Jump to content

Jade Wu

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jade Wu
Born (1953-01-05) January 5, 1953 (age 72)
NationalityChinese-American
EducationUC-San Diego, Mira Costa College
RelativesYuanlong Wang, grandfather

Jade Wu (born January 5, 1953) is a Chinese-American actress, playwright, producer, director, and editor who was born in Japan. She is the granddaughter of actor and director, Yuanlong Wang, who worked in Hong Kong, China, and Taiwan.[1] Wu has worked for the ABC as an actress on the daytime drama series General Hospital and One Life to Live, while also working as a writer for Disney. She has scripted and directed several documentaries that have screened at the IFP Market, Asian American International Film Festival, Sundance Producers Conference, and the Anthology Film Archives in New York City. As a writer, her plays have been read at the Santa Clara Experimental Theatre Festival and La Jolla Studio Stage. Wu has also served as a panellist for the National Endowment for the Arts, New York State Council on the Arts, and Individual Artist Grant, as well as serving as a juror for an International Emmy Award.

Early life

[edit]

Jade Wu was born on January 5, 1953, in Tokyo, Japan, to a family of Chinese heritage. The daughter of a soldier, she spent much of her childhood traveling while her father served in the United States Army. Her family later settled in the United States where her father began to work at Capitol Hill. Wu spent much of her childhood living in Washington, D.C. and considers it her hometown. After many years, she moved to California.

Education

[edit]

After moving to the west coast, Wu attended the University of California, San Diego, initially planning to go to medical school. After her first year as a student, she began delving into research but realized that she also wanted to pursue an MFA in the theatre. There, she developed accents in standard English, British English, Polish, Slovakian, and some fluency in Cantonese and Mandarin. Wu graduated with a BS in Biochemistry, a BA in Humanities, a BA in Drama, and an MFA in Acting and Directing. She later received a certification in video and film editing from The Edit Center and an AA in science and humanities from Mira Costa College.

Before entertainment

[edit]

After graduating, Jade Wu moved to New York City to pursue an acting or directing career. Upon her arrival, however, she struggled to find work. According to Wu, there were few roles or positions for Asian Americans on television at the time. Because of the lack of opportunities, Wu got involved in commercialism and later found herself in the corporate realm of public relations and advertising. During this period, she became skilled in image and visibility in both public and private sector campaigns. She became well-versed in international diplomacy and formalizing relationships as well as gaining interest in social, cultural, human, and environmental causes. During this time Wu also further developed her skills in public speaking, writing narratives, scripts, essays, journals, food styling, and photography.

Acting career

[edit]

Wu did not get involved with show business until 20 years after her move from the west coast. When one of her old headshots ended up in a Homicide: Life on the Street episodic casting office, she finally surfaced within Hollywood. At the time, the show was shooting in Baltimore, Maryland. The executives called her in for an audition as they were looking for a Korean immigrant. Wu has stated that in the late 1990s, roles for Asian American actors were so sparse that it was rare to find trained Asians who were adequately eligible for the position posted. Wu was awarded a recurring role on the show, introducing her to the professional arena of television.

Jade Wu has since then worked with actors and actresses such as: Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, George C. Wolf, Austin Pendleton, Jeanine Tesori, Jenifer Lewis, Ato Essandoh, Fred Weller, Geoff Arends, Tony Kushner, Ridley Scott, Will Smith, Gene Hackman, Tony Gilroy, Warren Leight, Paul McGuigan, Guerrmo Navarro, Vincenzo Natali, Peter Leto, Clark Johnson, Frank Prinzi, Tom Fontana and Barry Levinson.

Wu had recurring roles on One Life to Live, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Bull, and The Blacklist. She has performed on stage in Off-Broadway theatre productions at The Public, Delacorte Theatre in Central Park, Urban Stages, Bank St. Theatre, Minetta Lane, The Wilma Theatre, Arena Stage, Shakespeare Theatre Washington DC, and La Jolla Stage. Wu played the lead role of Ahma Chin in The Motel, which won the Humanitas Prize and an Independent Spirit Award Nomination. She has worked with stage directors such as Alan Schneider, Liv Ciuilei, JoAnne Akalaitis, Gerald Gutierrez, Wendy Goldberg, Blanka Zizka and David Muse among others.

From 2016 to 2018 Wu played Connie Lin in the Marvel Original Luke Cage on Netflix. In 2016 Wu had a recurring role as Judge Cara Bergen in the CBS series Bull with Michael Weatherly and as Katie's Mom in the HBO series Divorce with Sara Jessica Parker and Thomas Hayden Church. In 2018, Wu played one of the leads in the film Snakehead along with Sung Kang and Shuya Chang.

Television

[edit]

Stage

[edit]
  • Washer/Dryer (Dr.Lee)
  • Like Shadows (Boss)
  • U.S. Premiere Chimerica (Feng Mehui) (Ming Xoali)
  • Mother Courage (Farmers Wife)
  • 2752 (solo performance)
  • Memes in the Membrane (solo performance)
  • Red (Sonya Wong Pickford)
  • Book of Days (Sharon Bates)
  • The Shanghai Gesture (Mother God Damn)
  • Barriers (Naima)
  • Trojan Women (Pallas Athena)(Hecuba US)
  • Primary English Class (Mrs. Pong/Translator)

Teaching

[edit]

Jade Wu was a return lecturer at Bard College from February 2005 up until February 2007 where she lectured on the relations of Michel Foucault's philosophies in “Fearless Speech” and dramatic conflict and conversation in plays for the school's theater and social human justice departments. She also taught at the Fashion Institute of Technology, Cal State East Bay and Raul Julia Performing Arts Institute.

Awards

[edit]
  • Disney/ABC Fellowship
  • BlueCat Semi-finalist
  • PEN USA Rosenthal Emerging Writers finalist
  • Edinburgh Festival Best Actress Nomination
  • Jerome Media Fellowship

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Jade Wu - Updated Oct 2024". Fresher Post. Retrieved 27 January 2025.

Sources

[edit]
  1. "Jade Wu | LinkedIn." N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Nov. 2016.[1]
  2. "Creative-artist." Creative-artist. N.p., n.d. Web. 10 Nov. 2016.[2]
  3. Hyun. "Jade Wu in The Motel." Asiance July 2006: n. pag. Print.
  1. ^ Wu, Jade. LinkedIn. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help); Missing or empty |url= (help)
  2. ^ "Jade Wu". Creative Artist. Archived from the original on 2016-12-21. Retrieved 2016-12-13.