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Category: Womens History

Anna May Wong-The First Asian-American Movie Star

I felt sure that I’d see my name in electric lights before long.”
– Anna May Wong –

It’s been my mission on my blog to bring to light amazing women from the past to my readers that may have been overlooked. I have done posts on “Women of the Big Band Era Everyone Needs to Know-Part 1 & 2“, “The Women of the Canadian Heritage Minutes“, “Halifax, Nova Scotia Women Volunteers of WW2” and so many more.

Today as I open my Google landing page, I was taken by the sight of a beautiful Asian Woman in Black & White on my screen.

Anna May Wong-The First Asian-American Movie Star Google Doodle

Her name…ANNA MAY WONG and the the slideshow images (above & below) of artwork depicting Anna comes on the 97th anniversary of the general release of “The Toll of the Sea,” in which she claimed her first starring role.

Anna May Wong Toll of the Sea
Anna May Wong-The First Asian-American Movie Star Google Doodle
Anna May Wong-The First Asian-American Movie Star Google Doodle
Anna May Wong-The First Asian-American Movie Star Google Doodle
Anna May Wong-The First Asian-American Movie Star Google Doodle
Anna May Wong-The First Asian-American Movie Star Google Doodle
Anna May Wong-The First Asian-American Movie Star Google Doodle

Gosh such stunning Google Doodles!

The First Asian-American Movie Star

Anna May Wong

ABOUT ANNA MAY WONG:

Born Wong Liu Tsong; January 3, 1905 in Los Angeles to laundryman Wong Sam Sing and his wife, Lee Gon Toy.

Anna May Wong knew she wanted to be a movie star from the time she was a young girl seeing movies being shot constantly in and around Wong’s neighborhood. She began going to Nickelodeon movie theaters and quickly became obsessed with the “flickers”, missing school and using lunch money to attend the cinema. Her father was not happy with her interest in films, feeling that it interfered with her studies, but Wong decided to pursue a film career regardless. At the age of nine, she constantly begged filmmakers to give her roles, earning herself the nickname “C.C.C.” or “Curious Chinese Child”. By the age of 11, Wong had come up with her stage name of Anna May Wong, formed by joining both her English and family names. By the age of 17 she had become a movie star (Source).

A third-generation American, she managed to have a substantial acting career during a deeply racist time when the taboo against miscegenation meant that Caucasian actresses were cast as “Oriental” women in lead parts opposite Caucasian leading men.

She was also one of the few actors to successfully transition from silent to sound cinema, co-starring with Marlene Dietrich, Anthony Quinn and Douglas Fairbanks along the way. She was glamorous, talented and cosmopolitan—yet she spent most of her career typecast either as a painted doll or a scheming dragon lady (as seen below in the Look Magazine cover).

Anna May Wong on the cover of Look Magazine

She died of a massive heart attack on February 3, 1961, in Santa Monica, CA, after a long struggle against Laennec’s cirrhosis, a disease of the liver. She was 56 years old. Her fame lives on, four decades after her death. She is a part of American popular consciousness, chosen as one of the first movie stars to be featured on a postage stamp (Source).

For a more detailed BIO please read this article HERE.

Her Movie & TV Career

Anna May Wong appeared in over 50 American, English and German films in her career, making her the first global Chinese-American movie star.

Marlene Dietrich & Anna May Wong, cheeky scene from ‘The Shanghai Express‘ (1932). (video clip)

Anna May Wong in King of Chinatown (1939).

Anna May Wong in King of Chinatown (1939). Cartoon promoting the movie.

Source: IMDB

Daughter of the Dragon is a 1931 American pre-Code crime mystery film.

Daughter of the Dragon movie poster featuring Anna May Wong
DAUGHTER OF THE DRAGON, clockwise from top: Anna May Wong, Frances Dade, Bramwell Fletcher on window card, 1931

TV: The Gallery of Madame Liu-Tsong (1951).

An American television series which aired on the now defunct DuMont Television Network. It starred Anna May Wong, who played a detective in a role written specifically for her. The Gallery of Madame Liu Tsong was the first U.S. television series starring an Asian-American series lead (Source).

The Gallery of Madame Liu-Tsong Anna May Wong TV Show

Complete List of her movie & TV shows, HERE.

Photos of Anna May Wong during her Career

Vintage Photo of Anna May Wong - The First Asian American Movie Star
Vintage Photo of Anna May Wong - The First Asian American Movie Star
Vintage Photo of Anna May Wong - The First Asian American Movie Star
Vintage Photo of Anna May Wong - The First Asian American Movie Star in a stunning 1930's evening gown.
Vintage Photo of Anna May Wong - The First Asian American Movie Star in a top hat having a drink.
Anna May Wong, 1929. Photo- Dudley Glanfield. Vintage Photo of Anna May Wong - The First Asian American Movie Star
Vintage Photo of Anna May Wong - The First Asian American Movie Star in a stunning hair turban.

Why is Anna important?

The artist who depicted her for Google, Sophie Diao, said that she wished she knew of Wong when she was a child looking for Chinese American role models in Hollywood.”Asian American actors are underrepresented even now, so amazingly Anna May Wong was so active right at the beginning of film history, bridging the gap between silent films and talkies,” Diao said.That conversation about under representation has continued into modern Hollywood.

In 2017, the social media campaign #ExpressiveAsians was launched from sociologist Nancy Wang Yuen’s book “Reel Inequality: Hollywood Actors and Racism,” which quotes an unnamed casting director said it was a challenge to cast Asian actors because they are seen as not very “expressive.”The following year “Crazy Rich Asians” saw great critical acclaim. Leading actress Constance Wu was only the fourth woman of Asian descent to be nominated for best performance by an actress in a musical or comedy motion picture for the Golden Globes (Source).

For years, older generations of Chinese-Americans frowned upon the types of roles she played; but today a younger generation of Asian Americans sees her as a pioneering artist, who succeeded in a hostile environment that hasn’t altogether changed.

Check out this short video on Anna May Wong-In Her Own Words.

I hope readers that you enjoyed learning a bit more about this incredible woman, I know I did!

Question time: Have you heard of Anna May Wong before? Or was this your first time? Share in the comments section below.

FURTHER READING: Women’s History 1920s-1960s (Archived blog posts)

Liz

Women of the Big Band Era Everyone Should Know-Part 2

Women of the Big Band Era of the 1930s and 1940s everyone should know

The following post is a part 2 of a series entitled, ‘Women of the Big Band Era Everyone Should Know‘ that I have been working on since 2016. My latest post just dropped as of January 2024.

The series dives into the lives and legacies of the unsung heroines of the Big Band Era, shedding light on the remarkable women who shaped the music and history of this unforgettable era.

Now onto our next group of talented Big Band Era Women…..

Women of the Big Band Era Everyone Should Know

Hazel Scott

Pianist & the first Black Woman to have her own Television Show.

1940s vintage photo of Hazel Scott- Pianist & the first Black Woman to have her own Television Show.

Source: Media Diversified

A talent from a very young age on the piano (and other instruments), Hazel’s career started to really take off at the age of 16 when she began to perform for various radio programs and various other engagements.

Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, Scott performed jazz, blues, ballads, Broadway and boogie-woogie songs, and classical music in various nightclubs. From 1939 to 1943 she was a leading attraction at both the downtown and uptown branches of Café Society (A club that treated black & White customers equally). Her performances created national prestige for the practice of “swinging the classics.” By 1945, Scott was earning $75,000 ($1,043,762 today) a year (Source).

In addition to Lena Horne, Scott was also one of the first Afro-Caribbean women (she was originally born in Trinidad in 1920s but moved to Harlem in 1924) to garner respectable roles in major Hollywood pictures (playing herself).

July 3, 1950 , Scott became the first black woman to host her own, 15 minute 3 X’s a week television show (Source). She would play piano and vocals and often sang tunes in one of the 7 languages she spoke.

A review in Variety stated, “Hazel Scott has a neat little show in this modest package. Most engaging element in the air is the Scott personality, which is dignified, yet relaxed and versatile.” (Source)

The show would only be on air for a few short months, but that did not diminish the accomplishment she had achieved.

The Hazel Scott Show 1950s Vintage Advertising

Source: Wikipedia

FURTHER READING:

Hazel Scott’s FULL story is fascinating and a must read for everyone (including her commitment to Civil Rights). Lucky for us, so many articles have been written about this amazing woman and here is just one from the Smithsonian Magazine. Please take a few minutes after this blog post and give her life a read.

Now without further adieu, I’m going to let Hazel show you what she could do..WOW!

(Video Link)

Mary Lou Williams

The First Lady Of Jazz

Mary Lou Williams contains within herself the full essence of jazz.”

New York Times
Mary Lou Williams-The First Lady of Jazz - Vintage Photo


Mary Lou was a child prodigy, who taught herself to play the piano by ear. She was playing in public by the age of six and was a professional musician by her early teens. As a pianist, composer and arranger, Mary Lou mastered blues, boogie-woogie, swing, bebop and even free jazz with remarkable facility.

In 1927, Mary Lou married saxophonist John Williams who went on to join ‘Andy Kirk and his Twelve Clouds of Joy‘ a short while later. Williams herself also signed up with the group and by the 1930s was a regular member of Kirk’s band.

At a time when there were very few women instrumentalists in jazz, she was soon recognized as Kirk’s top soloist, and the band’s success in the 1930s was due in large part to Williams’ distinctive arrangements, compositions, and solo performances. She was responsible for some of the bands biggest hits, including “Froggy Bottom,” “Walkin’ and Swingin’,” and “Lotta Sax Appeal.” In addition to her work with the Clouds, Williams provided arrangements for many of the top bandleaders of the swing era (Source).

(Video Link)

Many bandleaders, including Duke Ellington and Benny Goodman, even tried to sign her up to write exclusively for them, but she valued her freedom too much (Source).

Mary also helped spawn an entire generation of young musicians during the 1940s that would precipitate the birth of one of the world’s most influential musical styles, known as bebop (Source).

For this segment I will leave you with Mary’s famous “Roll Em“-a boogie woogie piece based on the blues.

(Video Link)

FURTHER READING:

Read all about the rest of Mary Lou Williams Life HERE. A woman who in her career that spanned past the 1930s & 40s’ wrote hundreds of compositions and arrangements and recorded more than one hundred records (in 78, 45, and LP versions).

Consuela Harris

Dancer

Consuela Harris was, according to the very rare source on lMDb (rare indeed. There is nothing on this talented woman beyond this post and a couple of videos), “the sensational and best of the shake, hot, swinging dancers in the 1930s. She was a New York headliner who performed at the famous Sebastian’s Cotton Club in California and other New York highlights during this time.

Harris was one of the rare dancer, who told a story with her dancing. Flexible and graceful she was. Consuela appeared showing off her dancing talents in two Oscar Micheaux films, “Swing” (video below) from 1938 and “God’s Stepchildren” also from 1938. She was also in the movie, “Harlem on the Prairie” with Herb Jeffries.” (Source).

Hopefully one day, someone will pickup her story and tell the world all that they know (the Vintage Inn is waiting in anticipation).

(Video Link)

Marie Bryant

An American dancer, singer and choreographer

Just like the other women on this list, Marie started performing at a young age to various audiences (like her church) and would go on to make her professional debut at the age of 15 in 1934 with Louis Armstrong at the Grand Terrace Café in Chicago, dancing and singing with the floor show (Source).

By 1939 she was a featured attraction at the famous Apollo Theatre in Harlem, NY and even toured nationally with Duke Ellington. Her career took a more active turn in the 1940s appearing in various movies and touring musical revues.

Not content to just be okay with those roles Marie also began working as a teacher at a dance school run by the famous Katherine Dunham where she worked with Debbie Reynolds, Cyd Charisse, Betty Grable, Ava Gardner and others. When she worked with Gene Kelly, he called her “one of the finest dancers I’ve ever seen in my life”.

During this same time period, she worked as a dance coach and choreographer for Paramount, 20th Century Fox, MGM and Columbia, and developed her own dance teaching style which she called “controlled release.”

It appears that the word “rest” was never in Marie’s vocabulary.

Duke Ellington once referred to Marie as “one of the world’s greatest dancers.” And from the below clip of Marie singing and dancing in a 1942 Soundie: Bli-Blip, I would not disagree with the Duke (or Gene).

(Video Link)

For further Reading on Marie Bryant’s career 1950s and on, visit HERE.

Mildred Bailey

The Queen of Swing

Mildred-Bailey 1940s vintage photo of the singer

Source: Wikipedia

Mildred Bailey was a Native American jazz singer during the 1930s, nicknamed “The Queen of Swing”, “The Rockin’ Chair Lady” and “Mrs. Swing”. She is known for her light soprano voice, clear articulation, and jazz phrasing. As a singer Bailey was especially influenced by Ethel Waters and Bessie Smith, and she was one of the first nonblack performers to become a skilled jazz singer.

Her career really took off after Bing Crosby (who was partners with her brother) introduced her to Paul Whiteman (an American Bandleader) who invited her to sing with his band. She would be the front woman from 1929-1933.

Whiteman also had a popular radio program for Old Gold Cigarettes, and when Bailey debuted on it with her version of “Moanin’ Low” on August 6, 1929, favorable public reaction was immediate. However, Bailey’s first recording with Whiteman did not take place until October 6, 1931 when she recorded a song called “My Goodbye to You”. Her recording of “All of Me” with Whiteman the same year was a huge hit in 1932 (Source).

After Mildred left Whitemans band in 1933, she would go on to record with various popular big bands (like Benny Goodman and the Dorsey Brothers).

In 1933, Mildred met her third husband Red Norvo (a vibraphonist, improviser, and band leader). A dynamic couple, they were married until 1942, and were known as “Mr. and Mrs. Swing”. They lived and worked much of the time in New York City. They remained friends after their divorce. Thereafter, she worked as a solo act, singing in New York clubs, such as the Café Society and the Blue Angel. In 1944 she had her own radio show on CBS which aired from September 1944 until February 1945. Her last major engagement was with Joe Marsala in Chicago in 1950 (Source).

Mildred Bailey was truly a talented and outstanding singer. Please take a moment to enjoy just some of her music below and for further reading on Mildred’s career and successes visit HERE.

(Video Link)

(Video Link)

Friends, I hope you enjoyed reading about these outstanding women during the Big Band Era. They were really something weren’t they?

Now don’t forget that this is NOT everyone just a highlight of that era. If there is someone I missed from this series, please share in the comments below I always love hearing about outstanding women.

Liz