New York Film: Eat a Bowl of Tea (1989)
This week's Writing New York film is Wayne Wang's Eat a Bowl of Tea (1989), an adaptation of Louis Chu's novel of the same name, which was published in 1961. Set in New York's Chinatown in the late 1940s, the film tells the story of a young Chinese American war veteran, Ben Loy (Russell Wong), whose father, Wah Gay, (Victor Wong) has arranged for him to be married in China to the beautiful Mei Oi (Cora Miao). The film's opening dramatizes the results of U.S. laws beginning with the Page Act of 1875 and the Chinese Exclusion Act (1882). Chinese men who had come to the U.S. were barred from marrying U.S. citizens and from sending for their wives and families from China. As a result, the Chinese population in the U.S. was overwhelmingly male, and Chinatowns became bachelor communities. In an early scene, Wah Gay leaves the apartment of the prostitute he frequents only to find a long line of Chinese old-timers stretching down the stairway.
The marriage of Ben Loy and Mei Oi is made possible by the War Brides Act (1945), which permitted the wives and children of U.S. servicemen to enter the U.S. regardless of nationality. The Act thus offers new hope for the revitalization of Chinese American families and communities, and all of Chinatown waits expectantly for Ben and Mei's first child. But there's a problem: after consumating their marriage in China, Ben and Mei return to the U.S., where Ben finds himself to be impotent in the face of his father's and his community's expectations. Complications ensue.
The film, which runs about 102 minutes, is a faithful adaptation of Chu's novel and offers a vivid, unsentimental portrait of New York and its Chinatown after World War II.
Eat a Bowl of Tea was released on DVD, but it's currently out-of-print, though copies are available through amazon.com. Sadly, Chu's novel is also out-of-print, though Bryan and I are hoping to do something about that in the not-too-distant future.
Click here for an insightful review by Oliver Wang, an assistant professor of sociology at Cal State Long Beach. His blog ChasingChan.com is devoted to Asian American cinema.
Categories
Film0 TrackBacks
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: New York Film: Eat a Bowl of Tea (1989).
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://ahistoryofnewyork.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-t.cgi/28
Tag Cloud
- 9-11
- 9/11
- Aaron Burr
- adaptation
- advertising
- African Americans
- angels in america
- anime
- anthropology
- art
- baldwin
- banks
- Barnum
- baseball
- batman
- Batman
- Bethesda fountain
- bicycles
- bicycling
- bicyling
- blackface
- blogs
- bogart
- bohemians
- books
- bowery boys
- Brian Eno
- bridges
- broadway
- Brooklyn
- Brooklyn Bridge
- bryant
- burlequsue
- Bush
- caleb crain
- Cambridge Companion
- CBGB
- celebrity
- celluloid city
- cemeteries
- central park
- Chabon
- charles brockden brown
- children's literature
- chinatown
- circus
- clinton
- Columbus
- comics
- conference
- cosmopolitanism
- crane
- crime
- cycling
- dance
- Dark Knight
- David Byrne
- democracy
- diaries
- disasters
- documentary
- Don DeLillo
- downtown scenes
- Dreiser
- DUMBO
- dutch
- DVD
- dvd
- Dvorak
- Dylan
- Eakins
- Ellington
- Empire State Building
- environmentalism
- Fales Library and Special Collections
- fashion
- feminism
- ferry
- fiction
- Fifth Avenue
- film
- fire hydrants
- food
- football
- Frank Miller
- fringe festival
- gay new york
- gentrification
- geography
- Giuliani
- godspell
- goldman
- Gopnik
- grandcentralstation
- greed
- greenway
- Greenwich Village
- harlemrenaissance
- hart crane
- history
- hudson
- hughes
- immigrants
- jackie o
- james
- jazz
- jolson
- Joseph O'Neill
- joseph o'neill
- Kevin Baker
- KISS
- knickerbocker
- Knickerbocker Village
- leaves of grass
- LES
- Life on Mars
- literary history
- Lydia Thompson
- melville
- Melville
- mets
- minimalism
- Moby-Dick
- moby-dick
- modernism
- money
- museums
- music
- neighborhood history
- netflix
- netherland
- new york novels
- New York Times
- New Yorker
- newamsterdam
- newjersey
- newnetherlands
- novel
- NOW
- NYC holidays
- NYU English
- O'Keeffe
- O'Neill
- o'neill
- Obama
- obama
- opera
- outdoors
- painting
- parenting
- parks
- patti smith
- performanceart
- philadelphia
- poets
- politics
- protests
- public art
- publishing
- punk
- race
- radicalism
- radio
- railroad
- real estate
- reality TV
- rent
- Richard Price
- riis
- river
- Robert Moses
- robert rauschenberg
- rock'n'roll
- rollingstones
- schools
- schoonerpioneer
- science fiction
- scorsese
- seaport
- slavery
- stagecoach
- starwars
- statenisland
- statueofliberty
- streets
- subway
- summer
- superman
- Tammany
- tattoos
- teaching
- television
- tenement talks
- theater
- thoth
- Times Square
- tony kushner
- tour guides
- tourists
- traffic
- travel
- Union Square
- upstate
- visual arts
- walking
- walking tours
- Wall Street
- Washington Irving
- washingtonsquare
- waterfalls
- Wharton
- wharton
- Whitman
- whitman
- Williamsburg
- willsmith
- women
- woodyallen
- wordle
- World Trade Center
- Writing New York
- WTC
- wyler
- yankees
About Us
Search
Recent Posts
- First U.S. Sighting of the White Whale
- Call Me Barack
- Take the RFK to JFK
- The Original Knickerbocker and the Fallen Founder
- Roundup Postscript
- Post-election Roundup
- Where's the Times?
- Union Square, 1:45 am, November 5 -- Obama Day
- Change You Can Listen To
- Pop Music as Cultural History (PLUS: Lurker Amnesty!)
Categories
Keys to the City
- ArtCal
- Bike Map
- the bowery boys | New York City History
- Brooklyn Vegan
- Castle Garden
- City Lore
- Forgotten NY
- The Gothamist
- Hop Stop
- Lower East Side Tenement Museum
- Manhattan User’s Guide
- Municipal Art Society of New York
- Museum of the City of New York
- New Netherlands Institute
- New-York Historical Society
- New York Public Library
- The New Yorker
- NYC Stories
- South Street Seaport Museum
- The Village Voice
- Virtual New York City
Sites We Like
- 3 Quarks Daily
- About Last Night (Terry Teachout)
- Association of American University Presses
- ArtsJournal
- common-place
- David Byrne's Journal
- The Edge of the American West
- The Girl Who Ate Everything (Robyn Lee)
- Mr. Beller's Neighborhood
- Night Haunts (Sukhdev Sandhu)
- Overheard in New York
- The Rest Is Noise (Alex Ross)
- Steamboats Are Ruining Everything (Caleb Crain)
- Trauma & Violence Transdisciplinary Studies
- The Walt Whitman Archive
- WFMU
- WNYC
- Robert J. C. Young

Leave a comment