American academic and actress
Laureen Chew (born 1948) is an American academic and actress. She is Professor Emerita of Asian American studies at San Francisco State University .[ 1] [ 2] She acted in two Wayne Wang films in the 1980s, both of which were shot in San Francisco .
Early life and education
Chew was born and raised in Chinatown, San Francisco in 1948.[ 3] [ 4] She grew up around mostly other Chinese children.[ 3] [ 5] Her parents owned a laundry shop.[ 6] Chew attended a Catholic high school.[ 3]
Chew was a part of the Third World Liberation Front [ 7] and helped organized the Third World Liberation Front strikes of 1968 at San Francisco State University.[ 8] She was arrested and jailed for 20 days for misdemeanor charges of disturbing the peace, illegal assembly and failing to disperse.[ 6] At the end of the protest, San Francisco State established its College of Ethnic Studies .[ 5]
Chew graduated from San Francisco State University with a BA in Chinese and a MA in Elementary Education. She received her EdD from the University of the Pacific .[ 9]
Career
Chew is a former elementary school teacher within the public education system .[ 10] [ 4]
Chew's first film credit was on Wayne Wang 's Chan Is Missing (1982).[ 11] Her second credit was on Wang's Dim Sum: A Little Bit of Heart (1985). Much of the film was shot in Chew's home, with her actual mother acting as her character's mother in the film.[ 11]
Chew was the Elementary Education Department Chair 2001 to 2006. Chew was the Associate Dean of the College of Ethnic Studies from 2006 to 2012.[ 9]
Filmography
References
^ Bravo, Kent (October 2, 2019). "SF State celebrates 50th anniversary of the College of Ethnic Studies | SF State News" . news.sfsu.edu . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .
^ Springer, Denize (September 22, 2008). " '68 strike at SF State - San Francisco State University" . San Francisco State University . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .
^ a b c "APEX Express - 11.4.21 We are the Leaders All Education is Political" . KPFA . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .
^ a b Raukko, Tanya (2021-06-04). "Maintaining Vigor for Sustained Change in Asian American Issues" . Intertrend . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .
^ a b "The strike that led to the country's first Ethnic Studies department" . KALW . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .
^ a b Schevitz, Tanya (2008-10-26). "S.F. State to mark 40th anniversary of strike" . SFGATE . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .
^ "50 Years Ago Students Shut Down This College To Demand Ethnic Studies Courses" . NPR.org . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .
^ Bates, Karen Grigsby; Meraji, Shereen Marisol (2019-03-21). "The Student Strike That Changed Higher Ed Forever" . NPR . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .
^ a b "Laureen Chew | Asian American Studies" . aas.sfsu.edu . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .
^ Valverde, Kieu Linh Caroline; Dariotis, Wei Ming (2019-10-11). Fight the Tower: Asian American Women Scholars' Resistance and Renewal in the Academy . Rutgers University Press. p. 186. ISBN 978-1-9788-0636-8 .
^ a b Gorney, Cynthia (1985-08-21). "The Director's American Odyssey" . Washington Post . ISSN 0190-8286 . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .
^ Naves, Mario (July 27, 2022). "40 Years After Its Release, 'Chan Is Missing' Feels Even Fresher" . The New York Sun . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .
^ "Dim Sum: a Little Bit of Heart (1985)" . Radio Times . Retrieved 2022-11-03 .