The Warmth of Other Suns
<p>The story of Anna May Wong’s sojourn in Europe has become the stuff of legend. Seeing that there was nothing for her in Hollywood — except the same old exoticized roles where she never got the guy and died in the end (or sometimes died at the very beginning) — she gathered up every ounce of her youthful gumption and set sail for Germany in the spring of 1928. At UFA in Berlin, not only was Anna May cast in the leading role, but the screenplay was crafted specifically for her and the film was retitled in honor of her Chinese name, to boot! (If you ask me, <a href="https://halfcastewoman.substack.com/p/anna-may-wongs-top-10-films" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank"><em>Song</em></a> is still one of the best films she ever made.)</p>
<p>By the time she returned to the U.S. three years later, she had been hailed as an international sensation. Studio heads suddenly realized they’d better give the Chinese American actress a second look. <em>Los Angeles Times</em> reporter Harry Carr put it this way: </p>
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