Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - Tang Hede celebrated Leslie Cheung’s 66th birthday. Why do we still miss him today?

Tang Hede celebrated Leslie Cheung’s 66th birthday. Why do we still miss him today?

Let me tell you the reasons why I still miss him:

Talent, hard work, dedication, almighty, dedicated, patriotic, casual, fresh?

< p>Being able to focus all these keywords on one person may be the reason why we still miss him 19 years later. If you still can't understand it, go watch the 1993 "Farewell My Concubine" and the filming story behind it, and see how a Hong Kong actor played Cheng Dieyi, who plays the female lead, so convincingly, you may understand what I'm talking about. .

Being born in the 1990s, I have liked Leslie Cheung since 2008. It was due to the school magazine published by the literary club in school. My classmates used beautiful and gorgeous sentences throughout the article to describe his beauty and lustful rhetoric. The shock brought by the movie Farewell My Concubine.

We were 16 years old at that time, and we were directly amazed by that article and Leslie Cheung. Many of his fans are excellent, thus influencing more people.

In 2008, Leslie Cheung passed away five years ago.

Over the years, I have watched with my own eyes as his competitor on the Baidu Tieba star list has changed from Li Yuchun to Wang Junkai. In fact, I really want to laugh. I am very happy. No matter how the situation changes, I, Mr. Rong, will remain standing. . When I was in college, it was almost his 10th anniversary. We from all over the country stayed up all night to make origami cranes for him and count them every day. There were also some honor fans who showed uniform-size cross-stitch on his photos day and night. It's really very powerful.

The person in charge of Shanghai at that time was the same age as me. They collected folded paper cranes from various districts in Shanghai in the early morning and mailed them to Hong Kong. Unfortunately, due to various reasons, the folded paper cranes I folded were not mailed to Hong Kong.

But that was the craziness I was a part of. In the days before Bilibili, we foolishly sent paid text messages to the Beijing World Trade Center Elevator just to let others see his name in the bustling neon lights. Participate in his commemorative program, hold up a light sign in the background, boost the ratings of his TV program, and write letters to CCTV Music. I met a young lady from the Law Department of Tongji University during the event. We also went to the Yuanming Lecture Hall to send him flowers, print his photos, see his memorial tablet, and write him messages. Buy him flower cards.