...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!
Yellowface
- 447 statements
- 85 feature instances
- 77 referencing feature instances
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Yellowface is the practice in cinema, theatre and television where East Asian characters are portrayed by actors of other races while wearing make-up to give them the appearance of an East Asian person, often including epicanthic folds (the skin fold in the inner corner of the eye, a common East Asian feature). In more racist applications, the make-up is stylized with various stereotypical traits. Sometimes it is used simply out of a reluctance to cast genuine Asian actors. A prominent example was Anna May Wong being passed over for the lead female role of O-Lan in the 1937 film version of The Good Earth in favour of white actress Luise Rainer. Miss Wong was told she "was not beautiful enough". The excuse given was that The Hays Code would have prohibited the film from showing Wong kissing her leading man as "miscegenation", because he was the white actor Paul Muni, despite their both playing Chinese characters.note MGM also missed out by not allowing Sessue Hayakawa to play Wang Lung; despite his status as the first great Hollywood sex symbol, predating even Rudolf Valentino, Douglas Fairbanks or Ronald Colman. MGM had a very white-only attitude compared to the other studios Hayakawa had worked with. Yellowface has often been used simply to facilitate comically insulting representations of East Asians, though, unlike blackface with Minstrel Shows, it has never been associated with a particular artistic tradition. It also never gained the same stigma associated with blackface, and still remains far more acceptable in Western media, as demonstrated, for example, by its use in the film adaptation of Cloud Atlas, though this is starting to change as it becomes less and less acceptable. See also Blackface and Brownface. Interchangeable Asian Cultures is a related trope in which works conflate various Asian cultures and ethnicities. Should, under no circumstances, be confused with Yellow Face from Battle for Dream Island or the long-running cartoon with a literally yellow-skinned family. |
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In Barry Eisler's John Rain series, the title character is a half-white, half-Japanese American who uses plastic surgery and hair dye to look fully Asian. | |
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John Rain | hasFeature |
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Due to the times, 1933's The Bitter Tea of General Yen has this. It's nice to point out that General Yen isn't a caricature, but is actually played as a fully realized person. | |
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The Bitter Tea of General Yen | hasFeature |
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Miss Saigon: In the original West End (London) run of this musical, The Engineer was played by white actor Jonathan Pryce. The casting garnered controversy, but it didn't stop Pryce from winning a Tony Award for his performance. As pointed out by Pryce's defenders, the character is half European. Thuy was also played by a Caucasian performer in yellowface and in ways this is worse given that Thuy is the designated villain and in the original production with its original lyrics was considerably less sympathetic. Both of these roles are now generally played by Asian performers in English-speaking professional productions. | |
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Miss Saigon (Theatre) | hasFeature |
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El ChapulÃn Colorado episodes "El campeón de Karate amanció de mal Karate" and "La casa del te de hierbabuena de la luna" both set in Japan, all actors are Mexicans with Yellow face. Same in Chespirito parody sketch of Madame Butterfly. | |
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El ChapulÃn Colorado | hasFeature |
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The 1915 adaptation of Madame Butterfly has the white Canadian Mary Pickford playing the Japanese protagonist, Cio-Cio. | |
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Madame Butterfly (Theatre) | hasFeature |
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In The Terror of the Tongs (1961), the leader of the Red Dragon Tong is played by Christopher Lee, with Ewen Solo, Roger Delgado and Charles Lloyd-Pack as his main underlings, and Yvonne Monlaur as the hero's half-Chinese love interest. Burt Kwouk, in a tiny role as a diplomat, is the only actor of Asian descent with a speaking part. | |
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The Terror of the Tongs | hasFeature |
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The B.P.R.D. villain "Memnan Saa". His real name is Martin Gilfryd—he was a mid-19th-century English magician who studied under Tibetan monks and created a new identity as a generically Asian sorcerer. The artists noted that they modeled him after Christopher Lee's portrayal of Fu Manchu. | |
Yellowface / int_1bd4c2fc | featureApplicability |
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B.P.R.D. (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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Glenn in The Walking Dead: A Hardcore Parody. There were complaints, which only got louder when the creators and their supporters gave pretty weak excuses for why it wasn't so bad. | |
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The Walking Dead (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
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Cyber Six has a kind of controversial episode with very stereotypical Japanese looking characters private eye Yashimoto and his sister, to the point that it did not aired in the US. They were voiced by non-Japanese actors with Japanese Ranguage accent in both the English and Spanish version. However in its defense the animation was in charge of a Japanese studio and considering that despite the stereotype Yashimoto is pretty badass many actual Japanese fans of the show see it as a case of Mexicans Love Speedy Gonzales. | |
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Cybersix | hasFeature |
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Infamous "Last Horizons" episode of TaleSpin went out of circulation for its depiction of Panda bears as stereotypical Chinese Yellow Peril villains. | |
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TaleSpin | hasFeature |
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Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing was produced in 1955 with William Holden as the leading man, and Jennifer Jones in yellowface as Dr. Han Suyin. Nowadays, the film is a case-study in the difficulty Hays Code Hollywood had in depicting interracial relationships. | |
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Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing | hasFeature |
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The first novel in the The Shadow pulps, The Living Shadow, has the main bad guy, a white racketeer, dress in yellowface to fence stolen diamonds. | |
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The Shadow | hasFeature |
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In It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Dee performs a comedy character named "Taiwan Tammy" who is an Asian woman while wearing eye makeup, a black wig and cartoonish buck teeth. The performance involves heavy use of Asian Speekee Engrish. Charlie calls it "incredibly racist." | |
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It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia | hasFeature |
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In The Simpsons Krusty does a stand up act in "The Last Temptation of Krust" that involves him wearing large fake buckteeth, squinting his eyes, and talking like a stereotypical Chinese person. The audience did not react well to it. | |
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The Simpsons | hasFeature |
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Kickboxer: Thai Muay Thai champion Tong Po was played by Mohamed Qissi (credited as Michel Qissi), a martial artist and actor of full North African descent (from Morocco) who moved to Belgium. | |
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Kickboxer | hasFeature |
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Australian comedian Chris Lilley did it twice; first as aspiring actor Ricky Wong in We Can Be Heroes: Finding The Australian of the Year, then as narcissistic Stage Mom Jen Okazaki in Angry Boys. This is par for the course for Lilley; he's notorious for making mockumentary miniseries where he portrays numerous characters of varying gender and ethnicity, leaving him with quite the polarizing reputation. | |
Yellowface / int_26e7c4bb | featureApplicability |
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We Can Be Heroes: Finding The Australian of the Year | hasFeature |
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Notorious bomb The Conqueror went whole hog with the yellowface, with John Wayne, yes, John Wayne, wearing unconvincing makeup and a silly Fu Manchu mustache to play the Mongolian warlord and conqueror Genghis Khan. | |
Yellowface / int_2cb79a7f | featureApplicability |
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The Conqueror | hasFeature |
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Community had an episode where Pierce managed to simultaneously do this AND Black Face AND Brown Face with handpuppets, one being apparently a black Mexican and the other his Asian wife. The Dean referred to it as "harmless racial humor" as he pushed Pierce quickly offstage. | |
Yellowface / int_3558eaa2 | featureApplicability |
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Community | hasFeature |
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Yellowface / int_3b9a4a9e | comment |
Played with in the novel Yellowface by Rebecca F. Kuang. June Hayward, who is white, steals an unpublished first draft from her frenemy Athena Liu after Athena's death in a freak accident, and passes it off as her own. To quash possible concerns about the book's authenticity, she publishes it as "Juniper Song", with an author photo that makes her appear ethnically ambiguous. While Song is her actual middle name (ostensibly she's using it as her penname to honor her mother, who was something of a hippie, hence said middle name) and she never outright claims to be Asian, June and her publishers are still very obviously attempting to mislead the casual reader into making some...incorrect assumptions...about her ethnicity. Which quickly turns out to be a really bad idea. | |
Yellowface / int_3b9a4a9e | featureApplicability |
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Yellowface | hasFeature |
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The Australian sketch-comedy show Fast Forward did a short parody of Kung Fu (see below) with two actors engaging in this trope, but it's more famous now for the amount of overt Corpsing also on display. | |
Yellowface / int_42256342 | featureApplicability |
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Fast Forward | hasFeature |
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In South Park: Phone Destroyer, the PVP battles are hosted by "Don King Butters", which is to say, Butters in a fez, with fake buck teeth, drawn-on glasses and offensive Chinese accent. This is because Cartman told him to take the role of boxing promoter Don King, but since Butters had no idea who that was, he thought it was a random Asian name. | |
Yellowface / int_43ffa1d | featureApplicability |
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South Park: Phone Destroyer (Video Game) | hasFeature |
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The Inn of the Sixth Happiness: The main character's Chinese love interest is made half-European so he could be played by a white actor. (This was not the only change between book and film. The title was changed from The Small Woman— among other reasons, because the title role went to 5'8" Ingrid Bergman.) | |
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The Inn of the Sixth Happiness | hasFeature |
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In one MADtv (1995) sketch, an Asian guy takes his white girlfriend home to meet his parents. His parents are white (he's adopted) but pretend to be Asian to help him fit in with the family. They then get angry at him for dating a white girl. | |
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MADtv (1995) | hasFeature |
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Master of the Flying Guillotine includes a cast of Hong Kong actors using makeup to portray a variety of martial artists from other nationalities, including Turkish and Indian fighters. | |
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Master of the Flying Guillotine | hasFeature |
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The pilot episode of The Wild Wild West uses this along with a couple of other permutations of Fake Nationality. A Chinese character named Wing Fat (played by European-American actor Victor Buono in heavy makeup) works for the Mexican villain, Juan Manolo. Later, it is revealed that Wing Fat is Juan Manolo (or Wan Man Lo) and has been using a Mexican Decoy Leader. But as Manolo lies dying, it is revealed that he was wearing makeup in-universe and really was Mexican all along. | |
Yellowface / int_4ec6798d | featureApplicability |
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The Wild Wild West | hasFeature |
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In one Scandinavia and the World strip, Sweden makes fun of China by literally painting his face yellow, putting on a conical straw hat, squinting his eyes, and spouting racist clichés. He thinks it's okay because China is "almost white people and a superpower", but China gets very offended and throws vague threats at Sweden. | |
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Scandinavia and the World (Webcomic) | hasFeature |
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Mortal Komedy: This Mortal Kombat parody series brings us a Liu Kang played by a pasty white guy putting on a horrible "ortiental" accent. | |
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Mortal Komedy (Web Video) | hasFeature |
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The Siamese cats in Disney's Lady and the Tramp and The Aristocats are furry versions of the Yellowface, with considerable controversy as Disney itself restrict access to Lady and the Tramp for small children for this reason. In the first case the Siamese cats are malicious, in the second case the character is benevolent. | |
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Lady and the Tramp | hasFeature |
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Yellowface / int_5fd94766 | comment |
One episode of The Lucy Show had Lucy in a black wig and "slant eye" glasses, babbling in mock Japanese as she creates her usual mayhem trying to distract her boss Mr. Mooney from something. Only Lucille Ball could get away with such a hopelessly racist if over the top performance. | |
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The Lucy Show | hasFeature |
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The Mongols: None of the actors playing Mongols, starting with Jack Palance as Ögedei Khan (son of Genghis Khan), was from Mongolia or of East Asian descent. | |
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The Mongols | hasFeature |
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Ghost in the Shell (2017) (which was already facing accusations of Whitewashing) came under fire after it came out that the studio was experimenting with digital effects designed to make white actors look more Asian. | |
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Ghost in the Shell (2017) | hasFeature |
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Death from a Top Hat: One of the suspects is a stage magician named Donald MacNeil, who performs in yellowface as Ching Wong Fu. He's called Ching throughout the novel; he uses his stage name in ordinary life for publicity reasons, even when he's not wearing the makeup. | |
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The Great Merlini | hasFeature |
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Reilly, Ace of Spies: The Chinese police inspector that Reilly matches wits with in Port Arthur is played by David Suchet. Suchet is of South African and Lithuanian-Jewish descent. | |
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Reilly, Ace of Spies | hasFeature |
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Yellowface | |
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Kung Fu (1972): In this television series, David Carradine was Kwai Chang Caine and the character was made half-white. While the character of Caine was a sympathetic one, Carradine's casting gained notoriety because they passed over Bruce Lee, who had aided in creating the show with the sole purpose of starring in it. | |
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Kung Fu (1972) | hasFeature |
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Yellowface / int_7038c36b | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_7038c36b | comment |
Danger 5, an Affectionate Parody of secret agent TV shows. In "Kill-Men of the Rising Sun", all the Asian roles speaking roles are played by Australian actors in yellowface and speaking dubbed Japanese. This then becomes Leaning on the Fourth Wall as the Evil Plan involves Allied soldiers being brainwashed into becoming Japanese Super Soldiers, complete with yellowface and similarly dubbed voices. | |
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Danger 5 | hasFeature |
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Yellowface / int_70c7b114 | type |
Yellowface | |
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Two episodes from the first season of Gilligan's Island featured Italian American actor Vito Scotti as a Japanese submarine pilot. | |
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Gilligan's Island | hasFeature |
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Yellowface / int_7251cf08 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_7251cf08 | comment |
I Now Pronounce You Chuck & Larry has Rob Schneider playing a vaguely East Asian minister. For his performance, Schneider donned makeup to make himself look distinctly Asian, complete with a bigger, wider nose, slanted eyelids and a darker skin color. Some have attempted to excuse this because his maternal grandmother was Filipino, but not only is that not the ethnicity he's mocking, it didn't protect him from criticism of the performance by critics of all ethnicities. | |
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I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry | hasFeature |
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Yellowface / int_7540129f | type |
Yellowface | |
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Broken Blossoms: The depiction of Chen Huan the Chinese missionary was played by Richard Barthelmess, a white actor, though the portrayal is positive, especially for the time. Barthelmess actually took the time to learn some appropriate body language and mannerisms, and the opening scene where he receives counsel from the superior at his monastery is beautifully done. | |
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Broken Blossoms | hasFeature |
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In BioShock, gangster Frank Fontaine claims he spent some time disguised as a Chinese man. However, this doesn't appear onscreen. | |
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BioShock (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_791fca44 | |
Yellowface / int_7950511c | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_7950511c | comment |
Murder by Death features Sidney Wang, a parody of Charlie Chan. Naturally, he's played in yellowface as well, this time by Peter Sellers. | |
Yellowface / int_7950511c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_7950511c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Murder by Death | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_7950511c | |
Yellowface / int_7a36aae5 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_7a36aae5 | comment |
Gilbert and Sullivan's The Mikado is theoretically set in Japan and is really supposed to be performed by British actors in make-up. The real target is Britain, of course, with the setting chosen due to Japonism of the era (there was literally a mini Japanese village in Knightsbridge at the time). There were fears that visiting Japanese officials would be offended by the musical, but they enjoyed the performance and wryly commented on being "pleasingly disappointed" to find nothing offensive. Productions of the musical toured Japan with integrated casts and there was even a recent production that translated the lyrics into Japanese. The Mikado stands in an awkward position today because it really is meant to be performed in yellow face but that is far less appropriate today than it was in 1880s. Modern productions walk a fine line either eschewing make-up entirely or mixing exaggerated British features (huge mutton chops) with the make-up. | |
Yellowface / int_7a36aae5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_7a36aae5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Mikado (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_7a36aae5 | |
Yellowface / int_7f77ffd2 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_7f77ffd2 | comment |
Pretty much every version of Fu Manchu has been played by a white guy. Myrna Loy, before her big break in The Thin Man actually got a lot of Asian roles due to her exotic looks. The Mask of Fu Manchu and Thirteen Women are two examples. |
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Yellowface / int_7f77ffd2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_7f77ffd2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Fu Manchu | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_7f77ffd2 | |
Yellowface / int_8033f25c | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_8033f25c | comment |
The Golden Child features Charlotte Lewis as an East Asian character, though her character is heroic. Other Asian characters are played by Victor Wong, Shakti Chen, etc. | |
Yellowface / int_8033f25c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_8033f25c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Golden Child | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_8033f25c | |
Yellowface / int_80e4864b | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_80e4864b | comment |
In the biopic Genghis Khan, the Chinese characters are played by white actors in yellowface, including a painfully bad performance from James Mason as a Chinese court minister. The actors playing Mongols, however, are white actors with their appearance unaltered. | |
Yellowface / int_80e4864b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_80e4864b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
GenghisKhan | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_80e4864b | |
Yellowface / int_82439e64 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_82439e64 | comment |
In The Office (US) one of Michael Scott's characters is him in yellow face acting like a stereotypical Asian. He calls him "Ping" and most of his employees are offended by the character. | |
Yellowface / int_82439e64 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_82439e64 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Office (US) | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_82439e64 | |
Yellowface / int_84319a6c | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_84319a6c | comment |
Sorrowful and Immaculate Hearts: One of Bruce Wayne's reasons to be sad, filed under "Questionable" because he's not sure whether it's legitimate or not to be bothered by this, is that he's pretty sure Ra's al Ghul is actually a white guy, but Bruce can't call him out for it because he's white too. | |
Yellowface / int_84319a6c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_84319a6c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Sorrowful and Immaculate Hearts (Fanfic) | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_84319a6c | |
Yellowface / int_87d5d46 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_87d5d46 | comment |
The Teahouse of the August Moon: In the film adaptation, Marlon Brando plays Sakini, a native Okinawan working as an interpreter for the American occupiers. The Yellowface is at least lessened here by Brando's charismatic performance and the fact that Sakini is the smartest character in the story and not an embarrassing stereotype.note Brando was extremely invested in Sakini to the point of Method Acting. He lost over 15 pounds, learned Japanese and practiced appropriate postures and gestures. | |
Yellowface / int_87d5d46 | featureApplicability |
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Yellowface / int_87d5d46 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Teahouse of the August Moon (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_87d5d46 | |
Yellowface / int_88fce462 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_88fce462 | comment |
In The King of Fighters live-action film, Japanese protagonist Kyo Kusanagi is played by Caucasian Sean Faris, despite the character having an Asian father, and being shown as an Asian child in a flashback scene. | |
Yellowface / int_88fce462 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_88fce462 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The King of Fighters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_88fce462 | |
Yellowface / int_8a800df1 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_8a800df1 | comment |
The ailent film Tell It to the Marines, starring Lon Chaney, Sr., has a white woman playing the local Asian hottie/source of trouble. It's really obvious in a scene with several extras playing the locals: the camera pans from ethnic guy to ethnic guy to ethnic guy...to this woman who stands out as obviously a Caucasian in makeup. | |
Yellowface / int_8a800df1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_8a800df1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Tell It to the Marines | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_8a800df1 | |
Yellowface / int_8e5b0ea9 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_8e5b0ea9 | comment |
The Good Earth: A 1937 film adaptation of Pearl Buck's bestselling novel. A story set in China, with all the characters Chinese, but the leading roles were all given to white actors. The only role offered to an East Asian actress, Anna May Wong, was as the villain, but she turned it down, saying, "You're asking me — with Chinese blood — to do the only unsympathetic role in the picture featuring an all-American cast portraying Chinese characters." | |
Yellowface / int_8e5b0ea9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_8e5b0ea9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Good Earth | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_8e5b0ea9 | |
Yellowface / int_8f223e02 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_8f223e02 | comment |
The Blue Racer featured a literal Japanese beetle in the Mickey Rooney style in a number of episodes. | |
Yellowface / int_8f223e02 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_8f223e02 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Blue Racer | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_8f223e02 | |
Yellowface / int_9108833b | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_9108833b | comment |
One series of Knightmare had a Chinese trader by the name of Ah Wok, complete with traditional costume and comedy accent, being played by the not-at-all-Asian Mark Knight. | |
Yellowface / int_9108833b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_9108833b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Knightmare | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_9108833b | |
Yellowface / int_9e237766 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_9e237766 | comment |
In Vidocq, exotic dancer Préah (Spanish actress Inés Sastre) puts fake epicanthic folds over her eyes to look East Asian. | |
Yellowface / int_9e237766 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_9e237766 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Vidocq | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_9e237766 | |
Yellowface / int_9f9c64a3 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_9f9c64a3 | comment |
The 1961 film adaptation of Flower Drum Song impressively featured a mostly Asian cast (though not all of them were Chinese-American). The exception was Juanita Hall, an African-American, as Madame Liang. The role was intended for Anna May Wong (mentioned above) but she died before production began. The original stage production had a white actor as Sammy Fong, but the film replaced him with Jack Soo. | |
Yellowface / int_9f9c64a3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_9f9c64a3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Flower Drum Song | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_9f9c64a3 | |
Yellowface / int_a8283c45 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_a8283c45 | comment |
Madam Nagata from the Adam Adamant Lives! episode "More Deadly Than the Sword" was played by Mary Webster, a white Englishwoman. In a hilarious bit of irony, Nagata even had a line saying that the first step to becoming a geisha was to be Japanese. | |
Yellowface / int_a8283c45 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_a8283c45 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Adam Adamant Lives! | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_a8283c45 | |
Yellowface / int_a83b26f5 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_a83b26f5 | comment |
The Dr. Terrible's House of Horrible episode "Frenzy of Tongs", a parody of Yellow Peril movies like The Terror of the Tongs and the Fu Manchu series, the villain Hang Man Chan is played by Mark Gatiss. | |
Yellowface / int_a83b26f5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_a83b26f5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dr. Terrible's House of Horrible | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_a83b26f5 | |
Yellowface / int_ab42c63a | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_ab42c63a | comment |
Get Smart had the villain "The Craw", played by Leonard Strong, and Harry Hoo (Joey Forman), a Charlie Chan expy. | |
Yellowface / int_ab42c63a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_ab42c63a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Get Smart | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_ab42c63a | |
Yellowface / int_b0fc9724 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_b0fc9724 | comment |
In a Saturday Night Live sketch, three technology gurus complain about the iPhone 5, before being confronted by three Chinese workers (all played by white actors, though without any noticeable visual distinction) who make the phones. | |
Yellowface / int_b0fc9724 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_b0fc9724 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Saturday Night Live | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_b0fc9724 | |
Yellowface / int_b369b969 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_b369b969 | comment |
The titular character of Dr. No is half-German and half-Chinese. He is played by the white Jewish actor Joseph Wiseman. In fact, in this movie, every Asian character with a substantial role is played by a white actor in yellowface. Unfortunately, this makes it blatantly obvious from the moment we see her that Miss Taro is The Mole. | |
Yellowface / int_b369b969 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_b369b969 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dr. No | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_b369b969 | |
Yellowface / int_b48f2f50 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_b48f2f50 | comment |
Breakfast at Tiffany's: Mickey Rooney's role as the buck-toothed stereotype-Japanese Mr. Yunioshi is notorious. See trope photo. | |
Yellowface / int_b48f2f50 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_b48f2f50 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Breakfast at Tiffany's | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_b48f2f50 | |
Yellowface / int_b5ab36eb | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_b5ab36eb | comment |
You Only Live Twice has an in-universe example, with James Bond under cover disguised as a Japanese man, accomplished by dyeing his skin and hair and altering his body language. | |
Yellowface / int_b5ab36eb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_b5ab36eb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
You Only Live Twice | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_b5ab36eb | |
Yellowface / int_b5e05a50 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_b5e05a50 | comment |
Cloud Atlas both plays the trope straight and inverts it: the story consists of six segments in different time periods, with actors playing multiple roles implied to be reincarnations of each other. One of the segments takes place in 22nd-century "Neo-Seoul", in which various non-Asian actors play Koreans (most prominently Jim Sturgess, James D'Arcy and Hugo Weaving, who are white). Inverted by Doona Bae (Korean) and Xun Zhou (Chinese) appearing as different nationalities in other segments. | |
Yellowface / int_b5e05a50 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_b5e05a50 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Cloud Atlas | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_b5e05a50 | |
Yellowface / int_be462008 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_be462008 | comment |
Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins has the old Korean master Chiun played by Joel Grey in yellowface. Notably, the sheer amount of effort put into this earned the film an Academy Award nomination for Best Makeup, although it lost the award to Mask. | |
Yellowface / int_be462008 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_be462008 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_be462008 | |
Yellowface / int_c1827fff | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_c1827fff | comment |
Blood and Black Lace: Claude Dantes, a blue-eyed white woman, wears a Romulan-esque haircut and a ton of eyeliner to play the supposedly Chinese Tao-li. Apart from her name, you would be forgiven for not even realizing that she's supposed to be Asian. | |
Yellowface / int_c1827fff | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_c1827fff | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Blood and Black Lace | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_c1827fff | |
Yellowface / int_c43df4d8 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_c43df4d8 | comment |
Doctor Who offended (in many senses) frequently in the Classic series: Early Doctor Who serials in Asian settings, such as "Marco Polo" and "The Abominable Snowmen" had guest casts consisting mostly of white actors in yellowface. Zienia Merton, who portrayed Ping-Cho in the former, was half Asian (Burmese, not Chinese), however. Mavic Chen in "The Daleks' Master Plan" has the surname Chen and was given epicanthic folds, V-shaped eyebrows and darkened skin, although with the idea being that he would appear nonspecifically multiracial rather than Asian. "The Wheel In Space" featured amongst its multinational space station crew a Chinese character, Chang, played by a white actor, Peter Laird, in yellowface, adopting an excruciatingly fake Asian Speekee Engrish accent. Averted in "The Mind of Evil", a Jon Pertwee story that goes out of its way to use real Chinese actors for the Chinese characters, something that was seen as peculiar at the time. The director hated this trope, though more because it looked unrealistic than for any more politically correct reason. "Planet of the Spiders" has two Tibetan-appearing Time Lords played by white actors in makeup, with a fairly excruciating Asian Speekee Engrish accent in one case. The portrayal of the character is fairly respectful, but it's still quite painful to watch nowadays. According to the actor, the captain in "Planet of Evil" was supposed to look Chinese and had heavy latex prosthetics applied to create this effect. However, the makeup 'didn't go with [his] face', with the result that he doesn't even look like they were going for this, let alone look like an East Asian. The serial "The Talons of Weng-Chiang" has John Bennett in yellowface playing a Chinese magician in a Yellow Peril plot. Though the yellowface has made networks reluctant to rerun the serial, especially in America, its story is still highly regarded amongst fans - it possesses some anti-racist content as well. |
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Yellowface / int_c43df4d8 | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_c43df4d8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Doctor Who | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_c43df4d8 | |
Yellowface / int_cc315a2a | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_cc315a2a | comment |
Charlie Chan: In nearly all film adaptions of the novels, the Chinese-American detective is played by a white actor in yellowface. Probably the most famous was Warner Oland, who, despite being Swedish, enjoyed a long career playing Asian roles, appearing as Charlie Chan in 16 films, Fu Manchu in four films, as well as other Chinese characters in films like Old San Francisco and Shanghai Express. In a bit of a Zig Zag, Oland did not use makeup to change his appearance for Asian roles, believing his natural features sufficiently passed for Asian (Oland claimed some Mongolian ancestry on his Russian mother’s side). To the series' credit, the actors, such as Keye Luke as Number One Son, playing his family were usually Asians themselves. | |
Yellowface / int_cc315a2a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_cc315a2a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Charlie Chan | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_cc315a2a | |
Yellowface / int_cd34de67 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_cd34de67 | comment |
Tales of the Gold Monkey: Princess Koji, the Marivellas's resident Dragon Lady, is played by the white Marta DuBois. It's hand waved by the character being half-Irish. | |
Yellowface / int_cd34de67 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_cd34de67 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Tales of the Gold Monkey | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_cd34de67 | |
Yellowface / int_cfbea3ba | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_cfbea3ba | comment |
The sound-only equivalent of Yellowface was done, for laughs, in radio ensemble comedy show Round the Horne, where a recurring arch-enemy of Keneth Horne-Special Agent was Chou-En-Ginsberg, voiced in an exaggerated way by Kenneth Williams. Often, he would be acompanied by the lovely Lotus Blossom, played by Bill Pertwee. The portrayals were incredibly politically incorrect re their portrayals of things Chinese. | |
Yellowface / int_cfbea3ba | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_cfbea3ba | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Round the Horne (Radio) | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_cfbea3ba | |
Yellowface / int_d3ff6961 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_d3ff6961 | comment |
In one episode of Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!, Shaggy pretends to be Chinese, complete with queue, squinty eyes, and buck teeth. | |
Yellowface / int_d3ff6961 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_d3ff6961 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_d3ff6961 | |
Yellowface / int_d8713916 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_d8713916 | comment |
55 Days at Peking: Practically every Chinese character with any lines in this 1963 film is played by a white actor in makeup. The rare exception is Teresa, who's half Chinese and half American and was played by Lynne Sue Moon, an Anglo-Chinese actress. By contrast, Colonel Shiba of the Japanese delegation was played by Juzo Itami, and all the members of the delegation were played by Japanese actors. A large number of East Asian extras were hired, of course, to provide the mooks for the white heroes to mow down. | |
Yellowface / int_d8713916 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_d8713916 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
55 Days at Peking | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_d8713916 | |
Yellowface / int_d9c602eb | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_d9c602eb | comment |
South Park: In "The China Problem" Cartman and Butters 'infiltrate' a Chinese restaurant dressed up as stereotypical Asians in an attempt to uncover China's supposed plot to takeover America. Nobody is fooled by this. In "City Sushi" it is revealed that Dr. Janus has Multiple Personality Disorder and one of his personalities is City Wok owner Tuong Lu Kim |
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Yellowface / int_d9c602eb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_d9c602eb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
South Park | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_d9c602eb | |
Yellowface / int_e5c6748d | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_e5c6748d | comment |
In The Three Stooges short "No Dough Boys", a wartime short, the stooges are dressed as Japanese soldiers for a photo shoot, and later stumble upon a hideout with Nazi spies and have to take on the identity of the Japanese spies the Nazis were expecting to meet with. Hilarity Ensues. | |
Yellowface / int_e5c6748d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_e5c6748d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Three Stooges | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_e5c6748d | |
Yellowface / int_eae5292b | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_eae5292b | comment |
Shanghai Express features the completely white Warner Oland playing a half-white, half-Chinese character. The film itself lampshades this by having characters be confused on his ethnicity. | |
Yellowface / int_eae5292b | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_eae5292b | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Shanghai Express | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_eae5292b | |
Yellowface / int_eb049de6 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_eb049de6 | comment |
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows has Robert Downey Jr. as Sherlock Holmes disguising himself as a 19th century Chinese man complete with queue and giant opium pipe. | |
Yellowface / int_eb049de6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_eb049de6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_eb049de6 | |
Yellowface / int_ec4f863 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_ec4f863 | comment |
One of Our Dinosaurs Is Missing features several Chinese characters, none of whom are actually played by Chinese actors; Peter Ustinov plays the antagonist Hnup Wan, and Bernard Bresslaw plays his henchman Fan Choy. | |
Yellowface / int_ec4f863 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_ec4f863 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_ec4f863 | |
Yellowface / int_ef305472 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_ef305472 | comment |
7 Faces of Dr. Lao: Lao is played by Tony Randall. Of course, as hinted by the title, Lao is a 7,000 year old wizard who can appear in whatever form he wants. | |
Yellowface / int_ef305472 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_ef305472 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
7 Faces of Dr. Lao | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_ef305472 | |
Yellowface / int_f0a86c12 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_f0a86c12 | comment |
The How I Met Your Mother episode "Slapsgiving 3: Slappointment in Slapmarra" featured Neil Patrick Harris, Josh Randor, Cobie Smulders, and Alyson Hannigan dressed up in Yellowface as an attempt at creating an Affectionate Parody of 70's kung-fu movies. The episode received massive backlash from the Asian-American community, leading to apologies from the show's creators. The fact that the show is a frequent target of allegations of Monochrome Casting probably didn't help matters. | |
Yellowface / int_f0a86c12 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_f0a86c12 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
How I Met Your Mother | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_f0a86c12 | |
Yellowface / int_f3fd0fef | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_f3fd0fef | comment |
In The Shadow Hero, a "Chinese" gangster taken prisoner and dragged off to the cops by the hero turns out to be a white man in Yellowface. Complicated by the fact that the gangster who the impersonator was acting as a public front man for genuinely was Chinese. | |
Yellowface / int_f3fd0fef | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_f3fd0fef | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Shadow Hero (Comic Book) | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_f3fd0fef | |
Yellowface / int_f502a38a | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_f502a38a | comment |
The Smurfs (1981): Episode "The Traveler" has a Chinese character reaching Europe and befriending the Smurfs in his quest to appease the spirit of a dragon. The character is very stereotypical and speaks in Asian Speekee Engrish, and is voice by a non-Chinese actor. However is a kindhearted, friendly and brave character. Episodes "Papa's Big Snooze" and "Karate Clumsy" of the infamous ninth season happen in Feudal Japan with both a race of anthropomorphic Yellowface looking mice and actual human Japanese, same with "Imperial Panda-Monium" and "Fortune Cookie" in Imperial China. |
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Yellowface / int_f502a38a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_f502a38a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Smurfs (1981) | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_f502a38a | |
Yellowface / int_f53905a3 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_f53905a3 | comment |
The Year of Living Dangerously: Linda Hunt portrayed male Chinese-Australian photographer Billy Kwan. Hunt earned quite a lot of praise for her fine performance and was awarded an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in 1984. She is the only person ever to have gained an Oscar for playing someone of the opposite gender. | |
Yellowface / int_f53905a3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_f53905a3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The Year of Living Dangerously | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_f53905a3 | |
Yellowface / int_f6c05e8e | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_f6c05e8e | comment |
Defied in Friends. Joey tries to get the attention of a Broadway director at Chandler and Monica's wedding, but he says he's currently working on an All-Chinese work. "Can you be Chinese?". Joey ("I'm not proud of this, but...") proceeds to manipulate his eyelids, prompting a shocked reaction from the director asking him to stop. | |
Yellowface / int_f6c05e8e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_f6c05e8e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Friends | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_f6c05e8e | |
Yellowface / int_fcd86271 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_fcd86271 | comment |
The King and I: Russian-American Yul Brynner plays the King of Siam. He also popularized the role on Broadway, to the point that his iconic appearance has become strongly associated with the role. | |
Yellowface / int_fcd86271 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_fcd86271 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The King and I (Theatre) | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_fcd86271 | |
Yellowface / int_fd8ca1b3 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_fd8ca1b3 | comment |
The New Avengers: The Chinese crime lord Soo Choy in "Trap", who wears traditional Chinese robes and a Mandarin cap and generally comes across as a poor man's Fu Manchu, is played by a Caucasian actor in obvious yellowface. In fact, it is not even obvious at first that he is supposed to be Chinese and not a white man who has adopted Oriental mannerisms. Made more obvious by all of his henchmen being played by Asian actors. | |
Yellowface / int_fd8ca1b3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_fd8ca1b3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
The New Avengers | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_fd8ca1b3 | |
Yellowface / int_fd8fc45c | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_fd8fc45c | comment |
In Magic in the Moonlight, stage magician Stanley Crawford (Colin Firth) performs in yellowface as Wei Ling Soo (Crawford's character is loosely based on William Ellsworth Robinson/Chung Ling Soo. | |
Yellowface / int_fd8fc45c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_fd8fc45c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Magic in the Moonlight | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_fd8fc45c | |
Yellowface / int_ff5cc447 | type |
Yellowface | |
Yellowface / int_ff5cc447 | comment |
In the Short Circuit films, white actor Fisher Stevens has his face darkened to play stereotypical Indian Ben Jabituya. | |
Yellowface / int_ff5cc447 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Yellowface / int_ff5cc447 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Short Circuit | hasFeature |
Yellowface / int_ff5cc447 |
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