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IMDbPro

Peter Chong(1898-1985)

  • Actor
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Trailer for this wartime drama set in China
Play trailer3:08
L'auberge du sixième bonheur (1958)
World War II produced an influx of Hollywood espionage tales and battleground dramas during the 1940s and, as there were only a small supply of Japanese actors working in Hollywood at the time, a number of Asian character actors found steady employment, albeit undistinguished, as various Chinese allies and Japanese enemies. Benevolent-looking Chinese-American Peter Chong from the Broadway stage and radio was one of those fortunate actors. Placed in the secondary ranks along with Victor Wong, Harold Fong and Luke Chan, etc., the top-ranked Asian talent at the time included Keye Luke, Philip Ahn Victor Sen Yung, Richard Loo and Benson Fong. While most of Peter's parts were quite undernourished, a couple of film roles did allow the actor a brief spot of attention before his final fadeout in the mid-1960s.

Born John Kohnie Kuh on December 2, 1898, in Jersey City, New Jersey (various birth years (1994 and 1895) and birth places (China, Honolulu) are still floating about), he was the son of Chinese immigrants Fong Long Kuh and Det Ann Lye. In New York he made an obscure Broadway debut with "Bridge of Distances" (1925), but then managed to continue for the next decade or so with a stream of theatre roles. Billed as Peter Goo Chong (aka Goo Chong), his theatre credits include "Twelve Miles Out" (1925), "Fast Life" (1928), "These Few Ashes" (1928), "House Unguarded" (1929), "Inspector Kennedy" (1929), "Luana" (1930), "As You Desire Me" (1931), "The Social Register" (1931), "Border-Land" (1932), "Jamboree" (1932), "Hotel Alimony" (1934), "Petticoat Fever" (1935), in which he had on of his best stage roles, "Run Sheep Run" (1938), "They Knew What They Wanted," "Beverly Hills" (1940), "The Admiral Had a Wife" (which actually closed before it opened in December 1941 due to the bombing of Pearl Harbor) and "Little Darling" (1942).

Eventually Peter moved into radio and film. In the former medium he was, among many others, the voice of Charlie Chan. As for the latter, he started things off with an unbilled part in the Jeanne Eagels starrer The Letter (1929), which presented a Singapore setting. He wasn't able to focus strongly on the large screen, however, until the U.S. involvement in World War II. Chong then went on to play a number of benevolent Asian types, both Chinese and Japanese, primarily cheerful or dignified in nature but occasionally villainous. The parts themselves were small in size for the most part but throughout the WWII years, he added, if nothing else, an element of authenticity to such dramatic efforts as Mission à Moscou (1943), Prisonniers de Satan (1944), Betrayal from the East (1945)_, and _First Yank in Tokyo (1945), as well as the Danny Kaye vehicle Un fou s'en va-t-en guerre (1944).

War films continued to be in demand in the aftermath of WWII and Peter kept busy, less in uniform than before, and in roles that usually generated kindness and wisdom. Barely seen as a Japanese officer Au carrefour du siècle (1947) and an editor in Intrigue (1947), MGM employed him for a few of their films -- he played a valet in Parade de printemps (1948), a bartender in Un jour à New-York (1949), and another bit part in Une rousse obstinée (1950). While a number of his roles were servile in nature such as his manservant Wong in Francis aux courses (1951) and a dining car steward on Pékin-Express (1951), he did manage a couple of significant parts before he left films -- in James Cagney's La loi de la prairie (1956) and alongside Ingrid Bergman in L'auberge du sixième bonheur (1958) in which he played Wang, the bilingual Chinese cook.

Peter's last movie roles were in Cette terre qui est mienne (1959) and Commando de destruction (1960), playing a Chinese colonel in the latter. By this period he had started focusing on TV and appeared primarily in crime dramas ("The Thin Man" and "Richard Diamond") and westerns ("Johnny Ringo" and "Bonanza"). He retired from acting in the mid-1960s.

Music and composing became a large part of his life in later years. He died at age 86 in Los Angeles, on January 15, 1985, of a heart attack.
BornDecember 2, 1898
DiedJanuary 13, 1985(86)
BornDecember 2, 1898
DiedJanuary 13, 1985(86)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
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Known for

Ingrid Bergman, Robert Donat, and Curd Jürgens in L'auberge du sixième bonheur (1958)
L'auberge du sixième bonheur
7.2
  • Yang
  • 1958
James Cagney, Stephen McNally, and Irene Papas in La loi de la prairie (1956)
La loi de la prairie
6.7
  • Cooky
  • 1956
Dana Andrews, Richard Conte, Don 'Red' Barry, John Craven, Farley Granger, Sam Levene, Richard Loo, Kevin O'Shea, and Charles Russell in Prisonniers de Satan (1944)
Prisonniers de Satan
6.4
  • Mitsuru Toyama
  • 1944
John Archer, Douglas Dick, and Jean Willes in A Yank in Indo-China (1952)
A Yank in Indo-China
5.9
  • General Wang
  • 1952

Credits

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IMDbPro

Actor



  • Gardner McKay in Aventures dans les îles (1959)
    Aventures dans les îles
    8.1
    TV Series
    • Fong
    • General Ta
    • 1960–1961
  • Rod Taylor in Hong Kong (1960)
    Hong Kong
    8.0
    TV Series
    • Night Man
    • Old Chinese Man
    • Tong Kai
    • 1960–1961
  • Howard Duff and Barbara English in Dante (1960)
    Dante
    7.5
    TV Series
    • Fred
    • 1960
  • Georgine Darcy and Roger Perry in Harrigan and Son (1960)
    Harrigan and Son
    8.0
    TV Series
    • Delaney
    • 1960
  • James Stewart and Lisa Lu in Commando de destruction (1960)
    Commando de destruction
    6.2
    • Chinese Colonel
    • 1960
  • Don Durant and Mark Goddard in Johnny Ringo (1959)
    Johnny Ringo
    6.9
    TV Series
    • Foo Chung
    • 1960
  • Bonanza (1959)
    Bonanza
    7.3
    TV Series
    • Chinese Elder
    • Lo Chow
    • 1959–1960
  • The Lineup (1954)
    The Lineup
    7.6
    TV Series
    • George
    • 1959
  • Rock Hudson and Jean Simmons in Cette terre qui est mienne (1959)
    Cette terre qui est mienne
    6.3
    • Chu
    • 1959
  • Ingrid Bergman, Robert Donat, and Curd Jürgens in L'auberge du sixième bonheur (1958)
    L'auberge du sixième bonheur
    7.2
    • Yang
    • 1958
  • David Janssen in Richard Diamond, Private Detective (1956)
    Richard Diamond, Private Detective
    7.6
    TV Series
    • Fong
    • 1958
  • Phyllis Kirk, Peter Lawford, and Asta in Monsieur et Madame détective (1957)
    Monsieur et Madame détective
    7.1
    TV Series
    • Koko Han
    • 1957
  • Robert Shayne in Navy Log (1955)
    Navy Log
    7.8
    TV Series
    • General
    • 1956
  • James Cagney, Stephen McNally, and Irene Papas in La loi de la prairie (1956)
    La loi de la prairie
    6.7
    • Cooky
    • 1956
  • Humphrey Bogart and Gene Tierney in La main gauche du Seigneur (1955)
    La main gauche du Seigneur
    6.4
    • Fen Tso Lin - Merchant (uncredited)
    • 1955

Videos1

The Inn of the Sixth Happiness
Trailer 3:08
The Inn of the Sixth Happiness

Personal details

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  • Born
    • December 2, 1898
    • Miu, China
  • Died
    • January 13, 1985
    • Los Angeles, California, USA(heart attack)
  • Spouse
    • Eileen Loh1946 - 1974 (her death, 1 child)
  • Other works
    Active on Broadway [often credited as Peter Goo Chong] in the following productions:

Did you know

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  • Trivia
    His Chinese wife, Eileen Loh, was a schoolteacher. They had a daughter named Molly. Her name was inspired from a line he had in the MGM musical Parade de printemps (1948). Towards the end of the film Peter, playing Fred Astaire's valet, pulls a white rabbit out of a hat box and calls it "Molly".

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