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March 4, 2009
Glamour's Close, But No Ceegar


One thing we haven't talked about yet is the start of Women's History Month, which is March. It's a great time to highlight the accomplishments of women, and a lot of organizations are jumping on the bandwagon.

One of the coolest things I've seen so far is a Glamour photo spread showing female "American Icons," played by current celebrities. E.g.: Hayden Panettiere as Amelia Earhart and Lindsey Lohan as Madonna. It's a great idea, and highlights national treasures of sports and political action as well as entertainment.

However.

While the spread shows a number of African American women (including first lady Michelle Obama -- played by Alicia Keys -- Billie Holiday, and tennis star Althea Gibson), and one (ONE!) Latina (Dolores Huerta played by, who else, American Ferrera), there are no Asian American women. None. (Note to the world: Camilla Belle, who plays Mary Tyler Moore, is half-Brazilian. She couldn't have played Rita Hayworth, or something?)

Why? It's not because Asian American women have contributed nothing to US history and achievements. Maya Lin, Anna May Wong, Vera Wang, Connie Chung, Michiko Kakutani, Patsy Mink, Thelma Buchholdt, Michelle Kwan, and Kristi Yamaguchi were not merely pioneering Asian Americans, but groundbreakers in their own fields of design, entertainment, journalism, criticism, politics, and sports.

And it's not like there are no Asian American actresses to play them. I'd love to see Vanessa Hudgens do Anna May Wong, or Grace Park posing before the Vietnam Memorial as Maya Lin.

So, for Women's History Month, I'm going to do a few profiles of Asian American women. PLEASE HELP ME by suggesting women you'd like me to profile. (And you can even profile them yourselves and put the links in comments here. If there are enough, I'll do a links post.)

I'm going to start here with our very own Yuri Kochiyama in my next post, longtime activist and godmother to Asian American social justice workers everywhere. You can see a video of her above, which will give you some little idea of her placement in history. Which actress/model do you think should play her in a Glamour photo shoot in a perfect world?

Posted by Claire at March 4, 2009 12:59 PM


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13 Comments

Amber said:

Yes...I would love to see someone do a profile on Michelle Kwan!!! You could even do Michelle and Vera Wang together since Vera designed Michelle's skating dresses.

Anonymous said:

Sounds like a popularity contest to me, which these type of things usually are

Cynthia said:

Journalist, activist and scholar Helen Zia. Former editor of Ms. Magazine. Would be nice to have some GLBTQ representation -- Zia came out nationally on C-SPAN in the early 90s, like a badass. Portrayed by...Lucy Liu! Just kidding.

Claire Light said:

Don't you love how haters are always anonymous on the internet?

Who else should we be profiling?

Claire Light said:

I TOTALLY want to put Lucy Liu in a mullet wig for the eighties portion of that movie!

Anonymous said:

Claire: you miss understood my point. The reason I said it was a popularity contest was because the michelle Obama and Alicia keys are super mainstream. Kristi YAmaguchi is yester year. Who is hot and who is not? That is always the question. I'm sorry for the bad grammar, but I wouldn't call it hatin or prove me wrong

Anonymous said:

asian american women writers

Queen Liliuokalani

3 points:

So, beautiful photos (I love America Ferrara as Dolores Huerta) and totally yes on the absence of Asian Am women here.

But also, I get what's being said here about popularity, but not re: who is now and who is yesterday. For example, my Pinay icons, women like Sugar Pie DeSanto, or Victoria Manalo Draves, Jessica Hagedorn, other API's would think too obscure to place alongside other API women, with API becoming synonymous with Chinese American and Japanese American women.

Finally, why not include Lucy Liu - dressed as YOKO ONO, who is mega-recognizable, and a hell of an artist.

Claire Light said:

While i do appreciate that these things end up honoring the best known people at the expense of lesser known, but equally worthy, folks, we DO honor communities by honoring individuals. And by picking individuals, we'll leave others out, necessarily. I think one of the best things about top ten lists or profiles and highlights of people from a particular community is that it leads to discussion over who has been left out, and often those discussions bring more attention to the whole community than the original inclusion.

But my whole reason for asking people to suggest folks for me to profile (or to profile folks themselves) was to avoid the popularity (or more accurately, the visibility) contest. So, Barb, which of these would you like me to profile? Or whom are you going to profile yourself?

Indeed Claire, you did ask for suggestions of folks to profile. Sorry for forgetting that part, and thank you again for asking.

I'd suggest Sugar Pie DeSanto. As for myself, I will be writing about different API women and women of color writers as I read and revisit their work. I should do a quickie archive of these on my blog. I've recently done write up's on Marianne Villanueva, and Linda Hogan (the Native American writer, not Hulk Hogan's ex-wife). Soon forthcoming: M. Evelina Galang.

Claire Light said:

cool, thanks! i'll check those out!

Tai said:

Sandra Oh as Yuri Kochiyama...oh wait, it's already been done: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ApXSv6845cU

Carolyn said:

Ming Na as Maxine Hong Kingston or Amy Tan

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