Albany Times Union

Asian women ready for meaningful change

Many struggle to overcome long-held stereotype­s

- By Sonia Rao

Kat Ahn had taken a break from acting when a co-worker at her office job attempted to draw on her arm with a marker during a casual encounter. He responded to her anger by writing his actions off as a joke, a harmless reference to her past role in the popular “A Benihana Christmas” episode of “The Office,” in which Michael Scott reveals that he marked the arm of one of the two Asian waitresses he brought back to the holiday party so he could tell them apart.

In the show, the joke is meant to be at Michael’s expense — look at this pathetic man, newly single and so desperate for love that he would settle for a woman he can’t even identify. But it’s these throwaway bits that too often cling to the wrong people. Nearly 15 years later, Ahn recalls how quickly her excitement to appear in the beloved television series deflated after she realized she was “just there to be the joke.”

“You’re told to shut up and be grateful,” she says. “Actors have no power until they become a star.”

As a waitress from what Michael refers to as “Asian Hooters,” Ahn, who is Korean American, played a woman reduced to a punchline. Her experience mirrors the kind of roles actors of Asian descent have been offered for decades in an industry that still suffers from a dearth of opportunit­y for them.

Underrepre­sentation persists among the decisionma­kers as well — UCLA’S 2020 Hollywood Diversity Report found that 91 percent of the executives at major and mid-level studios were white, while the USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative reported that just 3.3 percent of those who directed the 1,300 most popular films released between 2007 and 2019 were of Asian descent.

The disparitie­s are worse for Asian women in particular, who have often been flattened into twodimensi­onal characters lacking agency or written as sex objects, whether stereotypi­cally submissive or cunning. Dismissing the depictions as jokes doesn’t account for how, with so few counterexa­mples, they long existed in a vacuum.

In reading about how the white man charged with murdering eight people, six of whom were Asian women, at spas in the Atlanta area blamed his “sexual addiction” and viewed the spas as a “temptation” he aimed to “eliminate,” film scholar Celine Parreñas Shimizu took note of the tragedy as “part of a long historical trajectory of locating that perverse sexuality on Asian women’s bodies.” On-screen portrayals are just a single factor lending to dehumanizi­ng perception­s of Asian women, but an undeniable one.

The Atlanta murders occurred amid a surge in anti-asian hate crimes, both extreme examples of the harm inflicted upon Asian American communitie­s. In Hollywood, it can more subtly manifest in objectifie­d portrayals like that of “A Benihana Christmas,” or the running gag on “Scrubs” about Dr. Kelso fetishizin­g Asian women. It proliferat­es through the widespread appropriat­ion of “Me so horny,” the line famously uttered by a Vietnamese sex worker in Stanley Kubrick’s “Full Metal Jacket” that men have repeated while catcalling Asian women since the film premiered in 1987.

“In Hollywood, most of the time we don’t actually feel for Asian Americans. We see them in service of others,” Shimizu says. “The stories have been told from within such a limited demographi­c.”

Just before mourning the lives lost in Atlanta, Asian and Asian American members of Hollywood celebrated the milestone achievemen­ts of their peers. Earlier this month, Chinese filmmaker Chloé Zhao became the first woman of color to be nominated for the best director Oscar, while Steven Yeun, who is Korean American, became the first Asian American to appear in the leading actor category. Joining Yeun was British actor Riz Ahmed, the category’s first-ever nominee of Pakistani descent. The progress is slow, but ongoing.

It took the box-office success of “Crazy Rich Asians” just a few years ago for Hollywood executives to greenlight more stories by and about Asian people, says actress Jamie Chung, who is Korean American. “They were like, ‘Asian people are bankable. We can make money off them.’”

After appearing in “The Real World,” Chung made her name in acting with guest roles, the earlier of which she says were often intended to be “very sexy.” She considers her recent portrayal of Ji-ah in the supernatur­al drama “Lovecraft Country” to be a turning point in her career. The series spends a full episode with the character, a South Korean nurse possessed by a kumiho, a deadly spirit. Chung was given the space to explore Ji-ah’s strained relationsh­ip with her mother and conflicted feelings for an American soldier during the Korean War. It was “liberating,” Chung says. “A lightbulb went off. If all my work made me feel this way, so valued and represente­d, I could just die happy.”

The kumiho seduces men before killing them, but the emotional depth to Ji-ah subverts on-screen stereotype­s of East and Southeast Asian women. Back in the 1980s, Asian American studies scholar and Oscar-nominated filmmaker Renee Tajimapeña studied the “dichotomy of the dragon lady and the lotus blossom,” tropes contributi­ng to the hypersexua­lization of Asian women.

“It parallels what are still the main myths and imagery of Asian Americans — the model minority or the perpetual foreigner,” Tajima-peña says. “The lotus blossom being a submissive, compliant sex object. The dragon lady being an evil, threatenin­g sex object. In both cases, the sex object.”

These lasting images are inextricab­le from Asian American history and date back to 1875, when Chinese women were effectivel­y restricted from immigratin­g to the United States because they were seen as prostitute­s and bearers of disease. The Chinese Exclusion Act was signed less than a decade later, literally writing anti-asian racism into American history. Growing prejudices continued and coincided with the emergence of cinema, Tajima-peña notes, eventually feeding into what was rendered on film.

Anna May Wong, widely considered to be the first Chinese American movie star, broke out in the 1920s with the silent film “The Toll of the Sea” and went on to appear in films like “The Thief of Baghdad” and “Daughter of the Dragon.” Though recognizab­ly talented, Wong tired of the roles she received and even worked in Europe for a time to escape the box Hollywood had trapped her in: “Why is it that the screen Chinese is nearly always the villain of the piece, and so cruel a villain - murderous, treacherou­s, a snake in the grass?” she said in a 1933 interview, according to the Los Angeles Times.

“There was always this Orientalis­t fantasy,” according to Tajima-peña, and it was only reinforced as Americans continued to fight multiple wars in Asia throughout the century.

The “Full Metal Jacket” scene might have reflected the reality of sex work during the Vietnam War, but its tone also captures “the colonial relationsh­ip, the fallout of war, the idea of these hypersexua­lized Asian women who were there to comfort and entertain the troops,” Tajimapeña says. “These images are deployed.”

The tropes are so ingrained into American culture that they even figured into shows like “Sex and the City,” which features a full story line about an Asian housekeepe­r looking to sabotage her male boss’ relationsh­ip with Samantha for her own sexual gain. One of the most memorable gags from “Austin Powers in Goldmember” involves Fook Mi and Fook Yu, Japanese twins whose names are mistaken for vulgaritie­s before they offer Austin a “top secret massage.”

Some actresses have rejected the notion that their roles play into stereotype­s. In her book “The Hypersexua­lity of Race,” Shimizu points to the Hong Kong prostitute in “The World of Suzie Wong” as an embodiment of the lotus blossom. But actress Nancy Kwan referred to the film as a “once-in-alifetime opportunit­y” in a 1993 interview with the San Francisco Chronicle and revealed she even turned down a role in “The Joy Luck Club” because its script called her 1960 film racist.

Likewise, Lucy Liu has for years pushed back against the categoriza­tion of her femme fatale-esque characters — as well as the tough Ling Woo from “Ally Mcbeal” — as dragon ladies.

 ?? Taylor Jewell / Associated Press ?? Oscar nominee Chloe Zhao poses for a portrait to promote her film “Nomadland.”
Taylor Jewell / Associated Press Oscar nominee Chloe Zhao poses for a portrait to promote her film “Nomadland.”

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