海角大神

海角大神 / Text

With the return of 鈥楳ulan,鈥 a look at Asian actors who paved the way

With the return of 鈥楳ulan,鈥 a film critic surveys the work of actors who have contributed to this moment of progress for Asian women in Hollywood.

By Peter Rainer , Special correspondent

Many years ago I attended a festival of Chinese films from the 1930s and 1940s and I remember being taken aback by how the women in many of those films were unstereotypically portrayed. There were few China Dollsor Dragon Ladies. Just real women living out their lives in the real world. Hollywood movies had accustomed me to an entirely different template, and I felt abashed by my naivet茅.

The imminent arrival next week of the live-action 鈥淢ulan鈥 on the Disney Plus channel has reminded me of how I felt back then. The situation for Asian women in Hollywood movies is still very much a work in progress 鈥 not nearly enough featured roles 鈥 but having a swashbuckling hero (played by Liu Yifei) at the center of a blockbuster movie has to be a leap in the right direction.

The impending appearance of 鈥淢ulan鈥 also prompted me to recall some Asian actors whose work may have directly or indirectly helped set the stage for this moment.

Anna May Wong

Anna May Wong grew up in Los Angeles and began her career in the silent movie era. She was the first Asian woman to be a Hollywood star and became also something of a fashion icon. Typecast as an exotic vamp for much of her career, she railed against the system, at one point saying, 鈥淲hy is it that the screen Chinese is nearly always the villain? And so crude a villain 鈥 murderous, treacherous, a snake in the grass. We are not like that.鈥澨

Hollywood did not know how to cast her, and for a time in the late 1920s, she decamped to Europe. She worked mostly in England, where she had great artistic success in such films as 鈥淧iccadilly鈥 (1929), playing a scullery maid who becomes a nightclub dancer, and where she acted on stage with a young Laurence Olivier. Her most famous role is in the classic 1932 melodrama 鈥淪hanghai Express,鈥 where she plays a shady lady and at times manages to upstage even her co-star Marlene Dietrich. Even in her most confining roles, playing Fu Manchu鈥檚 daughter and the like, Wong had the most extraordinary rapport with the camera. Few actors possessed such an intuitive naturalism. One can only imagine what she might have accomplished had she been cast as O-Lan in 鈥淭he Good Earth鈥 (1937), the role she most coveted, which instead went to a white actor, Luise Rainer.听

Michelle Yeoh

Before she broke through internationally in the 1997 James Bond picture 鈥淭omorrow Never Dies,鈥 Michelle Yeoh was already a major Hong Kong martial arts movie star. Unlike many of her action cohorts, she is equally adept at drama. Yeoh is the soulful center of Ang Lee鈥檚 鈥淐rouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon鈥 (2000), where her rueful, unacknowledged love for the warrior played by Chow Yun-Fat is as powerful as any of her high-flying, wall-climbing stunts. In the gold-plated rom com 鈥淐razy Rich Asians鈥 (2018), playing a steel-willed matriarch, she cut through the suds with blow torch force.听

Gong Li

Few actors have Gong Li鈥檚 astonishing range. In Zhang Yimou鈥檚 鈥淩aise the Red Lantern鈥 (1991), she plays the concubine of a warlord who slowly unravels when she comprehends the full extent of her subjugation. In 鈥淭he Story of Qui Ju鈥 (1992), also directed by Zhang, she is a poor pregnant farm woman whose confrontations with the local authorities 鈥 she demands an apology for a beating sustained by her husband 鈥 are magnificent arias of outrage.听Watch for her appearance in the new 鈥淢ulan.鈥澨

Joan Chen

Best known for her quicksilver performance as the opium-addicted wife of John Lone鈥檚 Pu Yi in Bernardo Bertolucci鈥檚 鈥淭he Last Emperor鈥 (1987), Chen also distinguished herself as the director of 1998鈥檚 heartbreaking 鈥淴iu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl,鈥 in which she does not appear as an actor. Set during the Cultural Revolution, it鈥檚 about an educated city girl who is exiled to the rural provinces and set upon by听the men there. Needless to say, the film, shot mostly in Tibet, was banned in China.听The movie鈥檚 uncompromising force is all of a piece with Chen鈥檚 best performances.听

Peter Rainer is the Monitor鈥檚 film critic.听