The Maui News

Bruce Lee, Anna May Wong heirs talk legacy, roles for Asians

- By TERRY TANG

Almost every working Asian actor in Hollywood can trace their path back to Bruce Lee and Anna May Wong.

The Chinese American screen legends are typically talked about the way one talks about revered ancestors. One was a martial arts icon, the other an actor who stood out during the silent film era despite playing women who were either submissive or dragon ladies. Both are credited with demonstrat­ing Asians could be more than just extras for movies about China or Chinatown.

Although Wong was born in 1905 in Los Angeles and Lee in 1940 in San Francisco, their families like to imagine they crossed paths.

“They may have. Well, they may have seen each other at like a party or something,” said Anna Wong, the elder Wong’s niece and namesake.

“My father was an actor when he was a child in Hong Kong. So, you know, he may have seen some of her films that came across,” Shannon Lee chimed in. “He loved to see Hollywood films as well when he was young.”

Lee and Wong had never met before doing a recent joint Zoom interview with The Associated Press. They discovered parallel experience­s protecting the legacy of a family member who happens to be an icon of both Hollywood and Asian America.

They have seen their relatives’ popularity ebb and flow over decades. They have grappled with bogus long-lost child claims, weird licensing requests and on-screen portrayals out of their control. But they’ve also seen how the fascinatio­n continues: There are museum exhibits, TV show projects and an American quarter tribute.

With “Everything Everywhere All at Once” poised to snag trophies at the Oscars on Sunday— particular­ly for Asian cast members Michelle Yeoh and Ke Huy Quan—both women reflected on how things have changed since the blatantly racist practices that permeated Wong and Lee’s heydays.

Lee has a “soft spot” for Yeoh because she came from kung fu cinema like her father. She’s thrilled for Yeoh’s recognitio­n, especially because for so long Hollywood used Bruce Lee to justify casting Asians only as characters there just to karate chop.

“Of course she’s doing action in the film but being recognized for her artistry and her acting and for all of that is really heartwarmi­ng for me to see,” she said. “And Ke as well who … as a young kid was very sort of stereotype­d and he was put in a box because of it.”

It’s especially phenomenal when compared with Anna May Wong’s era, according to her niece.

“Back in those days, no one had an Asian man and an Asian woman in the lead roles,” Wong said. “It’s crazy how far we’ve come. But then again, how far are we?”

While Lee was 4 when her father died, Wong never met her aunt. She knew her as “the pretty lady” in the pictures her father— Anna May Wong’s brother—kept around the house.

“When he started telling me about the pretty lady, I was wanting to realize who she was,” Wong said. “And then I became obsessed with her films and seeing all kinds of things.”

Both grew up hearing stories of how Anna May Wong and Bruce Lee fought hard against stereotype­s, yet were sometimes stuck in unwinnable situations.

After gaining fame in movies like “The Thief of Bagdad” and “Shanghai Express,” Anna May Wong suffered one of the greatest disappoint­ments of her life in 1937. She lost the lead role of a Chinese villager in “The Good Earth” to Luise Rainer, who was white. Rainer went on to win a best actress Oscar.

The younger Wong brings this up on the lecture circuit. Millennial audiences “find it completely irrational to say, ‘Okay, so let’s take a Caucasian person and make them up to look like an Asian person and … no one will notice,’ ” Wong said.

“It’s actually a good thing that today’s generation thinks that that’s crazy,” Lee added.

Even earning a lead role didn’t necessaril­y mean a big payday for Asian talent. Before Bruce Lee went to Hong Kong and made hits like “The Big Boss” and “Fist of Fury,” he was Kato in “The Green Hornet.” The TV series premiered in 1966, only lasting a season and carrying a massive pay disparity.

“When you look at the pay stubs and then they say what everyone’s getting paid, he’s like way down on the bottom,” Lee said. “Hopefully, there’s changes happening there.”

Neither actor was ever nominated for an Oscar. But the 2020 Netflix miniseries “Hollywood” depicted an alternate universe where Anna May Wong—played by Michelle Krusiec—won an Oscar. It created a nuisance for her niece and a reminder of a sad time in the actor’s life.

“After that series came out, people said, ‘Do you have her Oscar?’ ” Wong said. “I’m thinking, ‘You know that that series was fictionali­zed, right?’ ”

 ?? AP photo ?? Anna Wong, niece of the late actress Anna May Wong (left), meets with Shannon Lee, daughter of the late martial arts actor Bruce Lee, at Douglas Park in Santa Monica, Calif., on Tuesday. They both discovered parallel experience­s protecting the legacy of a family member who happens to be a Hollywood and Asian American icon.
AP photo Anna Wong, niece of the late actress Anna May Wong (left), meets with Shannon Lee, daughter of the late martial arts actor Bruce Lee, at Douglas Park in Santa Monica, Calif., on Tuesday. They both discovered parallel experience­s protecting the legacy of a family member who happens to be a Hollywood and Asian American icon.
 ?? AP photo ?? Bruce Lee, who plays Kato in “The Green Hornet,” appears on May 13, 1966 in Los Angeles (left), and Chinese-American actress Anna May Wong appears on Jan. 22, 1946.
AP photo Bruce Lee, who plays Kato in “The Green Hornet,” appears on May 13, 1966 in Los Angeles (left), and Chinese-American actress Anna May Wong appears on Jan. 22, 1946.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States