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8[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/8f455aa179705792c591d4034d3fca70.jpg]]
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10->''"[Anna May Wong] built up a level of stardom but Hollywood didn't know what to do with her."''
11-->-- '''David Schwartz'''
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13Anna May Wong (January 3, 1905 – February 3, 1961) was an American actress, and is nowadays recognised as the first Chinese-American movie star. Born to second generation Chinese-American parents in Los Angeles with the birth name Wong Liu Tsong (黃柳霜), Anna May quickly became enamoured with the movies and worked as an extra during her teenage years. Her first starring role came at the age of seventeen in ''Film/TheTollOfTheSea'', one of the first Technicolor movies. The HollywoodHypeMachine got behind her, "She should be seen again, and often, on the big screen", and a notable supporting turn in ''Film/{{The Thief of Bagdad|1924}}'' brought her to international attention. There was, however, one problem: her race.
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15Reluctant to feature an Asian-American actress as a female lead, Hollywood instead cast Anna May in supporting roles playing stereotypical Chinese characters, often of the DragonLady type. Part of the problem was MediaNotes/TheHaysCode, which forbade any depiction of "miscegenation". She could not be shown kissing a white actor, or be cast as his wife, girlfriend, etc., even if he was [[{{Yellowface}} playing an Asian character]], and the only Asian leading man in Hollywood at the time was Sessue Hayakawa (with whom she starred in just one film, ''Daughter of the Dragon''). This led to the biggest disappointment of her career, when she was passed over for the role of O-Lan in a film adaptation of ''Literature/TheGoodEarth'', despite the newspapers hyping her up as a shoo-in for the part, because MediaNotes/TheHaysCode prevented her from being cast as the wife of the white Paul Muni, even though he was playing a Chinese character. She turned down the unsympathetic part of TheVamp Lotus, and took her career to Europe and Asia, where she was able to play the type of characters she wanted. She did return to America, playing some non-stereotypical characters in B-movies, some of which were actually written for her (''Film/DaughterOfShanghai'' for instance). Her health worsened in later years and she died of a heart attack just before she was to star in the film adaptation of ''Theatre/FlowerDrumSong''.
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17Although she didn't have the career that was predicted in her youth, Anna May Wong is recognised today as a pioneer in terms of the way Asian-Americans were represented on the big screen. During a period where Asian-Americans were viewed as perpetually foreign by American society, Anna May's public image showed her as a hybrid between two cultures that society painted as impossibly different. In life, she was also a fashion icon, getting voted "World's Best Dressed Woman" by the Mayfair Mannequin Society of New York in 1934. She was also awarded an honorary doctorate by Peking University in 1932 -- the first time it had ever been given to an actor.
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19She's depicted as one the "Four Ladies of Hollywood" on a 30-foot sculpture designed by Creator/CatherineHardwicke at the western end of the Hollywood Walk of Fame, along with Creator/DorothyDandridge, Creator/DoloresDelRio and Creator/MaeWest. In 2021, the US government announced that she would be honored by having her face used as part of the American Women Quarters program, making her the first person of Asian descent to appear on American currency.
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21----
22!!In popular culture:
23* Her career was the subject of an Off-Broadway play ''China Doll'' by Elizabeth Wong (no relation).
24* She is featured as a protagonist in the novel ''Delayed Rays of a Star'' (alongside Creator/MarleneDietrich and Creator/LeniRiefenstahl).
25* She is portrayed by actress Creator/DoanLy in the 2013 documentary ''In Her Own Words'' (in which scenes from her life are recreated using a different actress).
26* She features as a recurring character in the miniseries ''Series/{{Hollywood|2020}}'', played by Creator/MichelleKrusiec.
27* In a 1980 episode ("Take Away") of the British TV series, ''Series/TheProfessionals'', a jerkass calls a visiting Hong Kong policewoman "Anna May Wong".
28----
29!!Selected filmography:
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31* ''Film/TheTollOfTheSea'' (1922) – Lotus Flower
32* ''Film/{{The Thief of Bagdad|1924}}'' – Mongol Slave (her first DragonLady role)
33* ''Film/{{Peter Pan|1924}}'' – Tiger Lily
34* ''A Trip To Chinatown'' (1926) – Ohati
35* ''Film/MrWu'' (1927) – Loo Song
36* ''Film/AcrossToSingapore'' (1928) – bar girl, NoNameGiven
37* ''Film/{{Piccadilly}}'' (1929) – Shosho
38* ''The Flame of Love'' (1931) – Hai Tang
39* ''Film/DaughterOfTheDragon'' (1931) – Princess Ling Moy (her final DragonLady role)
40* ''Film/ShanghaiExpress'' (1932) – Hui Fei
41* ''Film/AStudyInScarlet'' (1933) – Mrs. Pyke
42* ''Limehouse Blues'' (1934) – Tu Tuan
43* ''Film/JavaHead'' (1934) – Princess Taou Yen (only film in which she got to kiss her white co-star)
44* ''Dangerous To Know'' (1938) – Lan Ying
45* ''Film/DaughterOfShanghai'' (1938) – Lan Ying Lin (no relation to the above character)
46* ''Film/WhenWereYouBorn'' (1938) – Mei Lei Ming
47* ''King of Chinatown'' (1939) – Dr Mary Ling
48* ''Island of Lost Men'' (1939) – Kim Ling
49* ''Bombs Over Burma'' (1942) – Lin Ying
50* ''Film/LadyFromChungking'' (1942) – Kwan Mei
51* ''Impact'' (1949) – Su Lin
52* ''The Gallery of Madame Liu-Tsong'' (1951, Creator/DuMont TV series) – Madame Liu-Tsong (the first television show to feature an Asian-American)
53* ''The Barbara Stanwyck Show'' (1961) – As-hing (she died two days after her appearance)
54----
55!!Tropes associated with her works:
56%%
57%% As with all Creator/ pages, trivia tropes about the creator specifically are to be posted here,
58%% not a Trivia/ page, as they technically are InUniverse in the case of the person's career.
59%% However: As with all Creator/ pages, items that could go on a specific work's trivia page go there, not here.
60%%
61* TwentiesBobHaircut: She adopted one in the 20s and embraced TheFlapper look in order to show that she was just as American as anyone else. It seemed to work and she became a fashion icon.
62* TheBigDamnKiss: ''Film/JavaHead'' allowed her a kiss with John Loder, the only time she got to do so on-screen. It was allowed because the UK's censorship laws were less strict, and the characters were married. She had filmed a kiss for ''Film/{{Piccadilly}}'' but it was cut.
63* {{Bifauxnen}}: When she hung around with Marlene Dietrich in the 20s and 30s, the two were known for going out in top hats and tuxedos. Possibly as a nod to this, a sequence in ''Film/DaughterOfShanghai'' has Anna May's character disguising herself as a man briefly.
64* TheCastShowoff: She sang in many of her films as well, and would have sung in ''Literature/FlowerDrumSong'' had she lived to star in it.
65* CharacterTics: Across her films, she had a way of angling her eyebrows to give a very striking stare.
66* ChronicallyKilledActor: A very specific example. Even when she wasn't playing a villain, her characters had a habit of killing themselves; usually with a concealed dagger.
67* ContractualObligationProject: ''The Daughter of the Dragon'' was a film she only did so she could also star in ''Film/ShanghaiExpress''. It would be the last time she played a DragonLady on the big screen.
68* CreatorBacklash:
69** ''The Daughter of the Dragon'' was the last straw for her, and she used her star power to criticize the lack of good parts for Chinese-American actors.
70--->"Why is it that the screen Chinese is always the villain? And so crude a villain –- murderous, treacherous, a snake in the grass! We are not like that. How could we be, with a civilization that is so many times older than the West?"
71** Supposedly she wasn't too fond of ''Piccadilly'', with reasons ranging from the kiss scene that was cut by the British censors to bad memories of an affair around the same time.
72* DeletedRole: Her scenes were deleted from the film ''Why Girls Love Sailors''.
73* ExecutiveMeddling: The Hays Code prevented her from playing O-Lan in ''Literature/TheGoodEarth'' because it prevented interracial romances on the big screen. This also meant that many of her romances had to be downplayed in films. ''Java Head'' was the only film to feature her kissing a white man.
74* FakeNationality:
75** She played Native Americans in ''The Alaskan'' and ''Film/PeterPan1924''.
76** Downplayed whenever she played Chinese characters who were born and raised in China (such as ''Film/ShanghaiExpress'', ''Film/JavaHead'' and ''Film/TheTollOfTheSea''). She was third-generation, born in California.
77* TheFashionista: She was often noted for the elaborate costumes she usually wore in her roles. She was voted as the World's Best Dressed Woman in 1934, and was a fashion icon for over a decade.
78* FemmeFatalons: Long nails were part of her signature look, and helped in the DragonLady roles.
79* GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff: [[invoked]] She had a substantial fanbase in the UK, and made many films there to take advantage of the less strict censorship laws. It's probably the reason why her name is BritishEnglish/CockneyRhymingSlang for "pong" (smell).
80* HairstyleInertia: The 'Anna May Wong Cut' referred to her usual style of thick bangs stopping just above her eyebrows, sometimes with tendrils framing her jawline, and the rest of the hair in a bun. It was quite rare to see her forehead, although there were several roles that did (usually period pieces).
81* InterchangeableAsianCultures:
82** Subverted with ''Film/TheTollOfTheSea'', which was an adaptation of ''Theatre/MadameButterfly'', but moved the location from Japan to China.
83** Also defied with ''Dangerous to Know''. Initially the director wanted her to use stereotypical Japanese mannerisms, despite playing a Chinese character. Anna May however used her own knowledge of Chinese style and gestures to make the character more authentic.
84** Played straight in ''Piccadilly'' though, where her character does a Thai-inspired dance, keeps a Japanese dagger on the wall and has the Japanese name 'Shosho'. One could hand wave her character as being Japanese, but newspaper articles explicitly refer to her as Chinese.
85* MagnumOpusDissonance:[[invoked]] Her favourite film was the B-movie ''Daughter of Shanghai'' -- because she got to play an ActionSurvivor who is surprisingly competent for a heroine in the 1930s.
86* MightyWhiteyAndMellowYellow:
87** She often had to date white men, because actresses in China were viewed as little more than prostitutes, and she was looked down on by Asian men.
88** She starred in a few films with this subject matter -- ''Piccadilly'', ''Film/TheTollOfTheSea'' and ''Film/JavaHead'' (the only film in which she got to kiss her white co-star).
89** The film ''Limehouse Blues'' has a {{Gender Flip}}ped plot where it's a wealthy Eurasian crime lord trying to provide for a working class Cockney girl -- and Anna May's character advises him that it's not likely to work out.
90* MissingEpisode: [[invoked]] Her films ''Bits of Life'', ''The Fortieth Door'', and ''The Chinese Parrot'' are considered lost, as is the series ''The Gallery of Madame Li-Tsong''.
91* MsFanservice: Her stardom was in the Silent Era and MediaNotes/ThePreCodeEra, so she showed quite a bit of skin in her films. Many of her first roles were as {{Beautiful Slave Girl}}s. In some films -- notably ''The Flame of Love'', ''Piccadilly'', and ''Daughter of Shanghai'' -- she has scenes where she dances in sexy costumes. Ironically averted in ''Film/ShanghaiExpress'', where she's playing a prostitute, as her outfits are fairly modest.
92* MultipleLanguagesSameVoiceActor: For ''Road to Dishonour'', she also dubbed herself in the French and German language versions.
93* TheMuse: She reportedly inspired many writers. Composer Constant Lambert wrote ''Eight Poems of Li Po'' in her honor. "These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)" was inspired by her too. The lead role in ''Daughter of Shanghai'' was eventually rewritten with her in mind.
94* NonSingingVoice:[[invoked]] Her singing was dubbed for the 1934 musical ''Chu Chin Chow''.
95* PopCultureUrbanLegends:[[invoked]] A rumor is that her role was heavily reduced in ''Across to Singapore'' because she was upstaging Creator/JoanCrawford. This is likely false, as Joan had not yet achieved her stardom (her breakout role ''Our Dancing Daughters'' was released the next year).
96* PseudoRomanticFriendship: The novel ''Delayed Rays of a Star'' features her having these with Creator/MarleneDietrich and Creator/LeniRiefenstahl, which did happen in real life. (In the case of her friendship with Dietrich, it began after they starred together in ''Film/ShanghaiExpress''.) Because of Marlene's reputation, people were sure there was an affair involved, which Anna May frequently denied.
97* StarMakingRole: ''The Toll of the Sea'' made her the first leading Asian-American actress in Hollywood. Hilariously during production she said "this movie will never reach the screen."
98* {{Tuckerization}}: The titular role in ''The Gallery of Madame Liu-Tsong'' was written specifically for her; her birth name was Wong Liu Tsong.[[note]]According to the [[UsefulNotes/NameOrderConventions traditional Chinese name customs]], the family name -- in her case, Wong, usually comes first.[[/note]]
99* TypeCasting: As a DragonLady for most of her career. Sometimes as a YamatoNadeshiko too.
100* VocalEvolution: As she got her start in silent films, her California accent went unheard, but when she first appeared on the stage in London, she was mocked for it. As a result, she got vocal training at Cambridge to develop a more RP-sounding accent.
101* WhatCouldHaveBeen:
102** She founded her own production company in the 30s but it was dissolved due to disagreements with her business partner. She was hoping to adapt movies based on Chinese myths.
103** She was offered the role of Lotus in ''The Good Earth'' but refused.
104--->"If you let me play O-lan, I will be very glad. But you're asking me -– with Chinese blood -– to do the only unsympathetic role in the picture featuring an all-American cast portraying Chinese characters."
105** MGM refused to cast her in ''The Son-Daughter'', claiming she was "too Chinese", and Helen Hayes played the role in {{Yellowface}}.
106** She wanted to play the Asian blackmailer in ''Film/TheLetter'' but it went to Gale Sondergaard -- the reason for turning her down was that she was "too young" at 35. She later got to play the role in a 1956 stage adaptation, also directed by William Wyler.

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