Former flight attendant praises Andy Lau’s Malaysian wife Carol Chu for kindness

Hong Kong actor and singer Andy Lau (C) and his Malaysian wife Carol Chu (R) attend the memorial service of Cantonese opera actress Hung Sin Nui in Guangzhou city, China, Dec. 17, 2013. Photo by AFP

According to Dimsum Dailythe former crew member, who goes by Suet Man online, shared her experience with the celebrity couple in a Xiaohongshu video uploaded on Feb. 14.

She said she spent two months working closely with the couple while serving on their flights.

Suet Man recalled an incident aboard the couple’s private jet in which Lau was focused on memorizing a script and did not respond to repeated questions from cabin crew about his meal preference. Chu, seated nearby reading quietly, noticed the exchange and gently prompted her husband to reply.

“Quickly tell her what you’d like to eat,” Chu told Lau, according to Suet Man, as reported by The Standard.

Lau responded: “Anything, anything is fine.”

Suet Man said the brief interaction reflected Chu’s attentiveness and respectful attitude toward service staff. She added that colleagues and others familiar with the couple consistently described Chu as warm and considerate.

“They all said the same thing: Andy Lau’s wife is the kindest woman they’ve ever met.

“Not just toward him, but toward every staff member, every service person, everyone around him. She genuinely cares for them.”

Chu, 60, is reportedly from a wealthy family in Malaysia.

Lau, 65, enrolled in TVB’s acting training program in 1980, marking the start of his career. He gained prominence through television dramas such as “The Return of the Condor Heroes” and “The Duke of Mount Deer” before transitioning to film in the 1990s. He later became one of Hong Kong’s “Four Heavenly Kings,” alongside Jacky Cheung, Aaron Kwok, and Leon Lai.

The couple registered their marriage in 2008 after several years of dating and have a 14-year-old daughter. Known for maintaining a private lifestyle, they have rarely appeared together in public, with joint appearances limited to funerals of close relatives or colleagues.

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