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Ming-Na Wen's 1981 Mt. Lebanon High School yearbook photo. Wen was born on November 20, 1963, on Coloane, one of the two main islands of Macau. [1] Her mother Lin Chan Wen moved to Macau in the 1950s from Suzhou, China, to escape communism. [3] Her father is of Malaysian Chinese descent. [4] She has an older brother Jonathan [5] and a younger ...
Chuojiao (Chinese: 戳腳; pinyin: Chuōjiǎo; lit. 'poking foot') is a Chinese martial art that comprises many jumps, kicks, and fast fist sequences. The fist and feet work in unison and strike continuously forward, like "falling meteorites", never giving the opponent a moment to recover.
Fennec Shand is portrayed by Ming-Na Wen. [9] [10] [11] It marks one of several notable performances by Wen in Walt Disney Company projects, including voicing Mulan in the animated films Mulan (1998), Mulan II (2004) and the video game Kingdom Hearts II (2005), making a cameo appearance in the 2020 live-action remake as a court guest, and portraying Melinda May on the Marvel series Agents of S ...
"The flower that blooms in adversity is the most rare and beautiful of all," the Emperor of China waxed poetic in Disney's 1998 animated classic, Mulan. Originally set to open in theaters early ...
It was a day to remember for Ming-Na Wen, who reunited with her Joy Luck Club castmates on Tuesday at her Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony.The 59-year-old Star Wars and Marvel actress was honored ...
At the D23 Expo in 2019, Ming-Na Wen was named a Disney legend, and it’s hard to think many actors more deserving.Wen has accomplished a Mouse House triple crown: She voiced the Disney warrior ...
Jing-Mei Chen, M.D. is a fictional character from the medical drama series ER, portrayed by Ming-Na Wen. [1] The character first appears in the first season as a recurring guest character, going by the name Debra "Deb" Chen.
More than four hundred acupuncture points have been described, with the majority located on one of the twenty main cutaneous and subcutaneous meridians, pathways which run throughout the body and according to Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) transport qi.