James B. Leong

http://dbpedia.org/resource/James_B._Leong an entity of type: Thing

James B. Leong (born Leong But-jung and sometimes credited as Jimmy Leong) was a Chinese-American character actor and filmmaker who had a long career in Hollywood beginning during the silent era. Leong was born in Shanghai, and he moved to the United States with his parents when he was young. He graduated from college in Muncie, Indiana, in 1915 and briefly worked at a newspaper before moving to Hollywood, where he worked at first as a technical director for filmmakers like D. W. Griffith and Wesley Ruggles. rdf:langString
rdf:langString James B. Leong
rdf:langString James B. Leong
rdf:langString James B. Leong
rdf:langString Los Angeles, California, USA
xsd:date 1967-12-16
rdf:langString Shanghai, China
xsd:date 1889-11-02
xsd:integer 62294650
xsd:integer 1119676894
xsd:date 1889-11-02
rdf:langString Leong But-jung
xsd:date 1967-12-16
rdf:langString Actor, director
rdf:langString Agatha Tarwater
rdf:langString James B. Leong (born Leong But-jung and sometimes credited as Jimmy Leong) was a Chinese-American character actor and filmmaker who had a long career in Hollywood beginning during the silent era. Leong was born in Shanghai, and he moved to the United States with his parents when he was young. He graduated from college in Muncie, Indiana, in 1915 and briefly worked at a newspaper before moving to Hollywood, where he worked at first as a technical director for filmmakers like D. W. Griffith and Wesley Ruggles. By 1919, he had started his own production company — James B. Leong Productions, later known as the Wah Ming Motion Picture Company — to show Chinese life as it really was. He had grown tired of seeing Chinese people portrayed as kidnappers and assassins on the screen. Under this banner, he wrote and directed the 1921 film Lotus Blossom. During that time, he had said he planned to write and direct four films a year, though it never to fruition, with a planned follow-up, The Unbroken Promise, never filmed. He took work as an actor, playing smaller roles in Hollywood films, as well as continuing to work as a technical director and dialect coach. He made money by growing of silk crops in the 1940s. He married Agatha Tarwater in 1934; the pair had a son together. Leong became a U.S. citizen in 1958.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 7558
rdf:langString Leong But-jung
xsd:gYear 1889
xsd:gYear 1967

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