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Hollywood and the Asian Exclusion Part 3 of 3
THE EXCLUSION
goes beyond medical dramas. Over the years many programs--e.g., The Streets of San Francisco, Suddenly Susan, Dharma and Greg, Party of Five, and Nash Bridges have been set in San Francisco, a city with a population that is 35 percent Asian and has seven Chinese-language newspapers and three Chinese-language television stations. The new owner and publisher of the Examiner, founded by "yellow peril" demagogue William Randolph Hearst, is 37-year old Ted Fang. But not only have no Chinese-Americans ever been cast in these shows, they have rarely been seen in the background. In the last year of Suddenly Susan, Chinese calligraphy could be seen on an office wall decoration. Was this supposed to be a substitute for Chinese actors? Similarly, while promoting the roles of women in today's world, Lifetime Television has managed to make Asian Americans disappear from both the practice of medicine and the city of San Francisco. Don't look for any in Whoopi Goldberg's hospital drama, Strong Medicine, or the San
Francisco police show, The Division. And it's not going to get better any time soon. In August, 2000, Kurt McCortney of SAG's Board of Directors told me that every effort by the union's Asian Pacific Caucus and Asian Pacific American Task Force to persuade producers to cast more Asian Americans has hit a stone wall.
There has been relatively few daring attempts in dealing with interracial romantic relationships with Asian/Asian Pacific American males in films throughout history. Listed below are some prominent and rare examples.
In the early 1900's, isolated films such as Cecil B. DeMille's The Cheat brought to the screen the feelings of forbidden love between a White woman and an Asian man.
In the 1950's, Hiroshima Mon Amour and Crimson Kimono (in which, James Shigeta won the gorgeous White female - Victoria Shaw - from his White male co-star) featured an Asian Male and a White Female in starring romantic roles in major films!
In South Pacific, the song "You Have to be Carefully Taught" highlighted in the film one of the main reason why people fear interracial romantic situations.
In Bridge to the Sun, James Shigeta was married to the pretty Carroll Baker in a daring story during WWII!
In the 1990's, Disney's Johny Tsunami was one of the last example of romantic featured roles featuring an Asian/Asian American male and a White female.
Is the Asian/Asian Pacific American male and a non-Asian (White, Black & Hispanic) female romantic relationships taboo in American films?
WHILE MOST OF THE CRITICISM
CASTING WHITES AS ASIANS
ON MAY 15, 2000,
INEXPLICABLILY DISAPPOINTING
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