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Anna May Wong

Wong Liu Tsong (January 3, 1905 – February 3, 1961), known professionally as Anna May Wong, was an American actress, considered the first Chinese-American movie star in Hollywood,[1] as well as the first Chinese-American actress to gain international recognition.[2] Her varied career spanned silent film, sound film, television, stage, and radio. As one of the first women depicted on the reverse of the quarter in the 2022–2025 American Women quarters series, she is also the first Asian American to appear on a U.S. coin.[3]

Anna May Wong
Paramount publicity photo, c. 1935
Born
Wong Liu Tsong

(1905-01-03)January 3, 1905
DiedFebruary 3, 1961(1961-02-03) (aged 56)
OccupationActress
Years active1919–1961
AwardsHollywood Walk of Fame – Motion Picture
1700 Vine Street
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese黃柳霜
Simplified Chinese黄柳霜
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinHuáng Liǔshuāng
Wade–GilesHuang2 Liu3 Shuang1
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingWong4 Lau5soeng1
Signature

Born in Los Angeles to second-generation Taishanese Chinese-American parents, Wong became infatuated with films and began acting in films at an early age. During the silent film era, she acted in The Toll of the Sea (1922), one of the first films made in color, and in Douglas Fairbanks' The Thief of Bagdad (1924). Wong became a fashion icon and had achieved international stardom in 1924. Wong had been one of the first to embrace the flapper look. In 1934, the Mayfair Mannequin Society of New York voted her the "world's best dressed woman."[4] In the 1920s and 1930s, Wong was acclaimed as one of the top fashion icons.

Frustrated by the stereotypical supporting roles she reluctantly played in Hollywood, Wong left for Europe in March 1928, where she starred in several notable plays and films, among them Piccadilly (1929). She spent the first half of the 1930s traveling between the United States and Europe for film and stage work. Wong was featured in films of the early sound era, such as Daughter of the Dragon (1931), Java Head (1934), Daughter of Shanghai (1937), and with Marlene Dietrich in Josef von Sternberg's Shanghai Express (1932).[5]

In 1935, Wong was dealt the most severe disappointment of her career, when Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer refused to consider her for the leading role of the Chinese character O-Lan in the film version of Pearl S. Buck's The Good Earth. MGM instead cast Luise Rainer to play the leading role in yellowface. One biographer believes that the choice was due to the Hays Code anti-miscegenation rules requiring the wife of a white actor, Paul Muni (ironically playing a Chinese character in yellowface) to be played by a white actress.[6] But the 1930–1934 Hays Code of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America insisted only that "miscegenation (sex relationship between the white and black races) was forbidden" and said nothing about Asian/white intermarriages.[7] Other biographers have not corroborated this theory, including historian Shirley Jennifer Lim's Anna May Wong: Performing the Modern.[8] MGM screen-tested Wong for the supporting role of Lotus, the seductress, but it is ambiguous whether she refused the role on principle or was rejected.[9]

Wong spent the next year touring China, visiting her family's ancestral village, studying Chinese culture, and documenting the experience on film at a time when prominent female directors in Hollywood were few.[10]

In the late 1930s, she starred in several B movies for Paramount Pictures, portraying Chinese and Chinese Americans in a positive light.

She paid less attention to her film career during World War II, when she devoted her time and money to help the Chinese cause against Japan. Wong returned to the public eye in the 1950s in several television appearances.

In 1951, Wong made history with her television show The Gallery of Madame Liu-Tsong, the first-ever U.S. television show starring an Asian American series lead.[11] She had been planning to return to film in Flower Drum Song when she died in 1961, at the age of 56, from a heart attack. For decades after her death, Wong was remembered principally for the stereotypical "Dragon Lady" and demure "Butterfly" roles that she was often given. Her life and career were re-evaluated in the years around the centennial of her birth, in three major literary works and film retrospectives.

Biography

Early life

 
Anna May Wong seated in her mother's lap, c. 1905
 
This is a duplicate copy of the Certificate of Identity issued to actress Anna May Wong.

Anna May Wong was born Wong Liu Tsong (黃柳霜, Liu Tsong literally meaning "willow frost") on January 3, 1905, on Flower Street in Los Angeles, one block north of Chinatown, in an integrated community of Chinese, Irish, German and Japanese residents.[12][13] She was the second of seven children born to Wong Sam-sing, owner of the Sam Kee Laundry, and his second wife Lee Gon-toy.[14]

Wong's parents were second-generation Chinese Americans; her maternal and paternal grandparents had resided in the U.S. since at least 1855.[15] Her paternal grandfather, A Wong Wong, was a merchant who owned two stores in Michigan Bluffs, a gold-mining area in Placer County. He had come from Chang On, a village near Taishan, Guangdong Province, China, in 1853.[16] Anna May's father spent his youth traveling between the U.S. and China, where he married his first wife and fathered a son in 1890.[17] He returned to the U.S. in the late 1890s and in 1901, while continuing to support his family in China, he married a second wife, Anna May's mother.[18] Anna May's older sister Lew-ying (Lulu) was born in late 1902,[15] and Anna May in 1905, followed by five more children.

In 1910, the family moved to a neighborhood on Figueroa Street where they were the only Chinese people on their block, living alongside mostly Mexican and Eastern European families. The two hills separating their new home from Chinatown helped Wong to assimilate into American culture.[19] She attended public school with her older sister at first, but then when the girls became the target of racial taunts from other students, they moved to a Presbyterian Chinese school. Classes were taught in English, but Wong attended a Chinese language school afternoons and on Saturdays.[20]

About that same time, U.S. motion picture production began to relocate from the East Coast to the Los Angeles area. Movies were shot constantly in and around Wong's neighborhood. She began going to Nickelodeon movie theaters and quickly became obsessed with the "flickers", missing school and using lunch money to attend the cinema. Her father was not happy with her interest in films, feeling that it interfered with her studies, but Wong decided to pursue a film career regardless. At the age of nine, she constantly begged filmmakers to give her roles, earning herself the nickname "C.C.C." or "Curious Chinese Child".[21] By the age of 11, Wong had come up with her stage name of Anna May Wong, formed by joining both her English and family names.[22]

Early career

Wong was working at Hollywood's Ville de Paris department store when Metro Pictures needed 300 female extras to appear in Alla Nazimova's film The Red Lantern (1919). Without her father's knowledge, a friend of his with movie connections helped her land an uncredited role as an extra carrying a lantern.[23]

Wong worked steadily for the next two years as an extra in various movies, including Priscilla Dean and Colleen Moore pictures. While still a student, Wong came down with an illness identified as St. Vitus's Dance which caused her to miss months of school. She was on the verge of emotional collapse when her father took her to a practitioner of traditional Chinese medicine. The treatments proved successful, though Wong later claimed this had more to do with her dislike of the methods.[24] Other Chinese thought such as Confucianism and particularly Taoism and the teachings of Laozi had a strong influence on Wong's personal philosophy throughout her life.[25] The family's religious life also included Christian thought, in the form of Presbyterianism and as an adult she was a Christian Scientist for some time.[26]

Finding it difficult to keep up with both her schoolwork and her passion, Wong dropped out of Los Angeles High School in 1921 to pursue a full-time acting career.[27][28] Reflecting on her decision, Wong told Motion Picture Magazine in 1931: "I was so young when I began that I knew I still had youth if I failed, so I determined to give myself 10 years to succeed as an actress."[29]

In 1921, Wong received her first screen credit for Bits of Life, the first anthology film, in which she played the wife of Lon Chaney's character, Toy Ling, in a segment entitled "Hop".[30] She later recalled it fondly as the only time she played the role of a mother;[31] her appearance earned her a cover photo on the British magazine Picture Show.

 
Wong (holding child) with Beatrice Bentley in The Toll of the Sea (1922)

At the age of 17, Wong played her first leading role, in the early Metro two-color Technicolor movie The Toll of the Sea.[32] Written by Frances Marion, the story was based loosely on Madama Butterfly. Variety magazine singled Wong out for praise, noting her "extraordinarily fine" acting.[33] The New York Times commented, "Miss Wong stirs in the spectator all the sympathy her part calls for and she never repels one by an excess of theatrical 'feeling'. She has a difficult role, a role that is botched nine times out of ten, but hers is the tenth performance. Completely unconscious of the camera, with a fine sense of proportion and remarkable pantomimic accuracy ... She should be seen again and often on the screen."[34]

Despite such reviews, Hollywood proved reluctant to create starring roles for Wong; her ethnicity prevented U.S. filmmakers from seeing her as a leading lady. David Schwartz, the chief curator of the Museum of the Moving Image, notes, "She built up a level of stardom in Hollywood, but Hollywood didn't know what to do with her."[35] She spent the next few years in supporting roles providing "exotic atmosphere",[36] for instance playing a concubine in Tod Browning's Drifting (1923).[29] Film producers capitalized on Wong's growing fame but they relegated her to supporting roles.[37] Still optimistic about a film career, in 1923 Wong said: "Pictures are fine and I'm getting along all right, but it's not so bad to have the laundry back of you, so you can wait and take good parts and be independent when you're climbing."[22]

Stardom

 
Wong on the cover of the Chinese magazine The Young Companion in June 1927

At the age of 19, Wong was cast in a supporting role as a scheming Mongol slave in the 1924 Douglas Fairbanks picture The Thief of Bagdad. Playing a stereotypical "Dragon Lady" role, her brief appearances on-screen caught the attention of audiences and critics alike.[38] The film grossed more than $2 million and helped introduce Wong to the public. Around this time, Wong had an interracial relationship with Tod Browning, who had directed her in Drifting a year earlier.[39]

After this second prominent role, Wong moved out of the family home into her own apartment. Conscious that Americans viewed her as "foreign-born" even though she was born and raised in California, Wong began cultivating a flapper image.[40] In March 1924, planning to make films about Chinese myths, she signed a deal creating Anna May Wong Productions; when her business partner was found to be engaging in dishonest practices, Wong brought a lawsuit against him and the company was dissolved.[41]

It soon became evident that Wong's career would continue to be limited by American anti-miscegenation laws, which prevented her from sharing an on-screen kiss with any person of another race, even if the character was Asian, but being portrayed by a white actor.[42] The only leading Asian man in U.S. films in the silent era was Sessue Hayakawa. Unless Asian leading men could be found, Wong could not be a leading lady.[43]

Wong continued to be offered exotic supporting roles that followed the rising "vamp" stereotype in cinema.[44] She played indigenous native girls in two 1924 films. Filmed on location in the Territory of Alaska, she portrayed an Eskimo in The Alaskan. She returned to Los Angeles to perform the part of Princess Tiger Lily in Peter Pan. Both films were shot by cinematographer James Wong Howe. Peter Pan was more successful, and it was the hit of the Christmas season.[45][46] The next year, Wong was singled out for critical praise in a manipulative Oriental vamp role in the film Forty Winks.[47] Despite such favorable reviews, she became increasingly disappointed with her casting and began to seek other roads to success. In early 1925 she joined a group of serial stars on a tour of the vaudeville circuits; when the tour proved to be a failure, Wong and the rest of the group returned to Hollywood.[48]

In 1926, Wong put the first rivet into the structure of Grauman's Chinese Theatre when she joined Norma Talmadge for its groundbreaking ceremony, although she was not invited to leave her hand- and foot-prints in cement.[49][50] In the same year, Wong starred in The Silk Bouquet. Re-titled The Dragon Horse in 1927, the film was one of the first U.S. films to be produced with Chinese backing, provided by San Francisco's Chinese Six Companies. The story was set in China during the Ming dynasty and featured Asian actors playing the Asian roles.[51]

Wong continued to be assigned supporting roles. Hollywood's Asian female characters tended toward two stereotypical poles: the naïve and self-sacrificing "Butterfly" and the sly and deceitful "Dragon Lady". In Old San Francisco (1927), directed by Alan Crosland for Warner Brothers, Wong played a "Dragon Lady", a gangster's daughter.[52] In Mr. Wu (1927), she played a supporting role as increasing censorship against mixed-race onscreen couples cost her the lead. In The Crimson City, released the following year, this happened again.[53]

Move to Europe

Tired of being both typecast and passed over for lead Asian character roles in favor of non-Asian actresses, Wong left Hollywood in 1928 for Europe.[54] Interviewed by Doris Mackie for Film Weekly in 1933, Wong complained about her Hollywood roles: "I was so tired of the parts I had to play."[55][56] She commented: "There seems little for me in Hollywood, because, rather than real Chinese, producers prefer Hungarians, Mexicans, American Indians for Chinese roles."[57]

 

In Europe, Wong became a sensation, starring in notable films such as Schmutziges Geld (aka Song and Show Life, 1928) and Großstadtschmetterling (Pavement Butterfly). Of the German critics' response to Song, The New York Times reported that Wong was "acclaimed not only as an actress of transcendent talent but as a great beauty". The article noted that Germans passed over Wong's American background: "Berlin critics, who were unanimous in praise of both the star and the production, neglect to mention that Anna May is of American birth. They mention only her Chinese origins."[58] In Vienna, she played the title role in the operetta Tschun Tschi in fluent German.[56] An Austrian critic wrote, "Fräulein Wong had the audience perfectly in her power and the unobtrusive tragedy of her acting was deeply moving, carrying off the difficult German-speaking part very successfully."[59]

While in Germany, Wong became an inseparable friend of the director Leni Riefenstahl. Her close friendships with several women throughout her life, including Marlene Dietrich and Cecil Cunningham, led to rumors of lesbianism which damaged her public reputation.[60] These rumors, in particular of her supposed relationship with Dietrich, further embarrassed Wong's family. They had long been opposed to her acting career, which was not considered an entirely respectable profession at the time.[61]

London producer Basil Dean brought the play A Circle of Chalk for Wong to appear in with the young Laurence Olivier, her first stage performance in the United Kingdom.[56] Criticism of her California accent, described by one critic as a "Yankee squeak", led to Wong seeking vocal tutoring at Cambridge University, where she trained in received pronunciation.[62] Composer Constant Lambert, infatuated with the actress after having seen her in films, attended the play on its opening night and subsequently composed Eight Poems of Li Po, dedicated to her.[63]

Wong made her last silent film, Piccadilly, in 1929, the first of five British films, in which she had a starring role. The film caused a sensation in the UK.[64] Gilda Gray was the top-billed actress, but Variety commented that Wong "outshines the star" and that "from the moment Miss Wong dances in the kitchen's rear, she steals 'Piccadilly' from Miss Gray."[65] Though the film presented Wong in her most sensual role yet of the five films, once again she was not permitted to kiss her white love interest and a controversial planned scene involving a kiss was cut before the film was released.[66] Forgotten for decades after its release, Piccadilly was later restored by the British Film Institute.[67] Time magazine's Richard Corliss calls Piccadilly Wong's best film,[68] and The Guardian reports that the rediscovery of this film and Wong's performance in it has been responsible for a restoration of the actress' reputation.[49]

While in London, Wong was romantically linked with writer and broadcasting executive Eric Maschwitz, who possibly wrote the lyrics to "These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)" as an evocation of his longing for her after they parted.[49][69] Wong's first talkie was The Flame of Love (1930), which she recorded in French, English, and German. Though Wong's performance⁠—particularly her handling of the three languages⁠—was lauded, all three versions of the film received negative reviews.[70]

Return to Hollywood

 
Anna May Wong in Daughter of the Dragon (1931).

During the 1930s, American studios were looking for fresh European talent. Ironically, Wong caught their eye, and she was offered a contract with Paramount Studios in 1930. Enticed by the promise of lead roles and top billing, she returned to the United States. The prestige and training she had gained during her years in Europe led to a starring role on Broadway in On the Spot,[71] a drama that ran for 167 performances and which she would later film as Dangerous to Know.[72] When the play's director wanted Wong to use stereotypical Japanese mannerisms, derived from Madame Butterfly, in her performance of a Chinese character, Wong refused. She instead used her knowledge of Chinese style and gestures to imbue the character with a greater degree of authenticity.[73] Following her return to Hollywood in 1930, Wong repeatedly turned to the stage and cabaret for a creative outlet.

In November 1930, Wong's mother was struck and killed by an automobile in front of the Figueroa Street house.[74] The family remained at the house until 1934 when Wong's father returned to his hometown in China with Anna May's younger brothers and sister.[75] Anna May had been paying for the education of her younger siblings, who put their education to work after they relocated to China.[76] Before the family left, Wong's father wrote a brief article for Xinning, a magazine for overseas Taishanese, in which he expressed his pride in his famous daughter.[77]

 
Portrait of Anna May Wong by Carl Van Vechten, 1932

With the promise of appearing in a Josef von Sternberg film, Wong accepted another stereotypical role – the title character of Fu Manchu's vengeful daughter in Daughter of the Dragon (1931).[78] This was the last stereotypically "evil Chinese" role Wong played,[79] and also her one starring appearance alongside the only other well-known Asian actor of the era, Sessue Hayakawa. Though she was given the starring role, this status was not reflected in her paycheck: she was paid $6,000, while Hayakawa received $10,000 and Warner Oland, who is only in the film for 23 minutes, was paid $12,000.[80]

Wong began using her newfound celebrity to make political statements: late in 1931, for example, she wrote a harsh criticism of the Mukden Incident and Japan's subsequent invasion of Manchuria.[81][82] She also became more outspoken in her advocacy for Chinese American causes and for better film roles. In a 1933 interview for Film Weekly entitled "I Protest", Wong criticized the negative stereotyping in Daughter of the Dragon, saying, "Why is it that the screen Chinese is always the villain? And so crude a villain—murderous, treacherous, a snake in the grass! We are not like that. How could we be, with a civilization that is so many times older than the West?"[55][83]

Wong appeared alongside Marlene Dietrich as a self-sacrificing courtesan in Sternberg's Shanghai Express.[78] Her sexually charged scenes with Dietrich have been noted by many commentators and fed rumors about the relationship between the two stars.[84] Though contemporary reviews focused on Dietrich's acting and Sternberg's direction, film historians today judge that Wong's performance upstaged that of Dietrich.[78][85]

The Chinese press had long given Wong's career very mixed reviews, and were less than favorable to her performance in Shanghai Express. A Chinese newspaper ran the headline: "Paramount Utilizes Anna May Wong to Produce Picture to Disgrace China" and continued, "Although she is deficient in artistic portrayal, she has done more than enough to disgrace the Chinese race."[86] Critics in China believed that Wong's on-screen sexuality spread negative stereotypes of Chinese women.[87] The most virulent criticism came from the Nationalist government, but China's intellectuals and liberals were not always so opposed to Wong, as demonstrated when Peking University awarded the actress an honorary doctorate in 1932. Contemporary sources reported that this was probably the only time that an actor had been so honored.[88]

In both America and Europe, Wong had been seen as a fashion icon for over a decade. In 1934, the Mayfair Mannequin Society of New York voted her "The World's best-dressed woman" and in 1938 Look magazine named her "The World's most beautiful Chinese girl".[89]

Atlantic crossings

After her success in Europe and a prominent role in Shanghai Express, Wong's Hollywood career returned to its old pattern. She was passed over for the leading female role in The Son-Daughter in favor of Helen Hayes; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer deemed her "too Chinese to play a Chinese" in the film.[90] Wong was scheduled to play the role of a mistress to a corrupt Chinese general in Frank Capra's The Bitter Tea of General Yen (1933), but the role went instead to Toshia Mori.[91]

 
Carl Van Vechten photographic portrait of Wong, September 22, 1935

Again disappointed with Hollywood, Wong returned to Britain, where she stayed for nearly three years. In addition to appearing in four films, she toured Scotland and Ireland as part of a vaudeville show. She also appeared in the King George Silver Jubilee program in 1935.[92] Her film Java Head (1934), though generally considered a minor effort, was the only film in which Wong kissed the lead male character, her white husband in the film. Wong's biographer, Graham Russell Hodges, commented that this may be why the film remained one of Wong's personal favorites.[93] While in London, Wong met Mei Lanfang, one of the most famous stars of the Beijing Opera. She had long been interested in Chinese opera and Mei offered to instruct Wong if she ever visited China.[94]

In the 1930s, the popularity of Pearl Buck's novels, especially The Good Earth, as well as growing American sympathy for China in its struggles with Japanese imperialism, opened up opportunities for more positive Chinese roles in U.S. films.[95] Wong returned to the U.S. in June 1935 with the goal of obtaining the role of O-lan, the lead female character in MGM's film version of The Good Earth. Since its publication in 1931, Wong had made known her desire to play O-lan in a film version of the book;[96] and as early as 1933, Los Angeles newspapers were touting Wong as the best choice for the part.[97]

Nevertheless, the studio apparently never seriously considered Wong for the role. The Chinese government also advised the studio against casting Wong in the role. The Chinese advisor to MGM commented: "whenever she appears in a movie, the newspapers print her picture with the caption 'Anna May again loses face for China' ".[98]

According to Wong, she was instead offered the part of Lotus, a deceitful song girl who helps to destroy the family and seduces the family's oldest son.[99] Wong refused the role, telling MGM head of production Irving Thalberg, "If you let me play O-lan, I will be very glad. But you're asking me—with Chinese blood—to do the only unsympathetic role in the picture featuring an all-American cast portraying Chinese characters."[97]

The role Wong hoped for went to Luise Rainer, who won the Best Actress Oscar for her performance. Wong's sister, Mary Liu Heung Wong, appeared in the film in the role of the Little Bride.[100] MGM's refusal to consider Wong for this most high-profile of Chinese characters in U.S. film is remembered today as "one of the most notorious cases of casting discrimination in the 1930s".[101]

Chinese tour and rising popularity

After the major disappointment of losing the role in The Good Earth, Wong announced plans for a year-long tour of China, to visit her father and his family in Taishan.[75][102] Wong's father had returned to his hometown in China with her younger brothers and sister in 1934. Aside from Mei Lanfang's offer to teach her, she wanted to learn more about the Chinese theater and through English translations to better perform some Chinese plays before international audiences.[76][103] She told the San Francisco Chronicle on her departure, "... for a year, I shall study the land of my fathers. Perhaps upon my arrival, I shall feel like an outsider. Perhaps instead, I shall find my past life assuming a dreamlike quality of unreality."[75]

Embarking in January 1936, Wong chronicled her experiences in a series of articles printed in U.S. newspapers such as the New York Herald Tribune,[92] the Los Angeles Examiner, the Los Angeles Times, and Photoplay.[104] In a stopover in Tokyo on the way to Shanghai, local reporters, ever curious about her romantic life, asked if she had marriage plans, to which Wong replied, "No, I am wedded to my art." The following day, however, Japanese newspapers reported that Wong was married to a wealthy Cantonese man named "Art".[92][105]

During her travels in China, Wong continued to be strongly criticized by the Nationalist government and the film community.[106] She had difficulty communicating in many areas of China because she was raised with the Taishan dialect rather than Mandarin. She later commented that some of the varieties of Chinese sounded "as strange to me as Gaelic. I thus had the strange experience of talking to my own people through an interpreter."[107]

The toll of international celebrity on Wong's personal life manifested itself in bouts of depression and sudden anger, as well as excessive smoking and drinking.[108] Feeling irritable when she disembarked in Hong Kong, Wong was uncharacteristically rude to the awaiting crowd, which then quickly turned hostile. One person shouted: "Down with Huang Liu-tsong—the stooge that disgraces China. Don't let her go ashore." Wong began crying and a stampede ensued.[109]

After she left for a short trip to the Philippines, the situation cooled and Wong joined her family in Hong Kong. With her father and her siblings, Wong visited his family and his first wife at the family's ancestral home near Taishan.[102][110] Conflicting reports claim that she was either warmly welcomed or met with hostility by the villagers. She spent over 10 days in the family's village and sometime in neighboring villages before continuing her tour of China.[111]

After returning to Hollywood, Wong reflected on her year in China and her career in Hollywood: "I am convinced that I could never play in the Chinese Theatre. I have no feeling for it. It's a pretty sad situation to be rejected by Chinese because I'm 'too American' and by American producers, because they prefer other races to act Chinese parts."[102] Wong's father returned to Los Angeles in 1938.[112]

Late 1930s and further work films

To complete her contract with Paramount Pictures, Wong made a string of B movies in the late 1930s. Often dismissed by critics, the films gave Wong non-stereotypical roles that were publicized in the Chinese-American press for their positive images. These smaller-budgeted films could be bolder than the higher-profile releases and Wong used this to her advantage to portray successful, professional, Chinese-American characters.

Competent and proud of their Chinese heritage, these characters worked against the prevailing U.S. film portrayals of Chinese Americans.[113] In contrast to the usual official Chinese condemnation of Wong's film roles, the Chinese consul to Los Angeles gave his approval to the final scripts of two of these films, Daughter of Shanghai (1937) and King of Chinatown (1939).[114]

 
Photographic portrait dated November 17, 1937, by Eugene Robert Richee for Paramount Pictures. Daughter of Shanghai was released shortly after this photo was taken.

In Daughter of Shanghai, Wong played the Asian-American female lead in a role that was rewritten for her as the heroine of the story, actively setting the plot into motion rather than the more passive character originally planned.[115] The script was so carefully tailored for Wong that at one point it was given the working title Anna May Wong Story.[103] When the Library of Congress selected the film for preservation in the National Film Registry in 2006, the announcement described it as "more truly Wong's personal vehicle than any of her other films".[116]

Of this film, Wong told Hollywood Magazine, "I like my part in this picture better than any I've had before ... because this picture gives Chinese a break—we have sympathetic parts for a change! To me, that means a great deal."[117] The New York Times gave the film a generally positive review, commenting of its B-movie origins, "An unusually competent cast saves the film from the worst consequences of certain inevitable banalities. [The cast] ... combine with effective sets to reduce the natural odds against any pictures in the Daughter of Shanghai tradition."[118]

 
Carl Van Vechten photographic portrait of Wong, in costume for a dramatic adaptation of Gozzi's Turandot at the Westport Country Playhouse, August 11, 1937[119]

In October 1937, the press carried rumors that Wong had plans to marry her male co-star in this film, childhood friend and Korean-American actor Philip Ahn.[102] Wong replied, "It would be like marrying my brother."[120]

Bosley Crowther was not so kind to Dangerous to Know (1938), which he called a "second-rate melodrama, hardly worthy of the talents of its generally capable cast".[121] In King of Chinatown, Wong played a surgeon who sacrifices a high-paying promotion in order to devote her energies to helping the Chinese fight the Japanese invasion.[122] The New York Times' Frank Nugent gave the film a negative review. Though he commented positively on its advocacy of the Chinese in their fight against Japan, he wrote, "... Paramount should have spared us and its cast ... the necessity of being bothered with such folderol".[123]

Paramount also employed Wong as a tutor to other actors, such as Dorothy Lamour in her role as a Eurasian in Disputed Passage.[102] Wong performed on radio several times, including a 1939 role as "Peony" in Pearl Buck's The Patriot on Orson Welles' The Campbell Playhouse.[124][125] Wong's cabaret act, which included songs in Cantonese, French, English, German, Danish, Swedish, and other languages, took her from the U.S. to Europe and Australia through the 1930s and 1940s.[126]

In 1938, after she auctioned off her movie costumes and donated the money to Chinese aid, the Chinese Benevolent Association of California honored Wong for her work in support of Chinese refugees.[127] The proceeds from the preface that she wrote in 1942 to a cookbook entitled New Chinese Recipes, one of the first Chinese cookbooks, were also dedicated to United China Relief.[128] Between 1939 and 1942, she made few films, instead engaging in events and appearances in support of the Chinese struggle against Japan.

Being sick of the negative typecasting that had enveloped her throughout her American career, Wong visited Australia for more than three months in 1939. There she was the star attraction in a vaudeville show entitled 'Highlights from Hollywood' at the Tivoli Theatre in Melbourne.[129][130]

Later years and 1945 film success

Wong attended several socialite events at the Mission Inn in Riverside, California, in 1941.[131]

Wong starred in Bombs over Burma (1942) and Lady from Chungking (1942), both anti-Japanese propaganda made by the poverty row studio Producers Releasing Corporation. She donated her salary for both films to United China Relief.[132] The Lady from Chungking differed from the usual Hollywood war film in that the Chinese were portrayed as heroes rather than as victims rescued by Americans. Even after American characters are captured by the Japanese, the primary goal of the heroes is not to free the Americans, but to prevent the Japanese from entering the city of Chongqing (Chungking). Also, in an interesting twist, the Chinese characters are portrayed by Chinese-American actors, while the Japanese villains—normally played by Chinese-American actors—are acted by European Americans. The film ends with Wong making a speech for the birth of a "new China".[132] The Hollywood Reporter and Variety both gave Wong's performance in The Lady from Chungking positive reviews but commented negatively on the film's plot.

A Democrat, Wong was supportive of Adlai Stevenson's campaign during the 1952 presidential election.[133]

Later in life, Wong invested in real estate and owned a number of properties in Hollywood.[134] She converted her home on San Vicente Boulevard in Santa Monica into four apartments that she called "Moongate Apartments".[135] She served as the apartment house manager from the late 1940s until 1956, when she moved in with her brother Richard on 21st Place in Santa Monica.[136]

In 1949, Wong's father died in Los Angeles at the age of 91.[112] After a six-year absence, Wong returned to film the same year with a small role in a B movie called Impact.[137] From August 27 to November 21, 1951, Wong starred in a detective series that was written specifically for her, the DuMont Television Network series The Gallery of Madame Liu-Tsong,[137] in which she played the title role that used her birth name.[126] Wong's character was a dealer in Chinese art whose career involved her in detective work and international intrigue.[138] The ten half-hour episodes aired during prime time, from 9:00 to 9:30 pm.[139] Although there were plans for a second season, DuMont canceled the show in 1952. No copies of the show or its scripts are known to exist.[140] After the completion of the series, Wong's health began to deteriorate. In late 1953 she suffered an internal hemorrhage, which her brother attributed to the onset of menopause, her continued heavy drinking, and financial worries.[141]

In 1956, Wong hosted one of the first U.S. documentaries on China narrated entirely by a Chinese American. Broadcast on the ABC travel series Bold Journey, the program consisted of film footage from her 1936 trip to China.[142] Wong also did guest spots on television series such as Adventures in Paradise, The Barbara Stanwyck Show, and The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp.[143]

For her contribution to the film industry, Anna May Wong received a star at 1708 Vine Street on the inauguration of the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960.[144] She was the first Asian American actress to receive this honor.[145] She is also depicted larger-than-life as one of the four supporting pillars of the "Gateway to Hollywood" sculpture located on the southeast corner of Hollywood Boulevard and La Brea Avenue, with the actresses Dolores del Río (Hispanic American), Dorothy Dandridge (African American), and Mae West (White American).[146]

In 1960, Wong returned to film in Portrait in Black, starring Lana Turner. She still found herself stereotyped, with one press release explaining her long absence from films with a supposed proverb, which was claimed to have been passed down to Wong by her father: "Don't be photographed too much or you'll lose your soul",[49] a quote that would be inserted into many of her obituaries.[126]

Later life and death

 
Grave of Anna May Wong, her mother, and her sister at Angelus Rosedale Cemetery

Wong was scheduled to play the role of Madame Liang in the film production of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Flower Drum Song, but was unable to take the role due to her health issues.[147] On February 3, 1961, at the age of 56, Wong died of a heart attack[145] as she slept at home in Santa Monica, two days after her final screen performance on television's The Barbara Stanwyck Show in an episode entitled "Dragon by the Tail". (Wong had appeared in another story in the same series the previous year.) Her cremated remains were interred in her mother's grave at Rosedale Cemetery in Los Angeles. The headstone is marked with her mother's Anglicized name on top, and the Chinese names of Anna May (on the right) and her sister Mary (on the left) along the sides.

Legacy

 
 
Two photo portraits of Wong taken by Carl Van Vechten on April 25, 1939
 
The U.S. Mint is expected to produce more than 300 million Wong quarters at facilities in Philadelphia and Denver

Wong's image and career have left a notable legacy. Through her films, public appearances and prominent magazine features, she helped to humanize Chinese Americans to mainstream American audiences during a period of intense racism and discrimination. Chinese Americans had been viewed as perpetually foreign in U.S. society, but Wong's films and public image established her as a Chinese-American citizen at a time when laws discriminated against Chinese immigration and citizenship. Wong's hybrid image dispelled contemporary notions that the East and West were inherently different.[148]

Among Wong's films, only Shanghai Express retained critical attention in the U.S. in the decades after her death. In Europe and especially England, her films appeared occasionally at festivals. Wong remained popular with the gay community, who claimed her as one of their own and for whom her marginalization by the mainstream became a symbol.[149] Although the Chinese Nationalist criticism of her portrayals of the "Dragon Lady" and "Butterfly" stereotypes lingered, she was forgotten in China.[150] Nevertheless, the importance of Wong's legacy within the Asian-American film community can be seen in the Anna May Wong Award of Excellence, which is given yearly at the Asian-American Arts Awards;[151] the annual award given out by the Asian Fashion Designers group was also named after Wong in 1973.[149]

Wong's image remained as a symbol in literature as well as in the film. In the 1971 poem "The Death of Anna May Wong", Jessica Hagedorn saw Wong's career as one of "tragic glamour" and portrayed the actress as a "fragile maternal presence, an Asian-American woman who managed to 'birth' however ambivalently, Asian-American screen women in the jazz age".[152] Wong's character in Shanghai Express was the subject of John Yau's 1989 poem "No One Ever Tried to Kiss Anna May Wong", which interprets the actress' career as a series of tragic romances.[153] Sally Wen Mao wrote a book called Oculus, published in 2019, with a series of persona poems in the voice of Anna May Wong. In David Cronenberg's 1993 film version of David Henry Hwang's 1986 play, M. Butterfly, Wong's image was used briefly as a symbol of a "tragic diva".[154] Her life was the subject of China Doll, The Imagined Life of an American Actress, an award-winning[155] fictional play written by Elizabeth Wong in 1995.[156]

In 1995, film historian Stephen Bourne curated a retrospective of Wong's films called A Touch of Class for BFI Southbank.

As the centennial of Wong's birth approached, a re-examination of her life and career took shape; three major works on the actress appeared and comprehensive retrospectives of her films were held at both the Museum of Modern Art and the American Museum of the Moving Image in New York City.[67][157] Anthony Chan's 2003 biography, Perpetually Cool: The Many Lives of Anna May Wong (1905–1961), was the first major work on Wong and was written, Chan says, "from a uniquely Asian-American perspective and sensibility".[158] In 2004, Philip Leibfried and Chei Mi Lane's exhaustive examination of Wong's career, Anna May Wong: A Complete Guide to Her Film, Stage, Radio and Television Work was published, as well as a second full-length biography, Anna May Wong: From Laundryman's Daughter to Hollywood Legend by Graham Russell Hodges. Though Anna May Wong's life, career, and legacy reflect many complex issues which remain decades after her death, Anthony Chan points out that her place in Asian-American cinematic history, as its first female star, is permanent.[159] An illustrated biography for children, Shining Star: The Anna May Wong Story, was published in 2009.[160]

In 2016, the novelist Peter Ho Davies published The Fortunes, a saga of Chinese-American experiences centered around four characters, one of whom is a fictionalized Anna May Wong, imagined from childhood until her death. In a conversation published in the 2017 paperback edition, Davies described his novel as an exploration of the Chinese-American quest for authenticity—a third way of being Chinese-American—with Anna May Wong representing an iconic example of that struggle.[161]

On January 22, 2020, a Google Doodle celebrated Wong, commemorating the 97th anniversary of the day The Toll of the Sea went into general release.[162][163]

In 2020, actress Michelle Krusiec played Wong in Ryan Murphy's Netflix drama series, Hollywood. The limited series tells an alternate history of Hollywood in the 1940s.[164] Also in 2020, her life story was told as part of PBS's documentary Asian Americans.[165]

In 2021, the United States Mint announced that Wong would be among the first women depicted on the reverse of the quarter coin as a part of the American Women quarters series.[3] When the quarters with her depicted on them went into circulation in 2022, Wong became the first Asian-American depicted on American coinage.[166][167]

Li Jun Li has been cast in Damien Chazelle's upcoming film Babylon, playing a role inspired by Wong.[168]

A biopic from Working Title Films is in development, with British actress Gemma Chan set to portray Wong.[169]

Partial filmography

 
Still from the American silent drama film Drifting (1923) with Anna May Wong

See also

References

Citations

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  2. ^ Gan 1995, p. 83.
  3. ^ a b "American Women Quarters™ Program". United States Mint. August 2, 2021. Retrieved August 19, 2021.
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  6. ^ See Hodges, Graham Russell. Anna May Wong: From Laundryman's Daughter to Hollywood Legend (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004), 44, 60–67, 148.
  7. ^ See the Production Code of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, Inc., 1930–1934, II, Item 6. No mention is made of miscegenation between whites and any race other than Black Americans.
  8. ^ Lim, Shirley Jennifer. Anna May Wong: Performing the Modern. (PA: Temple University Press, 2019).
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  10. ^ Lim, Shirley J. "After Hollywood thwarted Anna May Wong, the actress took matters into her own hands". The Conversation.
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Cited sources

  • Bergfelder, Tim (2004). "Negotiating Exoticism: Hollywood, Film Europe and the cultural reception of Anna May Wong". In Fischer, Lucy; Landy, Marcia (eds.). Stars: The Film Reader. Psychology Press. pp. 59–75. ISBN 0-415-27892-9.
  • Berry, Sarah (2000). Screen Style: Fashion and Femininity in 1930s Hollywood. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-3312-6.
  • Camhi, Leslie (January 11, 2004). "Film: A Dragon Lady and a Quiet Cultural Warrior". The New York Times.
  • Chan, Anthony B. (2003). Perpetually Cool: The Many Lives of Anna May Wong (1905–1961). Lanham, MD: The Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-4789-2..
  • Chung, Hye-seung (2006). Hollywood Asian: Philip Ahn and the Politics of Cross-ethnic Performance. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. ISBN 1-59213-516-1..
  • Corliss, Richard (January 29, 2005). . Time. Archived from the original on February 18, 2005. Retrieved August 11, 2010.
  • Corliss, Richard (February 3, 2005). "That Old Feeling: Anna May Win". Time.
  • Crisler, B.R. (December 24, 1937). "Daughter of Shanghai". The New York Times.
  • Crowther, Bosley (March 11, 1938). "Dangerous to Know". The New York Times.
  • . Today Online. UCLA. January 3, 2008. Archived from the original on September 16, 2008. Retrieved May 8, 2020.
  • Finch, Christopher; Rosenkrantz, Linda (1979). Gone Hollywood: The Movie Colony in the Golden Age. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-12808-7.
  • "Forty Winks". The New York Times. March 3, 1925.
  • Gan, Geraldine (1995). Anna May Wong. Lives of Notable Asian Americans: Arts, Entertainment, Sports. New York: Chelsea House. pp. 83–91. ISBN 978-0-7910-2188-0..
  • Hodges, Graham Russell Gao (2012) [2004]. Anna May Wong: From Laundryman's Daughter to Hollywood Legend (2nd ed.). Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, HKU. ISBN 978-9882208902. OCLC 797815107.
  • Hsu, Shirley (January 23, 2004). "Nobody's Lotus Flower: Rediscovering Anna May Wong – Film Retrospective". Asia Pacific Arts Online Magazine. UCLA Asia Institute. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
  • Leibfried, Philip; Lane, Chei Mi (2004). Anna May Wong: A Complete Guide to her Film, Stage, Radio and Television Work. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-1633-5.
  • Leong, Karen J. (2005). The China Mystique: Pearl S. Buck, Anna May Wong, Mayling Soong, and the Transformation of American Orientalism. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-24422-2..
  • Lim, Shirley Jennifer (2005). "I Protest: Anna May Wong and the Performance of Modernity". A Feeling of Belonging: Asian American Women's Public Culture, 1930–1960. New York: New York University Press. pp. 104–175. ISBN 0-8147-5193-8..
  • Liu, Cynthia W. (2000). "When Dragon Ladies Die, Do They Come Back as Butterflies? Re-imagining Anna May Wong". In Hamamoto, Darrel; Liu, Sandra (eds.). Countervisions: Asian American Film Criticism. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. pp. 23–39. ISBN 1-56639-776-6.
  • Motion, Andrew (1986). The Lamberts: George, Constant and Kit. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 0-374-18283-3..
  • Negra, Diane (2001). Off-White Hollywood: American Culture and Ethnic Female Stardom. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-21678-8..
  • Nugent, Frank (March 16, 1939). "King of Chinatown". The New York Times.
  • Parish, James; Leonard, William (1976). Anna May Wong. Hollywood Players: The Thirties. New Rochelle, NY: Arlington House Publishers. pp. 532–538. ISBN 0-87000-365-8.
  • "Performing Race on Screen". cinema.cornell.edu. from the original on January 3, 2009. Retrieved May 8, 2020.
  • "Piccadilly". Variety. July 24, 1929.
  • Rollins, Peter C., ed. (2003). The Columbia Companion to American History on Film: How the Movies Have Portrayed the American Past. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-11223-8..
  • "Song". The New York Times. August 22, 1928.
  • Sweet, Matthew (February 6, 2008). "Snakes, Slaves and Seduction: Anna May Wong". The Guardian.
  • "The Toll of the Sea". The New York Times. November 27, 1922.
  • "The Toll of the Sea". Variety. December 1, 1922.
  • Wang, Yiman; Russell, Catherine, eds. (2005). The Art of Screen Passing: Anna May Wong's Yellow Yellowface Performance in the Art Deco Era. Camera Obscura 60: New Women of the Silent Screen: China, Japan, Hollywood. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. pp. 159–191. ISBN 0-8223-6624-X.
  • Wollstein, Hans J. (1999). Anna May Wong. Vixens, Floozies, and Molls: 28 Actresses of late 1920s and 1930s Hollywood. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. ISBN 0-7864-0565-1.
  • Wong, Elizabeth (2005). China Doll: The Imagined Life of an American Actress. Woodstock, IL: Dramatic Publishing. ISBN 1-58342-315-X.
  • Wood, Ean (2000). The Josephine Baker Story. London: Sanctuary. ISBN 1-86074-286-6.
  • Zia, Helen; Gall, Susan B. (1995). Notable Asian Americans. New York: Gale Research. ISBN 978-0-8103-9623-4..

Further reading

  • Doerr, Conrad (December 1968). "Reminiscences of Anna May Wong". Films in Review. New York: National Board of Review of Motion Pictures. ISSN 0015-1688.
  • Griffith, Richard; Mayer, Richard (1970). The Movies. New York: Fireside. ISBN 0-600-36044-X.
  • Schneider, Steven Jay, ed. (2005). 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die. Educational Series (2nd ed.). Hauppauge, NY: Barron's. ISBN 978-0764159077.
  • Sparks, Beverley N., "Where East Meets West," Photoplay, June 1924, p. 55.
  • Wagner, Rob Leicester (2016). Hollywood Bohemia: The Roots of Progressive Politics in Rob Wagner's Script. Santa Maria, CA: Janaway Publishing. ISBN 978-1596413696.
  • Winship, Mary, "The China Doll," Photoplay, June 1923, p. 34.
  • Lim, Shirley Jennifer (2019), Anna May Wong : Performing the Modern Philadelphia: Temple University Press. EANs: 978-1-4399-1833-3, 978-1-4399-1834-0, 978-1-4399-1835-7.[1][2]

External links

  • . Archived from the original on March 27, 2012. Retrieved June 29, 2013.
  • Anna May Wong at IMDb
  • Anna May Wong at the Internet Broadway Database  
  • . Archived from the original on March 22, 2008. Retrieved March 22, 2008.
  • Hong, Yunah (2011). "Anna May Wong: In Her Own Words". Women Make Movies. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
  • "Anna May Wong Tobacco Cards". Virtual History. Retrieved September 15, 2010.
  • "Rediscovering Los Angeles – Sam Kee Laundry". L.A. Daily Mirror. December 3, 2013. Retrieved May 17, 2017. Newspaper article and sketch on Anna's childhood home
  • Canton, Naomi (December 14, 2015). "Anna May Wong". Arts and Learning. Asia House. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
  1. ^ "Anna May Wong | Temple University Press".
  2. ^ "Shirley J. Lim".

anna, wong, canadian, artist, anna, wong, artist, this, chinese, name, family, name, wong, wong, tsong, january, 1905, february, 1961, known, professionally, american, actress, considered, first, chinese, american, movie, star, hollywood, well, first, chinese,. For the Canadian artist see Anna Wong artist In this Chinese name the family name is Wong Wong Liu Tsong January 3 1905 February 3 1961 known professionally as Anna May Wong was an American actress considered the first Chinese American movie star in Hollywood 1 as well as the first Chinese American actress to gain international recognition 2 Her varied career spanned silent film sound film television stage and radio As one of the first women depicted on the reverse of the quarter in the 2022 2025 American Women quarters series she is also the first Asian American to appear on a U S coin 3 Anna May WongParamount publicity photo c 1935BornWong Liu Tsong 1905 01 03 January 3 1905Los Angeles California U S DiedFebruary 3 1961 1961 02 03 aged 56 Santa Monica California U S OccupationActressYears active1919 1961AwardsHollywood Walk of Fame Motion Picture1700 Vine StreetChinese nameTraditional Chinese黃柳霜Simplified Chinese黄柳霜TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHuang LiǔshuangWade GilesHuang2 Liu3 Shuang1Yue CantoneseJyutpingWong4 Lau5soeng1SignatureBorn in Los Angeles to second generation Taishanese Chinese American parents Wong became infatuated with films and began acting in films at an early age During the silent film era she acted in The Toll of the Sea 1922 one of the first films made in color and in Douglas Fairbanks The Thief of Bagdad 1924 Wong became a fashion icon and had achieved international stardom in 1924 Wong had been one of the first to embrace the flapper look In 1934 the Mayfair Mannequin Society of New York voted her the world s best dressed woman 4 In the 1920s and 1930s Wong was acclaimed as one of the top fashion icons Frustrated by the stereotypical supporting roles she reluctantly played in Hollywood Wong left for Europe in March 1928 where she starred in several notable plays and films among them Piccadilly 1929 She spent the first half of the 1930s traveling between the United States and Europe for film and stage work Wong was featured in films of the early sound era such as Daughter of the Dragon 1931 Java Head 1934 Daughter of Shanghai 1937 and with Marlene Dietrich in Josef von Sternberg s Shanghai Express 1932 5 In 1935 Wong was dealt the most severe disappointment of her career when Metro Goldwyn Mayer refused to consider her for the leading role of the Chinese character O Lan in the film version of Pearl S Buck s The Good Earth MGM instead cast Luise Rainer to play the leading role in yellowface One biographer believes that the choice was due to the Hays Code anti miscegenation rules requiring the wife of a white actor Paul Muni ironically playing a Chinese character in yellowface to be played by a white actress 6 But the 1930 1934 Hays Code of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America insisted only that miscegenation sex relationship between the white and black races was forbidden and said nothing about Asian white intermarriages 7 Other biographers have not corroborated this theory including historian Shirley Jennifer Lim s Anna May Wong Performing the Modern 8 MGM screen tested Wong for the supporting role of Lotus the seductress but it is ambiguous whether she refused the role on principle or was rejected 9 Wong spent the next year touring China visiting her family s ancestral village studying Chinese culture and documenting the experience on film at a time when prominent female directors in Hollywood were few 10 In the late 1930s she starred in several B movies for Paramount Pictures portraying Chinese and Chinese Americans in a positive light She paid less attention to her film career during World War II when she devoted her time and money to help the Chinese cause against Japan Wong returned to the public eye in the 1950s in several television appearances In 1951 Wong made history with her television show The Gallery of Madame Liu Tsong the first ever U S television show starring an Asian American series lead 11 She had been planning to return to film in Flower Drum Song when she died in 1961 at the age of 56 from a heart attack For decades after her death Wong was remembered principally for the stereotypical Dragon Lady and demure Butterfly roles that she was often given Her life and career were re evaluated in the years around the centennial of her birth in three major literary works and film retrospectives Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Early career 1 3 Stardom 1 4 Move to Europe 1 5 Return to Hollywood 1 6 Atlantic crossings 1 7 Chinese tour and rising popularity 1 8 Late 1930s and further work films 1 9 Later years and 1945 film success 1 10 Later life and death 2 Legacy 3 Partial filmography 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Cited sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Anna May Wong seated in her mother s lap c 1905 This is a duplicate copy of the Certificate of Identity issued to actress Anna May Wong Anna May Wong was born Wong Liu Tsong 黃柳霜 Liu Tsong literally meaning willow frost on January 3 1905 on Flower Street in Los Angeles one block north of Chinatown in an integrated community of Chinese Irish German and Japanese residents 12 13 She was the second of seven children born to Wong Sam sing owner of the Sam Kee Laundry and his second wife Lee Gon toy 14 Wong s parents were second generation Chinese Americans her maternal and paternal grandparents had resided in the U S since at least 1855 15 Her paternal grandfather A Wong Wong was a merchant who owned two stores in Michigan Bluffs a gold mining area in Placer County He had come from Chang On a village near Taishan Guangdong Province China in 1853 16 Anna May s father spent his youth traveling between the U S and China where he married his first wife and fathered a son in 1890 17 He returned to the U S in the late 1890s and in 1901 while continuing to support his family in China he married a second wife Anna May s mother 18 Anna May s older sister Lew ying Lulu was born in late 1902 15 and Anna May in 1905 followed by five more children In 1910 the family moved to a neighborhood on Figueroa Street where they were the only Chinese people on their block living alongside mostly Mexican and Eastern European families The two hills separating their new home from Chinatown helped Wong to assimilate into American culture 19 She attended public school with her older sister at first but then when the girls became the target of racial taunts from other students they moved to a Presbyterian Chinese school Classes were taught in English but Wong attended a Chinese language school afternoons and on Saturdays 20 About that same time U S motion picture production began to relocate from the East Coast to the Los Angeles area Movies were shot constantly in and around Wong s neighborhood She began going to Nickelodeon movie theaters and quickly became obsessed with the flickers missing school and using lunch money to attend the cinema Her father was not happy with her interest in films feeling that it interfered with her studies but Wong decided to pursue a film career regardless At the age of nine she constantly begged filmmakers to give her roles earning herself the nickname C C C or Curious Chinese Child 21 By the age of 11 Wong had come up with her stage name of Anna May Wong formed by joining both her English and family names 22 Early career Edit Wong was working at Hollywood s Ville de Paris department store when Metro Pictures needed 300 female extras to appear in Alla Nazimova s film The Red Lantern 1919 Without her father s knowledge a friend of his with movie connections helped her land an uncredited role as an extra carrying a lantern 23 Wong worked steadily for the next two years as an extra in various movies including Priscilla Dean and Colleen Moore pictures While still a student Wong came down with an illness identified as St Vitus s Dance which caused her to miss months of school She was on the verge of emotional collapse when her father took her to a practitioner of traditional Chinese medicine The treatments proved successful though Wong later claimed this had more to do with her dislike of the methods 24 Other Chinese thought such as Confucianism and particularly Taoism and the teachings of Laozi had a strong influence on Wong s personal philosophy throughout her life 25 The family s religious life also included Christian thought in the form of Presbyterianism and as an adult she was a Christian Scientist for some time 26 Finding it difficult to keep up with both her schoolwork and her passion Wong dropped out of Los Angeles High School in 1921 to pursue a full time acting career 27 28 Reflecting on her decision Wong told Motion Picture Magazine in 1931 I was so young when I began that I knew I still had youth if I failed so I determined to give myself 10 years to succeed as an actress 29 In 1921 Wong received her first screen credit for Bits of Life the first anthology film in which she played the wife of Lon Chaney s character Toy Ling in a segment entitled Hop 30 She later recalled it fondly as the only time she played the role of a mother 31 her appearance earned her a cover photo on the British magazine Picture Show Wong holding child with Beatrice Bentley in The Toll of the Sea 1922 At the age of 17 Wong played her first leading role in the early Metro two color Technicolor movie The Toll of the Sea 32 Written by Frances Marion the story was based loosely on Madama Butterfly Variety magazine singled Wong out for praise noting her extraordinarily fine acting 33 The New York Times commented Miss Wong stirs in the spectator all the sympathy her part calls for and she never repels one by an excess of theatrical feeling She has a difficult role a role that is botched nine times out of ten but hers is the tenth performance Completely unconscious of the camera with a fine sense of proportion and remarkable pantomimic accuracy She should be seen again and often on the screen 34 Despite such reviews Hollywood proved reluctant to create starring roles for Wong her ethnicity prevented U S filmmakers from seeing her as a leading lady David Schwartz the chief curator of the Museum of the Moving Image notes She built up a level of stardom in Hollywood but Hollywood didn t know what to do with her 35 She spent the next few years in supporting roles providing exotic atmosphere 36 for instance playing a concubine in Tod Browning s Drifting 1923 29 Film producers capitalized on Wong s growing fame but they relegated her to supporting roles 37 Still optimistic about a film career in 1923 Wong said Pictures are fine and I m getting along all right but it s not so bad to have the laundry back of you so you can wait and take good parts and be independent when you re climbing 22 Stardom Edit Wong on the cover of the Chinese magazine The Young Companion in June 1927 At the age of 19 Wong was cast in a supporting role as a scheming Mongol slave in the 1924 Douglas Fairbanks picture The Thief of Bagdad Playing a stereotypical Dragon Lady role her brief appearances on screen caught the attention of audiences and critics alike 38 The film grossed more than 2 million and helped introduce Wong to the public Around this time Wong had an interracial relationship with Tod Browning who had directed her in Drifting a year earlier 39 After this second prominent role Wong moved out of the family home into her own apartment Conscious that Americans viewed her as foreign born even though she was born and raised in California Wong began cultivating a flapper image 40 In March 1924 planning to make films about Chinese myths she signed a deal creating Anna May Wong Productions when her business partner was found to be engaging in dishonest practices Wong brought a lawsuit against him and the company was dissolved 41 It soon became evident that Wong s career would continue to be limited by American anti miscegenation laws which prevented her from sharing an on screen kiss with any person of another race even if the character was Asian but being portrayed by a white actor 42 The only leading Asian man in U S films in the silent era was Sessue Hayakawa Unless Asian leading men could be found Wong could not be a leading lady 43 Wong continued to be offered exotic supporting roles that followed the rising vamp stereotype in cinema 44 She played indigenous native girls in two 1924 films Filmed on location in the Territory of Alaska she portrayed an Eskimo in The Alaskan She returned to Los Angeles to perform the part of Princess Tiger Lily in Peter Pan Both films were shot by cinematographer James Wong Howe Peter Pan was more successful and it was the hit of the Christmas season 45 46 The next year Wong was singled out for critical praise in a manipulative Oriental vamp role in the film Forty Winks 47 Despite such favorable reviews she became increasingly disappointed with her casting and began to seek other roads to success In early 1925 she joined a group of serial stars on a tour of the vaudeville circuits when the tour proved to be a failure Wong and the rest of the group returned to Hollywood 48 In 1926 Wong put the first rivet into the structure of Grauman s Chinese Theatre when she joined Norma Talmadge for its groundbreaking ceremony although she was not invited to leave her hand and foot prints in cement 49 50 In the same year Wong starred in The Silk Bouquet Re titled The Dragon Horse in 1927 the film was one of the first U S films to be produced with Chinese backing provided by San Francisco s Chinese Six Companies The story was set in China during the Ming dynasty and featured Asian actors playing the Asian roles 51 Wong continued to be assigned supporting roles Hollywood s Asian female characters tended toward two stereotypical poles the naive and self sacrificing Butterfly and the sly and deceitful Dragon Lady In Old San Francisco 1927 directed by Alan Crosland for Warner Brothers Wong played a Dragon Lady a gangster s daughter 52 In Mr Wu 1927 she played a supporting role as increasing censorship against mixed race onscreen couples cost her the lead In The Crimson City released the following year this happened again 53 Move to Europe Edit Tired of being both typecast and passed over for lead Asian character roles in favor of non Asian actresses Wong left Hollywood in 1928 for Europe 54 Interviewed by Doris Mackie for Film Weekly in 1933 Wong complained about her Hollywood roles I was so tired of the parts I had to play 55 56 She commented There seems little for me in Hollywood because rather than real Chinese producers prefer Hungarians Mexicans American Indians for Chinese roles 57 Wong with Ramon Novarro in Across to Singapore 1928 In Europe Wong became a sensation starring in notable films such as Schmutziges Geld aka Song and Show Life 1928 and Grossstadtschmetterling Pavement Butterfly Of the German critics response to Song The New York Times reported that Wong was acclaimed not only as an actress of transcendent talent but as a great beauty The article noted that Germans passed over Wong s American background Berlin critics who were unanimous in praise of both the star and the production neglect to mention that Anna May is of American birth They mention only her Chinese origins 58 In Vienna she played the title role in the operetta Tschun Tschi in fluent German 56 An Austrian critic wrote Fraulein Wong had the audience perfectly in her power and the unobtrusive tragedy of her acting was deeply moving carrying off the difficult German speaking part very successfully 59 While in Germany Wong became an inseparable friend of the director Leni Riefenstahl Her close friendships with several women throughout her life including Marlene Dietrich and Cecil Cunningham led to rumors of lesbianism which damaged her public reputation 60 These rumors in particular of her supposed relationship with Dietrich further embarrassed Wong s family They had long been opposed to her acting career which was not considered an entirely respectable profession at the time 61 London producer Basil Dean brought the play A Circle of Chalk for Wong to appear in with the young Laurence Olivier her first stage performance in the United Kingdom 56 Criticism of her California accent described by one critic as a Yankee squeak led to Wong seeking vocal tutoring at Cambridge University where she trained in received pronunciation 62 Composer Constant Lambert infatuated with the actress after having seen her in films attended the play on its opening night and subsequently composed Eight Poems of Li Po dedicated to her 63 Wong made her last silent film Piccadilly in 1929 the first of five British films in which she had a starring role The film caused a sensation in the UK 64 Gilda Gray was the top billed actress but Variety commented that Wong outshines the star and that from the moment Miss Wong dances in the kitchen s rear she steals Piccadilly from Miss Gray 65 Though the film presented Wong in her most sensual role yet of the five films once again she was not permitted to kiss her white love interest and a controversial planned scene involving a kiss was cut before the film was released 66 Forgotten for decades after its release Piccadilly was later restored by the British Film Institute 67 Time magazine s Richard Corliss calls Piccadilly Wong s best film 68 and The Guardian reports that the rediscovery of this film and Wong s performance in it has been responsible for a restoration of the actress reputation 49 While in London Wong was romantically linked with writer and broadcasting executive Eric Maschwitz who possibly wrote the lyrics to These Foolish Things Remind Me of You as an evocation of his longing for her after they parted 49 69 Wong s first talkie was The Flame of Love 1930 which she recorded in French English and German Though Wong s performance particularly her handling of the three languages was lauded all three versions of the film received negative reviews 70 Return to Hollywood Edit Anna May Wong in Daughter of the Dragon 1931 During the 1930s American studios were looking for fresh European talent Ironically Wong caught their eye and she was offered a contract with Paramount Studios in 1930 Enticed by the promise of lead roles and top billing she returned to the United States The prestige and training she had gained during her years in Europe led to a starring role on Broadway in On the Spot 71 a drama that ran for 167 performances and which she would later film as Dangerous to Know 72 When the play s director wanted Wong to use stereotypical Japanese mannerisms derived from Madame Butterfly in her performance of a Chinese character Wong refused She instead used her knowledge of Chinese style and gestures to imbue the character with a greater degree of authenticity 73 Following her return to Hollywood in 1930 Wong repeatedly turned to the stage and cabaret for a creative outlet In November 1930 Wong s mother was struck and killed by an automobile in front of the Figueroa Street house 74 The family remained at the house until 1934 when Wong s father returned to his hometown in China with Anna May s younger brothers and sister 75 Anna May had been paying for the education of her younger siblings who put their education to work after they relocated to China 76 Before the family left Wong s father wrote a brief article for Xinning a magazine for overseas Taishanese in which he expressed his pride in his famous daughter 77 Portrait of Anna May Wong by Carl Van Vechten 1932 With the promise of appearing in a Josef von Sternberg film Wong accepted another stereotypical role the title character of Fu Manchu s vengeful daughter in Daughter of the Dragon 1931 78 This was the last stereotypically evil Chinese role Wong played 79 and also her one starring appearance alongside the only other well known Asian actor of the era Sessue Hayakawa Though she was given the starring role this status was not reflected in her paycheck she was paid 6 000 while Hayakawa received 10 000 and Warner Oland who is only in the film for 23 minutes was paid 12 000 80 Wong began using her newfound celebrity to make political statements late in 1931 for example she wrote a harsh criticism of the Mukden Incident and Japan s subsequent invasion of Manchuria 81 82 She also became more outspoken in her advocacy for Chinese American causes and for better film roles In a 1933 interview for Film Weekly entitled I Protest Wong criticized the negative stereotyping in Daughter of the Dragon saying Why is it that the screen Chinese is always the villain And so crude a villain murderous treacherous a snake in the grass We are not like that How could we be with a civilization that is so many times older than the West 55 83 Wong appeared alongside Marlene Dietrich as a self sacrificing courtesan in Sternberg s Shanghai Express 78 Her sexually charged scenes with Dietrich have been noted by many commentators and fed rumors about the relationship between the two stars 84 Though contemporary reviews focused on Dietrich s acting and Sternberg s direction film historians today judge that Wong s performance upstaged that of Dietrich 78 85 The Chinese press had long given Wong s career very mixed reviews and were less than favorable to her performance in Shanghai Express A Chinese newspaper ran the headline Paramount Utilizes Anna May Wong to Produce Picture to Disgrace China and continued Although she is deficient in artistic portrayal she has done more than enough to disgrace the Chinese race 86 Critics in China believed that Wong s on screen sexuality spread negative stereotypes of Chinese women 87 The most virulent criticism came from the Nationalist government but China s intellectuals and liberals were not always so opposed to Wong as demonstrated when Peking University awarded the actress an honorary doctorate in 1932 Contemporary sources reported that this was probably the only time that an actor had been so honored 88 In both America and Europe Wong had been seen as a fashion icon for over a decade In 1934 the Mayfair Mannequin Society of New York voted her The World s best dressed woman and in 1938 Look magazine named her The World s most beautiful Chinese girl 89 Atlantic crossings Edit After her success in Europe and a prominent role in Shanghai Express Wong s Hollywood career returned to its old pattern She was passed over for the leading female role in The Son Daughter in favor of Helen Hayes Metro Goldwyn Mayer deemed her too Chinese to play a Chinese in the film 90 Wong was scheduled to play the role of a mistress to a corrupt Chinese general in Frank Capra s The Bitter Tea of General Yen 1933 but the role went instead to Toshia Mori 91 Carl Van Vechten photographic portrait of Wong September 22 1935 Again disappointed with Hollywood Wong returned to Britain where she stayed for nearly three years In addition to appearing in four films she toured Scotland and Ireland as part of a vaudeville show She also appeared in the King George Silver Jubilee program in 1935 92 Her film Java Head 1934 though generally considered a minor effort was the only film in which Wong kissed the lead male character her white husband in the film Wong s biographer Graham Russell Hodges commented that this may be why the film remained one of Wong s personal favorites 93 While in London Wong met Mei Lanfang one of the most famous stars of the Beijing Opera She had long been interested in Chinese opera and Mei offered to instruct Wong if she ever visited China 94 In the 1930s the popularity of Pearl Buck s novels especially The Good Earth as well as growing American sympathy for China in its struggles with Japanese imperialism opened up opportunities for more positive Chinese roles in U S films 95 Wong returned to the U S in June 1935 with the goal of obtaining the role of O lan the lead female character in MGM s film version of The Good Earth Since its publication in 1931 Wong had made known her desire to play O lan in a film version of the book 96 and as early as 1933 Los Angeles newspapers were touting Wong as the best choice for the part 97 Nevertheless the studio apparently never seriously considered Wong for the role The Chinese government also advised the studio against casting Wong in the role The Chinese advisor to MGM commented whenever she appears in a movie the newspapers print her picture with the caption Anna May again loses face for China 98 According to Wong she was instead offered the part of Lotus a deceitful song girl who helps to destroy the family and seduces the family s oldest son 99 Wong refused the role telling MGM head of production Irving Thalberg If you let me play O lan I will be very glad But you re asking me with Chinese blood to do the only unsympathetic role in the picture featuring an all American cast portraying Chinese characters 97 The role Wong hoped for went to Luise Rainer who won the Best Actress Oscar for her performance Wong s sister Mary Liu Heung Wong appeared in the film in the role of the Little Bride 100 MGM s refusal to consider Wong for this most high profile of Chinese characters in U S film is remembered today as one of the most notorious cases of casting discrimination in the 1930s 101 Chinese tour and rising popularity Edit After the major disappointment of losing the role in The Good Earth Wong announced plans for a year long tour of China to visit her father and his family in Taishan 75 102 Wong s father had returned to his hometown in China with her younger brothers and sister in 1934 Aside from Mei Lanfang s offer to teach her she wanted to learn more about the Chinese theater and through English translations to better perform some Chinese plays before international audiences 76 103 She told the San Francisco Chronicle on her departure for a year I shall study the land of my fathers Perhaps upon my arrival I shall feel like an outsider Perhaps instead I shall find my past life assuming a dreamlike quality of unreality 75 Embarking in January 1936 Wong chronicled her experiences in a series of articles printed in U S newspapers such as the New York Herald Tribune 92 the Los Angeles Examiner the Los Angeles Times and Photoplay 104 In a stopover in Tokyo on the way to Shanghai local reporters ever curious about her romantic life asked if she had marriage plans to which Wong replied No I am wedded to my art The following day however Japanese newspapers reported that Wong was married to a wealthy Cantonese man named Art 92 105 During her travels in China Wong continued to be strongly criticized by the Nationalist government and the film community 106 She had difficulty communicating in many areas of China because she was raised with the Taishan dialect rather than Mandarin She later commented that some of the varieties of Chinese sounded as strange to me as Gaelic I thus had the strange experience of talking to my own people through an interpreter 107 The toll of international celebrity on Wong s personal life manifested itself in bouts of depression and sudden anger as well as excessive smoking and drinking 108 Feeling irritable when she disembarked in Hong Kong Wong was uncharacteristically rude to the awaiting crowd which then quickly turned hostile One person shouted Down with Huang Liu tsong the stooge that disgraces China Don t let her go ashore Wong began crying and a stampede ensued 109 After she left for a short trip to the Philippines the situation cooled and Wong joined her family in Hong Kong With her father and her siblings Wong visited his family and his first wife at the family s ancestral home near Taishan 102 110 Conflicting reports claim that she was either warmly welcomed or met with hostility by the villagers She spent over 10 days in the family s village and sometime in neighboring villages before continuing her tour of China 111 After returning to Hollywood Wong reflected on her year in China and her career in Hollywood I am convinced that I could never play in the Chinese Theatre I have no feeling for it It s a pretty sad situation to be rejected by Chinese because I m too American and by American producers because they prefer other races to act Chinese parts 102 Wong s father returned to Los Angeles in 1938 112 Late 1930s and further work films Edit To complete her contract with Paramount Pictures Wong made a string of B movies in the late 1930s Often dismissed by critics the films gave Wong non stereotypical roles that were publicized in the Chinese American press for their positive images These smaller budgeted films could be bolder than the higher profile releases and Wong used this to her advantage to portray successful professional Chinese American characters Competent and proud of their Chinese heritage these characters worked against the prevailing U S film portrayals of Chinese Americans 113 In contrast to the usual official Chinese condemnation of Wong s film roles the Chinese consul to Los Angeles gave his approval to the final scripts of two of these films Daughter of Shanghai 1937 and King of Chinatown 1939 114 Photographic portrait dated November 17 1937 by Eugene Robert Richee for Paramount Pictures Daughter of Shanghai was released shortly after this photo was taken In Daughter of Shanghai Wong played the Asian American female lead in a role that was rewritten for her as the heroine of the story actively setting the plot into motion rather than the more passive character originally planned 115 The script was so carefully tailored for Wong that at one point it was given the working title Anna May Wong Story 103 When the Library of Congress selected the film for preservation in the National Film Registry in 2006 the announcement described it as more truly Wong s personal vehicle than any of her other films 116 Of this film Wong told Hollywood Magazine I like my part in this picture better than any I ve had before because this picture gives Chinese a break we have sympathetic parts for a change To me that means a great deal 117 The New York Times gave the film a generally positive review commenting of its B movie origins An unusually competent cast saves the film from the worst consequences of certain inevitable banalities The cast combine with effective sets to reduce the natural odds against any pictures in the Daughter of Shanghai tradition 118 Carl Van Vechten photographic portrait of Wong in costume for a dramatic adaptation of Gozzi s Turandot at the Westport Country Playhouse August 11 1937 119 In October 1937 the press carried rumors that Wong had plans to marry her male co star in this film childhood friend and Korean American actor Philip Ahn 102 Wong replied It would be like marrying my brother 120 Bosley Crowther was not so kind to Dangerous to Know 1938 which he called a second rate melodrama hardly worthy of the talents of its generally capable cast 121 In King of Chinatown Wong played a surgeon who sacrifices a high paying promotion in order to devote her energies to helping the Chinese fight the Japanese invasion 122 The New York Times Frank Nugent gave the film a negative review Though he commented positively on its advocacy of the Chinese in their fight against Japan he wrote Paramount should have spared us and its cast the necessity of being bothered with such folderol 123 Paramount also employed Wong as a tutor to other actors such as Dorothy Lamour in her role as a Eurasian in Disputed Passage 102 Wong performed on radio several times including a 1939 role as Peony in Pearl Buck s The Patriot on Orson Welles The Campbell Playhouse 124 125 Wong s cabaret act which included songs in Cantonese French English German Danish Swedish and other languages took her from the U S to Europe and Australia through the 1930s and 1940s 126 In 1938 after she auctioned off her movie costumes and donated the money to Chinese aid the Chinese Benevolent Association of California honored Wong for her work in support of Chinese refugees 127 The proceeds from the preface that she wrote in 1942 to a cookbook entitled New Chinese Recipes one of the first Chinese cookbooks were also dedicated to United China Relief 128 Between 1939 and 1942 she made few films instead engaging in events and appearances in support of the Chinese struggle against Japan Being sick of the negative typecasting that had enveloped her throughout her American career Wong visited Australia for more than three months in 1939 There she was the star attraction in a vaudeville show entitled Highlights from Hollywood at the Tivoli Theatre in Melbourne 129 130 Later years and 1945 film success Edit Wong attended several socialite events at the Mission Inn in Riverside California in 1941 131 Wong starred in Bombs over Burma 1942 and Lady from Chungking 1942 both anti Japanese propaganda made by the poverty row studio Producers Releasing Corporation She donated her salary for both films to United China Relief 132 The Lady from Chungking differed from the usual Hollywood war film in that the Chinese were portrayed as heroes rather than as victims rescued by Americans Even after American characters are captured by the Japanese the primary goal of the heroes is not to free the Americans but to prevent the Japanese from entering the city of Chongqing Chungking Also in an interesting twist the Chinese characters are portrayed by Chinese American actors while the Japanese villains normally played by Chinese American actors are acted by European Americans The film ends with Wong making a speech for the birth of a new China 132 The Hollywood Reporter and Variety both gave Wong s performance in The Lady from Chungking positive reviews but commented negatively on the film s plot A Democrat Wong was supportive of Adlai Stevenson s campaign during the 1952 presidential election 133 Later in life Wong invested in real estate and owned a number of properties in Hollywood 134 She converted her home on San Vicente Boulevard in Santa Monica into four apartments that she called Moongate Apartments 135 She served as the apartment house manager from the late 1940s until 1956 when she moved in with her brother Richard on 21st Place in Santa Monica 136 In 1949 Wong s father died in Los Angeles at the age of 91 112 After a six year absence Wong returned to film the same year with a small role in a B movie called Impact 137 From August 27 to November 21 1951 Wong starred in a detective series that was written specifically for her the DuMont Television Network series The Gallery of Madame Liu Tsong 137 in which she played the title role that used her birth name 126 Wong s character was a dealer in Chinese art whose career involved her in detective work and international intrigue 138 The ten half hour episodes aired during prime time from 9 00 to 9 30 pm 139 Although there were plans for a second season DuMont canceled the show in 1952 No copies of the show or its scripts are known to exist 140 After the completion of the series Wong s health began to deteriorate In late 1953 she suffered an internal hemorrhage which her brother attributed to the onset of menopause her continued heavy drinking and financial worries 141 In 1956 Wong hosted one of the first U S documentaries on China narrated entirely by a Chinese American Broadcast on the ABC travel series Bold Journey the program consisted of film footage from her 1936 trip to China 142 Wong also did guest spots on television series such as Adventures in Paradise The Barbara Stanwyck Show and The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp 143 For her contribution to the film industry Anna May Wong received a star at 1708 Vine Street on the inauguration of the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1960 144 She was the first Asian American actress to receive this honor 145 She is also depicted larger than life as one of the four supporting pillars of the Gateway to Hollywood sculpture located on the southeast corner of Hollywood Boulevard and La Brea Avenue with the actresses Dolores del Rio Hispanic American Dorothy Dandridge African American and Mae West White American 146 In 1960 Wong returned to film in Portrait in Black starring Lana Turner She still found herself stereotyped with one press release explaining her long absence from films with a supposed proverb which was claimed to have been passed down to Wong by her father Don t be photographed too much or you ll lose your soul 49 a quote that would be inserted into many of her obituaries 126 Later life and death Edit Grave of Anna May Wong her mother and her sister at Angelus Rosedale Cemetery Wong was scheduled to play the role of Madame Liang in the film production of Rodgers and Hammerstein s Flower Drum Song but was unable to take the role due to her health issues 147 On February 3 1961 at the age of 56 Wong died of a heart attack 145 as she slept at home in Santa Monica two days after her final screen performance on television s The Barbara Stanwyck Show in an episode entitled Dragon by the Tail Wong had appeared in another story in the same series the previous year Her cremated remains were interred in her mother s grave at Rosedale Cemetery in Los Angeles The headstone is marked with her mother s Anglicized name on top and the Chinese names of Anna May on the right and her sister Mary on the left along the sides Legacy Edit Two photo portraits of Wong taken by Carl Van Vechten on April 25 1939 The U S Mint is expected to produce more than 300 million Wong quarters at facilities in Philadelphia and Denver Wong s image and career have left a notable legacy Through her films public appearances and prominent magazine features she helped to humanize Chinese Americans to mainstream American audiences during a period of intense racism and discrimination Chinese Americans had been viewed as perpetually foreign in U S society but Wong s films and public image established her as a Chinese American citizen at a time when laws discriminated against Chinese immigration and citizenship Wong s hybrid image dispelled contemporary notions that the East and West were inherently different 148 Among Wong s films only Shanghai Express retained critical attention in the U S in the decades after her death In Europe and especially England her films appeared occasionally at festivals Wong remained popular with the gay community who claimed her as one of their own and for whom her marginalization by the mainstream became a symbol 149 Although the Chinese Nationalist criticism of her portrayals of the Dragon Lady and Butterfly stereotypes lingered she was forgotten in China 150 Nevertheless the importance of Wong s legacy within the Asian American film community can be seen in the Anna May Wong Award of Excellence which is given yearly at the Asian American Arts Awards 151 the annual award given out by the Asian Fashion Designers group was also named after Wong in 1973 149 Wong s image remained as a symbol in literature as well as in the film In the 1971 poem The Death of Anna May Wong Jessica Hagedorn saw Wong s career as one of tragic glamour and portrayed the actress as a fragile maternal presence an Asian American woman who managed to birth however ambivalently Asian American screen women in the jazz age 152 Wong s character in Shanghai Express was the subject of John Yau s 1989 poem No One Ever Tried to Kiss Anna May Wong which interprets the actress career as a series of tragic romances 153 Sally Wen Mao wrote a book called Oculus published in 2019 with a series of persona poems in the voice of Anna May Wong In David Cronenberg s 1993 film version of David Henry Hwang s 1986 play M Butterfly Wong s image was used briefly as a symbol of a tragic diva 154 Her life was the subject of China Doll The Imagined Life of an American Actress an award winning 155 fictional play written by Elizabeth Wong in 1995 156 In 1995 film historian Stephen Bourne curated a retrospective of Wong s films called A Touch of Class for BFI Southbank As the centennial of Wong s birth approached a re examination of her life and career took shape three major works on the actress appeared and comprehensive retrospectives of her films were held at both the Museum of Modern Art and the American Museum of the Moving Image in New York City 67 157 Anthony Chan s 2003 biography Perpetually Cool The Many Lives of Anna May Wong 1905 1961 was the first major work on Wong and was written Chan says from a uniquely Asian American perspective and sensibility 158 In 2004 Philip Leibfried and Chei Mi Lane s exhaustive examination of Wong s career Anna May Wong A Complete Guide to Her Film Stage Radio and Television Work was published as well as a second full length biography Anna May Wong From Laundryman s Daughter to Hollywood Legend by Graham Russell Hodges Though Anna May Wong s life career and legacy reflect many complex issues which remain decades after her death Anthony Chan points out that her place in Asian American cinematic history as its first female star is permanent 159 An illustrated biography for children Shining Star The Anna May Wong Story was published in 2009 160 In 2016 the novelist Peter Ho Davies published The Fortunes a saga of Chinese American experiences centered around four characters one of whom is a fictionalized Anna May Wong imagined from childhood until her death In a conversation published in the 2017 paperback edition Davies described his novel as an exploration of the Chinese American quest for authenticity a third way of being Chinese American with Anna May Wong representing an iconic example of that struggle 161 On January 22 2020 a Google Doodle celebrated Wong commemorating the 97th anniversary of the day The Toll of the Sea went into general release 162 163 In 2020 actress Michelle Krusiec played Wong in Ryan Murphy s Netflix drama series Hollywood The limited series tells an alternate history of Hollywood in the 1940s 164 Also in 2020 her life story was told as part of PBS s documentary Asian Americans 165 In 2021 the United States Mint announced that Wong would be among the first women depicted on the reverse of the quarter coin as a part of the American Women quarters series 3 When the quarters with her depicted on them went into circulation in 2022 Wong became the first Asian American depicted on American coinage 166 167 Li Jun Li has been cast in Damien Chazelle s upcoming film Babylon playing a role inspired by Wong 168 A biopic from Working Title Films is in development with British actress Gemma Chan set to portray Wong 169 Partial filmography EditMain article Anna May Wong on film and television The Toll of the Sea rescue Still from the American silent drama film Drifting 1923 with Anna May Wong The Red Lantern 1919 debut uncredited Bits of Life 1921 The Toll of the Sea 1922 as Lotus Flower The Thief of Bagdad 1924 as a Mongol Slave Peter Pan 1924 as Tiger Lily A Trip to Chinatown 1926 as Ohati Old San Francisco 1927 as A Flower of the Orient Piccadilly 1929 as Shosho Elstree Calling 1930 as Herself The Flame of Love 1930 as Hai Tang The Road to Dishonour 1930 as Hai Tang Hai Tang 1930 as Hai Tang Daughter of the Dragon 1931 as Princess Ling Moy Shanghai Express 1932 as Hui Fei A Study in Scarlet 1933 as Mrs Pyke Limehouse Blues 1934 as Tu Tuan Daughter of Shanghai 1937 as Lan Ying Lin When Were You Born 1938 as Mei Lee Ling Dangerous to Know 1938 as Lan Ying King of Chinatown 1939 as Dr Mary Ling Island of Lost Men 1939 as Kim Ling Bombs Over Burma 1942 as Lin Ying Lady from Chungking 1942 as Kwan Mei Impact 1949 as Su Lin Portrait in Black 1960 as TawnySee also EditAnna May Wong In Her Own Words Nancy Kwan the next famed Chinese American Hollywood actress from the mid 20th century Portrayal of East Asians in Hollywood Racism in early American film Tsuru Aoki Japanese American silent film actress married to Sessue Hayakawa Stereotypes of East and Southeast Asians in American media James Wong Howe Nellie Yu Roung Ling first modern dancer of China and fashion designer of Chinese American descentReferences EditCitations Edit Chan 2003 p xi Gan 1995 p 83 a b American Women Quarters Program United States Mint August 2 2021 Retrieved August 19 2021 Wong Brittany March 12 2019 8 Badass Asian Americans We Can t Overlook This Woman s History Month HuffPost Retrieved April 22 2021 Zia 1995 p 415 See Hodges Graham Russell Anna May Wong From Laundryman s Daughter to Hollywood Legend New York Palgrave Macmillan 2004 44 60 67 148 See the Production Code of the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America Inc 1930 1934 II Item 6 No mention is made of miscegenation between whites and any race other than Black Americans Lim Shirley Jennifer Anna May Wong Performing the Modern PA Temple University Press 2019 Hodges Graham Russell Anna May Wong From Laundryman s Daughter to Hollywood Legend New York Palgrave Macmillan 2004 44 60 67 148 154 Lim Shirley J After Hollywood thwarted Anna May Wong the actress took matters into her own hands The Conversation UCLA Today 2008 Hodges 2012 pp 1 5 Corliss January 29 2005 p 2 Finch and Rosenkrantz 1979 p 231 a b Hodges 2012 p 1 Hodges 2012 p 6 Chan 2003 p 13 Hodges 2012 pp 1 7 8 10 Hodges 2012 p 5 Hodges 2012 pp 13 14 Hodges 2012 p 21 a b Wollstein 1999 p 248 Chan 2003 p 31 Hodges 2004 pp 26 27 Chan 2003 pp 145 146 Hodges 2004 p 225 Lim 2005 p 51 Hodges 2004 p 41 a b Wollstein 1999 p 249 Gan 1995 p 84 Hodges 2004 p 35 Jacqui Palumbo Groundbreaking movie star Anna May Wong to be first Asian American featured on US currency CNN Retrieved October 19 2022 The Toll of the Sea film review December 1 1922 The Toll of the Sea film review November 27 1922 Anderson Melissa March 2 8 2006 The Wong Show TimeOut New York No 544 Retrieved March 14 2008 Parish 1976 pp 532 533 Hodges 2004 p 58 Hodges 2004 p 49 Vierra Mark A 2003 Hollywood Horror From Gothic to Cosmic p 14 ISBN 978 0810945357 Chan 2003 pp 37 139 Chan 2003 pp 37 38 Leong 2005 pp 181 182 Hodges 2004 p 64 Claire Love Jen Pollack Alison Landsberg 2017 Silent Film Actresses and Their Most Popular Characters National Women s History Museum Hodges 2004 pp 45 46 Bergfelder 2004 pp 61 62 Forty Winks film review February 3 1925 Wollstein 1999 p 250 a b c d Sweet 2008 Hodges 2004 p 66 Chan 2003 p 185 Liu 2000 p 24 Rohter Larry 2010 The Crimson City 1928 Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Archived from the original on May 10 2010 Chan 2003 p 42 a b Leong 2005 pp 83 187 a b c Wollstein 1999 p 252 Parish 1976 p 533 Song film review August 22 1928 Parish 1976 p 534 Wollstein 1999 pp 252 253 256 Hodges 2004 p 87 Hodges 2004 p 97 Motion 1986 p 161 Hodges 2004 p 92 Piccadilly film review July 24 1929 Chan 2003 pp xiii 213 215 219 a b Hsu 2004 Corliss January 29 2005 pp 1 3 Hodges 2004 p 178 Chan 2003 pp 51 53 Lim 2005 p 56 Hodges 2004 p 187 Lim 2005 p 57 Hodges 2004 p 112 a b c Chan 2003 p 90 a b Hodges 2004 p 155 Hodges 2004 p 148 a b c Wollstein 1999 p 253 Lim 2005 p 59 Corliss February 3 2005 p 4 Hodges 2004 p 118 Chan 2003 pp 95 96 Lim 2005 p 58 Chan 2003 p 232 Lim 2005 p 60 Leong 2005 p 74 Leong 2005 p 75 Mein Film 1932 p 333 Cited in Hodges 2004 p 125 Chan 2003 p 33 Hodges 2004 p 128 Hodges 2004 pp 127 128 a b c Gan 1995 p 89 Hodges 2004 pp 144 217 Hodges 2004 pp 150 155 Leong 2005 pp 75 94 Hodges 2004 pp 150 151 a b Hodges 2004 p 152 Hodges 2004 p 151 Leong 2005 p 76 Chan 2003 p 261 Berry 2000 p 111 a b c d e Parish 1976 p 536 a b Liu 2000 p 29 Liu 2000 pp 28 29 Chan 2003 p 97 Hodges 2004 pp 159 160 Chan 2003 p 99 Hodges 2004 p 134 Hodges 2004 pp 165 167 Chan 2003 pp 122 123 Hodges 2004 p 168 a b Chan 2003 p 280 Lim 2005 pp 47 63 67 Leong 2005 p 94 Lim 2005 p 66 Librarian of Congress Adds Home Movie Silent Films and Hollywood Classics to Film Preservation List Press release Library of Congress December 27 2006 Leung Louise June 1938 East Meets West Hollywood Magazine pp 40 55 Quoted in Leong 2005 p 94 Crisler 1937 Hodges 2004 p 180 Wollstein 1999 p 256 Crowther 1938 Lim 2005 p 47 Nugent 1939 Hodges 2004 p 191 The Campbell Playhouse Internet Archive Retrieved July 30 2018 a b c Corliss January 29 2005 p 1 Leong 2005 p 95 Hodges 2004 p 203 Oriental stardust Anna May Wong in White Australia Anna May Wong s Lucky Shoes 1939 Australia through the eyes of an Art Deco Diva Anthony Sharon ed 1989 Camp Haan Papers Collection Riverside Public Library a b Leong 2005 p 101 Motion Picture and Television Magazine Ideal Publishers November 1952 p 33 Finch and Rosenkrantz 1979 p 156 Parish 1976 p 538 Wollstein 1999 pp 257 258 a b Chan 2003 p 78 Camhi 2004 Chan 2003 p 80 Hodges 2004 pp 216 217 Hodges 2004 pp 217 218 Chan 2003 p 124 Chan 2003 pp 81 268 Chung 2006 p 26 a b Who is Anna May Wong the first Asian American on U S currency The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved October 19 2022 Negra 2001 p 1 Chan 2003 pp 80 81 Lim 2005 pp 49 51 a b Hodges 2004 p 232 Hodges 2004 pp 231 232 Chan 2003 p 276 Liu 2000 p 35 Liu 2000 pp 31 33 Liu 2000 pp 34 35 ACTF The David Mark Cohen National Playwriting Award Archived from the original on May 12 2008 Retrieved May 12 2008 Kennedy Center Retrieved March 8 2010 UCSB Special Collections California Ethnic and Multicultural Archives Library ucsb edu Archived from the original on June 18 2010 Retrieved June 18 2010 Performing Race on Screen Chan 2003 p xvii Chan 2003 p 275 Yoo Paula July 2008 Shining Star The Anna May Wong Story Publishers Weekly Vol 255 illustrated by Lin Wang p 125 Retrieved October 26 2018 Davies Peter Ho 2017 The Fortunes A Novel Boston Houghton Mifflin Harcourt First Marine Books Edition pp 103 175 272 ISBN 978 1328745484 Celebrating Anna May Wong January 22 2020 Retrieved January 22 2020 Holcombe Madeline January 22 2020 Google Doodle celebrates Anna May Wong nearly 100 years after her first leading role Here s why she s in focus CNN Soloski Alexis May 1 2020 Hollywood Offers Alternate History and Glimpses of a Real One The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 2 2020 Lopez Kristen May 12 2020 Asian Americans PBS Documentary Compels Viewers to Honor and Remember Indiewire com Retrieved May 19 2020 SF To Celebrate First Asian American on U S Money Get This Landmark Coin Next Week The San Francisco Standard November 4 2022 United States Mint to Begin Shipping Fifth American Women Quarters Program Coins October 24 United States Mint First Look Brad Pitt and Margot Robbie Promise to Light Up Babylon Vanity Fair September 7 2022 Retrieved September 7 2022 Sun Rebecca March 24 2022 Gemma Chan Nina Yang Bongiovi Developing Anna May Wong Biopic With Working Title Films Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved July 13 2022 Cited sources Edit Bergfelder Tim 2004 Negotiating Exoticism Hollywood Film Europe and the cultural reception of Anna May Wong In Fischer Lucy Landy Marcia eds Stars The Film Reader Psychology Press pp 59 75 ISBN 0 415 27892 9 Berry Sarah 2000 Screen Style Fashion and Femininity in 1930s Hollywood Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press ISBN 0 8166 3312 6 Camhi Leslie January 11 2004 Film A Dragon Lady and a Quiet Cultural Warrior The New York Times Chan Anthony B 2003 Perpetually Cool The Many Lives of Anna May Wong 1905 1961 Lanham MD The Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 4789 2 Chung Hye seung 2006 Hollywood Asian Philip Ahn and the Politics of Cross ethnic Performance Philadelphia Temple University Press ISBN 1 59213 516 1 Corliss Richard January 29 2005 Anna May Wong Did It Right Time Archived from the original on February 18 2005 Retrieved August 11 2010 Corliss Richard February 3 2005 That Old Feeling Anna May Win Time Crisler B R December 24 1937 Daughter of Shanghai The New York Times Crowther Bosley March 11 1938 Dangerous to Know The New York Times Film reveals real life struggles of an onscreen Dragon Lady Today Online UCLA January 3 2008 Archived from the original on September 16 2008 Retrieved May 8 2020 Finch Christopher Rosenkrantz Linda 1979 Gone Hollywood The Movie Colony in the Golden Age Garden City NY Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 12808 7 Forty Winks The New York Times March 3 1925 Gan Geraldine 1995 Anna May Wong Lives of Notable Asian Americans Arts Entertainment Sports New York Chelsea House pp 83 91 ISBN 978 0 7910 2188 0 Hodges Graham Russell Gao 2012 2004 Anna May Wong From Laundryman s Daughter to Hollywood Legend 2nd ed Hong Kong Hong Kong University Press HKU ISBN 978 9882208902 OCLC 797815107 Hsu Shirley January 23 2004 Nobody s Lotus Flower Rediscovering Anna May Wong Film Retrospective Asia Pacific Arts Online Magazine UCLA Asia Institute Retrieved May 29 2016 Leibfried Philip Lane Chei Mi 2004 Anna May Wong A Complete Guide to her Film Stage Radio and Television Work Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 0 7864 1633 5 Leong Karen J 2005 The China Mystique Pearl S Buck Anna May Wong Mayling Soong and the Transformation of American Orientalism Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 24422 2 Lim Shirley Jennifer 2005 I Protest Anna May Wong and the Performance of Modernity A Feeling of Belonging Asian American Women s Public Culture 1930 1960 New York New York University Press pp 104 175 ISBN 0 8147 5193 8 Liu Cynthia W 2000 When Dragon Ladies Die Do They Come Back as Butterflies Re imagining Anna May Wong In Hamamoto Darrel Liu Sandra eds Countervisions Asian American Film Criticism Philadelphia Temple University Press pp 23 39 ISBN 1 56639 776 6 Motion Andrew 1986 The Lamberts George Constant and Kit New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 0 374 18283 3 Negra Diane 2001 Off White Hollywood American Culture and Ethnic Female Stardom London Routledge ISBN 0 415 21678 8 Nugent Frank March 16 1939 King of Chinatown The New York Times Parish James Leonard William 1976 Anna May Wong Hollywood Players The Thirties New Rochelle NY Arlington House Publishers pp 532 538 ISBN 0 87000 365 8 Performing Race on Screen cinema cornell edu Archived from the original on January 3 2009 Retrieved May 8 2020 Piccadilly Variety July 24 1929 Rollins Peter C ed 2003 The Columbia Companion to American History on Film How the Movies Have Portrayed the American Past New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 11223 8 Song The New York Times August 22 1928 Sweet Matthew February 6 2008 Snakes Slaves and Seduction Anna May Wong The Guardian The Toll of the Sea The New York Times November 27 1922 The Toll of the Sea Variety December 1 1922 Wang Yiman Russell Catherine eds 2005 The Art of Screen Passing Anna May Wong s Yellow Yellowface Performance in the Art Deco Era Camera Obscura 60 New Women of the Silent Screen China Japan Hollywood Durham NC Duke University Press pp 159 191 ISBN 0 8223 6624 X Wollstein Hans J 1999 Anna May Wong Vixens Floozies and Molls 28 Actresses of late 1920s and 1930s Hollywood Jefferson NC McFarland ISBN 0 7864 0565 1 Wong Elizabeth 2005 China Doll The Imagined Life of an American Actress Woodstock IL Dramatic Publishing ISBN 1 58342 315 X Wood Ean 2000 The Josephine Baker Story London Sanctuary ISBN 1 86074 286 6 Zia Helen Gall Susan B 1995 Notable Asian Americans New York Gale Research ISBN 978 0 8103 9623 4 Further reading EditDoerr Conrad December 1968 Reminiscences of Anna May Wong Films in Review New York National Board of Review of Motion Pictures ISSN 0015 1688 Griffith Richard Mayer Richard 1970 The Movies New York Fireside ISBN 0 600 36044 X Schneider Steven Jay ed 2005 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die Educational Series 2nd ed Hauppauge NY Barron s ISBN 978 0764159077 Sparks Beverley N Where East Meets West Photoplay June 1924 p 55 Wagner Rob Leicester 2016 Hollywood Bohemia The Roots of Progressive Politics in Rob Wagner s Script Santa Maria CA Janaway Publishing ISBN 978 1596413696 Winship Mary The China Doll Photoplay June 1923 p 34 Lim Shirley Jennifer 2019 Anna May Wong Performing the Modern Philadelphia Temple University Press EANs 978 1 4399 1833 3 978 1 4399 1834 0 978 1 4399 1835 7 1 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anna May Wong Wikiquote has quotations related to Anna May Wong The Anna May Wong Society Archived from the original on March 27 2012 Retrieved June 29 2013 Anna May Wong at IMDb Anna May Wong at the Internet Broadway Database Anna May Wong Documentary Home Archived from the original on March 22 2008 Retrieved March 22 2008 Hong Yunah 2011 Anna May Wong In Her Own Words Women Make Movies Retrieved January 22 2020 Anna May Wong Tobacco Cards Virtual History Retrieved September 15 2010 Rediscovering Los Angeles Sam Kee Laundry L A Daily Mirror December 3 2013 Retrieved May 17 2017 Newspaper article and sketch on Anna s childhood home Canton Naomi December 14 2015 Anna May Wong Arts and Learning Asia House Retrieved August 25 2019 Portals Biography Los Angeles ChinaAnna May Wong at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Anna May Wong Temple University Press Shirley J Lim Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anna May Wong amp oldid 1131539659, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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