Joan Chen

Chinese-born American actress and director From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Joan Chen (simplified Chinese; 陈冲; born April 26, 1961) is a Chinese-born American actress and film director. She is the recipient of numerous accolades, including four Taipei Golden Horse Awards and an AACTA Award. She made her film debut in the Chinese film Youth (1977) before starring in the film Little Flower [zh] (1979). She came to the attention of American audiences for her portrayal of Wanrong in the Bernardo Bertolucci historical epic film The Last Emperor (1987), which won nine Academy Awards including Best Picture.

Born
陳沖 (Chen Chong)

(1961-04-26) April 26, 1961 (age 65)
Shanghai, China
CitizenshipUnited States
OccupationsActress, director
Yearsactive1975–present
Quick facts Born, Citizenship ...
Joan Chen
Chen in 2025
Born
陳沖 (Chen Chong)

(1961-04-26) April 26, 1961 (age 65)
Shanghai, China
CitizenshipUnited States
OccupationsActress, director
Years active1975–present
Spouses
  • Jim Lau
    (m. 1985; div. 1990)
  • Peter Hui
    (m. 1992)
Children2
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese陳冲
Simplified Chinese陈冲
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinChén Chōng
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingCan4 Cung1
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She is also known for her leading roles in Heaven & Earth (1993), Golden Gate (1994), Red Rose White Rose (1994), Saving Face (2004), Sunflower (2005), and The Home Song Stories (2007) with supporting roles in Lust, Caution (2007), Tigertail (2020), and Dìdi (2024). As a filmmaker she directed the feature films Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl (1998), Autumn in New York (2000), English (2018) and Hero (2022).

On television, she is most known for her recurring role as Jocelyn 'Josie' Packard in the David Lynch created surrealist drama series Twin Peaks (1990–1991). She also portrayed Madame Chiang Kai-shek in the HBO film Hemingway & Gellhorn (2012), Chabi in the Netflix series Marco Polo (2014–2016) and Lu Mei in the FX on Hulu series A Murder at the End of the World (2023).

Early life

Chen was born in Shanghai, to a family of pharmacologists.[1] She and her older brother, Chase, were raised during the Cultural Revolution. At the age of 14, Chen was discovered on the school rifle range by Jiang Qing, the wife of leader Mao Zedong and major Chinese Communist Party figure, for excelling at marksmanship. This led to her being selected for the Actors' Training Program by the Shanghai Film Studio in 1975, where she was discovered by veteran director Xie Jin who chose her to star in his 1977 film Youth [fr][2] as a deaf mute whose senses are restored by an army medical team. Chen graduated from high school a year in advance, and at the age of 17 entered Shanghai International Studies University, where she majored in English.[3]

Career

1979–1984: Early career in China

Chen in fantasy makeup for the 1985 film Dim Sum: A Little Bit of Heart
Chen in the 1985 film Dim Sum: A Little Bit of Heart

Chen performed alongside Liu Xiaoqing, Tang Guoqiang and Ge Cunzhuang in Zhang Zheng's (simplified Chinese: 张铮; traditional Chinese: 張錚; pinyin: Zhāng Zhēng) Little Flower [zh] in 1979, for which she won the Hundred Flowers Award for Best Actress.[4] Chen portrayed a pre-Maoist revolutionary's daughter, who, reunited with her brother, a wounded Communist soldier, later learned that his doctor was her biological mother. Little Flower was her second film and she soon achieved the status of China's most-loved actress; she was dubbed "the Elizabeth Taylor of China" by Time magazine for having achieved stardom while still a teenager.[2]

In addition, Chen was in the 1979 film Hearts for the Motherland [zh]. The film directed by Ou Fan (欧凡; 歐凡; Ōu Fán) and Xing Jitian (邢吉田; Xíng Jítián) depicts an overseas Chinese family that returns to China from Southeast Asia out of their patriotic feelings but encounter political troubles during the Cultural Revolution. The songs, "I Love You, China" and "High Flies the Petrel" (高飞的海燕; 高飛的海燕; Gāofēi de Hǎiyàn), sung by Chen's character, are perennial favorites in China. In 1981, Chen starred in Awakening (苏醒; 甦醒; Sūxǐng), directed by Teng Wenji [zh].

1985–1999: Hollywood and Twin Peaks

At age 20, Chen moved to the United States, where she studied filmmaking at California State University, Northridge. Her first Hollywood movie was Tai-Pan, filmed on location in China. In 1985, she appeared in the American television show Miami Vice as May Ying, former wife of Martin Castillo and husband to Ma Sek in the episode "Golden Triangle (Part II)". She went on to portray the Last Empress Wanrong in Bernardo Bertolucci's The Last Emperor, which won 9 Academy Awards in 1988, including Best Picture.[5] She then starred in the David Lynch/Mark Frost television series Twin Peaks as Josie Packard. She starred alongside Rutger Hauer in 1989's The Blood of Heroes, written and directed by David Webb Peoples. In 1993, she co-starred in Oliver Stone's Heaven & Earth. She portrayed two different characters in Clara Law's Temptation of a Monk: a seductive princess of Tang dynasty, and a dangerous temptress. She shaved her head on-screen for the role. The award-winning film was adapted from a novel by Lilian Lee.

In 1994, she co-starred with Steven Seagal in the action-adventure On Deadly Ground. She also returned to Shanghai to star in Stanley Kwan's Red Rose White Rose opposite Winston Chao, and subsequently won a Golden Horse Award and a Hong Kong Film Critics Society Award for her performance. In 1996, she served as a jury member at the 46th Berlin International Film Festival.[6]

Tired of being cast as an exotic beauty in Hollywood films, Chen moved into directing in 1998 with the critically acclaimed Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl, adapted from the novella Celestial Bath (Chinese: 天浴; pinyin: Tiān Yù) by her friend Geling Yan. She later directed Autumn in New York, starring Richard Gere and Winona Ryder, in 2000.

2000–present: International acclaim

In the middle of the 2000s, Chen made a comeback in acting and began to work intensely, alternating between English and Chinese-language roles. In 2004, she starred in Hou Yong's family saga Jasmine Women, alongside Zhang Ziyi, in which they played multiple roles as daughters and mothers across three generations in Shanghai. She also starred in the Asian-American comedy Saving Face as a widowed mother, who is shunned by the Chinese-American community for being pregnant and unwed and has come to live with her lesbian daughter. In 2005, she appeared in Zhang Yang's family saga Sunflower, as a mother whose husband and son have a troubled father-son relationship over 30 years. She starred in the Asian American independent film Americanese and in Michael Almereyda's Tonight at Noon, the first part of a two part project, scheduled to be released in 2009.

In 2007, Chen was acclaimed for her performance in Tony Ayres' drama The Home Song Stories. She portrayed a glamorous and unstable Chinese nightclub singer who struggles to survive in 1970s Australia with her two children. The performance earned her multiple awards, including the Australian Film Institute Award for Best Actress and the Golden Horse Award for Best Leading Actress. The same year saw her co-starring in two other acclaimed films: Ang Lee's Lust, Caution, opposite Tony Leung Chiu-Wai, and Jiang Wen's The Sun Also Rises, opposite Anthony Wong Chau-Sang, for which she received the Asian Film Award for Best Supporting Actress.

In 2008, she starred alongside Sam Chow (simplified Chinese: 邹爽; traditional Chinese: 鄒爽; pinyin: Zōu Shuǎng) in Shi Qi (十七; Shíqī), directed by Joe Chow (姬诚; 姬誠; Jī Chéng), as a rural mother of a 17-year-old in eastern Zhejiang province. The same year Joan Chen portrayed a factory worker in Jia Zhangke's 24 City once fancied because she resembled Chen herself in the 1979 film Little Flower, but who missed her chance at love. She co-starred in Bruce Beresford's 2009 adaptation of the autobiography of dancer Li Cunxin, Mao's Last Dancer, along with Wang Shuangbao (王双宝; 王雙寶; Wáng Shuāngbǎo) and Kyle MacLachlan.[7]

In 2009, Chen starred alongside Feng Yuanzheng and Liu Jinshan [zh] in the Chinese TV series Newcomers to the Middle-Aged (人到中年; Rén Dào Zhōngnián), directed by Dou Qi (斗琪; Dòu Qí), in which she played a female doctor facing middle-age problems. She also played the part of goddess Guan Yin in the 2010 Chinese TV adaptation of Journey to the West, directed by Cheng Lidong (程力栋; 程力棟; Chéng Lìdòng). In October 2009 Joan Chen was the curator of the first Singapore Sun Festival, whose theme was "The Art of Living Well". She selected five films for screening during the festival: The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, Dead Man Walking, Hannah and Her Sisters, Still Life and Edward Scissorhands.[8][9]

In 2010, Chen joined the cast of Wang Leehom's directorial debut Love in Disguise, Alexi Tan's (陈奕利; 陳奕利; Chén Yìlì) Color Me Love (爱出色; 愛出色; Ài Chūsè; alongside Liu Ye),[10] Ilkka Järvi-Laturi's Kiss, His First (alongside Tony Leung Ka-fai and Gwei Lun-mei)[11] and veteran acting coach Larry Moss' Relative Insanity (along with Juliette Binoche). In May 2010, she was set to star and direct one of the three parts of the anthology film Seeing Red.[12][13] In 2011, Chen played Secretary Bishop's girlfriend on the television series Fringe episode "Immortality".[14] Chen was cast as the Mongol Yuan Dynasty empress Chabi in the 2014 American television series Marco Polo. Being somewhat unfamiliar with the Mongols, Chen read The Secret History of the Mongol Queens in order to prepare for the role.[15] She also appeared in several episodes of the 2018 Chinese television drama Ruyi's Royal Love in the Palace as Ula Nara Yixiu (the Empress Xiaojingxian).

In 2014, Chen served as a jury member at the 71st Venice International Film Festival.[16] In the same year, Chen presided over the jury for the 51st Golden Horse Awards.[17] In 2023 she played a caring and compassionate mother to a rebellious teenager in the coming of age comedy-drama Dìdi directed by Sean Wang. Angi Han of The Hollywood Reporter wrote of her performance, that the "role often trusts her remarkable ability to convey a lifetime’s worth of regret or joy or swallowed anger through a simple gaze".[18] For her performance she was nominated for the Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Performance.[19]

Personal life

In 1981, Chen left China to study at the State University of New York at New Paltz, before transferring to the California State University, Northridge.[citation needed]

From 1985 to 1990, Chen was married to actor Jim "Jimmy" Lau.[citation needed]

In 1989, she became a naturalized citizen of the United States.[citation needed]

On January 18, 1992, Chen married her second husband, cardiologist Peter Hui. They have two daughters.[20] They live in San Francisco, California.[citation needed]

On April 9, 2008, Chen wrote an article entitled "Let the Games Go On" for The Washington Post objecting to the politicization of the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.[21]

Charitable work

In May 2008, Chen appeared alongside James Kyson Lee, Silas Flensted, and Amy Hanaialiʻi Gilliom in a public service announcement for the Banyan Tree Project campaign to stop HIV/AIDS-related stigma in Asian & Pacific Islander communities.[22][23]

In October 2008, Chen made the cover of Trends Health magazine alongside actresses Ke Lan (Chinese: 柯蓝) and Ma Yili (Chinese: 马伊琍) to promote the Chinese Pink Ribbon Breast Cancer Prevention campaign.[citation needed]

On January 8, 2010, Chen attended, alongside Nancy Pelosi, Nicole Kidman, and Joe Torre, the ceremony to help Family Violence Prevention Fund break ground on a new center located in the Presidio of San Francisco intended to combat violence against women and children. During the ceremony, Chen performed an excerpt from the documentary play The Thumbprint of Mukhtar Mai (presented as part of "Seven").[24][25][26]

On January 15, 2010, Chen was set to appear, along with other Asian American personalities, in a series of videos supporting the Center for the Pacific Asian Family.[27]

Social impact

Chen has contributed to the Asian LGBTQ+ community in the US by starring in several LGBTQ+ films, with the most famous ones being “Saving Face” and  “Montreal, My Beautiful”. Saving Face was released in 2004, when it released it was rare to see works on topics related to Asian LGBTQ+ community. However, this movie demonstrated not only Asian LBTQ+ community’s life, but also some typical Chinese family’s life and relationship. It became a classic film widely, and has become reference for people wishing to learn about the life of these communities. [28][29]

Chen has also been very dedicated in advocating for the Asian American or broader immigrant community. She said publicly, while in an interview, that a very important reason for her choosing her latest character in “Montreal, My Beautiful” was because she felt strongly connected to the immigrant background of the character. She, in other interviews, is also actively expressing her thoughts on the experience as an Asian actress in the US – how hard it was being the minority in Hollywood and the lower visibility for most Asian actors. These behaviors has made her one of the most iconic figures among all Asian actors in the US. [30][31][32]

Filmography

Actress

Film

More information Year, Title ...
Film
YearTitleRoleNotes
1977 Youth Shen Yamei
1979 Little Flower Zhao Xiaohua
Hearts for the Motherland Huang Sihua
1981 Awakening Su Xiaomei
1985 Dim Sum: A Little Bit of Heart Young M.J. player
1986 Goodbye My Love Ling Ti
Tai-Pan May–May
1987 The Night Stalker Mai Wing
The Last Emperor Wanrong
1989 The Salute of the Jugger Kidda Aka The Blood of Heroes
1991 Wedlock Noelle
1992 Turtle Beach Minou
Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me Jocelyn 'Josie' Packard Scene deleted – see Twin Peaks: The Missing Pieces
1993 Temptation of a Monk Princess Hong'e (Scarlet)
Lady Qingshou (Violet)
Heaven & Earth Mama
1994 Golden Gate Marilyn
On Deadly Ground Masu
Red Rose White Rose Wang Jiao-Rui
1995 The Hunted Kirina
Wild Side Virginia Chow Also associate producer
Judge Dredd Ilsa Hayden
1996 Precious Find Camilla Jones
1999 Purple Storm Shirley Kwan
2000 What's Cooking? Trinh Nguyen
2004 Jasmine Women Mo's Mother / Mo
Saving Face Hwei-Lan Gao
Avatar Madame Ong
2005 Sunflower Xiuqing
2006 Americanese Betty Nguyen
2007 The Home Song Stories Rose Hong
Lust, Caution Mrs. Yee
The Sun Also Rises Dr. Lin
2008 The Leap Years Li-Ann (age 49)
All God's Children Can Dance Evelyn
Shi Qi Mother
24 City Gu Minhua
2009 Mao's Last Dancer Niang
2010 Love in Disguise Joan
Color Me Love Zoe
2011 1911 Empress Longyu
2012 White Frog Irene Young
Passion Island Johanna
Let It Be Niu Jie
Double Xposure Dr. Hao
2014 For Love or Money Xu's Mother
Twin Peaks: The Missing Pieces Jocelyn 'Josie' Packard
2015 You Are My Sunshine Pei Fangmei
Lady of the Dynasty Consort Wu
Cairo Declaration Soong Ching-ling
2019 Sheep Without a Shepherd Laoorn
2020 Tigertail Yuan
Ava Toni
2023 Under the Light He Xiuli
2024 Dìdi Chungsing Wang Also executive producer
2025 The Wedding Banquet May Chen
Oh. What. Fun. Jeanne Wang-Wasserman
Montreal, My Beautiful (Montréal, ma belle) Feng Xia
TBA Remarkably Bright Creatures TBA Post-production
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Television

More information Year, Title ...
Television
YearTitleRoleNotes
1983 Matt Houston Miss Taipei Episode: "Target: Miss World"
1984 The New Mike Hammer Ti Episode: "Hot Ice"
Knight Rider Su-Lin Episode: "Knight of the Drones"
1985 Miami Vice May Ying Episode: "Golden Triangle"
Double Dare Lily Chang Episode: "Hong Kong King Con"
American Playhouse Mei Lai Episode: "Paper Angels"
MacGyver Lin Episode: "The Golden Triangle"
1988 HeartBeat Cathryn Episode: "Pilot"
1989 Wiseguy Maxine Tzu Episode: "All or Nothing"
1990–1991 Twin Peaks Jocelyn 'Josie' Packard TV series — Series regular (2 seasons)
1992 Nightmare Cafe Cafe Customer Episode: "Nightmare Cafe"
Strangers The Girl TV movie
Children of the Dragon Jin-Juan Miniseries
Shadow of a Stranger Vanessa TV movie
1993 Tales from the Crypt Connie Episode: "Food for Thought"
1997 Homicide: Life on the Street Elizabeth Wu Episode: "Wu's on First?"
Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child Princess Jade (voice) Episode: "Aladdin"
1998 The Outer Limits Major Dara Talif Episode: "Phobos Rising"
1999 In a Class of His Own Linda Ching TV movie
2009 Newcomers to the Middle-Aged Tian Wenjie TV series
2010 Journey to the West Guan Yin
2011 Fringe Reiko Episode: "Immortality"
2012 Hemingway & Gellhorn Madame Chiang Kai-shek HBO TV movie
Heroes of Sui and Tang Dynasties Empress Dugu TV series
2013 Serangoon Road Patricia Cheng 10 episodes
Meng's Palace
海上孟府
Er Jie TV series
2014–2016 Marco Polo Chabi 20 episodes
2017 Twin Peaks Jocelyn 'Josie' Packard Episode: "Part 17", archive footage
2018 Ruyi's Royal Love in the Palace Ula Nara Yixiu 6 episodes
2023 A Murder at the End of the World Lu Mei 6 episodes
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Filmmaker

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Notes
1995 Wild Side Associate producer
1998 Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl
2000 Autumn in New York
2018 English
2022 Hero
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Awards and nominations

More information Award, Year ...
Award Year Category Work Result Ref.
AARP Movies for Grownups Awards 2025 Best Supporting Actress Dìdi Won [33]
Asian American International Film Festival 1994 Asian American Media Award N/a Won [34]
Asian Film Awards 2008 Best Actress The Home Song Stories Nominated [35]
Best Supporting Actress The Sun Also Rises Won [36]
Asia Pacific Screen Awards 2007 Best Performance by an Actress The Home Song Stories Nominated [37]
Asia Society 2024 Asia Entertainment Gamer Changer Award N/a Honored [38]
Australian Film Institute Awards 2007 Best Actress in a Leading Role The Home Song Stories Won [39]
Berlin International Film Festival 1998 Golden Bear Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl Nominated [40]
CAAMFest 2012 Award for Achievement in Citizen Journalism N/a Honored [41]
Capri Hollywood International Film Festival 2007 Capri Global Award Lust, Caution Won [42][43]
Chicago International Film Festival 1998 Gold Hugo Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl Nominated [44][45]
Critics Choice Association 2024 Career Achievement Award N/a Honored [46]
Denver Film Festival 2024 Career Achievement Award Dìdi Honored [47]
EDA Awards 2024 Best Supporting Actress Nominated [48]
Festival du Film de Paris 1999 Grand Prix Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl Nominated [49]
Special Jury Prize Won
Film Critics Circle of Australia 2008 Best Actress The Home Song Stories Won [50]
Fort Lauderdale International Film Festival 1998 Best Drama Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl Won [51]
Golden Raspberry Awards 1987 Worst Actress Tai-Pan Nominated [52]
Worst New Star Nominated
1995 Worst Actress On Deadly Ground Nominated [53]
Hawaiʻi International Film Festival 2007 Achievement in Acting The Home Song Stories Won [54][55]
Hong Kong Film Critics Society Awards 1994 Best Actress Red Rose White Rose Won [56]
Hong Kong Film Awards 1995 Best Actress Nominated [57]
Hundred Flowers Awards 1980 Best Actress Little Flower Won [58]
Independent Spirit Awards 2000 Best First Feature (Over $500,000)
(shared with Alice Chan Wai-Chung)
Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl Nominated [59]
2025 Best Supporting Performance Dìdi Nominated [60]
Inside Film Awards 2007 Best Actress The Home Song Stories Won [61]
2010 Best Actress Mao's Last Dancer Nominated [62][63]
Macau International Movie Festival 2020 Best Actress Sheep Without a Shepherd Nominated
Mons International Film Festival 1999 Grand Prize Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl Won
National Board of Review 1999 International Freedom Award Won [64]
Newport Beach Film Festival 2024 Career Achievement Award N/a Honored [65]
Reelworld Film Festival 2025 Outstanding Feature Actress Montreal, My Beautiful Won [66]
San Diego Asian Film Festival 2005 Lifetime Achievement Award N/a Honored [67]
San Diego Film Critics Society 2024 Best Supporting Actress Dìdi Nominated [68]
San Francisco Bay Area Film Critics Circle 2024 Best Supporting Actress Won [69]
San Francisco International Film Festival 2024 Career Tribute Award N/a Honored [70][71]
Seattle Film Critics Society 2024 Best Supporting Actress Dìdi Nominated [72]
Shanghai International Film Festival 2008 Press Prize for Most Attractive Actress Shi Qi Won
Shanghai Television Festival 2024 Best Actress in a Supporting Role The Heart Nominated [73]
Singapore International Film Festival 2018 Cinema Legend Award N/a Honored [74][75]
South by Southwest 2006 Special Jury Prize for Outstanding Ensemble Cast
(shared with Ben Shenkman, Chris Tashima, Kelly Hu and Allison Sie)
Americanese Won [76][77]
Sundance Film Festival 2024 U.S. Dramatic Special Jury Award for Best Ensemble
(shared with Izaac Wang, Shirley Chen and Chang Li Hua)
Dìdi Won [78]
Taipei Golden Horse Awards 1994 Best Leading Actress Red Rose White Rose Won [79]
1998 Best Director Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl Won [80]
Best Adapted Screenplay (shared with Geling Yan) Won
2007 Best Leading Actress The Home Song Stories Won [81][82]
Torino Film Festival 2007 Best Actress Won [83]
Toronto Film Critics Association 2025 Outstanding Lead Performance in a Canadian Film Montreal, My Beautiful Won [84]
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Other media

  • 2008: "Shanghai," narrator—an audio walking tour by Louis Vuitton and Soundwalk[85]

Other recognition

  • Chen was named one of the "Fifty Most Beautiful People" by People magazine in 1992.[86][87]
  • Chen inspired the American experimental rock band Xiu Xiu, named after her film Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl, according to singer-songwriter Jamie Stewart.[88][89]
  • Chen was chosen by Goldsea as Number 45 on its compilation of "The 120 Most Inspiring Asian Americans of All Time".[90]

References

Works cited

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