
Richard Loo
Biography
Richard Loo (October 1, 1903 – November 20, 1983) was an American film actor who was one of the most familiar Asian character actors in American films of the 1930s and 1940s. He appeared in more than 120 films between 1931 and 1982. Chinese by ancestry and Hawaiian by birth, Loo spent his youth in Hawaii, then moved to California as a teenager. He graduated from the University of California at Berkeley and began a career in business. The stock market crash of 1929 and the subsequent economic depression forced Loo to start over. He became involved with amateur, then professional, theater companies and in 1931 made his first film. Like most Asian actors in non-Asian countries, he played primarily small, stereotypical roles, though he rose quickly to familiarity, if not fame, in a number of films. His stern features led him to be a favorite movie villain, and the outbreak of World War II gave him greater prominence in roles as vicious Japanese soldiers in such successful pictures as The Purple Heart (1944) and God Is My Co-Pilot (1945). Loo was most often typecast as the Japanese enemy pilot, spy or interrogator during World War II. In the film The Purple Heart he plays a Japanese Imperial Army general who commits suicide because he cannot break down the American prisoners. According to his daughter, Beverly Jane Loo, he didn't mind being typecast as a villain in these movies as he felt very patriotic about playing those parts. In 1944 he appeared as a Chinese army lieutenant opposite Gregory Peck in The Keys of the Kingdom. He had a rare heroic role as a war-weary Japanese-American soldier in Samuel Fuller's Korean War classic The Steel Helmet (1951), but he spent much of the latter part of his career performing stock roles in films and minor television roles. In 1974 he appeared as the Thai billionaire tycoon Hai Fat in the James Bond film The Man with the Golden Gun, opposite Roger Moore and Christopher Lee. Loo was also a teacher of Shaolin monks in three episodes of the 1972–1975 hit TV series Kung Fu and made a further three appearances as a different character. His last acting appearance was in The Incredible Hulk TV series in 1981, but he continued to act in Toyota commercials into 1982. Loo died of a cerebral hemorrhage on November 20, 1983, age 80. [biography (excerpted) from Wikipedia]
Filmography

The Men Who Made the Movies: Samuel Fuller

Collision Course: Truman vs. MacArthur

The Man with the Golden Gun

Kung Fu: The Way of the Tiger, the Sign of the Dragon

Chandler

One More Train to Rob

Marcus Welby, M.D.: A Matter of Humanities

The Sand Pebbles

A Girl Named Tamiko

Diamond Head

Confessions of an Opium Eater

The Scavengers

Hong Kong Affair

The Quiet American

Battle Hymn

Around the World in Eighty Days

The Conqueror

Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing

House of Bamboo

Soldier of Fortune

The Shanghai Story

Living It Up

The Bamboo Prison

Hell and High Water

China Venture

Destination Gobi

Target Hong Kong

5 Fingers

I Was an American Spy

The Steel Helmet

Malaya

The Clay Pigeon

State Department: File 649

Rogues' Regiment

The Cobra Strikes

Half Past Midnight

To the Ends of the Earth

Women in the Night

Beyond Our Own

Web of Danger

Seven Were Saved

Tokyo Rose

Prison Ship

First Yank into Tokyo

Back to Bataan

China's Little Devils

China Sky

Betrayal from the East

God Is My Co-Pilot

The Keys of the Kingdom

The Story of Dr. Wassell

The Purple Heart

So Proudly We Hail

Destroyer

Behind the Rising Sun

China

Flight for Freedom

The Falcon Strikes Back

The Amazing Mrs. Holliday

Road to Morocco

Across the Pacific

Wake Island

Star Spangled Rhythm

Secret of the Wastelands

Doomed to Die

The Fatal Hour

Barricade

Daughter of the Tong

Island of Lost Men

Lady of the Tropics

Miracles for Sale

Mr. Wong in Chinatown

Panama Patrol

North of Shanghai

Shadows Over Shanghai

Blondes at Work

West of Shanghai

The Good Earth

The Soldier and the Lady

Lost Horizon

Stowaway

Mad Holiday

Roaming Lady

China Seas

Stranded

Student Tour

Now and Forever

The Bitter Tea of General Yen
