Irene Tsu (born November 4, 1945, Shanghai, China) is an actress who started in the film Flower Drum Song in 1961. She was featured in an advertising campaign (Wiki wiki dollar) in the 1960s. She speaks English and three varieties of Chinese.[which?]
Irene Tsu | |||||||||
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諸慧荷 | |||||||||
Born | Shanghai, China | November 4, 1945||||||||
Alma mater | UCLA | ||||||||
Occupations |
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Years active | 1961–present | ||||||||
Employer(s) | Coldwell Banker (real estate), motion picture industry, and yoga schools | ||||||||
Organizations | Member of
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Known for | Actress | ||||||||
Height | 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m) | ||||||||
Board member of | Beverly Hills Greater Los Angeles Association of Realtors (BHGLA) | ||||||||
Spouse | |||||||||
Children | 1 | ||||||||
Awards | Voted woman of the year 1969 by US information Service | ||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 諸慧荷 | ||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 诸慧荷 | ||||||||
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Website | irenetsu |
Early life and career
editTsu was born in Shanghai, China to Z.M. and Dulcie Lynn Tsu.[1] Her father was a banker and her mother a painter. After political changes in China in the 1940s, the family left for Taiwan, then Hong Kong. Her father remained behind in Taiwan while in 1957 she and the rest of her immediate family (sister and mother) emigrated to Larchmont, New York, a suburb of New York City, where her aunt lived. Irene attended Mamaroneck Elementary School in Mamaroneck, New York and studied ballet.
In the late 1950s. she auditioned for a dancing job in Broadway's Flower Drum Song. A staff member of the producer David Merrick's office saw the performance and auditioned her for the Broadway musical The World of Suzie Wong and Tsu got a part. Later Irene auditioned for choreographer Hermes Pan in the upcoming film adaptation of the musical Flower Drum Song.[2] The choreographer brought Irene to Hollywood and she was a teenage dancer in the film Flower Drum Song (1961), directed by Henry Koster.[2] He gave her her first speaking role as a teenage prostitute in his next film, Take Her, She's Mine (1963) starring James Stewart and Sandra Dee, which started her acting career.[citation needed]
She studied acting with Ned Maderino, Lee Strasberg and Peggy Feury[citation needed] and attended Los Angeles City College,[3] UCLA Film School, and California State University, Los Angeles.[4]
In 1961, Tsu entered the Miss Chinatown USA beauty pageant on behalf of New York and won first place.
On November 21, 1963, the evening before President John F. Kennedy was assassinated, Tsu's only appearance on Perry Mason was aired on CBS, as she played the role of defendant Juli Eng in "The Case of the Floating Stones." She made guest appearances on most of the other popular '60s–70s television shows such as I Spy, The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Family Affair, Mission: Impossible, Wonder Woman, and The Wild Wild West. She was tested for, but didn't get the female lead of The Sand Pebbles.[5] In the 1960s, Tsu met Frank Sinatra in Miami, Florida where she was filming the "Chevron Island" commercials and Sinatra was filming Tony Rome. They dated for over two years.
Tsu married director Ivan Nagy in 1971, although they later separated.[6][7]
Later career
editFrom 1978 until 1989, Tsu was chief operating officer and head designer for her own leisure apparel company, The IT Company/Irene Tsu Designs.
Since 1990 Tsu has been a realtor for Coldwell Banker in Beverly Hills, California.[4][8]
A long-time yoga practitioner, Tsu studied with yoga master Bikram Choudhury and is featured in both of his books Bikram's Beginning Yoga Class. She taught at Bikram Yoga College in Encinitas, California.[9] She teaches weekly yoga classes at the Bikram HQ in Los Angeles and for the Beverly Hills Department of Parks.
She is a single mother to her daughter, an adopted niece from China.[6][10]
Selected filmography
editFilm
edit- Flower Drum Song (1961) as Dancer (uncredited)
- The Horizontal Lieutenant (1962) as Oriental Spy (uncredited)
- Under the Yum Yum Tree (1963) as Suzy (uncredited)
- Take Her, She's Mine (1963) as Miss Wu
- John Goldfarb, Please Come Home! (1965) as Harem Girl (uncredited)
- The Sword of Ali Baba (1965) as Nalu
- How to Stuff a Wild Bikini (1965) as Native Girl
- Seven Women (1966) as Chinese Girl
- Women of the Prehistoric Planet (1966) as Linda
- Paradise, Hawaiian Style (1966) as Pua
- Caprice (1967) as Su Ling
- Island of the Lost (1967) as Judy Hawllani
- The Green Berets (1968) as Lin
- The Yin and the Yang of Mr. Go (1970) as Tah-Ling
- Stand Up and Be Counted (1972) (uncredited)
- Three the Hard Way (1974) as Empress
- Airport 1975 (1974) as Carol
- Judge Dee and the Monastery Murders (1974, TV Movie) as Celestial Image
- Paper Tiger (1975) as Talah
- Deadly Hero (1975)
- Hot Potato (1976) as Detective Sgt. Pam Varaje
- Damien's Island (1976) as Momi
- Down and Out in Beverly Hills (1986) as Sheila Waltzberg
- Steele Justice (1987) as Xua Chan
- A Girl to Kill For (1990) as The Counselor
- Unbecoming Age (1992) as R.J
- Mr. Jones (1993) as Mrs. Chang
- Snapdragon (1993) as Hua
- Comrades: Almost a Love Story (1996) as Aunt Rosie
- Golden Chicken (2002) as Kam's Aunt
- The Heart Specialist (2006) as Mrs. Olson
- Alibi (2007) as Chu Fan
Television
edit- Perry Mason TV series, episode: The Case of the Floating Stones (November 21, 1963) as Juli Eng
- My Favorite Martian TV series, Season 2 Episode 9 – Double Trouble (1964) as Leilani
- The Man from U.N.C.L.E. TV series, episode: The Hong Kong Shilling Affair (March 15, 1965) as Jasmine
- I Spy TV series, episode: A Cup of Kindness (September 22, 1965)
- Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea TV series, episode: The Peacemaker (November 21, 1965) as Su Yin
- My Three Sons, TV series, episode: Robbie and the Slave Girl (January 20, 1966) as Terry
- The Man from U.N.C.L.E., episode: The Five Daughters Affair: Part II (April 7, 1967) – Reikko
- The Wild Wild West TV series, episode: The Night of the Samurai (October 13, 1967) – Reiko O'Hara
- Family Affair TV series, episode: Eastward Ho (1970) – Ming Lee
- Mission: Impossible TV series, episode: Double Dead (February 12, 1972) as Penyo
- Hawaii Five-O TV series, episode: Engaged to Be Buried (February 27, 1973) as Alia
- Future Cop TV series (1977) as Doctor Tingley
- The Rockford Files, TV series, episode: Irving the Explainer (November 18, 1977) as Daphne Ishawaharda
- Wonder Woman, TV series, episode: The Man Who Made Volcanoes (November 18, 1977) as Mei Ling
- Trapper John, M.D., TV series, episode: Heart and Seoul (January 28, 1986) as Dr. Julie Lok
- Noble House (1988) all four episodes
- Tell Me No Secrets, (1997) TV movie
- Star Trek: Voyager, TV series, episode: Author, Author (April 18, 2001) as Mary Kim
- Cold Case, TV series, episode: Chinatown (November 22, 2009) as Da Chun Lu
- Law & Order: LA TV series, episode: Angel's Knoll (May 25, 2011) as Christina Yu
Notes
editReferences
edit- ^ Cf. Lisanti (2001), p.158
- ^ a b "Profile: Irene Tsu", Glamor Girls of the Silver Screen, website
- ^ "Actress Irene Tsu, an LACC Alum, Talks to LACC Cinema Students About her Film Career" Archived November 25, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Los Angeles City College News, December 1, 2006
- ^ a b Realtor: Irene Tsu – webpage
- ^ Lisanti, Tom, "How Actress Irene Tsu Lost the Female Lead in The Sandpebbles", cinemaretro.com Archived April 6, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Cf. Lisanti & Paul (2002), p.295
- ^ Beck, Marilyn, "Hollywood Hotline: Frank Sinatra Works on TV Special and Off-Beat Movie", Friday, September 26, 1969
- ^ Irene Tsu: Salesperson License #00975925 issued 12/21/87, State of California, Department of Real Estate
- ^ Bikram Yoga – Encinitas, California
- ^ Cf. Lisanti (2001), p.167
Sources
edit- Lisanti, Tom, Fantasy femmes of sixties cinema: interviews with 20 actresses from biker, beach, and Elvis movies, McFarland Publishing, 2001. Cf. pp.158–169 for entry on Irene Tsu.
- Lisanti, Tom; Paul, Louis, Film fatales: women in espionage films and television, 1962–1973, McFarland Publishing, 2002. See pp.293–295 for the entry on Irene Tsu.
Further reading
edit- "My life: Irene Tsu", Post magazine, South China Morning Post, interview with Kate Whitehead, January 26, 2014