The Star Malaysia - Star2

Will James Hong get a star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame?

- By TERRY TANG

JAMES Hong is learning to do his first Zoom video chat at the spry age of 91. The actor, who has witnessed his industry continuous­ly evolve with technology, is finding it “mind-boggling”.

“What is this Zoom thing anyway?” Hong said from his Los Angeles home, where he’s been hunkering down with his wife. “If I live another five years, what are we going to be doing? Talking through our fingernail­s?”

That sarcastic sense of humour is one of many reasons Hong has remained such an appealing presence on screen for nearly 70 years.

In the upcoming film, Everything Everywhere All At Once, he plays father to Michelle Yeoh.

The longtime character actor is now in the spotlight after actor Daniel Dae Kim launched a campaign on Aug 5 to get Hong a star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame.

The nomination process isn’t until June but Kim wanted to secure the required US$50,000 (RM205,000) price tag to create and install a star.

While most celebritie­s have a studio or record label helping to cover costs, Hong does not.

It took all of three days for 1,700 people to donate US$55,000 to #StarforJam­esHong.

“I thought maybe I should help him raise the money somehow,” Hong said. “But he said ‘We’ve fulfilled it.’ Even my nephew and niece didn’t get a chance to put in any money.”

Hong didn’t know about the campaign beforehand and was more shocked by the donations than anyone. It was especially meaningful during an economy decimated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

“It’s hard to scrape up US$10, US$25 or US$50 let alone a thousand or five thousand,” Hong said. “I owe my public a lot and I don’t know exactly how to thank them.”

Kim and Hong met when they guest-starred in the same episode of Charmed in 2001.

In his GoFundMe pitch, Kim said Hong “epitomises the term ‘working actor,’ and that’s not even taking into account all he’s done to help further representa­tion for actors of colour.

Arthur Dong, author of Hollywood Chinese and a longtime friend, said it’s no surprise these younger Asian American actors revere him.

Hong stuck to his ambition in an era when roles available to Asian actors were mostly tropes and stereotype­s – a fact the actor acknowledg­es. What counted is that he worked to change things, Dong said.

“He’s not a victim. He works to conquer the problem and push for progress,” Dong said. “The fact that he survived it is incredible. I think that’s where the younger generation­s of actors find respect for him.”

Specifical­ly, Hong and eight other Asian American actors fed up with being offered “cliche roles” formed their own acting troupe in 1964.

“I was doing all these little Chinese kids being rescued by the white guys... and railroad workers. I was very frustrated,” he recalled.

“When do I get to be James Hong with a main role?”

That acting group developed into Los Angeles-based East West Players, which is today arguably the most reputable Asian American theatre company in the country.

The Hollywood landscape Hong is working in today is vastly different for Asian Americans.

Actors aren’t just saying no to cliche characters, but some, like Kim, have formed their own production companies to tell the stories they want to tell, Hong said.

There are also a lot more Asian American arts organisati­ons amplifying the voices of talented actors, writers and filmmakers.

“If I live another 10 years, it will be a whole different picture because all those talents are just starting to come forward,” Hong said.

If Hong were to join the Walk Of Fame’s galaxy of nearly 2,700 stars, he’d be one of very few Asian American actors.

Last year, Lucy Liu became only the second Asian American woman, after Anna May Wong, to receive a star.

Hong can’t help but be a little cynical. A couple of people tried to nominate him before but he was rejected.

“It’s like that Wayne’s World movie I made: Am I worthy?” Whether or not Kim’s campaign succeeds, the deluge of donations and fan support still feels like plenty of validation.

“They have told me that what I’m doing is worthwhile,” Hong said. “I knew that before anyway but now there’s hope, there’s a pat on the back.” – AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia