Thursday, February 2, 2012

Anna May Wong


By virtue of at least being Chinese (though she was born in Los Angeles' Chinatown), actor & style icon Anna May Wong was one of the few touches of authenticity in Orientalisme product from early Hollywood. She was a striking, elegant presence in such opium-laced, ornately-designed fare as Daughter of the Dragon, Daughter of Shanghai, Toll of the Sea & Josef von Sternberg's deliriously exotic Shanghai Express (1932). In the sprawling British silent masterpiece Picadilly (1929), Wong showed she could be just as scintillating in a striped tennis sweater as in body-hugging silk & a two-storey deco headpiece. As an underage girl, the actor entered a love affair with director Tod Browning, a relationship that managed to remain a secret for an unusually long time by Hollywood standards. While the public & filmmakers may have been fickle about Anna May Wong, she was silver-dusted catnip for the elegant celebrity photographers of the day, including Carl Van Vechten, Lotte Jacobi, Arthur Kales, Otto Dyar, Paul Tanqueray, Edwin Hesser & Nikolas Murray. Easily one of the most beautiful & seductive women to ever appear on screen, it's a shame she's not mentioned in the same breath as Garbo, Harlow & Norma Shearer, though this does seem to be changing thanks to some fervent missionary work on the part of film scholars, repertory film theater programmers & understandably devoted bloggers. Wong died of a heart attack in her Santa Monica home on February 3, 1961. She was only 56-years-old.




































3 comments:

Will @ 50 Watts said...

I was only introduced to her when TCM played Shanghai Express recently, and made up my mind to see all her films. She damn near upstages Dietrich in her first scenes.

Charles Lieurance said...

I agree. It takes the wind out of me when she's on screen & she grabbed scenes from a lot of first-rate actresses in her time.

Sister Wolf said...

Gorgeous!