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Opinion
Denise Tsang

Hong Kong’s Kai Tak Sports Park launch evokes nostalgia but where is the global appeal?

From Andy Lau’s brief cameo to a red-hot pyrotechnic display, the opening at the park’s main stadium was a spectacle that carries Hong Kong’s future

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The Post’s news editor, Denise Tsang, at the opening ceremony of Kai Tak Sports Park on Saturday. Photo: Handout
An award-winning journalist, Denise has spent more than 20 years in the industry and specialises in macro-economic and political-economic news in Hong Kong.
As an invited guest at the two-hour opening extravaganza at the main stadium of Hong Kong’s newest landmark, Kai Tak Sports Park, I found myself exclaiming a few times and swinging through a range of emotions during the opening ceremony, not least during the moment Andy Lau Tak-wah, one of the “Four Heavenly Kings” of Cantopop, appeared on stage.

I gasped, first with delight at the film star’s cameo, and then with a murmur of disappointment when he departed the stage after just three minutes without singing a single song.

I was astonished to see my mother’s silver idols, 77-year-old George Lam Tsz-Cheung and his 63-year-old wife Sally Yeh Chen-ven, singing a medley of Cantopop hits from the 1980s and 90s, with Yeh dancing like a teenager.

At that point, the music was so loud and the lighting so bright that I wished I had a pair of ear plugs and sunglasses with me. The massiveness of the space and its acoustics could be overwhelming.

Later, I was more than a little bemused to see Olympic table tennis champion Fan Zhendong and local paddler Doo Hoi-kem thwack balls at each other using ridiculously big bats in a bizarre clown version of ping pong.

And then I found myself literally feeling the heat and exclaiming as spectacular plumes of fire flared towards the retractable rooftop in my first experience of an indoor pyrotechnics display at a tremendous scale.

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