Anna May Wong, Chinese American Film Star, Dealt With Racism and Stereotypes

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The actor pushed back against being cast as a “Dragon Lady” and concubine.

When Michelle Yeoh accepted the 2023 Golden Globe award for Best Actress in a motion picture musical or comedy, she could have easily been referencing the legendary Anna May Wong when she said: “this is for all the shoulders that I stand on, all who came before me who look like me.” Other award-winners have made similar kinds of statements. Think of Denzel Washington thanking Sidney Poitier; or Halle Berry showing appreciation for Dorothy Dandridge, Lena Horne, and Diahann Carroll during their respective Oscar acceptance speeches in 2002.

These small acts of generosity are reminders that the achievements of the present are connected to challenges of the past. And as the years roll by, America’s film history continues to reinterpret and appreciate the lives and careers of actors like Anna May Wong. It’s long past due to recognize her journey.

She is having quite a moment these days. The U.S. Mint has included Wong on a new quarter, which is part of a series featuring historically and culturally significant women—the first for an Asian American to appear on American currency. Mattel announced the release of a new Anna May Wong doll as part of its Barbie Inspiring Women series. And some of Wong’s personal effects—a makeup kit, cigarette case, and calling cards—are also now formally part of the collection at the National Museum of American History. It does not get more iconically American than being associated with currency, Barbie, and the Smithsonian.

Anna May Wong’s story gives us an opportunity to consider not only her successes but also her struggles. At the heart of her story is a uniquely Asian American woman’s journey.