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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Anna May Wong

Wikipedia

 
Image:Annamaywong.jpg|thumb|Anna May Wong in ?Princess Turandot?, photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1937

Anna May Wong (January 3, 1905-February 3, 1961) was the first truly notable Chinese American Hollywood actress. Born Wong Liu Tsong (黃柳霜, pinyin: Hu?ng Liǔshuāng) in Los Angeles, California, a daughter of a laundryman, she began playing bit parts as a teenager. Her first role was in the silent film, The Red Lantern (1919) with Alla Nazimova, as an uncredited extra. Her ethnicity prevented her from getting choice parts, especially romantic ones due to the Hays code anti-miscegenation rules. When MGM was casting for the The Good Earth (1937), she was passed up for the lead female role of O-lan because Paul Muni, an actor of European descent, was to play Wang Lung, O-lan's husband. Even though Muni was to be wear heavy make up to look Asian, industry regulations prevented her from playing romantic roles opposite actors of different ethnicity. Instead, the role Wong hoped for went to Luise Rainer.

Despite this discrimination, she had a number of significant film roles. Her first starring role was in The Toll of the Sea (1921). Anna May travelled throughout Europe, and was one of the leads in the British film Piccadilly (1929). Another eminent film for Wong was "Java Head" (1934), in which she starred opposite John Loder as a Chinese princess married to a 19th-century English gentleman. She has also made films in German and French. In addition, she co-starred with Marlene Dietrich in Shanghai Express (1932) and with Lana Turner in Portrait in Black, though she typically earned far less than her billing would indicate. For her work in "Shanghai Express," she received $6,000 in comparison to Dietrich's more than $78,000. She toured extensively on the stage throughout Europe and the United States, including opposite Vincent Price in Princess Turandot , a stage version of Giacomo Puccini?s opera.

Wong never married, though reportedly was a mistress of film director Marshall Neilan, among others.

In 2004-05, three biographies were released about Wong.




  • The Red Lantern (1919) uncredited

  • The Toll of the Sea (1921) as Lotus Flower

  • The Thief of Baghdad (1924)

  • Peter Pan (1924) as Tiger Lily

  • Piccadilly (1929)as Shosho

  • Shanghai Express (1932) as Hui Fei

  • A Study in Scarlet (1933)

  • Dangerous to Know (1937)

  • Daughter of Shanghai (1937)

  • Portrait In Black (1960)


Category:1905 births|Wong, Anna May
Category:1961 deaths|Wong, Anna May
Category:Chinese Americans|Wong, Anna May
Category:Cinema actors|Wong, Anna May
Category:American actors|Wong, Anna May

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Anna May Wong".


Last Modified:   2005-02-25


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