Talent

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Talent Name
Lori Tan Chinn
Conceived 3 months in Hoisan, China (that’s the first Chinese to arrive in America), lived in her mother’s womb during the 3-month ship ordeal to America, and 3 months later, born as a near-Yankee baby on July 7th - the year doesn’t matter - in Seattle, WA!  Lori first had ambitions to become a gymnast, or a costume designer, a violinist, but ended up a writer, self-taught actor, dancer, singer, celebrating her 51st  year in all these combined passions on January 17th, the day the Greyhound Bus rolled into NYC and the YWCA. She quickly landed her first show, on Broadway, in the chorus of “Lovely Ladies, Kind Gentlemen”, a musical adaptation of “The Teahouse of the August Moon”. She was quickly plucked out of the chorus and cast as the female comic lead when choreographer, Ron “Cabaret” Field created a 5-minute dance solo for her. Nine years and many bread & butter jobs later, she landed her 2nd Broadway show, “G.R. Point”, opposite Michael Moriarty, and another 9 years later, landed her 3rd Broadway show, “M. Butterfly”, which introduced and skyrocketed the career of newcomer, BD Wong. The latest pre-Broadway gig, “Half Time”, the project that the late Marvin Hamlisch had worked on before his death, starring Georgia Engel, Donna McKechnie, and Andre De Shields, had its out-of-town presentation at the Paper Mill Playhouse.  In-between these intervals, there was Off-Broadway: “The Primary English Class”, opposite Diane Keaton, 7 seasons at the famed O’Neill Theater Center, working with fellow rising-star actors: Meryl Streep, Samuel L. Jackson, Mary Alice, some television gigs: “Rodgers & Hammerstein’s South Pacific”, starring Glenn Close, Harry Connick, Jr. (she had the opportunity to play the role of Bloody Mary in 3 stage productions, one at Washington, DC’s Arena Stage garnered her the Helen Hayes Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Musical); as Iris, 2nd season semi-regular on “Roseanne”; 7 seasons as Chang in “Orange is the New Black”; films: “She-Devil”, “What About Bob?”, “Mickey Blue Eyes” (her single scene with Hugh Grant was included in a collection of funniest comedy scenes). The joy and privilege of being within the cast of “Awkwafina is Nora From Queens” rounds out the celestial cycle of affectionately-proclaimed “Asian-American Meteorics” – ones who shot up like meteors from their early beginnings, in all directions of the arts. What a thrill, what an honor, this ride!

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