Birthdate: February 22, 1929 (97 Years Old)
Birthplace: Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
Enjoying his 70th year as an actor,
James Hong (Chinese birth name in pinyin: Wú Hànzhāng) is perhaps the most recognizable Asian American character actor in Hollywood movie history, and, still working in his eight decades, among the most durable of
all actors.
Hong boasts an astounding total of over 650 acting credits. At age 93, James Hong remains extremely active, with three credits in 2022 including a feature role in Disney-Pixar’s
Turning Red, Daniels’
Everything Everywhere All at Once with
Michelle Yeoh, and will appear in a starring role in Zack Ward’s Patsy Lee & The Keepers of the 5 Kingdoms, for which Wong wrote the story, and is part of the vocal ensemble for
Wendell and Wild (2022) directed by Henry Selick and written by
Jordan Peele, Keegan-Michael Key, and Clay Chapman.
James Hong was a U.S. Army soldier during the Korean War when he further developed his performance abilities. After his engineering studies at USC and working in the public engineering department of Los Angeles County, he studied with a renowned acting teacher and actor Jeff Corey. Hong then gained a wide range of experience in lead and supporting roles on television during the 1950s and 1960s, from The New Adventures of Charlie Chan (1957-1958) to The Outer Limits (1963).
He founded East West Players in 1965, the most important Asian American theater company in America, with the actor Mako, with whom he joined the cast of Robert Wise’s The Sand Pebbles (1966). Other major films in which Hong made an indelible presence are Chinatown (1975) and its sequel, The Two Jakes (1990), as Chew in Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner (1982) and sorcerer Lo Pan in John Carpenter’s Big Trouble in Little China (1986).
Hong is one of the only actors to have performed in TV series across seven decades—or nearly the entire span of the medium’s history of narrative entertainment, ranging in recent decades across such disparate landmark series as The X-Files and Seinfeld. For many American moviegoers and TV viewers in decades stretching from the 1950s to the 2000s, Hong was literally the face of Asian characters, so meager were the roles and opportunities for Asian American actors, and so reliable and prolific was Hong.
In recent years, James Hong has performed as a voice actor in dozens of animated features for film and TV, including Disney’s Mulan (1998) and Kung Fu Panda (2008). At age 93, James Hong is one of the oldest working and longest-running actors in Hollywood history.