COINING A FIRST. Chinese-American actor Anna May Wong, whose first
film appearance was Chinese Parrot in 1922, is seen in this
undated photo. More than 60 years after her death, Wong is the first
Asian American to grace U.S. currency. The U.S. Mint began shipping new
quarters with her likeness in October. (AP Photo)
More than 60 years after Anna May Wong became the first
Asian-American woman to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame,
the pioneering actor has coined another first, quite literally. (Image
courtesy of the U.S. Mint)
With quarters bearing her face and manicured hand that
began shipping in October, actor Anna May Wong is the first Asian
American to grace U.S. Currency, according to the U.S. Mint. (Image
courtesy of the U.S. Mint)
From The Asian Reporter, V32, #11 (November 7, 2022), page 7.
"Momentous": Asian-Americans laud Anna May Wong’s
U.S. quarter
By Terry Tang
The Associated Press
More than 60 years after Anna May Wong became the first
Asian-American woman to receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame,
the pioneering actor has coined another first, quite literally.
With quarters bearing her face and manicured hand that began shipping
in October, Wong is the first Asian American to grace U.S. Currency,
according to the U.S. Mint. Few could have been more stunned at the
honor than her niece and namesake, Anna Wong, who learned about the
American Women Quarters honor from the Mint’s head legal consul.
"From there, it went into the designs and there were so many talented
artists with many different renditions. I actually pulled out a quarter
to look at the size to try and imagine how the images would transfer
over to real life," Anna Wong wrote in an e-mail to The Associated
Press.
The elder Wong, who fought against stereotypes foisted on her by a
white Hollywood, is one of five women being honored this year as part of
the program. She was chosen for being "a courageous advocate who
championed for increased representation and more multi-dimensional roles
for Asian-American actors," Mint director Ventris Gibson said in a
statement.
The other icons chosen include writer Maya Angelou; Dr. Sally Ride,
an educator and the first American woman in space; Wilma Mankiller, the
first female elected principal chief of the Cherokee Nation; and Nina
Otero-Warren, a trailblazer for New Mexico’s suffrage movement.
Wong’s achievement has excited Asian Americans inside and outside of
the entertainment industry.
Her niece, whose father was Anna May Wong’s brother, participated in
an event with the Mint at Paramount Studios in Los Angeles. The event
featured the screening of one of Wong’s movies, Shanghai Express,
and a panel discussion.
Arthur Dong, the author of Hollywood Chinese, said the quarter
feels like a validation of not just Wong’s contributions, but of all
Asian Americans’. A star on the Walk of Fame is huge, but being on U.S.
currency is a whole other stratosphere of renown.
"What it means is that people all across the nation — and my guess is
around the world — will see her face and see her name," Dong said. "If
they don’t know anything about her, they will ... be curious and want to
learn something about her."
Born in Los Angeles in 1905, Wong started acting during the silent
film era. While her career trajectory coincided with Hollywood’s first
Golden Age, things were not so golden for Wong.
She got her first big role in 1922 in The Toll of the Sea,
according to Dong’s book. Two years later, she played a Mongol slave in
The Thief of Bagdad. For several years, she was stuck receiving
offers only for femme fatale or Asian "dragon lady" roles.
She fled to European film sets and stages, but Wong was back in the
U.S. by the early 1930s and again cast as characters reliant on tropes
that would hardly be tolerated today. These roles included the
untrustworthy daughter of Fu Manchu in Daughter of the Dragon and
a sex worker in Shanghai Express.
She famously lost out on the lead to white actor Luise Rainer in
1937’s The Good Earth, based on the novel about a Chinese farming
family. But in 1938, she got to play a more humanized, sympathetic
Chinese-American doctor in King of Chinatown.
The juxtaposition of that film with her other roles is the focus of
one day in a monthlong program, Hollywood Chinese: The First 100
Years, that Dong is curating at the Academy Museum of Motion
Pictures in Los Angeles in November.
"(King of Chinatown) was part of this multi-picture deal at
Paramount that gave her more control, more say in the types of films she
was going to be participating in," he said. "For a Chinese-American
woman to have that kind of multi-picture deal at Paramount, that was
quite outstanding."
By the 1950s, Wong had moved on to television appearances. She was
supposed to return to the big screen in the movie adaptation of Rodgers
and Hammerstein’s Flower Drum Song but had to bow out because of
illness. She died on February 2, 1961, a year after receiving her star.
Bing Chen, co-founder of the nonprofit Gold House — focused on
elevating representation and empowerment of Asian and Asian-American
content — called the new quarter "momentous." He praised Wong as a star
"for generations."
But at the same time, he highlighted how anti-Asian hate incidents
and the lack of representation in media still persist.
"In a slate of years when Asian women have faced extensive challenges
— from being attacked to objectified on screen to being the least likely
group to be promoted to corporate management — this currency reinforces
what many of us have known all along: (they’re) here and worthy," Chen
said in a statement. "It’s impossible to forget, though, as a hyphenated
community, that Asian Americans constantly struggle between being
successful and being seen."
Asian-American advocacy groups outside of the entertainment world
also praised the new quarters. Norman Chen, CEO of The Asian American
Foundation, plans to seek the coins out to show to his parents.
"For them to see an Asian-American woman on a coin, I think it’d be
really powerful for them. It’s a dramatic symbol of how we are so
integral to American society yet still seen in stereotypical ways," he
said. "But my parents will look at this. They will be pleasantly
surprised and proud."
To sum it up, Chen said, it’s a huge step: "Nothing is more American
than our money."
Terry Tang is a member of The Associated Press’ Race and Ethnicity
team.
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