Charlie Chan is a fictional
Honolulu police detective created by author
Earl Derr Biggers for a series of mystery novels. Biggers loosely based Chan on Hawaiian detective
Chang Apana. The benevolent and heroic Chan was conceived as an alternative to
Yellow Peril stereotypes and villains like
Fu Manchu
Dr. Fu Manchu ( zh, t=傅滿洲/福滿洲, p=Fú Mǎnzhōu) is a supervillain who was introduced in a series of novels by the English author Sax Rohmer beginning shortly before World War I and continuing for another forty years. The character f ...
. Many stories feature Chan traveling the world beyond
Hawaii
Hawaii ( ; ) is an island U.S. state, state of the United States, in the Pacific Ocean about southwest of the U.S. mainland. One of the two Non-contiguous United States, non-contiguous U.S. states (along with Alaska), it is the only sta ...
as he investigates mysteries and solves crimes.
Chan first appeared in Biggers' novels and then was featured in a number of media. Over four dozen
films
A film, also known as a movie or motion picture, is a work of Visual arts, visual art that simulates experiences and otherwise communicates ideas, stories, perceptions, emotions, or atmosphere through the use of moving images that are gen ...
featuring Charlie Chan were made, beginning in 1926. The character, featured only as a supporting character, was first portrayed by East Asian actors, and the films met with little success. In 1931, for the first film centering on Chan, ''
Charlie Chan Carries On'', the
Fox Film Corporation
The Fox Film Corporation (also known as Fox Studios) was an American independent company that produced motion pictures and was formed in 1914 by the theater "chain" pioneer William Fox (producer), William Fox. It was the corporate successor to ...
cast
Swedish actor
Warner Oland; the film became popular, and Fox went on to produce 15 more Chan films with Oland in the title role. After Oland's death, American actor
Sidney Toler was cast as Chan; Toler made 22 Chan films, first for Fox and then for
Monogram Studios. After Toler's death, six films were made, starring
Roland Winters.
Readers and moviegoers of America greeted Chan warmly. Chan was seen as an attractive character, portrayed as intelligent, heroic, benevolent, and honorable; this contrasted with the common depiction of Asians as evil or conniving which dominated Hollywood and national media in the early 20th century. However, in later decades critics increasingly took a more ambivalent view of the character. Despite his good qualities, Chan was also perceived as reinforcing condescending Asian stereotypes such as an alleged incapacity to speak idiomatic English and a tradition-bound and subservient nature. No Charlie Chan film has been produced since 1981.
The character has also been featured in several
radio programs, two
television shows, and
comics
a Media (communication), medium used to express ideas with images, often combined with text or other visual information. It typically the form of a sequence of Panel (comics), panels of images. Textual devices such as speech balloons, Glo ...
.
Books
The character of Charlie Chan was created by
Earl Derr Biggers. In 1919, while visiting
Hawaii
Hawaii ( ; ) is an island U.S. state, state of the United States, in the Pacific Ocean about southwest of the U.S. mainland. One of the two Non-contiguous United States, non-contiguous U.S. states (along with Alaska), it is the only sta ...
, Biggers planned a detective novel to be called ''
The House Without a Key''. He did not begin to write that novel until four years later, however, when he was inspired to add a Chinese-American police officer to the plot after reading in a newspaper of
Chang Apana and Lee Fook, two detectives on the Honolulu police force. Biggers, who disliked the
Yellow Peril stereotypes he found when he came to California, explicitly conceived of the character as an alternative: "Sinister and wicked Chinese are old stuff, but an amiable Chinese on the side of law and order has never been used.":
The "amiable Chinese" made his first appearance in ''The House Without a Key'' (1925). The character was not central to the novel and was not mentioned by name on the dust jacket of the first edition.
[Queen (1969), 102.] In the novel, Chan is described as "very fat indeed, yet he walked with the light dainty step of a woman" and in ''The Chinese Parrot'' as being " … an undistinguished figure in his Western clothes." According to critic Sandra Hawley, this description of Chan allows Biggers to portray the character as nonthreatening, the opposite of evil Chinese characters, such as
Fu Manchu
Dr. Fu Manchu ( zh, t=傅滿洲/福滿洲, p=Fú Mǎnzhōu) is a supervillain who was introduced in a series of novels by the English author Sax Rohmer beginning shortly before World War I and continuing for another forty years. The character f ...
, while simultaneously emphasizing supposedly Chinese characteristics such as impassivity and stoicism.
Biggers wrote six novels in which Charlie Chan appears:
*''
The House Without a Key'' (1925)
*''
The Chinese Parrot'' (1926)
*''
Behind That Curtain'' (1928)
*''
The Black Camel'' (1929)
*''
Charlie Chan Carries On'' (1930)
*''
Keeper of the Keys'' (1932)
Film, radio, stage and television adaptations
Films
The first film featuring Charlie Chan, as a supporting character, was ''
The House Without a Key'' (1926), a ten-chapter serial produced by
Pathé Studios, starring
George Kuwa, a Japanese actor, as Chan.
[Hanke (1989), xii.] A year later
Universal Pictures
Universal City Studios LLC, doing business as Universal Pictures (also known as Universal Studios or simply Universal), is an American filmmaking, film production and film distribution, distribution company headquartered at the 10 Universal Ci ...
followed with ''
The Chinese Parrot'', starring Japanese actor
Kamiyama Sojin as Chan, again as a supporting character.
In both productions, Charlie Chan's role was minimized. Contemporary reviews were unfavorable; in the words of one reviewer, speaking of ''The Chinese Parrot'', Sojin plays "the
Chink
''Chink'' is an English-language List of ethnic slurs, ethnic slur usually referring to a person of Chinese people, Chinese descent, but also used to insult people with East Asian features. The use of the term describing eyes with epicanthic ...
sleuth as a
Lon Chaney cook-waiter … because Chaney can't stoop that low."
For the first film to center mainly on the character of Chan,
Warner Oland, a white actor, was cast in the title role in 1931's ''
Charlie Chan Carries On'', and it was this film that gained popular success. Oland, a Swedish actor, had also played
Fu Manchu
Dr. Fu Manchu ( zh, t=傅滿洲/福滿洲, p=Fú Mǎnzhōu) is a supervillain who was introduced in a series of novels by the English author Sax Rohmer beginning shortly before World War I and continuing for another forty years. The character f ...
in an earlier film. Oland, who claimed some
Mongolian ancestry, played the character as more gentle and self-effacing than he had been in the books, perhaps in "a deliberate attempt by the studio to downplay an uppity attitude in a Chinese detective."
[Hanke (1989), 111.] Oland starred in sixteen Chan films for Fox, often with
Keye Luke, who played Chan's "", Lee Chan. Oland's "warmth and gentle humor"
helped make the character and films popular; the Oland Chan films were among Fox's most successful. By attracting "major audiences and box-office grosses on a par with A's" they "kept Fox afloat" during the
Great Depression
The Great Depression was a severe global economic downturn from 1929 to 1939. The period was characterized by high rates of unemployment and poverty, drastic reductions in industrial production and international trade, and widespread bank and ...
.
Oland died in 1938, and the Chan film ''Charlie Chan at the Ringside'' was rewritten with additional footage as ''
Mr. Moto's Gamble'', an entry in the
Mr. Moto series, another contemporary series featuring an East Asian protagonist; Luke appeared as Lee Chan, not only in already shot footage but also in scenes with Moto actor
Peter Lorre. Fox hired another white actor,
Sidney Toler, to play Charlie Chan, and produced eleven Chan films through 1942.
[Hanke (1989), 169.] Toler's Chan was less mild-mannered than Oland's, a "switch in attitude that added some of the vigor of the original books to the films."
He is frequently accompanied, and irritated, by his Number Two Son, Jimmy Chan, played by
Victor Sen Yung, who later portrayed "Hop Sing" in the long-running
Western
Western may refer to:
Places
*Western, Nebraska, a village in the US
*Western, New York, a town in the US
*Western Creek, Tasmania, a locality in Australia
*Western Junction, Tasmania, a locality in Australia
*Western world, countries that id ...
television series ''
Bonanza
''Bonanza'' is an American Western television series that ran on NBC from September 12, 1959, to January 16, 1973. Lasting 14 seasons and 431 episodes, ''Bonanza'' is NBC's longest-running Western, the second-longest-running Western series on ...
''.
When Fox decided to produce no further Chan films, Sidney Toler purchased the film rights from the author's widow. He had hoped to film more Charlie Chan pictures independently, to be released through Fox, but Fox had already discontinued the series and had no interest in reviving it. Toler approached
Philip N. Krasne
Philip N. Krasne (May 6, 1905 - September 18, 1999) was an American attorney who became a film and television producer.
Early years and education
Krasne was the son of Herman J. Krasne, a clothing merchant, and Rose Bernstein, Polish immigrants ...
, a Hollywood lawyer who financed film productions, and Krasne brokered a deal with
Monogram Pictures. James S. Burkett produced the films for Monogram. The budget for each film was reduced from Fox's average of $200,000 to $75,000.
For the first time, Chan was portrayed on occasion as "openly contemptuous of suspects and superiors."
[Hanke (1989), 170.] African American
African Americans, also known as Black Americans and formerly also called Afro-Americans, are an Race and ethnicity in the United States, American racial and ethnic group that consists of Americans who have total or partial ancestry from an ...
comedic actor
Mantan Moreland played chauffeur Birmingham Brown in 13 films (1944–1949) which led to criticism of the Monogram films in the forties and since;
some call his performances "brilliant comic turns",
while others describe Moreland's roles as an offensive and embarrassing stereotype.
[Cullen, ''et al'' (2007), 794.] Toler died in 1947 and was succeeded by
Roland Winters for six films. Keye Luke, missing from the series after 1938's Mr. Moto rework, returned as Charlie's son in the last two entries.
Spanish-language adaptations
Three Spanish-language Charlie Chan films were made in the 1930s and 1950s. The first, ''Eran Trece'' (''There Were Thirteen'', 1931), is a
multiple-language version of ''Charlie Chan Carries On'' (1931). The two films were made concurrently and followed the same production schedule, with each scene filmed twice the same day, once in English and then in Spanish. The film followed essentially the same script as the Anglophonic version, with minor additions such as brief songs and skits and some changes to characters' names (for example, the character Elmer Benbow was renamed Frank Benbow). A Cuban production, ''La Serpiente Roja'' (The Red Snake), followed in 1937.
[Mitchell (1999), 235.] In 1955, Producciones Cub-Mex produced a Mexican version of Charlie Chan called ''El Monstruo en la Sombra'' (Monster in the Shadow), starring Orlando Rodriguez as "Chan Li Po" (Charlie Chan in the original script).
The film was inspired by ''La Serpiente Roja'' as well as the American Warner Oland films.
Chinese-language adaptations
During the 1930s and 1940s, five Chan films were produced in Shanghai and Hong Kong. In these films, Chan, played by Xu Xinyuan (徐莘园), owns his detective agency and is aided not by a son but by a daughter, Manna, played first by Gu Meijun (顾梅君) in the Shanghai productions and then by Bai Yan (白燕) in postwar Hong Kong.
Chinese audiences also saw the original American Charlie Chan films. They were by far the most popular American films in 1930s China and among Chinese expatriates; "one of the reasons for this acceptance was that this was the first time Chinese audiences saw a positive Chinese character in an American film, a departure from the
sinister East Asian stereotypes in earlier movies like ''
Thief of Baghdad'' (1924) and
Harold Lloyd
Harold Clayton Lloyd Sr. (April 20, 1893 – March 8, 1971) was an American actor, comedian, and stunt performer who appeared in many Silent film, silent comedy films.Obituary ''Variety'', March 10, 1971, page 55.
One of the most influent ...
's ''
Welcome Danger'' (1929), which incited riots that shut down the Shanghai theater showing it." Oland's visit to China was reported extensively in Chinese newspapers, and the actor was respectfully called "Mr. Chan".
Modern adaptations
In Neil Simon's ''
Murder by Death'',
Peter Sellers
Peter Sellers (born Richard Henry Sellers; 8 September 1925 – 24 July 1980) was an English actor and comedian. He first came to prominence performing in the BBC Radio comedy series ''The Goon Show''. Sellers featured on a number of hit comi ...
plays a Chinese detective called Sidney Wang, a parody of Chan.
In 1980, Jerry Sherlock began production on a comedy film to be called ''Charlie Chan and the Dragon Lady''. A group calling itself C.A.N. (Coalition of Asians to Nix) was formed, protesting the fact that non-Chinese actors,
Peter Ustinov
Sir Peter Alexander Ustinov (16 April 192128 March 2004) was a British actor, director and writer. An internationally known raconteur, he was a fixture on television talk shows and lecture circuits for much of his career. Ustinov received #Awa ...
and
Angie Dickinson, had been cast in the primary roles. Others protested that the film script contained a number of stereotypes; Sherlock responded that the film was not a documentary. The film was released the following year as ''
Charlie Chan and the Curse of the Dragon Queen'' and was an "abysmal failure".
[Sengupta (1997).] An updated film version of the character was planned in the 1990s by
Miramax
Miramax, LLC, formerly known as Miramax Films, is an American independent film and television production and distribution company owned by beIN Media Group and Paramount Global. Based in Los Angeles, California, it was founded on December 19, ...
. While this Charlie Chan was to be "hip, slim, cerebral, sexy and... a martial-arts master," and portrayed by actor
Russell Wong, nonetheless the film did not come to fruition.
Actress
Lucy Liu
Lucy Alexis Liu (; born December 2, 1968) is an American actress, producer, and artist. Widely regarded as a trailblazer for Asian Americans in arts and entertainment, Asian American representation in Hollywood, Los Angeles, Hollywood, she is t ...
was slated to star in and executive-produce a new Charlie Chan film for Fox. The film was in preproduction by 2000; as of 2009, it was slated to be produced, but it also did not come to fruition.
Radio
On radio, Charlie Chan was heard in several different series on three networks (the
NBC Blue Network,
Mutual, and ABC) between 1932 and 1948 for the 20th Century Fox Radio Service.
Walter Connolly initially portrayed Chan on Esso Oil's ''Five Star Theater'', which serialized adaptations of Biggers novels.
Ed Begley, Sr. had the title role in N.B.C.'s ''The Adventures of Charlie Chan'' (1944–45), followed by
Santos Ortega (1947–48). Leon Janney and Rodney Jacobs were heard as Lee Chan, Number One Son, and Dorian St. George was the announcer. ''Radio Life'' magazine described Begley's Chan as "a good radio match for Sidney Toler's beloved film enactment."
Stage
Valentine Davies wrote a stage adaptation of novel ''Keeper of the Keys'' for Broadway in 1933, with
William Harrigan
William Harrigan (March 27, 1894 – February 1, 1966) was an American actor who performed in Hollywood during the 1930s and 1940s and on stage.
Early years
Harrigan was born in New York City and attended New York Military Academy. Harrigan was ...
as the lead. The production ran for 25 performances.
Television adaptations
* In 1956–57, ''
The New Adventures of Charlie Chan'', starring
J. Carrol Naish in the title role, were made independently for TV syndication in 39 episodes, by
Television Programs of America. The series was filmed in England. In this series, Chan is based in London rather than the United States. Ratings were poor, and the series was canceled.
* In the 1960s,
Joey Forman played an obvious parody of Chan named "Harry Hoo" in two episodes of ''
Get Smart
''Get Smart'' is an American comedy television series parodying the Spy fiction, secret agent genre that had become widely popular in the first half of the 1960s with the release of the ''James Bond'' films. It was created by Mel Brooks and Bu ...
''.
* In the 1970s,
Hanna-Barbera
Hanna-Barbera Cartoons, Inc. ( ; formerly known as H-B Enterprises, Hanna-Barbera Productions, Inc. and H-B Production Co.), simply and commonly known as Hanna-Barbera, was an American animation studio and production company, which was acti ...
produced an
animated series
An animated series, or a cartoon series, is a set of Animation, animated films with a common title, usually related to one another. These episodes typically share the same main heroes, some different secondary characters and a basic theme. Series ...
called ''
The Amazing Chan and the Chan Clan''.
Keye Luke, who had played Chan's son Lee in many Chan films of the 1930s and late '40s, lent his voice to Charlie, employing a much-expanded vocabulary; Luke thus became the first actual Chinese person to portray Chan on screen. (The title character bears some resemblance to the Warner Oland depiction of Charlie Chan.) The series focused on Chan's children, played initially by East Asian-American child actors before being recast, due to concerns that younger viewers would not understand the accented voices. Leslie Kumamota voiced Chan's daughter Anne, before being replaced by
Jodie Foster
Alicia Christian "Jodie" Foster (born November 19, 1962) is an American actress and filmmaker. Foster started her career as a child actor before establishing herself as leading actress in film. She has received List of awards and nominations re ...
.
* ''
The Return of Charlie Chan'', a television film starring
Ross Martin as Chan, was made in 1971 but did not air until 1979.
Comics and games
A ''Charlie Chan''
comic strip
A comic strip is a Comics, sequence of cartoons, arranged in interrelated panels to display brief humor or form a narrative, often Serial (literature), serialized, with text in Speech balloon, balloons and Glossary of comics terminology#Captio ...
, drawn by
Alfred Andriola, was distributed by the
McNaught Syndicate beginning October 24, 1938. Andriola was chosen by Biggers to draw the character.
[Ma (2000), 13.] Following the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor
Pearl Harbor is an American lagoon harbor on the island of Oahu, Hawaii, west of Honolulu. It was often visited by the naval fleet of the United States, before it was acquired from the Hawaiian Kingdom by the U.S. with the signing of the Reci ...
, the strip was dropped; the last strip ran on May 30, 1942.
In 2019,
The Library of American Comics
Library of American Comics (abbreviated as LoAC) is an American publisher of classic United States, American comic strips collections and comic history books, founded by Dean Mullaney and Bruce Canwell in 2007.
History Background
Dean Mullaney ...
reprinted one year of the strip (1938) in their ''
LoAC Essentials'' line of books ().
Over decades, other Charlie Chan
comic books
A comic book, comic-magazine, or simply comic is a publication that consists of comics art in the form of sequential juxtaposed panel (comics), panels that represent individual scenes. Panels are often accompanied by descriptive prose and wri ...
have been published:
Joe Simon and
Jack Kirby
Jack Kirby (; born Jacob Kurtzberg; August 28, 1917 – February 6, 1994) was an American comics artist, comic book artist, widely regarded as one of the medium's major innovators and one of its most prolific and influential creators. He grew ...
created
Prize Comics
A prize is an award to be given to a person or a group of people (such as sporting teams and organizations) to recognize and reward their actions and achievements. ' ''Charlie Chan'' (1948), which ran for five issues. It was followed by a
Charlton Comics
Charlton Comics was an American comic-book publishing company that existed from 1945 to 1986, having begun under a different name: T. W. O. Charles Company, in 1940. It was based in Derby, Connecticut. The comic-book line (comics), line was a divi ...
title which continued the numbering (four issues, 1955).
DC Comics
DC Comics (originally DC Comics, Inc., and also known simply as DC) is an American comic book publisher owned by DC Entertainment, a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery. DC is an initialism for "Detective Comics", an American comic book seri ...
published ''The New Adventures of Charlie Chan'', a 1958 tie-in with the TV series; the DC series lasted for six issues.
Dell Comics
Dell Comics was the comic book publishing arm of Dell Publishing, which got its start in pulp magazines. It published comics from 1929 to 1973. At its peak, it was the most prominent and successful American company in the medium.Evanier, Mark"Wh ...
did the title for two issues in 1965. In the 1970s,
Gold Key Comics published a short-lived series of Chan comics based on the
Hanna-Barbera
Hanna-Barbera Cartoons, Inc. ( ; formerly known as H-B Enterprises, Hanna-Barbera Productions, Inc. and H-B Production Co.), simply and commonly known as Hanna-Barbera, was an American animation studio and production company, which was acti ...
animated series. In March through August 1989
Eternity Comics/Malibu Graphics published ''Charlie Chan'' comic books numbers 1 - 6 reprinting daily strips from January 9, 1939 to November 18, 1939.
In addition, a board game, ''The Great Charlie Chan Detective Mystery Game'' (1937), and a ''Charlie Chan Card Game'' (1939), have been released.
Modern interpretations and criticism
The character of Charlie Chan has been the subject of controversy. Some find the character to be a positive
role model
A role model is a person whose behaviour, example, or success serves as a model to be emulated by others, especially by younger people. The term ''role model'' is credited to sociologist Robert K. Merton, who hypothesized that individuals compa ...
, while others argue that Chan is an
offensive stereotype. Critic John Soister argues that Charlie Chan is both; when Biggers created the character, he offered a unique alternative to stereotypical evil Chinamen, a man who was at the same time "sufficiently accommodating in personality... unthreatening in demeanor... and removed from his Asian homeland... to quell any underlying xenophobia."
Critic Michael Brodhead argues that "Biggers's sympathetic treatment of the Charlie Chan novels convinces the reader that the author consciously and forthrightly spoke out for the Chinese – a people to be not only accepted but admired. Biggers's sympathetic treatment of the Chinese reflected and contributed to the greater acceptance of Chinese-Americans in the first third of
he twentiethcentury." S. T. Karnick writes in the ''
National Review
''National Review'' is an American conservative editorial magazine, focusing on news and commentary pieces on political, social, and cultural affairs. The magazine was founded by William F. Buckley Jr. in 1955. Its editor-in-chief is Rich L ...
'' that Chan is "a brilliant detective with understandably limited facility in the English language
hosepowers of observation, logic, and personal rectitude and humility made him an exemplary, entirely honorable character."
[Karnick (2006).] Ellery Queen
Ellery Queen is a pseudonym created in 1928 by the American detective fiction writers Frederic Dannay (1905–1982) and Manfred Bennington Lee (1905–1971). It is also the name of their main fictional detective, a mystery writer in New York City ...
called Biggers's characterization of Charlie Chan "a service to humanity and to inter-racial relations."
Dave Kehr of ''
The New York Times
''The New York Times'' (''NYT'') is an American daily newspaper based in New York City. ''The New York Times'' covers domestic, national, and international news, and publishes opinion pieces, investigative reports, and reviews. As one of ...
'' said Chan "might have been a stereotype, but he was a stereotype on the side of the angels."
Keye Luke, an actor who played Chan's son in a number of films, agreed; when asked if he thought that the character was demeaning to the race, he responded, "Demeaning to the race? My God! You've got a ''Chinese hero!''" and "
were making the best damn murder mysteries in Hollywood."
[Lepore, Jill.]
CHAN, THE MAN
" ''The New Yorker'', 9 August 2010.
Other critics, such as sociologist
Yen Le Espiritu and Huang Guiyou, argue that Chan, while portrayed positively in some ways, is not on a par with white characters, but a "benevolent Other" who is "one-dimensional". The films' use of white actors to portray East Asian characters indicates the character's "absolute Oriental Otherness;" the films were only successful as "the domain of white actors who impersonated heavily-accented masters of murder mysteries as well as purveyors of cryptic proverbs." Chan's character "embodies the stereotypes of Chinese Americans, particularly of males: smart, subservient, effeminate." Chan is representative of a
model minority,
the good stereotype that counters a bad stereotype: "Each stereotypical image is filled with contradictions: the bloodthirsty Indian is tempered with the image of the noble savage; the ''bandido'' exists along with the loyal sidekick; and Fu Manchu is offset by Charlie Chan." However, Fu Manchu's evil qualities are presented as inherently Chinese, while Charlie Chan's good qualities are exceptional; "Fu represents his race; his counterpart stands away from the other Asian Hawaiians."
Some argue that the character's popularity is dependent on its contrast with stereotypes of the Yellow Peril or Japanese people in particular. American opinion of China and Chinese Americans grew more positive in the 1920s and '30s in contrast to the Japanese, who were increasingly viewed with suspicion. Sheng-mei Ma argues that the character is a psychological over-compensation to "rampant paranoia over the racial other."
In June 2003, the
Fox Movie Channel cancelled a planned Charlie Chan Festival, soon after beginning restoration for cablecasting, after a special-interest group protested. Fox reversed its decision two months later, and on 13 September 2003, the first film in the festival was aired on Fox. The films, when broadcast on the Fox Movie Channel, were followed by round-table discussions by prominent East Asians in the American entertainment industry, led by
George Takei, most of whom were against the films.
Collections such as
Frank Chin's ''
Aiiieeeee! An Anthology of Asian-American Writers'' and Jessica Hagedorn's ''
Charlie Chan Is Dead'' are put forth as alternatives to the Charlie Chan stereotype and "
rticulatecultural anger and exclusion as their animating force." Fox has released all of its extant Charlie Chan features on DVD,
and
Warner Bros. (the current proprietor of the Monogram library) has issued all of the Sidney Toler and Roland Winters Monogram features on DVD.
Modern critics, particularly Asian Americans, continue to have mixed feelings on Charlie Chan. Fletcher Chan, a defender of the works, argues that the Chan of Biggers's novels is not subservient to white characters, citing ''The Chinese Parrot'' as an example; in this novel, Chan's eyes blaze with anger at racist remarks and in the end, after exposing the murderer, Chan remarks "Perhaps listening to a 'Chinaman' is no disgrace." In the films, both ''
Charlie Chan in London'' (1934) and ''
Charlie Chan in Paris'' (1935) "contain scenes in which Chan coolly and wittily dispatches other characters' racist remarks."
Yunte Huang manifests an ambivalent attitude, stating that in the US, Chan "epitomizes the racist heritage and the creative genius of this nation's culture." Huang also suggests that critics of Charlie Chan may have themselves, at times, "caricatured" Chan himself.
[Huang (2011), p. 280.]
Chan's character has also come under fire for "nuggets of fortune cookie Confucius" and the "counterfeit proverbs" which became so widespread in popular culture. The Biggers novels did not introduce the "Confucius say" proverbs, which were added in the films, but one novel features Chan remarking: "As all those who know me have learned to their distress, Chinese have proverbs to fit every possible situation." Huang Yunte gives as examples "Tongue often hang man quicker than rope," "Mind, like parachute, only function when open," and "Man who flirt with dynamite sometime fly with angels." He argues, however, that these "colorful aphorisms" display "amazing linguistic acrobatic skills." Like the "
signifying monkey" of African American folklore, Huang continues, Chan "imparts as much insult as wisdom."
Bibliography
* Biggers, Earl Derr. ''
The House Without a Key''. New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1925.
* —. ''
The Chinese Parrot''. New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1926.
* —. ''
Behind That Curtain''. New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1928.
* —. ''
The Black Camel''. New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1929.
* —. ''
Charlie Chan Carries On''. New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1930.
* —. ''
Keeper of the Keys''. New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1932.
*
Davis, Robert Hart. ''Charlie Chan in the Temple of the Golden Horde''. 1974. ''Charlie Chan's Mystery Magazine''. Reprinted by Wildside Press, 2003. .
*
Lynds, Dennis. ''Charlie Chan Returns''. New York: Bantam Books, 1974. ASIN B000CD3I22.
*
Pronzini, Bill, and Jeffrey M. Wallmann. ''Charlie Chan in the Pawns of Death''. 1974. ''Charlie Chan's Mystery Magazine''. Reprinted by Borgo Press, 2003. .
*
Avallone, Michael. ''Charlie Chan and the Curse of the Dragon Queen''. New York: Pinnacle, 1981. .
*
Robert Hart Davis. "The Silent Corpse". Feb.1974. ''Charlie Chan's Mystery Magazine''.
*
Robert Hart Davis. "Walk Softly, Strangler". Nov. 1973. ''Charlie Chan's Mystery Magazine''.
*
Jon L. Breen. "The Fortune Cookie". May 1971. ''
Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine''.
*
Swann, John L. ''Death, I Said: A Charlie Chan Mystery''. Utica, New York: Nicholas K. Burns Publishing, 2023. .
*
Swann, John L. ''The Tangled String: A Charlie Chan Mystery''. Utica, New York: Nicholas K. Burns Publishing, 2024. .
Filmography
Unless otherwise noted, information is taken from Charles P. Mitchell's ''A Guide to Charlie Chan Films'' (1999).
American Western
Latin America
China
See also
*
Portrayal of East Asians in Hollywood
*
Mr. Wong
Notes
References
*
*
*
*
*
*
* "Creating Charlie Chan" (22 March 1931). In
Popular Culture' (1975). Ed. by David Manning White. Ayer Publishing. .
*
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External links
* The "Charlie Chan" Novels
*
''Behind That Curtain''*
*
''Keeper Of The Keys''*
''The Black Camel''*
''The Chinese Parrot''*
''The House Without a Key''About Charlie ChanCharlie Chan BiographyCharlie Chan fan sitePublic-domain Charlie Chan radio programsThe Charlie Chan Family HomeBooks and Films of Charlie Chan
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Fictional characters based on real people
Chan, Charlie
Fictional Chinese detectives
Fictional Chinese people
Film series introduced in 1926
Literary characters introduced in 1919
Mass media franchises introduced in 1925
Mutual Broadcasting System programs
NBC Blue Network radio programs
Novels by Earl Derr Biggers
Race-related controversies in film
Race-related controversies in literature
Book series
Stereotypes of Asian Americans
Stereotypes of East Asian people
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