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Shows Lack of Cultural Respect (Review of NBC's Lost Empire / LA Times Version)
Written by Jeff Park (Editor in Chief)
TYPICALLY,
we might think of racism as discriminatory exclusion or discriminatory selection that is institutionally enforced: people of color not matriculating into higher education at proportionate rates to whites, not being promoted to upper-level management, racial profiling, etc. "The Lost Empire" turned this "history of exclusion" on its head, but in a way that is no less offensive to many Asians.
The production accomplished this by injecting a white, male romantic lead into a Chinese myth where none before existed.
WHAT'S PARTICULARLY DISTURBING
about "The Lost Empire" is that the inclusion of the white man was mandated to screenwriter David Henry Hwang. Further, it was made clear that this character was to serve as the romantic interest of the female Asian lead.
IN A STORY
in The Times ("Ancient Mysteries," by Susan King, March 11), director Peter MacDonald said that producer Robert Halmi "wanted the romance between Orton [the white male] and Kwan Ying [the Asian
Media representations often continues incorrect and false
stereotypical images from the past. This can be seen with
the recent debacle of the false imprisonment of Wen
Ho Lee and in the Jet Li character in Romeo
Must Die.
What is ironic is that there has been major films from the past that has featured a US Asian/Asian Pacific American actor in an interracial romance/marriage with a white woman (Crimson Kimono) and where where the US Asian/Asian Pacific American male "won" the white woman from his white male competitor?!?! (i.e. Bridge to the Sun.
.
TRYING TO PIN DOWN
motivation for the inclusion of whites in ethnic films is an endeavor best left to another essay. For now, let us simply include "The Lost Empire" with other films in Hollywood's history that have, for their own reasons, placed white males in lead roles in otherwise Asian stories. Films that come to mind are "Come See the Paradise" (1990), which placed a white, romantic male lead squarely in the story of the Japanese American internment, and "Year of the Dragon" (1985), which placed a white, romantic male lead in New York's Chinatown. A more recent example is "Snow Falling on Cedars" (1999), which also dealt with World War II internment. And then there's the hit Broadway play "Miss Saigon." In each case, the white male was the romantic lead to an Asian woman.
PERHAPS MOST DISTURBING
is that such white male inclusion comes, for the most part, unabated by
any kind of repercussions from Asians. The fact that The Times can so blithely
report on the demand for a white lead actor tells us that a major network
such as NBC either has not considered the possible repercussions or doesn't
fear any from Asians. This after a nationwide
protest of the major television networks in 1999 by a coalition that
included blacks, Asians, Latinos and Native Americans for failing to include
people of color in their new shows.
ASIANS
and other groups underrepresented on television, such as racial minorities, gays, lesbians and the physically and mentally challenged, deserve the same level of respect as the mainstream. But they need to make their voices heard. And network and studio executives must listen.
THE FRAMEWORK FOR IMPROVED RELATIONS
is in place: Underrepresented groups have advocacy organizations that can be consulted, and the networks, as a result of the NAACP-led protests in 1999, have vice presidents for diversity. Now everyone involved must make two-way communication the norm.
One thing is clear: Unless meaningful, ongoing dialogue is established during the script development process, the door to more cultural insults such as "The Lost Empire" will remain open.
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