From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Be Home for Dinner
Official poster
誰家灶頭無煙火
GenreModern Sitcom
Starring Elliot Ngok
Jason Chan
Kristal Tin
Stephen Au
Yvonne Lam
Helen Ma
Queenie Chu
Océane Zhu
Becky Lee
Matt Yeung
Dickson Lee
Katy Kung
Original languageCantonese
No. of episodes158
Production
Production location Hong Kong
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time22 minutes (approx.)
Production company TVB
Original release
Network TVB Jade
Release21 March (2011-03-21) –
30 October 2011 (2011-10-30)
Related

Be Home for Dinner (Traditional Chinese: ( 誰家灶頭無煙火) is an TVB modern sitcom series.

Synopsis

Chung Kwok-Chu (Elliot Ngok) is a renowned food critic and an assistant editor-in-chief of a newspaper, Ko Jim Daily. When his son, Si-Hon (Jason Chan) returns from Canada, Chu is disappointed to find that Si Hon intends to become a chef rather than taking up a professional career. His attempts to guide his son away are thwarted when Shum Bui-yee (Kristal Tin), a well-known and respected chef, reluctantly accepts Si-Hon as her assistant.

At the Chung household, Chu has to face his bickering younger brother Kwok-Tung (Stephen Au) and Si-Hon's aunt, Suen Ma-lei (Yvonne Lam), his second wife Dau Kwai Sum (Helen Ma) who worries that she is not doing enough as a stepmother, and how children, half-siblings Si-Hon and Si-Nga (Katy Kung) do not understand fine foods as he does. As members of his family manage to find a way to get along, Chu and his family find that friends and co-workers changing their family dynamic again.

Cast

  • Elliot Ngok as Chung Kwok-chu, Sam's father, a magazine editor-in-chief
  • Jason Chan as Si Hon "Sam" Chung, an aspiring pastry chef
  • Kristal Tin as Carmen Sum (Sum Bui-yee), Sam's master
  • Stephen Au as Chung Kwok-tung, Kwok-chu's younger brother
  • Seth Leslie as Joe Smith, Sam's best friend from Canada
  • Yvonne Lam as Mari Suen, Kwok-chu's sister-in-law from his first marriage, Sam's maternal aunt
  • Helen Ma as Dau Kwai-Sum, Chu's second wife and Si-Na's mother, Sam's stepmother
  • Katy Kung as Si Nga "Julia" Chung, Sam's younger half-sister
  • Queenie Chu as Jackie Yeung
  • Océane Zhu as Susan Nin
  • Becky Lee as Tong Jing-jing (Sum Hoi-yee), a freelance writer, revealed to be Carmen's estranged younger sister
  • Dickson Lee as Chin Dai-kwan
  • Mat Yeung as Tin Hoi
  • Lily Ho as Tseun Ding-kei, a dedicated writer

Awards and nominations

45th TVB Anniversary Awards 2011

  • Nominated: Best Drama
  • Nominated: Best Actor (Stephen Au)
  • Nominated: Best Actress (Kristal Tin)
  • Nominated: Best Supporting Actor (Matt Yeung)
  • Nominated: Best Supporting Actress (Yvonne Lam)
  • Nominated: My Favourite Male Character (Stephen Au)
  • Nominated: My Favourite Male Character (Jason Chan)
  • Nominated: My Favourite Female Character (Kristal Tin)
  • Nominated: Most Improved Male Artiste (Jason Chan)
  • Nominated: Most Improved Male Artiste (Matt Yeung)
  • Nominated: Most Improved Female Artiste (Katy Kung)

Viewership ratings

Week Episodes Average Points Peaking Points References
1 March 21–25, 2011 1 — 5 25 [1]
2 March 28–31, 2011 6 — 9 21 [2]
3 April 4–8, 2011 10 — 14 24 [3]
4 April 11–15, 2011 15 — 19 23 [4]
5 April 18–22, 2011 20 — 24 23 [5]
6 April 25–28, 2011 25 — 28 23 [6]
7 May 2–6, 2011 29 — 33 24 [7]
8 May 9–13, 2011 34 — 38 24 [8]
9 May 16–20, 2011 39 — 43 24 [9]
10 May 23–27, 2011 44 — 48 24 [10]
11 May 30 - June 3, 2011 49 — 53 24 [11]
12 June 6–10, 2011 54 — 58 25 [12]
13 June 13–17, 2011 59 — 63 24 [13]
14 June 20–24, 2011 64 — 68 24 [14]
15 June 27 - July 1, 2011 69 — 73 24 [15]
16 July 4–8, 2011 74 — 78 25 [16]
17 July 11–15, 2011 79 — 83 25 [17]
18 July 18–22, 2011 84 — 88 24 [18]
19 July 25–29, 2011 89 — 93 23 [19]
20 August 1–5, 2011 94 — 98 23 [20]
21 August 8–12, 2011 99 — 103 23 [21]
22 August 15–19, 2011 104 — 108 24 [22]
23 August 22–26, 2011 109 — 113 25 [23]
24 August 29 - September 2, 2011 114 — 118 25 [24]
25 September 5–9, 2011 119 — 123 26 [25]
26 September 12–16, 2011 124 — 128 24 [26]
27 September 19–23, 2011 129 — 133 25 [27]
28 September 26–30, 2011 134 — 138 27 [28]
29 October 4–7, 2011 139 — 142 25 [29]
30 October 10–14, 2011 143 — 147 25 [30]
31 October 17–21, 2011 148 — 152 25 [31]
32 October 24–28, 2011 153 — 158 27 [32]
October 30, 2011 159 — 160 27 29 [33]

References

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Be Home for Dinner
Official poster
誰家灶頭無煙火
GenreModern Sitcom
Starring Elliot Ngok
Jason Chan
Kristal Tin
Stephen Au
Yvonne Lam
Helen Ma
Queenie Chu
Océane Zhu
Becky Lee
Matt Yeung
Dickson Lee
Katy Kung
Original languageCantonese
No. of episodes158
Production
Production location Hong Kong
Camera setup Multi-camera
Running time22 minutes (approx.)
Production company TVB
Original release
Network TVB Jade
Release21 March (2011-03-21) –
30 October 2011 (2011-10-30)
Related

Be Home for Dinner (Traditional Chinese: ( 誰家灶頭無煙火) is an TVB modern sitcom series.

Synopsis

Chung Kwok-Chu (Elliot Ngok) is a renowned food critic and an assistant editor-in-chief of a newspaper, Ko Jim Daily. When his son, Si-Hon (Jason Chan) returns from Canada, Chu is disappointed to find that Si Hon intends to become a chef rather than taking up a professional career. His attempts to guide his son away are thwarted when Shum Bui-yee (Kristal Tin), a well-known and respected chef, reluctantly accepts Si-Hon as her assistant.

At the Chung household, Chu has to face his bickering younger brother Kwok-Tung (Stephen Au) and Si-Hon's aunt, Suen Ma-lei (Yvonne Lam), his second wife Dau Kwai Sum (Helen Ma) who worries that she is not doing enough as a stepmother, and how children, half-siblings Si-Hon and Si-Nga (Katy Kung) do not understand fine foods as he does. As members of his family manage to find a way to get along, Chu and his family find that friends and co-workers changing their family dynamic again.

Cast

  • Elliot Ngok as Chung Kwok-chu, Sam's father, a magazine editor-in-chief
  • Jason Chan as Si Hon "Sam" Chung, an aspiring pastry chef
  • Kristal Tin as Carmen Sum (Sum Bui-yee), Sam's master
  • Stephen Au as Chung Kwok-tung, Kwok-chu's younger brother
  • Seth Leslie as Joe Smith, Sam's best friend from Canada
  • Yvonne Lam as Mari Suen, Kwok-chu's sister-in-law from his first marriage, Sam's maternal aunt
  • Helen Ma as Dau Kwai-Sum, Chu's second wife and Si-Na's mother, Sam's stepmother
  • Katy Kung as Si Nga "Julia" Chung, Sam's younger half-sister
  • Queenie Chu as Jackie Yeung
  • Océane Zhu as Susan Nin
  • Becky Lee as Tong Jing-jing (Sum Hoi-yee), a freelance writer, revealed to be Carmen's estranged younger sister
  • Dickson Lee as Chin Dai-kwan
  • Mat Yeung as Tin Hoi
  • Lily Ho as Tseun Ding-kei, a dedicated writer

Awards and nominations

45th TVB Anniversary Awards 2011

  • Nominated: Best Drama
  • Nominated: Best Actor (Stephen Au)
  • Nominated: Best Actress (Kristal Tin)
  • Nominated: Best Supporting Actor (Matt Yeung)
  • Nominated: Best Supporting Actress (Yvonne Lam)
  • Nominated: My Favourite Male Character (Stephen Au)
  • Nominated: My Favourite Male Character (Jason Chan)
  • Nominated: My Favourite Female Character (Kristal Tin)
  • Nominated: Most Improved Male Artiste (Jason Chan)
  • Nominated: Most Improved Male Artiste (Matt Yeung)
  • Nominated: Most Improved Female Artiste (Katy Kung)

Viewership ratings

Week Episodes Average Points Peaking Points References
1 March 21–25, 2011 1 — 5 25 [1]
2 March 28–31, 2011 6 — 9 21 [2]
3 April 4–8, 2011 10 — 14 24 [3]
4 April 11–15, 2011 15 — 19 23 [4]
5 April 18–22, 2011 20 — 24 23 [5]
6 April 25–28, 2011 25 — 28 23 [6]
7 May 2–6, 2011 29 — 33 24 [7]
8 May 9–13, 2011 34 — 38 24 [8]
9 May 16–20, 2011 39 — 43 24 [9]
10 May 23–27, 2011 44 — 48 24 [10]
11 May 30 - June 3, 2011 49 — 53 24 [11]
12 June 6–10, 2011 54 — 58 25 [12]
13 June 13–17, 2011 59 — 63 24 [13]
14 June 20–24, 2011 64 — 68 24 [14]
15 June 27 - July 1, 2011 69 — 73 24 [15]
16 July 4–8, 2011 74 — 78 25 [16]
17 July 11–15, 2011 79 — 83 25 [17]
18 July 18–22, 2011 84 — 88 24 [18]
19 July 25–29, 2011 89 — 93 23 [19]
20 August 1–5, 2011 94 — 98 23 [20]
21 August 8–12, 2011 99 — 103 23 [21]
22 August 15–19, 2011 104 — 108 24 [22]
23 August 22–26, 2011 109 — 113 25 [23]
24 August 29 - September 2, 2011 114 — 118 25 [24]
25 September 5–9, 2011 119 — 123 26 [25]
26 September 12–16, 2011 124 — 128 24 [26]
27 September 19–23, 2011 129 — 133 25 [27]
28 September 26–30, 2011 134 — 138 27 [28]
29 October 4–7, 2011 139 — 142 25 [29]
30 October 10–14, 2011 143 — 147 25 [30]
31 October 17–21, 2011 148 — 152 25 [31]
32 October 24–28, 2011 153 — 158 27 [32]
October 30, 2011 159 — 160 27 29 [33]

References

External links


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