Actor
Who Plays Linus Gives Character
a Blanket Endorsement
Article
by Judith Newmark
(Post-Despatch December 27 1998)
No
one can say that B.D. Wong lacks range. The actor made his
reputation starring on Broadway in M. Butterfly. He played
the title role, an actor whose lover, a French diplomat,
seems convinced that his partner is a woman. It was a
bravura performance in a serious drama, the kind of work
that wins awards -- and Wong has the Tony to prove it.
Then he found broad popularity, and much bigger audiences,
in Steve Martin's Father of the Bride movies. He played the
goofy but lovable assistant to Martin Short's extravagant
but lovable party-planner. And now he's playing a
thumb-sucking preschooler with a strong spiritual streak
and a deepattachment to his security blanket.
B.D. Wong is Linus in the new production of You're a Good
Man, Charlie Brown, the musical based on Charles Schulz's
Peanuts comic strip. Michael Mayer, the Broadway director
behind the revival, says he cast actors in whom he found a
genuine resonance with the familiar comic-strip figures.
Wong considers that a compliment. He admires Linus for
going his own way, hanging on to that blanket because it
makes him feel good, no matter what the other kids say.
Wong, however, tends to see in himself a bit more of Lucy
-- "a belligerence" -- and, he hopes, something of the
resilient Charlie Brown as well.
But he feels deep affection for Linus, who reminds him of
his father. "My dad has a childlike, yet wise, philosophy,
a simple wisdom," he said. "He can cut right to the truth
of something, in an emotional way."
In fact, he thanks his dad and his mom for a lot --
including the love of musical theater that led him to this
show, and to his whole career.
Wong grew up in San Francisco, where his father worked for
the post office and his mother for the phone company. His
parents, both third-generation Chinese-Americans, grew up
in the city's Chinatown during the Depression.
"I know it was very difficult, so difficult I can't imagine
it," Wong said. "My parents wanted me and my brothers to
have a good life."
The brothers do have good lives, each with a career
straight out of a little kid's daydreams: one actor, one
doctor, one firefighter. Wong credits their successes to
their parents, who never defined that "good life" in
strictly material terms. "I was creative, but not athletic,
and I was blessed with incredible parents who never tried
to deny that," he said. "They sent me to art class. My
mother taught me crafts. My dad took me to the ballet. They
also gave me violin lessons, and I was good at it.
"But one day I looked in the mirror and thought, 'I don't
like this. I don't like playing the violin.' It was the
wrong thing in the right world."
When Wong was 14, a friend told him that she was going to
audition for the school musical, Guys and Dolls. She said
he should try out for a part, too, instead of playing in
the orchestra.
He was already familiar with the music, because his father,
a musical comedy fan, played those records all the time. "I
grew up hearing show tunes -- Rodgers and Hammerstein,
Meredith Willson, Lerner and Loewe," he said. "I didn't
know what it was, just music my dad liked. But I heard it
all.
"So I went to the audition. And as soon as I got on the
stage, I knew: Not only do I love it, but it loves me. I
knew then that I wanted to be an actor."
Despite their encouragement of the arts, the Wongs had the
same reservations as other parents would about their son's
ambitions -- which turned out not to be a passing phase. An
acting life is uncertain at best, and probably worse if
your son is Asian-American. "I knew how they felt," Wong
said. "I grew up watching those roles, too. The Asian
characters were either evil or funny, with thick glasses,
an accent and no sexuality. "But they understood that my
passion for acting overrode all that. I told them, look, I
don't know what I am doing. I don't know if it will work.
If I fail, I will go to medical school, like my brother."
He grinned. "Medical school was never a possibility,
believe me." "But they showed incredible support for me at
times when I needed it most. I guess they had some kind of
subliminal idea that if they did that, one day I would be
happy. But I was happy then, and so were they. They were
happy to be helping me. "It's been very satisfying, for all
of us. I don't think you could find a better example of
parents who let their children find their own way."