Kenneth Eng

American documentary filmmaker From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kenneth Eng is an American documentary film director and editor.[2][3] He is best known for his work on the documentary films My Life in China, Kokoyakyu: High School Baseball and Take Me to the River.[4][5]

Born
Boston, Massachusetts
AlmamaterSchool of Visual Arts (NYC)
Boston Latin School
OccupationsFilm director, editor
Yearsactive2004 - present
Quick facts Born, Alma mater ...
Kenneth Eng
Born
Boston, Massachusetts
Alma materSchool of Visual Arts (NYC)
Boston Latin School
OccupationsFilm director, editor
Years active2004 - present
Parent(s)Yau King Eng (father)
Yuan Lin Eng (Wong) [1]
Websitehttps://www.kennetheng.com/
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Life and career

Kenneth was born and raised in Boston, Massachusetts.[6] He graduated from Boston Latin School, afterward moved to New York to study film at the School of Visual Arts in 1994.[7] His thesis film, Scratching Windows, about graffiti writers, was broadcast on PBS nationally.[8]

Kenneth's documentary film, Take Me to the River, about the Maha Kumbh Mela festival in Allahabad, India.[9] In 2006, he directed the feature documentary, Kokoyakyu: High School Baseball, about the Koshien Tournament in Japan, was broadcast on PBS nationally.[10]

In 2014, Kenneth directed My Life in China, a documentary about his father Yau King Eng and his history since leaving China and coming to America, premiered at the San Diego Asian Film Festival.[11]

Filmography

More information Year, Film ...
YearFilmDirectorEditor
2004 Take Me to the River Yes Yes
2006 Kokoyakyu: High School Baseball Yes Yes
2012 Bikini Barbershop: Jersey Yes
2014 My Life in China Yes Yes
2015 Tested Yes
2016 Beartrek Yes
2018 The Most Interesting Man in Show Business Yes
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Awards and honors

Further reading

References

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