Arts
Alan Chin – Artist. He was the youngest artist in history to be chosen to receive the commission to do one of the Hearts of San Francisco, benefiting the San Francisco General Hospital Foundation. He currently donates his time and art to charitable organizations helping to create positive change in the world.
Ping Chong is internationally recognized as a director, writer, and multi-disciplinary artist, and is considered a seminal figure in Asian American theatre and the Asian American arts movement.
James Wong Howe is one of the greatest American cinematographers in movie history. He has over 130 films to his credit. A master at the use of shadow, he was one of the first to use deep-focus cinematography, photography in which both foreground and distant planes remain in focus. Nominated for ten Academy Awards for cinematography, winning twice (1955, 1963)
M. Pei is a Pritzker Prize-winning Chinese American architect, known as the last master of high modernist architecture. Pei is perhaps one of the most successful Asian architects of the 20th century, with his works built all over the world. Designed the Louvre Pyramid
Anna Sui is an American fashion designer. She has boutiques in many countries, especially Japan
Vivienne Tam fashion designer. Her clothing brand is named after her and is inspired by Chinese design and modern fashion. The theme of first collection was EAST WIND CODE. Her shops can be found in most major cities around the world.
Vera Wang fashion designer. She is known for her wedding gown collection, among other specialties. She won cfda's womenswear designer of the year award in 2005
Wayne Wang - Hollywood director He won the Golden Shell at the San Sebastian Film Festival in September 2007 for A Thousand Years of Good Prayers .
Anna May Wong - first Asian American movie star nominated for ten Academy Awards for cinematography, winning twice (1955, 1963)
Bradley Darryl Wong - first Asian American actor to receive awards from Actor's Equity Theatre World, Outer Critics, and Drama Desk; won a Tony Award as best featured actor for his performance in M Butterfly
Frank Wu is a science fiction and fantasy artist. He won the Hugo Award for Best Fan Artist in 2004, 2006, and 2007. He also won the Grand Prize (the Gold Award) in the Illustrators of the Future contest in 2002. Retrieved May 2008 from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chinese_Americans
Alex Chiu - eccentric promoter
Rupert Jee - owner of the Hello Deli next to the Ed Sullivan Theatre; has made numerous appearances on The Late Show with David Letterman
David Ji - co-founder of Apex Digital
Andrea Jung - CEO, Avon products
John Kwan - CEO, founder of VeriPic, multiple patent holder
Kim Ng - baseball executive
Patrick Soon-Shiong, surgeon, founder Abraxis BioScience, billionaire
An Wang - computer engineer and inventor; co-founder of Wang Laboratories
Charles Wang - founder, CEO, chairman, Computer Associates
Rosalind Chao - actress
Joan Chen - actress, director
Mandy Cho - former beauty queen hailing from Hong Kong
Annabel Chong - adult film actress
China Chow - actress, model (father is Chinese-American)
Kam Fong Chun - actor
Haing S. Ngor - Chinese Cambodian actor; won an Oscar for Best Supporting actor in The Killing Fields
Kelly Hu - actress
William Hung - actor of American Idol fame
James Hong - actor
Malese Jow - actress on Unfabulous and Bratz
Archie Kao - actor and model
Nancy Kwan - first Chinese-born star in Western cinema
Dan Kwong - performance artist, writer, teacher
Tiffany Lam - former beauty queen hailing from Hong Kong
Bruce Lee - martial artist, kung fu actor
Brandon Lee - actor, son of Bruce Lee
Jason Scott Lee - actor
Bai Ling - actress
Lucy Liu - film/television actress
John Lone - actor, most notable for his role as Pu Yi in The Last Emperor
Keye Luke - actor
Olivia Munn - actress, model and television personality
Janel Parrish- actress
Robin Shou - martial artist
Kobe Tai - adult film actress
Jennifer Tilly - actress
Meg Tilly - actress
Chuti Tiu - actress, "Desire", "24", "Dragnet", "Beautiful", "The Specials", former America's Junior Miss (first non-Caucasian winner)
Lauren Tom - actress
Ming Tsai - chef and restaurateur (Blue Ginger); host of Emmy Award winning television show "East Meets West"
Kelly Vitz- actress on Sky High and Nancy Drew
Garrett Wang - actor in Star Trek: Voyager
Ming-Na Wen - Macanese-born actress
Anna May Wong - first female Asian-American star of the screen
B. D. Wong - actor in Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, winner of a Tony Award for M Butterfly
Helen Wong - model and actress
Russell Wong - actor
Victor Wong - Hollywood actor
Daniel Wu - Hong Kong-based Chinese American actor
Kiko Wu - adult model and actress
Martin Yan - chef, host of Yan Can Cook
Welly Yang - actor and artist
Victor Sen Yung - actor, portrayed Hop Sing in Bonanza
Nan Zhang - actress, Gossip Girl as Kati Farkas
Jeff Chang - journalist, hip-hop historian
Laura Chang - science editor, The New York Times
Julie Chen - newsreader on The Early Show and host of Big Brother
Anna Chen Chennault - journalist, notable in American public life; also, wife of Claire Chennault, of the Flying Tigers
Connie Chung - TV news anchor, the second woman ever to anchor a national news program
Ben Fong-Torres - journalist, Rolling Stone
Jennifer 8. Lee - journalist, The New York Times
Carol Lin - news anchor
Sam Chu Lin - journalist, one of the first Asian Americans on network TV news
Lisa Ling - journalist, known for her role as a co-host of ABC's The View and host of National Geographic Ultimate Explorer
Jennifer Su (Jennifer Tsou) - Television news anchor, Star TV
Kaity Tong - Television news anchor, WPIX-TV
Jeff Yang - writer, media/business consultant, Asian American culture columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle
Anthony Yuen - journalist
Bette Bao Lord - a distinguished novelist and writer, and serves as chair of the Board of Trustees of Freedom House. President Clinton has hailed Ms. Bao Lord as "someone who writes so powerfully about the past and is working so effectively to shape the future." Her First novel, Spring Moon (1981), set in pre-revolutionary China , was an international bestseller and American Book Award nominee for best first novel.
Eileen Chang - writer
Lan Samantha Chang - an American writer of novels and short stories ; director of the Iowa Writer's Workshop. Her works include Hunger , a novella plus four short stories, and Inheritance, a novel.
Frank Chin - novelist, playwright, and essayist. He received an American Book Award in 1989 for a collection of short stories, and another in 2000 for Lifetime Achievement.
Maxine Hong Kingston - writer, novelist. Among her works are The Woman Warrior (1976), awarded the National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction, and China Men (1980), which was awarded the 1981 National Book Award. She was awarded the 1997 National Humanities Medal by President of the United States Bill Clinton. Hong Kingston was awarded the Northern California Book Award Special Award in Publishing for her most recent novel Veterans of War, Veterans of Peace (2006).
David Henry Hwang - a contemporary American playwright who has risen to prominence as the preeminent Asian American dramatist in the U.S.
Gish Jen - writer, novelist
Ha Jin – novelist. He has won a number of awards for his writing, including the National Book Award and PEN/Faulkner Award for his novel, Waiting (1999). Many of his short stories have appeared in The Best American Short Stories anthologies, and his collection Under The Red Flag (1997) won the Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction, while Ocean of Words (1996) has been awarded the PEN/Hemingway Award. The novel War Trash (2004), set during the Korean War, won the PEN/Faulkner Award and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
Gus Lee - a best-selling American.author. Several of her short stories have been reprinted in The Best American Short Stories .
David Wong Louie - an American writer of novels and short stories. Pangs of Love received the 1991 First Fiction Award from the Los Angeles Times and the Ploughshares First Fiction Book Award. It was also named a Notable Book by the New York Times and a Voice Literary Supplement Favorite. The Barbarians are Coming won the Shirley Collier Prize. He has also won the John C. Zacharis First Book Award.
Adeline Yen Mah - author and physician
Amy Tan - best-selling author
Jade Snow Wong - writer
Timothy C. Wong - sinologist, translator, and literary theorist
Laurence Yep - award- winning Chinese-American modern author . The most notable of his books is a series called the Golden Mountain Chronicles. He received the Newbery Honor for two books in the series.
Judy Yung - author of Island: Poetry and History of Chinese Immigrants on Angel Island , 1910-1940 (1980), the award-winning Unbound Feet: A Social History of Chinese Women in San Francisco (1995) and Chinese American Voices: From the Gold Rush to the Present (2006), among other books.
Ben Fee - writer and labor organizer. He was the writer of short works depicting the Chinese American experience of the post-World War Two era. His mix of old-style cultural mores was popularized by author and vaudeville producer Frank Chin who caricatured Fee as a mix of the American "Wild West" and traditional Chinese thinking.
Military
Maj. Arthur Chin - World War II pilot and fighter ace with Canton Provincial Air Force, National Revolutionary Army
David S. C. Chu - US Army Captain, now United States Under Secretary of Defense (Personnel and Readiness)
Gordon Pai'ea Chung-Hoon , US Navy Rear Admiral
Major General John Liu Fugh - the first Chinese American officer to be promoted to the rank of General in the US Army, and the Army's first Chinese American Judge Advocate General
Eddie Fung - the only Chinese American soldier to be captured by Japan during World War II
William Ah Hang - one of the first Asian Americans to enlist in the U.S. Navy during Civil War
Wah Kau Kong - Second Lieutenant and first Chinese American fighter pilot in the US Air Force
Wilbur Carl Sze - first Chinese American officer in U.S. Marine Corps
James Yee - US Army Captain and chaplain, formerly charged with sedition
James Yee - US Army Captain and chaplain, formerly charged with sedition
Francis B. Wai - US Army Captain and the only Chinese American to have been awarded the Medal of Honor
Mun Charn Wong , US Air Force Lieutenant Colonel, friend of Wah Kau Kong
Jin Au-yeung - rapper
Flora Chan - Hong Kong-born singer/actress
Jaycee Chan - American-born, Hong Kong singer, son of Jackie Chan
Chi Cheng - bassist to alternative metal band, Deftones
Kelis - singer
CoCo Lee - singer
Annie Lin - singer-songwriter
Justin Lo - American-born, Hong Kong singer
Yo-Yo Ma - cellist
Benny Mao - singer-songwriter
Dawn Xiana Moon - singer-songwriter, model, writer
Richard On - guitarist-songwriter for rock band O.A.R.
Ne-Yo - R&B artist, 1/4 Chinese
Tan Dun - grammy and Oscar award winning composer; recipient of the prestigious Grawemeyer Award for his opera Marco Polo
Vienna Teng - singer-songwriter
Lee-Hom Wang - Taiwanese pop singer
Chris Wong Won ("Fresh Kid Ice", 'The Chinaman") - Chinese Trinidadian rapper, member of 2 Live Crew
1957 Tsung-Dao Lee and Chen Ning Yang - received the Nobel Prize for their work in particle physics
1976 Samuel Chao Chung Ting - shared the Nobel Prize for physics for discovering the existence of a new particle called j/psi
1982 Daniel Chee Tsui was awarded the Nobel prize for his discovery of the fractional quantum Hall effect.
1986 Yuan T. Lee - shared the Nobel Prize for chemistry for his work in the nature of chemical reactions
1997 Steven Chu is a co-winner of Nobel Prize in Physics in “development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light”. As a senior at Garden City High School in New York, he discovered the thrill of experimentation once again. In physics lab, the Chinese American teen built an instrument to measure gravity. After studying physics in college and graduate school, Chu worked as a scientist at Bell Laboratories for nine years. In 1997, all of Chu's years in the lab paid off when he received the Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on cooling atoms.
Norman C. Bay - former United States Attorney for the District of New Mexico. Bay was the first Chinese-American United States Attorney 2000
Julia Chang Bloch - first Asian American ambassador in the history of the U.S. diplomatic core 1989 Secretary of Labor
Elaine Chao - the first Chinese American to serve in the federal cabinet. 2001
Denny Chin - Federal judge, Southern District of New York Ruby Chow became the first Chinese American woman elected to Seattle City Council 1973
David S. C. Chu - United States Undersecretary of Defense for Readiness (R)
March Fong Eu was elected California Secretary of State in 1974, the first Asian American woman ever elected to a state constitutional office in the United States . 1974
Hiram Fong - first American of Asian descent to be elected to the U.S. Senate when he was chosen as Hawaii 's first senator 1959
Matthew K. Fong - former Republican state treasurer of California (R)
Ed Jew - former member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors (D)
Bill Lann Lee - First Asian American to head the U.S. Justice Department's Civil Rights Division 2000
Dr. Henry Lee - First Chinese American Head of Connecticut State Police, commissioner of public safety -- the state's highest ranking police post. (1998)
Late Sheriff of Jefferson Parish, Louisiana (D) John Chun Liu is a New York City elected official, currently serving on the New York City Council representing District 20. He was elected to represent northeast Queens 2002
Gary Locke - first Asian American governor on the U.S. mainland; 1993, first Asian American to head a county ( King County , Washington ) government in the U.S. mainland 1996
Wing Luke - first Asian American elected official in the Pacific Northwest when he became a Seattle City Council member 1962
Liu Yong-chuan – President of The Independent Federation of Chinese Students and Scholars . ( IFCSS) had become one of the most influential overseas Chinese students groups in history. It had lobbied successfully in U.S. Congress, organized the well-known " Washington March for Chinese Democracy" in 1989, and united tens of thousands of Chinese students together for many years since 1989.
Gary Locke - former Democratic Governor of Washington
Thomas Tang served as a United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit for sixteen years 1977Shien Biau Woo - former attorney general and lieutenant governor of Delaware , current president of the 80-20 Initiative
David Wu - Democratic member of the United States House of Representatives for Oregon , representing the state's First Congressional District. Wu is the first Chinese American member of the House of Representatives.1999Sherman Wu - Chinese American social activist and a former professor, whose experiences at Northwestern University brought the issue of discrimination against Asian Americans to the fore. The general condemnation of the prejudice exhibited against him presaged later actions in the Asian American civil rights movement.
Mae Yih - former Oregon State Senator (D)
Helen Zia - journalist and scholar who has covered Asian American communities and social and political movements for decades.
Leland Yee - California State Senator in District 8. He became the first Asian American to be appointed Speaker pro Tempore, making him the second highest ranking Democrat of the California State Assembly.Min Chueh Chang - Chinese American reproductive biologist. Though his career produced findings that are important and valuable to many areas in the field of fertilization, including his work on in vitro fertilization which led to the first "test tube baby", he was best known to the world for his contribution to the development of the combined oral contraceptive pill.
Shiing-Shen Chern – mathematician, one of the leaders in differential geometry of the twentieth century.
Leroy Chiao - an American engineer and a former NASA astronaut who was stationed on board the International Space Station. NASA astronaut
David Jung-Kuang Chiu - Chinese-born American leader in education, serving as both Director of Asian Studies and Dean of University Advisement, Hofstra University
Wen Tsing Chow - missile guidance scientist, digital computer pioneer
Paul Ching Wu Chu - physicist, superconductivity. He received numerous awards and honors for his outstanding work in superconductivity, including the US National Medal of Science and the International Prize for New Materials. He was an invited contributor to the White House National Millennium Time Capsule at the National Archives in 2000 and was selected the Best Researcher in the US by US News and World Report in 1990.
Steven Chu - 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics, first Asian-American to run one of the 16 national laboratories operated by the Department of Energy (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) He's known for his research in laser cooling and trapping of atoms, which won him the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1997.
Fan Chung - mathematician
Lue Gim Gong - in 1888, he invented an orange, which is still grown in Florida , that survives cold weather
Dr. David Ho - AIDS researcher. reported for the first time the "healthy carrier state" of HIV infection, which identified otherwise healthy individuals who tested positive for the virus but did not show any physical signs of the disease in 1984.
William C. Hsiao - Harvard economist. He is considered one of the world's foremost experts on health care economics and financing and regularly advises U.S. government agencies, foreign governments and non-governmental organizations such as the World Bank, UNICEF, and the World Health Organization.
Feng-hsiung Hsu - the architect and the principal designer of the IBM Deep Blue chess machine , which beat World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov in 1997 . He as the recipient of the 1990 Mephisto Award for his doctoral dissertation and also the 1991 ACM Grace Murray Hopper Award for his contributions in architecture and algorithms for chess machines.
Him Mark Lai - Notable historian. Proclaimed by The Chronicle of Higher Education as “the Scholar who legitimized the study of Chinese America,” Him Mark Lai has been at the core of many community institutions as well as a pivotal figure for the Chinese Historical Society of America (CHSA).
Henry C. Lee - forensic scientist. He has worked on famous cases such as the JonBenét Ramsey murder, the O.J. Simpson and Laci Peterson cases, the post- 9/11 forensic investigation, the Washington, DC sniper shootings and to reninvestigate the assassination of John F. Kennedy . He investigated the 3-19 Shooting Incident of R.O.C. President Chen Shui-bian and Vice President Annette Lu . Following the O.J. Simpson case Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr hired Dr. Henry Lee to join his investigation of the death of Deputy White House Counsel Vincent Foster , who killed himself in Fort Marcy Park on July 20, 1993.
Maya Lin - A Monumental Architect. Maya Lin rose to fame in 1981. Just 21-years-old and still an architectural student at Yale University, Lin won a contest to design the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. Her design beat out more than 1,400 entries. The Memorial's 594-foot granite wall features the names of the more than 58,000 U.S. soldiers who died during the Vietnam War. Each year, four million people visit the wall to pay their respects to these war heroes. Less than a decade later, Lin designed another famous structure—the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Alabama. The monument outlines the major events of the Civil Rights Movement. Today, Lin's designs can be found in several American cities and continue to inspire the entire nation.
T. Y. Lin - civil engineer (bridgebuilder)
The Hon. Gordon Quan, noted civil rights lawyer and former city councilperson of Houston , Tex. Gordon Quan has been selected for inclusion in Best Lawyers in America , Who's Who in American Law and Texas Super Lawyers.
Chang-lin Tien - professor, former chancellor UC Berkeley. The first Asian American and Chinese American to head a major U.S. university
Samuel C. C. Ting - 1976 Nobel laureate, Physics
Daniel Chee Tsui - was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for his contributions to the discovery of the fractional quantum Hall effect along with Horst L. Störmer of Columbia University and Robert Laughlin of Stanford in 1998.
Kai-Fu Lee - an information technology executive and a computer science researcher. The founding p resident of Google China
Ann Wang - Invented the magnetic core memory 1944 , which revolutionized computing and served as the standard method for memory retrieval and storage until the invention of the microchip in the 1960s
Taylor Wang - first Chinese American scientist to go into space (1985 on space shuttle Challenger).
Pei-Yuan Wei - creator of ViolaWWW
Flossie Wong-Staal - virologist and AIDS researcher. She was the first person to map HIV. From 1990-2002, she was the Florence Riford Chair in AIDS Research at the University of California at San Diego (UCSD). She is now the Chief Scientific Officer and Vice President of Genomics for Immusol.
Chien-Shiung Wu - female physicist with an expertise in radioactivity. She worked on the Manhattan Project (to enrich the uranium fuel) and disproved the conservation of parity . Her nicknames to many scientists are “First Lady of Physics”, “Madame Curie of China ” and also “Madame Wu”.
Henry Tzu-Yow Yang - chancellor, UC Santa Barbara. He held the post of Neil A. Armstrong Distinguished Professor of Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering at Purdue University .
Shing-Tung Yau - mathematician working in differential geometry. He proved Calabi's conjecture on a class of manifolds now named Calabi-Yau manifolds, which has now become the geometric ground where physicists build their string theory.
Michael Chang - at age 17, is the youngest male tennis player in the world to win the Grand Slam tournament ( 1989) and the first American man in 34 years to win the French Open
Tiffany Chin - figure skater. She dominated the junior circuit in ice skating prior to her Olympic career, winning the US Junior National title as well as the World Junior title. Chin made the United States Winter Olympic team in 1984 after winning the free skate at the 1984 Nationals. She won two world bronze medals as well the 1985 U.S. National title, a first for an Asian American or anyone who was not Caucasian.
Amy Chow - gymnast and a member of the famous Magnificent 7 who were the first American team to win Olympic gymnastics gold.
Norm Chow - UCLA Bruins offensive coordinator. Chow won the 2002 Broyles Award as the nation's top collegiate assistant coach. He also was named the 2002 NCAA Division I-A Offensive Coordinator of the Year by American Football Monthly and was named the National Assistant Coach of the Year in 1999 by the American Football Foundation.
Julie Chu - Olympics hockey player. Chu is the first Asian American woman and first Chinese American woman to play for the U.S. Olympic ice hockey team, and played in the 2002 and 2006 games. She won the Patty Kazmaier Award in 2007 for best female collegiate hockey player.
Karen Kwan - former figure skater, sister of Michelle Kwan. Karen represented the United States at numerous international skating events, and won the bronze medal at the 1996 Nebelhorn Trophy in Germany.
Michelle Kwan - figure skater. She won nine U.S. championships, five World Championships, and two Olympic medals. She has remained competitive for over a decade and is the most decorated figure skater in U.S. history. Known for her consistency and expressive artistry on ice, she is widely considered to be one of the greatest figure skaters of all time.
Caroline Zhang - figure skater. She is the 2006 Junior Grand Prix Final Champion and 2007 World Junior Champion.
Charles Goodall Lee - first licensed Chinese American dentist in the United States. He settled in Oakland and became Oakland Chinatown's first dentist. His practice continued till his retirement in 1940. He was an active participant in civil affairs founding Oakland's Chinese American Citizens Alliance in 1912.
Clara Elizabeth Chan Lee - first Chinese American woman voter in the United States. She registered to vote on 1911-11-08 in California.
Soong Mei-Ling - a.k.a. Madame Chiang Kai-Shek. As the wife of President Chiang Kai-shek, she played a prominent role in the politics of the Republic of China.
Katherine Young - World's oldest user of the Internet. O n her 102nd birthday, she became a celebrity for being the oldest person to surf the Internet. She was feted with numerous birthday emails and an emailed sonogram of her great-grandson.
Yung Wing - First Chinese and Asian to obtain a degree from an American college (Yale University) in 1854. He persuaded the Qing Dynasty government to send young Chinese to the United States to study Western science and engineering. With the government's eventual approval, he organized what came to be known as the Chinese Educational Mission, which included 120 young Chinese students, to study in the New England region of the United States beginning in 1872. The Educational Mission was disbanded in 1881, but many of the students later returned to China and made significant contributions to China's civil services, engineering, and the sciences.In 1863, construction began on the transcontinental railroad—1,776 miles of tracks that would form a link between America's West and East coasts. While thousands of European immigrants worked on the westbound Pacific Union rail, there was not enough manpower to build the Central Pacific line, which snaked through the rugged Rocky and Sierra Nevada Mountains. In 1865, Central Pacific officials hired 50 Chinese laborers to lay down a section of track. Their work was so well done, they decided to recruit more Chinese men. In the end, nearly 12,000 Chinese railroad workers were hired to perform dangerous work that white men refused to do. They dammed rivers, dug ditches, and blasted tunnels through mountain ranges. Hundreds of men died on the job. The Chinese also faced discrimination because they looked different from the white workers. Although they often outperformed other laborers, they were paid less. Despite all of the hardships, the Chinese laborers never quit. Thanks to their hard work, America became the first continent to have a coast-to-coast railroad. The railroad was considered the greatest American technological feat of the 19th century. It served as a vital link for trade, commerce and travel that joined the eastern and western halves of late 19th century United States .
Starting in the late 19th century, Chinese workers were used to construct hundreds of miles of levees throughout the delta's waterways in an effort to reclaim and preserve farmland and control flooding. These levees confine waterflow to the riverbeds. Levee failures in the delta can result in the flooding of vast tracts of both agricultural land and developed cities.
This type of cooking typically caters to Western tastes, and differs significantly from the cuisine of China.