Ling Woo

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First appearanceThey Eat Horses, Don't They? (1998)
Portrayed byLucy Liu
OccupationJudge, Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Of counsel, Cage & Fish
NationalityAmerican
Ling Woo
Ally McBeal character
First appearanceThey Eat Horses, Don't They? (1998)
Portrayed byLucy Liu
In-universe information
OccupationJudge, Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Of counsel, Cage & Fish
NationalityAmerican

Ling Woo is a fictional character in the US comedy drama Ally McBeal, portrayed by Chinese-American actress Lucy Liu. A Mandarin-speaking Chinese-American lawyer,[1] Ling has been described as cold and ferocious.[2]

At the time, she was cited as the most famous and only significant[3][4] representative of Asian women on US television (besides news anchors and reporters).[5] Thus, her characterization has attracted much scholarly attention in the US.[5]

Ally McBeal is an American television series created by David E. Kelley which ran on the Fox network from 1997 to 2002.[6] Set in the fictional Boston law firm of Cage, Fish and Associates, the series explores the relationships among various lawyers working at the firm, often as they relate to gender-specific issues raised in court cases.[6] Ling Woo was a character written by Kelley specifically for actress Lucy Liu after she failed to secure the role of Nelle Porter in the show.[7]

Woo appeared for the first time in the second season episode They Eat Horses, Don't They? as a client suing a Howard Stern-like talk show host named Wick.[7][8] She was suing because Wick's programs contributed to sexual harassment in her workplace.[7] Wick claimed Woo brought suit because she had a "slutty little Asian thing going", and Woo said that she wanted to sleep with Wick because if she did, she would kill him.[7] The character proved to be a hit, and Liu was signed on as a regular for the series.[9]

Ling became a lawyer with the firm by pressuring Richard Fish, the firm's senior partner, to hire her services as counsel.[10] She remained a regular on the show until 2001, when her role was reduced to four episodes in the upcoming season.[11] Ling's employment history changed that season when the Governor of Massachusetts offers Ling a job as judge after Ling complimented her twin babies.[10] Woo is a graduate of Cornell Law School where she was editor of the Law Review.

Asian women were rarely given prominent roles on American television.[4] In 1994 Margaret Cho had a brief prime-time show called All American Girl, which was not popular with audiences and did not last a full season.[4] When the show aired, there had not been another Asian-American-centered show or an Asian main character at the time the Ling character was created.[4] Unlike the 1970s depictions of docile East Asian women on TV, Ling's character was the opposite, but still a classic stereotype, that of the Dragon Lady.[1] At the time, she was the only significant representative of Asian women on television[4] in the United States (besides news anchors and reporters),[5] leaving no one else to counteract this prominent stereotype.[4] She remains the most memorable Asian TV character of the 1990s.[1]

Character

See also

References

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