person

Lotus Long

Personal Info

Known For

Acting

Gender

Female

Birthday

1909-07-18

Place of Birth

Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA

Lotus Long

Biography

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Lotus Long (born Lotus Pearl Shibata, July 18, 1909 – September 14, 1990) was an American actress. Long was born in New Jersey to a father of Japanese ancestry and a mother of Hawaiian ancestry. She came to Southern California during the 1920s to act in Hollywood films, and usually portrayed ethnic Asian female characters in supporting roles. She used the name "Lotus Long" for stage and film. Because of her adopted surname, people generally assumed that she was of Chinese ancestry – something she later relied on to avoid mass incarceration in American internment camps with other persons of Japanese ancestry, both legal permanent residents and American citizens, during World War II. She appeared in the MGM docudrama Eskimo (1933) as wife of the main character. Under the stage name Lotus Long as Moonflower in the 1934 film The Mysterious Mr. Wong and as the murder victim, Princess Lin Hwa, in 1939's Mr. Wong in Chinatown. She also starred alongside Keye Luke in Phantom of Chinatown as Win Len, Dr. Benton's secretary, whereas Keye Luke played Mr. Wong, this time known as Detective James Lee Wong. She was also credited under the name Karen Sorrell in the films Flight into Nowhere (1938) starring Jack Holt and Mysterious Mr. Moto (1938) starring Peter Lorre. She was uncredited as a "native girl" in the film The Real Glory (1939) starring Gary Cooper and David Niven. One of her more infamous roles would be as Tokyo Rose in Lew Landers' film, Tokyo Rose (1946), which also starred Keye Luke, Edwin Luke, Richard Loo, Byron Barr, and Osa Massen. Long had one writing and producing credit, for the film The Tahitian (1956) made with her husband, James Knott. The Tahitian was filmed on location with a largely native cast. In Timothy Tau's short film bio-pic Keye Luke, Lotus Long is portrayed by Mei Melancon, who is also of mixed ancestry (Japanese, Chinese and French), and who was inspired by the real-life figure of Tokyo Rose (Iva Toguri) to get into acting.

Also Known For

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58

Phantom of Chinatown

Nov 18, 1940

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58

Mysterious Mr. Moto

Sep 17, 1938

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42

The Mysterious Mr. Wong

Jan 25, 1935

poster

60

Think Fast, Mr. Moto

Jul 23, 1937

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53

Mr. Wong in Chinatown

Aug 01, 1939

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57

The Mystery of Mr. Wong

Mar 08, 1939

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65

Eskimo

Nov 14, 1933

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33

Sing Sing Nights

Dec 14, 1934

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NA

The Peacock Fan

Aug 01, 1929

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NA

Rose of the Yukon

Jan 05, 1949

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62

Flying Tigers

Oct 08, 1942

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50

Tokyo Rose

Feb 08, 1946

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60

Last of the Pagans

Dec 20, 1935

poster

45

Sea Spoilers

Sep 30, 1936

poster

40

Flight Into Nowhere

Apr 19, 1938

poster

55

China Passage

Mar 12, 1937

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NA

For Beauty's Sake

Jun 06, 1941