Stay updated with the latest C-drama reviews

New reviews, recaps, and drama picks — delivered through our blog.

Get in touch

MijuDrama

Sharing stories, insights, and ideas — one post at a time.

© 2026 MijuDrama. All rights reserved.

Quick Links

  • Home
  • Category
  • About
  • Contact

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Sitemap
TMDBThe Movie Database

This product uses the TMDB API but is not endorsed or certified by TMDB.

Built with Next.js & Tailwind CSS

MijuDrama
MijuDrama
HomeDramasMoviesVarietyPeopleBlog
← PeopleTMDB PROFILE · NOT SEEDED

This person is not in our database yet.

Data shown below is sourced directly from TMDB. Request to add them and an admin will seed their profile.

Casey Chan Lai-Ying

Casey Chan Lai-Ying

Gender
Female
Biography

Casey Chan Lai-ying was born in Hong Kong in 1954. She studied art at Sir Robert Black College of Education, first working in advertising design upon graduation and later at a TV magazine. A fondness for Yamada Yoji prompted her to study directing at College of Art, Nihon University, graduating with a film that won an award. Returning to Hong Kong, Chan worked in production in capacities as varied as production assistant, assistant editor, assistant director, producer and director. She established Gold Harbour International Films in 1992, making her directorial debut with Death Warrant (1992), followed by The Black Morning Glory (1993). Chan also produced a documentary on Hong Kong filmmakers with Japan’s NHK as well as distributing Hong Kong films in Japan. She later distributed DVDs of Japanese films, including the horror series Yotsuya Kaidan and the films of Japanese teen idol Yamaguchi Momoe. Chan’s directorial career is best represented by The Poet (1998), the story of Beijing poet Gu Cheng’s murder of his wife. Other films include Face to Face (2002), a ghost story based on Japanese author Rampo Edogawa’s novel, I Love You, Mom (2013) and the documentary Silk Expression - Silk Road with Chip Tsao (2003). In 2013, she finished the 3D film 3D Lost in Wrestling, which uses 3D technology to animate and interpret metaphysical thoughts of China.