Template for Creating New Headers - Must Add Banman Zone
Click logo for homepage of IMDiversity.com - where careers, opportunities and communities connect
home | search jobs | my account employer profiles | career center | about us | for employers
Featured Employers



 

Featured Jobs

View Featured Jobs

$100K-PLUS Jobs
 

Asian American Village Categories
AAV Jobs Center
AAV Blog
Arts, Culture & Media
Business, Finance & Economics
Careers, Workplace, Employment
Civil, Human & Equal Rights
Education & Academia
Family, Lifestyles, Traditions
History & Heritage
Opinion and Letters
Politics & Law
World Affairs
News & Announcements
Reference
Organizations & Links
Browse Full Index
 

Asian-American Village News
PBS film revisits killing of AZ Sikh after 9/11 attacks
Hawai'i official state plant will be taro
Burmese woman teaching English to others in MD
MN women allegedly sold protected wildlife parts
Old friends remember Obama's pre-politics years in NY, L.A.
villages/asian/ AP Headlines Update Pagee
Secret Asian Man

It's S.A.M.!
The NEW Secret Asian Man
Redesigned Weekly Section, and new multistrip theme series

 
Also


What's New @ IMDiversity Career Center?

Graduate School Opportunities

QuickSearch: Jobs preferring Bilingual/ Multilingual Candidates
 

 

Dr. Mom Chung of the Fair-Haired Bastards:  The Life of a Wartime Celebrity

 

By Judy Tzu-Chun Wu

 

During World War II, Mom Chung’s was the place to be in San Francisco.  Soldiers, preparing for departure to the Pacific arena of war or on leave from their duties, could eat good comfort food there to their heart’s delight.  They consumed vast quantities of BBQ ribs, red beans, and chocolate cake to make up for the dreariness of military fare.  They swapped stories with each other over drinks at the bar.  They also caught glimpses of and actually talked with the foremost celebrities of their time: John Wayne, Ronald Reagan, Tennessee Williams, Helen Hayes, Tallulah Bankhead, and many others.  At Mom Chung’s, they met prominent politicians and military leaders like Kentucky Senator and future commissioner of baseball “Happy” Chandler and Fleet Admiral of the U.S. Navy Chester W. Nimitz.

Mom Chung’s was not a restaurant or a nightclub.  It was the private residence of Dr. Margaret Chung, the first known American-born woman of Chinese descent to become a physician.  She hosted these weekly Sunday parties for 75 to 100 people at a time in her modestly-sized home.  Then in her fifties, she cooked the food herself and made the rounds to ensure that her guests felt welcome.  After all, almost all of them were members of her adopted family.  The celebrities, the politicians, the highly ranked and the common soldiers were bound to each other through her, their surrogate mother.  Their ties stemmed not from blood connection but from their mutual affection and common dedication to the Allied Cause. 

Chung’s family, which grew to approximately 1,500 members, served as a vital political resource during the international conflicts of the 1930s and 1940s.  She recruited pilots among her “sons” for the Flying Tigers, the American volunteer force that fought in support of China during the Sino-Japanese War.  Once the United States formally entered World War II, she used her contacts to lobby for the creation of WAVES, the Women’s Naval Reserve.

Described as a serious, commanding, almost regal person, Chung nevertheless had a bawdy sense of humor.  Because she never married and could offer no legitimate father figure for her mostly white and male children, they became known as Mom Chung’s “Fair-Haired Bastards.” 

A pioneer in the professional and political realms, Chung experimented with her personal life as well.  She alternatively adopted masculine clothing as well as glamorous feminine attire.  She also engaged in romantic relationships with other women, like writer Elsa Gidlow and entertainer Sophie Tucker. 

Despite these colorful achievements, Margaret Chung has all but disappeared from historical memory. 

Dr. Mom Chung of the Fair-Haired Bastards: The Life of a Wartime Celebrity is the first biography to explore Margaret Chung's remarkable and complex life.  It offers an intimate portrait of a woman who invented and reinvented herself in a quest for influence and social acceptance.  The book traces Chung's life, beginning with the Christian missionaries in the frontier West who converted her parents and inspired her career in medicine, continuing through the years of her professional training in the burgeoning urban centers of Los Angeles and Chicago, bringing alive the bohemian and queer social milieus of Hollywood and San Francisco, and concluding with the wartime celebrity community that she cultivated and utilized for political purposes.

This biography draws from Chung's unpublished autobiography, correspondence from her admirers and friends, archival sources, and oral histories to situate the life of this extraordinary woman within the context of her times.  It affords a rare glimpse into the possibilities of traversing racial, gender, and sexual boundaries of American society from the late Victorian era through the early Cold War period.

 

On the Net

Other Readings of Interest

 

 

Judy Tzu-Chun Wu

Judy Tzu-Chun Wu is an associate professor of History at Ohio State University, where she teaches courses in U.S., Asian American, and Women’s Histories, and has served as the coordinator for the Asian American Studies Program.  She received her Ph.D. in History from Stanford University in 1998.  During the 2005-2006 academic year, she is also a visiting Associate Professor at the University of Chicago’s Center for the Study of Race, Politics, and Culture.  Her current book project, tentatively entitled “Radicals on the Road: Third World Internationalism and American Orientalism during the Viet Nam Era,” examines the influence of Asian culture, politics, and people on American forms of radicalism from the mid-1950s through the 1970s. This work focuses on the travels of American activists of varying racial backgrounds to Asia as well as the journeys of Asian political and religious advocates to the United States.  Dr. Mom Chung of the Fair-Haired Bastards: The Life of a Wartime Celebrity (University of California Press, February 2005) is her first book.

IMDiversity.com is committed to presenting diverse points of view. However, the viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at IMD.

 

IMDiversity, Inc.
contact us
© 2008 IMDiversity Inc. All Rights Reserved.
privacy statement