| Propelled by a blend of creative talent,
business savvy, and tenacity, Hugo Shong and Luo Yan are emerging
forces in Chinese-American publishing and filmmaking, respectively.
Luo (CFA’90), a successful actress and filmmaker based
in Los Angeles, and her husband, Shong (COM’87, GRS’90),
president of International Data Group-Asia, met as students
at Boston University in the 1980s. They returned to campus
in March for a special Boston screening of Luo’s 2001
movie, Pavilion of Women, where each announced a gift to the
University.
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Hugo Shong (COM'87, GRS'90) and Luo Yan (CFA'90)
with theatre arts Professor Jim Spruill in March at the
Boston screening of Luo's movie, Pavilion of Women. |
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Luo has pledged $50,000 to the College of Fine Arts over
the next five years to endow the Luo Yan Scholarship Fund,
which will be awarded to one or two female CFA students of
Asian descent majoring in theater performance or management.
For the last ten years, she has owned and operated the merchandizing
company Moonstone International and the film distribution
company Silver Dreams Productions. That extensive business
experience served her well for Pavilion, her first venture
as a film producer and screenwriter.
At the screening, Shong announced that he will give an additional
$50,000 over the next five years to the Hugo Shong Scholarship
Fund, which he established in 1998 with a donation of $50,000.
The scholarship is for students of Asian descent studying
journalism, film and television, or mass communication at
the College of Communication. Shong attended COM on a full
scholarship, and he says that without that support, he wouldn’t
have been able to come to America. “Coming to BU was
one of the most important changes in my career and my life,
and I’m very grateful to the College of Communication
for that,” he says.
An award-winning reporter, Shong was managing editor of Electronic
Business Asia. At International Data Group, an international
information technology media, research, and exposition company,
he launched Cosmopolitan China, PC World Vietnam, and the
Chinese editions of Esquire and Good Housekeeping.
— Tim Stoddard
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