rimagz: Lucy Liu Biography

October 10, 2010

Lucy Liu Biography

Name
Lucy Liu
Date of Birth
December 02, 1968
Birth Place
Queens, NY
Relationships
Will McCormack, boyfriend (2004 to present) Zach Helm, ex-boyfriend (2003 to 2004; engaged) Nicholas Lea, ex-boyfriend (1997 to 1998)



1968
Lucy Liu
December 02

Far From Barbie

While growing up in Queens, N.Y., Liu, the daughter of Chinese immigrants, dreams of an acting career, even though she rarely sees Asian performers in movies or on TV. "When you're younger and you don't feel like you quite fit in anywhere, you think there must be a community of misfits out there that you can fall into," she tells the New York Times. "The popular girls were all blondes," she adds to PEOPLE. "I wanted to be Barbie and I was as opposite to Barbie as you could get."
1986

The Artistic Brain

Liu attends New York University before transferring to the University of Michigan where she majors in Asian studies. To her surprise, the aspiring actress is cast as the lead in a college production of Alice in Wonderland. The role, she says, changed her life. "I realized you can be anything you want in the world," she tells Newsday. "You don't have to follow what's given." Her self-expression – through performing, photography and painting – continues after college, when she is awarded a grant to make art in China.
1990s
Lucy Liu

Small Sightings

Liu decides to pursue acting professionally and moves to L.A., where she appears in commercials and small parts on TV hits like Beverly Hills, 90210 and ER. "I fulfilled my parents' dreams by going to the University of Michigan. I always knew I wanted to act, so I went up to my father and I said, 'I am going to go to California,'" she recalls. "Now, they are my biggest fans." She eventually appears in Gridlock'd with Thandie Newton, plays a dominatrix in Payback (right) and Tom Cruise's ex-girlfriend in Jerry Maguire.
1998
Lucy Liu
September 21

Creating Ling Woo

Ally McBeal show creator David E. Kelley develops a new character specifically for Liu. She plays Ling Woo, a combative client who becomes the firm's most politically incorrect lawyer, and earns an Emmy nomination and a shared SAG Award for the best ensemble. But Liu is criticized for perpetuating the Asian "dragon lady" stereotype. "This role has been liberating for me. I can bring who I am into it," Liu tells Newsweek. When she leaves the show in 2001 to pursue film, Liu thanks Kelley for giving her a role that "taught me about myself and helped me grow as a person."
1999
May 10

What a Beauty!

PEOPLE names Liu one its 50 Most Beautiful people. Her Ally costar and onscreen love Greg Germann remembers his first impression of Liu, "I looked at her and just went, 'Whoa!' She's stunning," he tells PEOPLE. In 2004, she makes her second appearance in the annual issue. The following year, she costars with Jackie Chan and Owen Wilson as Princess Pei-Pei in Shanghai Noon.
2000
Lucy Liu
November 03

A Heavenly Role

Liu kicks butt alongside Drew Barrymore and Cameron Diaz in the big-screen remake Charlie's Angels, which rakes in $264 million worldwide. Liu calls the high-profile role in the original all-white TV cast "a historical step for me." Director McG adds, "Nobody ever gave her anything...It was that sort of elegant tenacity that I wanted to reflect in this movie's Alex character…There was no real agenda to cast an ethnic Angel..."
2002
Lucy Liu
December

A Murderess in Chicago

Liu makes a show-stopping appearance as a pineapple heiress-turned-killer in the movie adaptation of Chicago. The film, which stars Renée Zellweger, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Richard Gere and Queen Latifah, wins the Best Picture Oscar and a SAG Award for outstanding cast.
2003
Lucy Liu

Not the Marrying Kind

Liu begins dating playwright Zach Helm (right), and in 2004, the pair is engaged. But they never make it to the altar, calling it quits at the end of 2004. "I don't want to settle for anything else," she tells In Style. "[Love] should be like lightning. For me it happens almost immediately." In 2005, she moves on with actor Will McCormack.
Lucy Liu
June 27

Returning for More

Liu re-teams with Barrymore and Diaz for Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle, and this time, they lure Demi Moore out of her film hiatus to join them as a retired Angel with a tarnished halo. Although the sequel doesn't perform as well as the first installment at the box office, it still earns more than $37 million during its opening weekend.
Lucy Liu
October 10

Chopping Off Heads

Liu plays Queen of the Tokyo Underworld, O-Ren Ishii, who attempted to murder Uma Thurman's character in Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill: Vol. 1. The film eventually earns $110 million worldwide. In one scene, Liu slices off another gang leader's head during a mob meeting. She earns the MTV Movie Award for Best Villain, but once again, Liu finds herself defending her role. "I think that because I'm Asian, people will immediately sort of label it as a 'dragon lady,'" she tells CBS. "I think if it was, you know, Renée Zellweger playing this role, nobody would say, 'Dragon lady.'" 

2006
Lucy Liu
January 16

Code Clooney: Calling Dr. Hearthrob!

PEOPLE reports that Liu – who had guest slots on ER in 1995 – and former ER star George Clooney were seen "lip-locking" in a limo outside a downtown Manhattan restaurant. Clooney's rep denies any romance between the stars.
Lucy Liu
December

3 Needles

Liu and Sandra Oh star in the indie drama, 3 Needles, which examines the global AIDS epidemic. Liu plays a blood collector who unknowingly transmits HIV to an entire Chinese village. "It's the plague of our century and something we have to acknowledge. If the message can come out in any other way, let it be through cinema," Liu tells the Chicago Sun-Times.
2007
Lucy Liu
February 15

Visiting Betty

Liu guest stars on ABC's Ugly Betty as an attorney who seeks revenge on Betty's boss Daniel Meade (played by Eric Mabius, right). Soon after, ABC gives Liu her own show, Cashmere Mafia, which is produced by Darren Star of Sex and the City fame. She will play Mia Mason, an ambitious publishing executive, in the ensemble cast about four high-powered female professionals who bonded in business school.
2008
Lucy Liu
January

From Mafia to Money?

Cashmere Mafia premieres on ABC. EW says, "Lucy Liu has a curious habit of spinning blondes into career gold." The series costars Miranda Otto, Bonnie Somerville, and Frances O'Connor (left). The series is plagued by low ratings and is cancelled in its first season. But Liu sticks with ABC, joining the cast of Dirty Sexy Money.
Lucy Liu
October 01

Dirty Sexy Lucy

Liu joins Peter Krause, Donald Sutherland and William Baldwin as a series regular on the show, making her Dirty Sexy Money debut on ABC. Playing the scheming yet stunning Nola Lyons in the first episode of the show's second season, Liu’s whip-smart fashionista Nola is set to become a permanent member of the Darling family's inner circle.
In 2007 Liu appeared in Code Name: The Cleaner; Rise, a supernatural thriller co-starring Michael Chiklis in which Liu plays an undead reporter (for which she was ranked number 41 on "Top 50 Sexiest Vampires"); and Watching the Detectives, an independent romantic comedy co-starring Cillian Murphy. She made her producer debut and also starred in a remake of Charlie Chan, which had been planned as early as 2000.Liu guest starred as lawyer Grace Chin on Ugly Betty in the 2007 episodes "Derailed" and "Icing on the Cake."



 In 2007 Empire named Liu number 96 of their "100 Sexiest Movie Stars." The producers of Dirty Sexy Money created a role for Liu as a series regular. Liu played Nola Lyons, a powerful attorney who faced Nick George (Peter Krause). Liu voiced Silvermist in Disney Fairies and Viper in Kung Fu Panda.


In March 2010, Liu made her Broadway debut in the Tony Award–winning play God of Carnage as Annette on the second replacement cast alongside Jeff Daniels, Janet McTeer, and Dylan Baker.[26] In March 2012, she was cast as Joan Watson for Elementary. Elementary is an American Sherlock Holmes adaption, and the role Liu was offered is traditionally played by men.[27] She also has played police officer Jessica Tang on Southland, a television show focusing on the lives of police officers and detectives in Los Angeles as a recurring guest actor during the fourth season.She received the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Drama Guest Actress for this role.[30]




In August 2011, Liu became a narrator for the musical group The Bullitts.In 2013, Liu was invited to become a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.


Career as visual artist
Liu had previously presented her artwork under a pseudonym, Yu Ling (which is her Chinese name). Liu, who is an artist in several media, has had several gallery shows showcasing her collage, paintings, and photography.She began doing collage mixed media when she was 16 years old, and became a photographer and painter.Liu attended the New York Studio School for drawing, painting, and sculpture from 2004 to 2006.



In September 2006, Liu held an art show and donated her share of the profits to UNICEF.[36][37] She also had another show in 2008 in Munich. Her painting "Escape" was incorporated into Montblanc's Cutting Edge Art Collection and was shown during Art Basel Miami 2008, which showed works by contemporary American artists. Liu has stated that she donated her share of the profits from the NYC Milk Gallery gallery show to UNICEF. In London, portion of the proceeds from her book Seventy Two went to UNICEF.

Charity
In 2001 Liu was the spokesman for the Lee National Denim Day fundraiser, which raises money for breast cancer research and education. In 2004 Liu was appointed an ambassador for U.S. Fund for UNICEF. She traveled to Pakistan and Lesotho, among several other countries.



Early in 2006, Liu received an "Asian Excellence Award" for Visibility. She also hosted an MTV documentary, Traffic, for the MTV EXIT campaign in 2007. In 2008, she produced and narrated the short film The Road to Traffik, about the Cambodian author and human rights advocate Somaly Mam. The film was directed by Kerry Girvin and co-produced by photographer Norman Jean Roy. This led to a partnership with producers on the documentary film Redlight.



Liu is a supporter of marriage equality for gays and lesbians, and became a spokesman for the Human Rights Campaign in 2011. She has teamed up with Heinz to combat the widespread global health threat of iron deficiency anemia and vitamin and mineral malnutrition among infants and children in the developing world.

Personal life
Lucy Liu has never married and has no children.

In 1991 Liu underwent surgery after a breast cancer scare. "The doctor sort of felt and said it was cancer and it needs to come out. I went into shell-shock. It was pretty traumatising." The lump was removed just two days after the doctor's examination and was found to be benign.




Liu has studied various religions, such as Jewish mysticism, Buddhism, and Taoism. She has stated, "I'm into all things spiritual—anything to do with meditation or charts or any of that stuff. I studied Chinese philosophy in school. There's something in the metaphysical that I find very fascinating."

She has been a member of the Chinese-American organization Committee of 100 since 2004.



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