Joan Chen(I)
- Actress
- Director
- Writer
Born into a family of doctors and educated in China at the Shanghai
Film Academy and the Shanghai Institute of Foreign Languages, Joan Chen
was discovered by veteran Chinese director
Jin Xie while observing a filming with a
school group. Her performance in
Xiao hua (1979) (A.K.A. "The Little
Flower") won China's Best Actress award, and resulted in the Chinese
press dubbing her "The
Elizabeth Taylor of China" for
having achieved top stardom while still in her teen years. She came to
the U.S. to attend college in 1981, first at the State University of
New York at New Paltz, later at California State University at
Northridge. She a succession of small parts in movies and T.V., with
her first break coming in 1986 when, in true Hollywood legend, producer
Dino De Laurentiis noticed
her in the parking lot of Lorimar Studios and cast her in
Tai-Pan (1986). The film bombed, but it
led to her being cast as the ill-fated Empress in
Bernardo Bertolucci's
The Last Emperor (1987), which
won critical acclaim. This, and her role as enigmatic mill owner Josie
Packard in the cult TV series
Twin Peaks (1990), are her
best-known roles in Europe and North America. However, Hollywood's
practice of type-casting East Asians has led to a dearth of major roles
for Chen since then, and in recent roles, she has often been cast as a
villainess.
After taking a few years off to start a family, Joan returned to the screen in important supporting roles playing women in early middle age, such as the mother of a principle adult character. As a result, her career is flourishing again on both sides of the Pacific. Her two directing efforts were well-received critically, and in a 2008 interview she revealed she planned to direct again but was putting that off until her daughters were grown, since directing took her away from them too much, whereas acting could be done on a part-time basis.
After taking a few years off to start a family, Joan returned to the screen in important supporting roles playing women in early middle age, such as the mother of a principle adult character. As a result, her career is flourishing again on both sides of the Pacific. Her two directing efforts were well-received critically, and in a 2008 interview she revealed she planned to direct again but was putting that off until her daughters were grown, since directing took her away from them too much, whereas acting could be done on a part-time basis.
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Asian Icons of Film and Television
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