USA TODAY US Edition

‘Legend of Vietnamese cinema’ lives on in Hollywood

- Thuan Le Elston Thuan Le Elston, a USA TODAY Opinion editor, is the author of "Rendezvous at the Altar: From Vietnam to Virginia."

On the red carpet recently for the Los Angeles premiere of HBO’s new miniseries “The Sympathize­r,” she is regal in gold and black silk – glittering among Hollywood stars Robert Downey Jr. and Sandra Oh.

You’d never know that five decades ago this month, actress Kieu Chinh was “homeless among the clouds,” as she recounts in her memoir, “Kieu Chinh: An Artist in Exile,” about how she became an accidental movie star in her native Vietnam and her refugee journey as Saigon fell in 1975.

Yet, with the trauma of a survivor, here she is reliving the Vietnam War in “an espionage thriller and cross-culture satire” based on Viet Thanh Nguyen’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel.

The miniseries, also streaming Sundays on Max, features award-winning filmmaker Park Chan-wook and Downey, who just won a best supporting actor Oscar for “Oppenheime­r.”

“I am so proud of our entire production for bringing to life a Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng novel about a Vietnamese story adapted and played by a majority Vietnamese cast – especially our new young star Hoa Xuande as The Captain,” Kieu Chinh told me.

“As a period piece, you can imagine when we’re shooting some of these visually stunning scenes it was extremely emotional,” said Kieu Chinh, 86. “For me, it was like reliving the past.”

For Nguyen, the novelist who alluded to Kieu Chinh’s refugee story in “The Sympathize­r,” it’s more than appropriat­e that she appears in the TV adaptation of his best-seller.

“Kieu Chinh is a legend of Vietnamese cinema and popular culture,” he emailed me. “Vietnamese audiences adore her, and she has played prominent roles in American cinema as well, from ‘The Joy Luck Club’ to ‘Journey from the Fall.’ ”

“A legend of Vietnamese cinema and popular culture.” That’s exactly what Kieu Chinh was throughout my childhood, even after my family escaped the fall of Saigon and resettled in Phoenix in 1975. For as long as I could remember, images of her beauty and elegance made me think that she rivaled American legend Grace Kelly.

In Saigon during the war, the “Kieu Chinh TV Show” featured Hollywood celebritie­s of the USO Tour who came to help entertain service members, such as Danny Kaye, Glenn Ford and Tippi Hedren. It was Tippi Hedren, star of such films as Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds” – and mother to actress Melanie Griffith and grandmothe­r to actress Dakota Johnson – who sponsored Kieu Chinh to the United States in the late 1970s.

Then in 1977, Alan Alda wrote and starred in a “M*A*S*H” episode in which Kieu Chinh played Hawkey’s love interest, called “In Love and War.” Though “M*A*S*H” took place during the Korean War, the show premiered toward the end of the Vietnam War and was considered a commentary on how U.S. policy affected my birthplace.

Watching that episode with my parents, I understood that they were proud of Kieu Chinh and sad at the same time – for her interrupte­d career as well as for our native land.

Cinema wasn’t done with Kieu Chinh, however.

She found herself starring in “The Joy Luck Club,” which came out in 1993. Coincident­ally, I landed a role in an Oliver Stone movie that premiered the same year, “Heaven and Earth.”

It was unbelievab­le enough for me, a journalist, to have 15 minutes of dialogue in a Hollywood film. But at our movie premiere in Los Angeles, I turned around and was suddenly face to face with the movie star of my childhood – Kieu Chinh.

That night I called my mom in Phoenix to brag about meeting the Vietnamese icon, and if my dad hadn’t passed away just a couple of years before, he would have been so jealous.

Kieu Chinh and I have stayed in touch over the years. Recently, when I called to congratula­te her on “The Sympathize­r,” the icon born in 1937 was just so thrilled to have found a new generation of young fans who follow her on Facebook and Instagram. Every time she posts something, she’s excited they respond with so many likes and comments.

She’s also excited about continuing to find work in Hollywood. Her social media posts are full of her leaving yet another airport: “On The Road Again!”

“If it seems like I’ve been working non-stop, it’s because I have,” Kieu Chinh wrote me. “Since wrapping HBO & A24’s ‘The Sympathize­r’ in Thailand, I literally went directly from set to set, landing in Philadelph­ia the next day, to film Apple TV+’s ‘Sinking Spring’ by producer & director Sir Ridley Scott and creator/director Peter Craig.”

I asked what it’s like working with Robert Downey Jr., who plays multiple “Ugly American” roles in “The Sympathize­r.” Kieu Chinh replied: “I was in awe of his work all season long. I wouldn’t be surprised that the Academy Award winner will win an Emmy for this series.”

 ?? ?? Actress Kieu Chinh and Oscar winner Robert Downey Jr., star and co-executive producer of the HBO miniseries “The Sympathize­r,” at the Los Angeles premiere on April 9. The seven-episode series, the second of which airs Sunday night, also is streaming on Max.
Actress Kieu Chinh and Oscar winner Robert Downey Jr., star and co-executive producer of the HBO miniseries “The Sympathize­r,” at the Los Angeles premiere on April 9. The seven-episode series, the second of which airs Sunday night, also is streaming on Max.
 ?? VAN HOC PRESS ?? “Kieu Chinh: An Artist in Exile” published in October 2021.
VAN HOC PRESS “Kieu Chinh: An Artist in Exile” published in October 2021.
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 ?? FILMMAGIC FOR HBO ??
FILMMAGIC FOR HBO

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