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Victor Sen Yung

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Victor Sen Yung

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  • In 1972, while returning to Los Angeles from San Francisco, he was among the passengers on a PSA airliner hijacked by two Bulgarians demanding ransom and passage to Siberia. Yung and another passenger were wounded. A third passenger and the two hijackers were killed when FBI agents stormed the plane on the ground in San Francisco.
  • He majored in animal husbandry at the College of Agriculture at the University of California, Berkeley, and has a memorial scholarship named after him, awarded each year by the Chinese Alumni Association.
  • Perhaps more familiar to TV audiences as Hop Sing, the ranch cook, in Bonanza (1959).
  • Was an accomplished Cantonese cook and penned the book "Great Wok Cookbook" in 1974.
  • Played the role of "Number Two Son" in 25 Charlie Chan films during the late 1930s and most of the 1940s; his comedic character was alternately named James, Jimmy, or Tommy Chan.
  • His son, Brent Kee Young, is an accomplished glass artist, and a professor at the Cleveland Institute of Art (CIA).
  • Served in the US Army Air Forces during World War II, first making training films at the First Motion Picture Unit, then as a member of the cast of "Winged Victory," the Air Forces' theatrical play and film (as Sgt. Victor Young). He then requested officer training and apparently reached the rank of captain.
  • Died of natural-gas poisoning in his home. Though his body was discovered on 11/10/80, the coroner's office determined he had been dead approximately ten days, putting his actual date of death at about 11/1/80.
  • Remembered as "No. 2 Son," Jimmy Chan, in Sidney Toler's Charlie Chan movies of the 1930s and '40s.

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