Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Gone to Hong Kong, Back Next Week


I'm flying to Hong Kong in a few hours so I can watch the one and only Connie Chan perform Cantonese opera at the HK Coliseum this weekend. I'll be back to my regular blogging late next week.

The above photo dates from 1958, when Connie — already a rising opera star — was just eleven years old. (Thanks to Oldflames for the wonderful bon voyage!)

UPDATE: I just heard the sad news that Connie's mother, opera star Kung Fan-hung, passed away last night after collapsing at the Hong Kong Coliseum during Connie's first performance. Please join me in extending heartfelt sympathy to her at this time.

Friday, February 19, 2010

The Most Talked About Show in Town


Kristin Morris, curator of the Swinging Chinatown exhibit, kindly sent this picture of a Chinese Skyroom cocktail napkin (featuring The Wongettes) that is among the photographs, costumes, and memorabilia on display at the Old Mint in downtown San Francisco. The show is only open for three more days — this Friday through Sunday, 12-5 pm — so make sure to drop by if you haven't seen it yet.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Anna May Wong and Wang Renmei


This photo of Anna May Wong in Shanghai, taken during her 1936 trip to China, was just auctioned on eBay. I love Anna May, but I don't even try to collect her memorabilia, since it usually ends up priced way beyond my wallet's comfort level. Nevertheless, I now wish I made a bid for this particular piece — especially after I figured out the movie featured in the background advertisements: Song of Everlasting Regret (長恨歌), a 1936 melodrama starring "Wildcat" Wang Renmei as a divorced housewife who aspires to become a singer but ends up an exploited sing-song girl driven to murder.

I suppose this post is but my own small song of regret...


Shanghai film star Wang Renmei
Courtesy of the amazing Shanghai Memory website (only in Chinese)

Monday, February 15, 2010

Past Divas of Hong Kong Cinema


I don't do Facebook. Lord knows I already spend way too much time on the Internet. But if I did, I would definitely become a fan of Past Divas of Hong Kong Cinema. Check it out, Facebookies!

The Wongettes: Dancing Debutantes


Elizabeth Jean, Kim Wong, and Helen Kim (left to right)

I don't know too much about The Wongettes besides that they were the house dancers at Andy Wong's Chinese Skyroom. According to a program reproduced in Trina Robbins' book Forbidden City: The Golden Age of Chinese Nightclubs, the girls performed numbers such as "Chino Soy" (Chinese Rhumba), "La Conga", and "Kicking the Gong Around" (I'd love to see their interpretation of this Cab Calloway song).

Here's a short piece about the tantalizing trio from the March 1941 issue of The Coast:

Chinese Society Girls Become
Chinese Skyroom Dance Trio


For weeks, the sports-about-town have been gathering every afternoon at the Chinese Skyroom bar to inspire a squad of Chinatown debs in their effort to become chorus girls.

Now, three of the squad have graduated and are part of the the Chinese Skyroom show. They're the luscious Wongettes (after Boss Andy Wong), who, as you can see in pic [above], are not hard to look at; more than that, they've really learned how to dance. You can see them three times per show any of these nights.

The rest of the squad — fourteen of Chinatown's blue-bloods — are still in rehearsal, will make their dancing debut soon.

And finally, check out this cool matchbook. The striking Wongettes are just the thing to light your fire!

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Stuck on Lily Ho


Check out these cool Lily Ho badges that I found on eBay! There are also sets for Chin Ping, Connie Chan, and Josephine Siao.

On Your Mark, Get Set... Shanghai!


The Asian Art Museum's Shanghai exhibit opened yesterday, and I dropped by a quick visit. It's a wonderful show. My only complaint is that I wish it were a little larger. Nevertheless, I think the curators did a fantastic job of showcasing the breadth of Shanghai art throughout the city's various incarnations.

I'll be writing more about the exhibition at the Museum's blog, but in the meantime here are a dozen of my favorite pieces:
  • Ladies, 1890
    A series of twelve paintings (ink and color on silk) by Wu Youru, whose delicately rendered Shanghai beauties were the forerunners of the calendar girls of the 20s and 30s.

  • Boundary tablet of Hongkew (the American Settlement), post-1850
    This piece of metal has a weight that palpably conjures Shanghai's colonial past.

  • Plum Blossoms under the Moon, 1933
    I could sit for hours staring at this haunting and seductive hanging scroll by Tao Lengyue, who was given the name Lengyue, or "Cold Moon", because of the amazing moonlit scenes that were his specialty.

  • Huang Jinrong and Du Yuesheng, 1924
    You gotta love this hanging scroll portraying "Big Ears" Du and "Pockmarked" Huang — the bad boys behind Shanghai's Green Gang — as genteel fellows relaxing in a tranquil garden of bamboo and pine trees.

  • Qipao, 1920s and 30s
    My favorites were those with the Art Deco patterns, but the one with the cut-velvet floral pattern was pretty cool too!

  • It Often Begins with a Smile, 1930s
    My favorite of the Shanghai lady posters on display, a delicious pinup that I'd love to hang on my wall. It was painted by Jin Meishing, one of the "Three Pillars of Calendar Posters". After the Revolution, he continued painting in the same vibrant and luminous style. But instead of portraying decadent bourgeois ladies, he depicted healthy proletarian lasses in such works as Vegetables Are Green, Melons Are Plump, Harvest Is Bountiful.

  • I wouldn't mind having this in my living room...

    Rug, 1920-1935
    Wool with yin and yang pattern. Private collection.

  • Sanmao Follows the Army, 1946
    Three pages of original artwork from Sanmao, the longest running comic strip in China. A delightfully gruesome piece of patriotic black humor.

  • Shanghai Number One Department Store, 1955
    I was a little disappointed that this poster didn't make it into the catalog. The crowded scene of what seems like all of China, including its ethnic minorities, jammed inside this real-life department store is proof that even back then the Communists had an inkling that salvation lies in consumer capitalism.

  • This was an amazing installation that I fully intend to sit through in its entirety when I revisit the exhibit. Starting off completely darkened, the neon tubes light up one by one to the sound of the plucked strings of a Chinese zither.

    Landscape-Commemorating Huang Binhong-Scroll, 2007
    By Shen Fan (b. 1952). Installation with lights and sound. Courtesy of the artist.

  • Forest, 2004
    Li Huayi's mesmerizing hypnagogic landscape painting depicting an ancient cypress grove on the grounds of a temple outside Suzhou. Evidently, the Qianlong Emperor gave them the title Qingqi Guguai, meaning "elegant and strange".

  • Mawangdui, 2009
    Liu Dahong's stunning embroidered silk banners, modeled after Western Han Dynasty funerary banners but updated with hyper-mythologized Maoist iconography.

If you can't make it to the show, do consider buying the handsome and hefty catalog, Shanghai: Art of the City — a steal at 49 bucks for the hardcover edition. You can order it directly from the Museum.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Happy Lunar New Year


Yu So Chow (from Oldflames)


Julie Yeh Feng (from Duriandave)

Best wishes for a happy, healthy,
and prosperous Year of the Tiger!

A Night at the Old Mint

Tonight was the opening gala for the Swinging Chinatown exhibit at the Old Mint in San Francisco. It was an absolutely fabulous celebration of Trina Robbin's new book Forbidden City: The Golden Age of Chinese Nightclubs and the pioneering Asian American performers who created stages of their own on which to fulfill their dreams.

Honestly, I was so excited to be there that I was unable to savor the amazing collection of photographs and memorabilia on display. Curator Kristin Morris, of the San Francisco Museum and Historical Society, did an outstanding job of organizing the exhibit, which exceeded by leaps and bounds my already high expectations. Besides the images that appear in Trina's book, there were fantastic photos from the collection of the Chinese Historical Society of America, as well as two from my own collection.

As for the performances, I don't think I stopped grinning the whole time the show was going on. The Grant Avenue Follies performed three numbers ("Chinatown, My Chinatown", "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing", and "All that Jazz"); Jimmy Borges, who flew in from Hawaii, rocked the mike with two tunes (including one he wrote just for the occasion, "I Found My Heart in San Francisco"), and The Shanghai Pearl turned up the heat with a classic striptease and fan dance. Emcee Ben Fong-Torres kept the proceedings smooth, spontaneous, and funny.

I took lots of pictures, but unfortunately I wasn't able to make the best of my brand new 100-buck Kodak. Here are a few that came out all right.


The Grant Avenue Follies proving that you're never too old to swing


Burlesque bird of paradise The Shanghai Pearl flashing her feathers


Two photos from my own collection, showing choreographer Walton Biggerstaff


Yours truly with the truly wonderful Trina Robbins

The exhibit is only open for seven days: Friday, February 12 to Monday, February 15 and Friday, February 19 to Sunday, February 21; noon to 5pm. If you live nearby or are passing through the area, do not miss this rare and precious glimpse of the Golden Age of Chinese Nightclubs. I know I'll be making another visit!

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Soft Film Video Jukebox: Rebecca Pan

If you missed Hong Kong in the 60s on Lucky Cat Zoë's radio show last week, then you are in luck. The podcast is now available on her blog. It was a fun — and funny — show. Besides debuting their new song, "When You Were Dreaming", the band also shared their recent discovery of a delightful tune by Rebecca Pan called "Willow Pattern Blues", released in the U.K. in 1965 as the B-side of "Will the Orange Blossoms Smile" (which they played on the show).

The single was one of several that Rebecca recorded for the Parlophone label under the name Ching. Both songs were written by Iain Kerr and Roy Cowan, a musical comedy duo who toured internationally for years as "Goldberg & Solomon" in their popular show Gilbert & Sullivan Go Kosher. A newspaper ad for their follow-up, Slightly Jewish and Madly Gay, touted them as "those two crowned gnomes of nonsense" (The Sydney Morning Herald, March 14, 1977).

As for "Willow Pattern Blues", it's a tasty little morsel of tongue-in-cheek Orientalism that's addictively charming all by itself. But the following homemade video by boogetman65 will have you playing the song over and over again!

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Charming Lovebirds: Victor Sen Yung and Iris Wong

I've been slowly making my way through the Charlie Chan DVD collection. After seeing Victor Sen Yung in a couple of other features, I decided to jump ahead a bit and check him out in the role that launched his career: as Jimmy Chan, the detective's number two son in the Sidney Toler films.

What a surprise it was to see him paired up with the equally charming Iris Wong in an all too brief romantic interlude in Charlie Chan in Reno (1939). I'll have more to say later about each of them, but for now just sit back and enjoy the wonderful chemistry between Victor and Iris. In this clip you can get a rare glimpse of regular Chinese Americans unburdened by the stereotypes of Hollywood.

Florence Hin Lowe: Chinese Wonder Girl


That's lovely contortionist Florence Hin Lowe on the cover of Billboard (January 8, 1944), an event which was probably the zenith of her twenty-odd-year career. Inside the magazine was the following account of how she got into show business.

FLORENCE HIN LOWE
'China's Sock Contortionist'


"You have to work pretty hard." These six words sum up a modest self-estimate of the talent which has made Florence Hin Lowe's contortion acts one of the socks of showbiz.

It took more than hard work to get Florence Hin Lowe near a stage at all. She is Chinese, and the Chinese view the theater with somewhat more than suspicion. There was a lot of determination involved before she got her Canton-born parents to let her attend acrobatic school at the age of seven. And there were a lot of raised eyebrows in the Los Angelese Chinese community when she went.

However, Flo fooled them all. At 8 she played the Paramount Theater in Los Angeles, at 11 she was on the stage at Grauman's Chinese Theater there. When she was 12, her parents gave up their dried goods business and moved Flo and her aerial somersaults to Chicago.

She's been a sock ever since. In Vancouver, B.C., the Chinese community declares a holiday when she hits town. In Washington, the Chinese ambassador's wife brought the whole embassy staff to see her.

However, being a regular show-stopper hasn't spoiled Florence in the least. If you try to talk to her about her act, she just blushes and says:

"Well, you have to work pretty hard."

And work hard she did. Although her career may not have been glamorous by Hollywood standards, Florence undoubtedly had plenty of great stories to tell after she retired.

That's her on the left when she was just 10 years old, performing at the commencement of a Los Angeles dancing program (Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune, August 7, 1930).

In 1937 she was the lead act of Ted Mack's "Precision Rhythm Orchestra and Revue (The Ogden Standard-Examiner, October 12).

In 1941 Florence was traveling with veteran showman A.B. Marcus, "a sort of road show Ziegfeld", whose revues were "comprised of those sure fire staples of 'flesh' entertainment — plenty of beautiful girls, a good chorus line, an exotic dancer or two, a sprinkling of variety acts and some dependable comics" (Syracuse Herald-Journal, March 1). Evidently, the company of more than 60 performers had "recently returned from a three-year world tour, in which they visited many of the principal cities of Japan, China, the Philippine Islands, South Africa, East Africa, India, Burma, Federated Malay states, Straits settlements, Java, Hong Kong, Cuba, and a return run in Mexico" (The Charleston Gazette, August 17, 1941).

In 1942 Florence was performing in Reno at the State Line Country Club in a floor show headlined by an act called Chick and Lee, "Nitwits of Nonsense" (Reno Evening Gazette, July 30). Now that's show business for you!

In 1943 she was still doing her "rubber-body stuff", this time at New York's Folies Bergere Theater-Restaurant, in a Chinese production number that also included Forbidden City alumni Noel Toy, Jadine Wong, and Li Sun (Billboard, June 12).


Ad in Billboard magazine (August 8, 1943)

By 1949 Florence was performing at town fairs, like the Great Hagerstown Fair in Hagerstown, Maryland, and the Eastern Carolina Agricultural Fair in Florence, South Carolina (in 1950). The description of her act in the Hagerstown newspaper suggests that she had perhaps reached the bottom of the entertainment circuit: "The Lily Lady is pleasant, smiling and good to look at. There is no doubt but what the audience will shout for more when they see this charming performer go through her unusual routines in front of the grandstand" (The Daily Mail, September 16, 1949). Oh dear!

Thankfully, it seems that she climbed back up the ladder, at least to the theater-restaurants of Reno. In late 1951, she was performing at the Hotel Golden, and also with Tom Ball's China Doll Revue, headlined by "Chinese Hillbillies" Ming & Ling.


Well, that's all I know. I'm curious to find out the ending of her story. If anyone out there happens to know what happened to Florence Hin Lowe, the Chinese Wonder Girl, do let me know.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Hong Kong Cowgirl: Yu So Chow


Here's Yu So Chow, Hong Kong's Queen of Martial Arts, decked out as a cowgirl in Bloodbath at Golden Sand Bay (1952), a Western flavored kung fu film that I'm dying to see. It wasn't the only time that Miss Yu donned a cowboy hat and packed a pair of pistols. Her very fist film, shot in Suzhou in 1949, was called Double Pistol Heroine.


Yu So Chow as the "Double Pistol Heroine"

And while we're on the subject of the lovely Miss Yu, here are some pics I've been meaning to post for quite some time. The first comes from Oldflames: a lovely shot of Yu So Chow looking very much like a pirate queen. Can't you picture her armed with a cutlass in each hand?


Finally, here's a recent photo that SpyMonkey kindly sent me, showing Yu So Chow elegantly, yet funkily, dressed during her trip to Hong Kong last November for the 50th anniversary of the Hong Kong–China Opera Institute, the training school founded by her father Master Yu Jim-yuen. (You might have heard of some of its students ... like Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung, and Yuen Biao.)


Anyway, it's pretty remarkable seeing these last two photos side by side. Despite the passage of nearly 60 years, Yu So Chow still has the same cool style. I especially love her matching green nail polish!

Friday, February 5, 2010

Get Shanghaied!


Moonlight over Huangpu River, 1930s.
By Yuan Xiutang (dates unknown). Chromolithograph on paper. Collection of the Shanghai History Museum.

This lovely lady will be appearing in the Shanghai exhibit opening next Friday at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco. I'll have more to say about the show once I see it, but before then let me make two announcements.

The Asian Art Museum will be giving away a pair of free tickets each week during the exhibit. The ticket giveaway is only open to California residents, so my condolences to all of you living outside the Golden State. But if you are lucky enough to live in the Bay Area, you should definitely enter. You only need to do it once to be eligible for all weekly giveaways.

Secondly, I will be a guest blogger at the Asian Art Museum Blog, starting in March on a monthly basis throughout the duration of the exhibition. I'll keep you posted here, but better if you subscribe to their RSS feed, so you don't miss out on anything. There promises to be lots of great stuff. In fact, just yesterday there was a post about the first Chinese animated feature, Princess Iron Fan (1941).

OK... what are you waiting for? Get Shanghaied!

Thursday, February 4, 2010

The Lost World of Esther Eng


Mad Fire, Mad Love (1949)

The lost films of Esther Eng, the pioneering Chinese American female director, are as tantalizing as the above advertisement for her last movie, Mad Fire, Mad Love, a color feature set and shot in Hawaii.

A couple of weeks ago Frank Bren, co-author of Hong Kong Cinema: A Cross-Cultural View, wrote a wonderful tribute to Esther Eng in memory of her passing 40 years ago. Hers is a fascinating story that deserves to be better known. Unfortunately, none of the nine films she directed have survived. Frank and Hong Kong movie historian Law Kar have been trying to restore Esther to her proper place in film history. They've written about her in their book (mentioned above) and have created a website (that is, sorry to say, sorely in need of a redesign). Evidently, they are also developing a feature film about her life. All of which is a roundabout way of excusing myself from duplicating their research and encouraging you to read Frank's article, look for Hong Kong Cinema: A Cross-Cultural View at your local library, and visit the Esther Eng website.

Let me instead present some primary source materials that I've been able to dig up. First is a full page ad for Esther's first film project, Heartaches (1936). The ad comes from the January 31, 1936 issue of Chinese Digest, an English-language Chinese American news magazine published in San Francisco.


Heartaches (1936)

The production of the film was chronicled in Chinese Digest in the months leading up to its release. On December 6, 1935 it was reported that scenes were shot in San Francisco Chinatown before the crew left for Hollywood to finish filming the story. On December 13, 1935 it was revealed that Heartaches would include scenes shot in Technicolor, still a new process at that time (the first feature shot in Technicolor, Becky Sharp had just been released the previous summer). On December 20, 1935 it was reported that production had been completed and that the film would be released shortly. On December 27, 1935 it was announced that Heartaches would debut at the Mandarin Theatre in San Francisco Chinatown on New Year's Day. I've been unable to confirm if the premiere happened as planned, but the following news item from February 14, 1936 suggests that the screening may been postponed.

"Heartaches" to Be Shown This Week

Cathay Pictures' super singing and talking picture, "Heartaches", will be shown at the local Mandarin Theater this Saturday and Sunday, with Wei Kim Fong, stage star, in the leading role.

"Heartaches" is financed by Quon Yi Lum, and produced by Esther Eng and Bruce Wong, with Paul Ivano, formerly Gloria Swanson's best cameraman, doing the camera work. Story and direction are by Frank Tong and Henry Tung.

[NOTE: Frank Tong (Tang) worked in Hollywood as an actor and technical advisor for more than twenty years. He also provided the calligraphy for the the signs and banners in The Good Earth.]

The story concerns an aviation student in America, Ching, played by Beal Wong, who falls in love with an opera star, played by Wei Kim Fong. The manager of the opera company, jealous of Fong's constant rendezvous with Ching, threatens to discharge her and send her back to China.

[NOTE: Beal Wong was a bit player in Hollywood for some 30 years, appearing in nearly 50 films.]

Ching finishes his training, goes to war in China, and is separated from his loved one. While in China, he marries and Fong, hearing about it, is heartbroken.

Capacity audience is expected to witness this stirring film. All of the players in the cast, with the exception of the star, are American-Chinese. Miss Eng with Miss Fong, will journey shortly to China to seek prospective film stars for their coming productions. They will stay in China for two months.

The present picture will also be shown in Singapore in the near future.

In May 1936 Esther Eng and Wai Kim Fong did indeed sail to Hong Kong, where they screened Heartaches. Wai Kim Fong would star in Esther's next two films, her first as director: National Heroine (1937), a patriotic movie about a woman who joins the Chinese army to prove that the "weaker" sex is vital to the defense of China; and Ten Thousand Lovers (1938), a Grandview film produced by Joseph Sunn Jue.

Esther would return to the U.S. and work again with Grandview on several pictures, including Golden Gate Girl (1941), starring a young Bruce Lee, just three months old; and A Fair Lady by the Blue Lagoon (1947), a love story set in rural California.


A Fair Lady by the Blue Lagoon (1947), aka The Blue Jade

Esther Eng's final film was Mad Fire, Mad Love (1949). Later that year she moved to New York City and opened a Chinese restaurant: an inconspicuous ending to the story of a forgotten movie pioneer.

Let me leave you with one last interesting item about Esther from the May 8, 1936 issue of Chinese Digest, on the eve of her career as film director. In a column called "Lien Fa Saw You" talking about the latest hairstyles being worn in Chinatown, Esther — quite a fetching tomboy — is among the ladies mentioned (and, I might add, so is Li Tei Ming, future wife of Charlie Low and featured singer at Forbidden City).

As Miss Esther Eng favors sports clothes, her hair is fashioned "in tune". A sleeky boyish bob is worn with one very slight wave at the left side, which breaks the straightness. When attending a formal affair, more waves may be seen, a clever idea, and most charming on Miss Eng.

Thanks to The Chinese Mirror and Roast Pork Sliced From A Rusty Cleaver for the heads-up about Frank Bren's article!

* NOTE: the image of Mad Fire, Mad Love at the top of this post is not an actual artifact but a composite that I created from identical, but differently colored, versions of an ad that appeared in a Chinese movie magazine.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Swinging Chinatown at the Old Mint


Forbidden City chorus girls

Okay folks — get ready for something really special! The San Francisco Museum and Historical Society will be hosting an exhibition in celebration of Trina Robbins' new book Forbidden City: The Golden Age of Chinese Nightclubs.

The fabulous photo you see above is just one example of the precious ephemera that will be on display at the museum's new home in San Francisco's Old Mint. Because the building is still being prepared, the Swinging Chinatown exhibit will only be open for a very limited time: Friday, February 12 to Monday, February 15 and Friday, February 19 to Sunday, February 21; noon to 5pm.

If you live in the Bay Area, do not miss this rare opportunity to glimpse this glamorous and groundbreaking chapter of Chinese American history. The exhibit will include more than 100 vintage photographs, dancer Ellen Chin's costumes and gold dancing shoes, Tony Wing's tap shoes, as well as menus, napkins, and other memorabilia from San Francisco's Chinese nightclubs.


Ellen Chin's gold dancing shoes

But wait — there's more! On Thursday, February 11 there will be an opening gala. The tickets are rather steep, but it's for a good cause — to raise funds for the museum. Besides, the event promises to be a night to remember. Local journalist and radio personality Ben Fong-Torres will be master of ceremonies. The Grant Avenue Follies will be providing entertainment, as will former Forbidden City singers Ellie Chui and Jimmy Borges; and contemporary burlesque performer The Shanghai Pearl will be demonstrating precisely why she is known as the Princess of Pulchritude. Finally, let's not forget the grand dame of the evening, the sweet and charming Trina Robbins, who made all of this possible.

Hope you can make it!

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Hong Kong in the 60s on Lucky Cat Radio


Last spring I told you about Hong Kong in the 60s, a cool new band that I felicitously discovered online, and their then-soon-to-be-released debut CD. Well, I should have followed up sooner, but better late than never, right?

The band's Willow Pattern Songs EP, six delectable pieces of dreamy and quirky pop, is currently available for download at Amazon (a steal at five bucks and some cents) and at iTunes (for even cheaper). More timely is their upcoming guest appearance this Thursday on Lucky Cat Zoë's weekly radio show on ResonanceFM. The show is broadcast from London, but thanks to the wonders of the Web, you can listen to it no matter where you happen to be.

Just go to the ResonanceFM website at the appropriate time and click on "LISTEN ON-LINE":

Thursday 11am (San Francisco)
Thursday 2pm (New York)
Thursday 7pm (London)
Friday 3am (Hong Kong)
Friday 6am (Sydney)

Hong Kong in the 60s will be playing some of the Chinese pop that has inspired them, as well as some of their own music. And, since host Zoë always does a little on-air cooking during her Dim Sum Lunchbox feature and since band member Mei Yau likes to blog about cooking, expect something tasty too.

In the meantime, here are a few songs to whet your appetite!

Hong Kong in the 60s