Celebrity Life
Style Folio: Eliza Sam, Hong Kong Actress
Eliza Sam, the Hong Kong actress with a million social media followers, talks to us about everything from style to stilettoes, on-screen and off.
Beauty Queen, film star, television actress, wife, mother and model â Eliza Sam is the gorgeous Canadian-born girl next door whoâs been in the spotlight ever since she won the Miss Chinese Vancouver Pageant in 2009 and went on to take the crown in the 2010 Miss Chinese International Pageant.
She was shot further into the orbits of celebrity via the smash television show Divas in Distress â her popular role in the latter gave her the nickname âPrincess Heung Heungâ, which still follows her to this day. We snatched a few minutes from Samâs packed schedule to chat with her.
Eliza Sam, Hong Kong Actress
How has your fashion journey evolved over the years?
When I was a kid, I watched my mom upcycle clothes that Iâd grown out of to make outfits for my Barbie. When I was an awkward tween she let me use her sewing machine, and ever since then, Iâve been making my own clothes. I studied fashion design too. I actually wore a DIY gown to a red-carpet event â I pulled an all-nighter to make it.
What do you love wearing?
I like to mix and match classic or luxury brands with unbranded street chic. Styling is mixing something old and new, not wearing a full look.
Tell us about your accessories journey.
Growing up, Iâd buy a lot of things that were trendy at the time. But nowadays I prefer to invest in classic items, ones that Iâll like and use for a long time. My motto is âquality over quantityâ. Once in a while, Iâll supplement with some seasonal items, but not often. Itâs less wasteful and I regret less.
Bags or shoes?
Thatâs easy. My real love is shoes â they can make or break an outfit and I consider some to be art pieces. You can tell bits of a personâs personality by looking at their shoe collection.
Would you be influenced by a celebrity wearing a brand?
Influencers can definitely make me aware of a new bag, but I wouldnât be influenced enough to buy it just because someone else has it. I can be inspired â if itâs styled really well Iâll think about it. There are a lot of It-bags, but I like to think about which situation of my life it fits into, whether itâs an everyday utility or a waiting-for-a-special-event kind of bag. I think a lot before I commit.
When did you make the leap from a few followers to this sudden jump to more than a million on Instagram?
I remember the day I reached 1,000 followers. I was amazed and touched that people even cared to follow me. Iâm so thankful to all my followers, who encourage me to work harder and do better. Itâs more than a million now and Iâm genuinely amazed.
Knowing you influence young ladies who are looking at your aesthetic, are you more conscious about what you wear or post?
Iâve been aware from the beginning that, as a public figure, I inevitably have some responsibility to be a good role model. I love fashion, so I love styling and being styled in beautiful fashion. It makes me feel good. For me, fashion is an interesting thing â it can make me feel really amazing and confident, or it can make me feel self-conscious. Great fashion is really great art.
Youâve been in several television shows and films and had to wear clothes according to your character. Whatâs been the most memorable experience?
With shows like Emily in Paris or Sex and the City, itâs fun to look at the fashion â and there are a lot of It-items and so-called inspirational looks for that season or time frame. But I love looking at the clothing in dramas that hark back to a bygone era because weâre never going to wear such beautiful garments today.
Have you ever had the opportunity to wear such costumes?
Yes, twice, in two of my dramas. I had great costume designers and assistants who helped me wear them. You get to put on these grand robes and you really feel as if youâre in a fantasy. A lot of the historical things I wouldnât know about, so I had implicit trust with the wardrobe department because they knew exactly what to wear according to which Chinese dynasty it was. Iâve had two parts like that, in Under the Veil and Lady Sour. Those have been my favourite costumes on-screen. Iâm fully aware that, had I not been an actress, Iâd never have experienced this kind of majesty in costumes. So in a way, Iâm more interested in costumes than I am in contemporary fashion per se. Contemporary fashion makes me feel cool, but historical fashion offers a glimpse of fantasy.
What are the momentous outfits youâve worn?
Two spring to mind: the gown I wore when I won my title and, of course, my wedding outfit. I have two boys now, so I guess, 30 years from now, Iâll save them for my daughters-in-law.
Rumour has it you have an epic shoe collection.
Yes, itâs true. More than 100, easily â and thatâs not including what I have back in Canada. They are some shoes I have â like maybe 10 pairs â that are in mint condition. Thereâs a Miu Miu platform shoe with rhinestones, which is special. And heels, so many heels. Of course, I have a lot of Louboutins and I only wear them for a short period of time. When Iâm home alone, I put them on, play along with some music and have my own dance party for one.
Has your fashion changed since your boys were born?
No, I was always a white-shirt-and-jeans girl. Iâm still a white-shirt-and-jeans girl. I hike up the look with interesting shoes and bags, but at heart, I havenât changed.
Any fashion regrets?
Super low-rise pants. They were so cool at the time, but I donât think I could do it again. Ever.
Style Folio: Actress Eliza Sam on Her Fashion Journey
PHOTOGRAPHY RUBY LAW
ART DIRECTION AND STYLING TASHA LING
HAIR KOLEN BUT
MAKEUP DEEP CHOI
ASSISTANTS VENUS CHU AND PHEOBE
LOCATION THE LANDMARK MANDARIN ORIENTAL
The post Style Folio: Eliza Sam, Hong Kong Actress appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
Star of âHand Rolled Cigaretteâ Bipin Karma on Inclusion and His Rising Career
The breakout star of the film Hand Rolled Cigarette, newcomer Bipin Karma is on a high. We talk to the rising young Hong Kong-based actor.
Bipin Karma carries the weight of great expectations on his shoulders well â the weight of 30,000 pairs of eyes from the underserved Nepali community in Hong Kong. And the 24-year-old knows it.
You may not remember exactly when the term ârepresentation mattersâ first emerged into the common lexicon, but itâs been a go-to phrase in the past two years. Partly for that very reason, Karma knows Hong Kongâs Nepali diaspora has held him in great esteem from the moment he was cast as the second lead in the now-acclaimed film, Hand Rolled Cigarette.
Written and directed by Chan Kin-long, the modest budget two-hander with actor Gordon Lam not only reaped great rewards at the local box-office, but also amassed seven nominations â including Best Feature Film â at this yearâs 57th Golden Horse Awards.
There are several questions hanging in the air. Will Karma win Best Newcomer in the upcoming round of local awards? Considering the glowing reviews, will he get the trophy for Best Supporting Actor? Is this the beginning of a career where heâs the focus of all eyes in the Southeast Asian community?
âInitially, all I saw was that the film was a great opportunity,â he says. âI wanted to be involved in it and I wanted to do as much as I could, to the best of my ability, finish it, execute it, but I wasnât thinking so much about how much it means in the bigger scheme of things. âI just realised that Iâm the first Nepali actor in Hong Kong â ever! So when I was asked during the press calls around the release of the film, âHow does it feel?â â well, the honest answer is that I donât know how I feel. Iâm still going through it.â
Born in Hong Kong, Karma was brought up by his grandmother in Nepal until he was eight years old. He attended primary school here â âI had to learn English real fastâ â and eventually enrolled to study creative media at City University. Heâs currently trying to wrap up his BSc in digital entertainment at the same institution. Which brings us to the obvious question. How did he get the part? âAudition,â he says. âI was in my final year at college when the movieâs director was in the thick of the casting process and he came across Bench, a digital short Iâd written. Even doing that, we couldnât find a lead actor who was of ethnic minority descent, so I ended up doing the part out of necessity. No one else was doing it.
âI went for the casting, but I was kind of reluctant at first, because it was big part and you had to speak fluent Cantonese â and my Cantonese was elementary. And itâs a demanding role. How it all came about, you can only connect the dots looking back. I couldnât even comprehend Iâd be acting as a lead in a Cantonese film â it had never felt as if there was any place here for someone like me.â
With a surname like Karma, maybe it was fate. He laughs and says, âI was comfortable in front of the camera â I was doing parkour videos, I was doing commercials for different brands. But I hadnât done any proper acting to that extent â I was doing stunts and acrobatics, but it wasnât often speaking parts.â
Having little experience or fluency, as well as an innate shyness, he wondered how heâd managed to land a leading role in a major motion picture. âI asked the director, âWhy did you choose me?â He said, âIntuition.â Everything came together, because I was interested in cinema and I wanted to work on a film, but behind the camera.
It had never felt as if there was any place for someone like me
Bipin Karma
âI was fully aware this was my big break into the film industry. We had long chats at the early stages of presenting my background with sincerity and authenticity. I wasnât going to be projected as a clichĂŠ or in some stereotypical manner. The writer and directorâs intentions were good, and we wanted it to appear as real as possible. So far, itâs been amazing.â
The Hong Kong film industry is also notoriously hard-working, with long hours and toil both physical and emotional, but Karma looks back on the experience only with fondness. âWorking on the film felt like a dream. The shoot took around a month, and weâd had a few monthsâ preparation before shooting. As itâs my voice on screen, I had to do a lot of practice in advance. The team helped me translate the Chinese script into English. I had to understand it, get it right phonetically and, you know â act!â
Then, of course, there was the physicality of the part, which also took its toll. âWhen you see the action scenes, I was in the zone. In my head I knew how to perfectly execute it, even though Iâd had surgery just seven months before on my ankle [for a gymnastics injury]. I hadnât fully recovered and there were some moments when I was really hurting, but I used that as a tool on screen â the body language, the pain all worked in my favour.â
When the film was released and resonated with audiences, few people were more surprised than Karmaâs own family. Heâd briefly mentioned to them that he was working on a film project and didnât self-hype to his friends and crew, letting the work speak for himself.
âI really appreciate the recognition,â he says, âbut honestly Iâm quite an introvert. They saw the full film and were â I guess â surprised.â Karma admits to being the quiet type. âI like my alone time â I get a lot of my energy in solitude,â he says. So when the time came to promote the film, he had to take a deep breath and get used to the rigamarole of questions, the media calls and photo sessions. At our photoshoot we saw him come alive, doing somersaults, high kicks and leaps towards the ceiling.
âWe usually do the safe shots and then I vibe with the photographer and ask, âHey, can I jump?â Speaking in a foreign language was generally a challenge as a kid, so when I returned to Hong Kong, I naturally expressed myself through sport. Parkour has been the biggest impact in my life â my action is louder than my words.â
As with any actor, itâs not the past laurels but what comes next that matters most â and especially so at this stage. Heâs currently keeping his studies in mind and is working on a personal project that involves writing and directing.
Back in Nepal, his face is cropping up in many fan sites. âThere are great actors in Nepal, wanting to go global, but itâs not easy. For me to get this opportunity, it was a slow dawning, âOh my God!â It means a lot. So many Nepalese have been so supportive. A lot of media from Nepal contacted me, and so many of my communityâs friends, families near and distant, theyâve just been reaching out and saying theyâre proud and â it means a lot.â
A people thatâs long felt excluded can at last see a version of itself on the screen, thanks to Karmaâs work. Those whoâve never seen one of their own as a leading figure in Asian cinema find this young man representing a long-existing ethnicity but one thatâs mostly been invisible â or at least not so glamorously visible. I ask the question, âHow does it feel?â several times before he answers. âHow do I feel? Happy,â says Karma. âYeah, I guess, Iâm just happy.
(Hero image: Bipin Karma in Zegna)
Bipin Karma Photoshoot
PHOTOGRAPHER ANDY CHAN
STYLIST BHISAN RAI
ART DIRECTION P.RAMAKRISHNAN
MAKE-UP ARTIST JENNY TZIONG
HAIR STYLIST DOMINIC TAO
The post Star of âHand Rolled Cigaretteâ Bipin Karma on Inclusion and His Rising Career appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.