Sharla Cheung Man is of Shanghainese origin. She was discovered by
Jing Wong, who cast her in many of his
productions in the early 1990s. After appearing in
God of Gamblers (1989), Cheung was propelled to
stardom for her role in the
Stephen Chow smash hit
All for the Winner (1990). She soon became a
highly popular Hong Kong actress and immediately found herself working
almost non-stop.
"All for the Winner" also launched Stephen Chow's career, and the two
were subsequently paired in many early 90's comedies, in which Cheung
usually starred as Chow's love interest. Her pairings with Stephen Chow
were huge box office hits such as
God of Gamblers II (1990), the
Fight Back to School (1991) trilogy,
Royal Tramp (1992), and
King of Beggars (1992).
They teamed up for about 10 films, however their collaboration came to
an end in 1994 with
Hail the Judge (1994).
Another frequent co-star was
Andy Lau,
alongside whom she appeared in such films as
God of Gamblers (1989),
God of Gamblers II (1990),
Dances with Dragon (1991), the
Lee Rock (1991)
trilogy, and
Handsome Siblings (1992).
Cheung is known for the many fantasy/martial arts films she's starred
in, that include several adaptations of
Louis Cha's novels, such as
King Hu's
Swordsman (1990) (as Ren
Yingying, the beautiful Sacred Maiden of the Sun-Moon Sect),
Royal Tramp (1992) (as the Divine Lady
of the Dragon Sect posing as the Empress Dowager),
Kung Fu Cult Master (1993)
(opposite
Jet Li, as a beautiful and mysterious
Mongolian princess),
The Sword Stained with Royal Blood (1993) (opposite
Biao Yuen, as a princess posing as a thief),
The Sword of Many Lovers (1993)
(alongside
Leon Lai), and
The Maidens of Heavenly Mountains (1994)
(as a semi-godess, alongside
Brigitte Lin
and
Gong Li). Other notable roles include
Holy Weapon (1993) (as
a spider ninja, along with
Michelle Yeoh
and
Maggie Cheung),
Flying Dagger (1993)
(as 'Tony Leung Ka Fai''s rival),
Legend of the Liquid Sword (1993)
(along with
Aaron Kwok), and the "Wong Fei
Hung" serial's parody
Last Hero in China (1993)
(as
Jet Li's love interest).
After an impressive body of work in the early 1990s (she starred in
about 50 films between 1990 and 1995), Sharla Cheung moved into
producing in 1995 with
Yat chin ling yat yeh ji mung jung yan (1995),
which starred 'Tony Leung Ka Fai' and
Chien-Lien Wu. However, she was unhappy
with it and remade the film as
Romantic Dream (1995).
The films were commercial failures, and Cheung subsequently retired
from the film industry to focus on various business interests.
In the early 2000s, Cheung made a comeback in acting with
Leung go duk lap bau jong dik nui yan (2003),
a modern urban drama about women facing difficult romantic choices. She
also turned to television and portrayed Diao Chan, one of the Four
Beauties of ancient China in
Diao Chan (2002), opposite
Ray Lui. She subsequently starred in such TV
shows as
Feng man lou (2005)
alongside
Nicky Wu, and
Fan fu da yuan (2006) along
with
Honglei Sun.