derek Tsang from a pool of 3,000 contestants. She was required to move to London for an eight-month shoot, leading her to discontinue her master's studies. Tseng also worked on the Mandarin dialogues for the scenes set in China. Her performance was critically acclaimed, with Palmer Haasch of Business Insider calling it "a brilliant debut performance" and Therese Lacson of Collider describing it as "magnificent", and it earned her Outstanding Performance in a Drama Series at the 1st Gotham TV Awards.

Tseng signed with Artist International Group in August 2023, and she has expressed interest in making her debut in Taiwanese cinema. In 2024, Tseng is cast in a lead role as Princess Gulun Shou'an, a Chinese scholar and martial artist, in Guy Ritchie's upcoming series Young Sherlock.

Personal life
After the filming of 3 Body Problem, Tseng returned to Taiwan and is currently residing in the mountain regions of Tamsui.