
Victor Sen Yung
Acting
Born 1915-10-18 · San Francisco, California, USA
Victor Sen Young (born Victor Cheung Young or Sen Yew Cheung; October 18, 1915 – body discovered November 9, 1980) was an American character actor, best known for playing Jimmy Chan in the Charlie Chan films and Hop Sing in the Western series Bonanza. He was born in San Francisco, California to Gum Yung Sen and his first wife, both immigrants from China. His mother died during the flu epidemic of 1919. His father placed Victor and his younger sister, Rosemary, in a children's shelter, and returned to his homeland to seek another wife. He returned in 1922 with his new wife, Lovi Shee, forming a household with his two children. Sen Yung made his first significant acting debut in the 1938 film Charlie Chan in Honolulu, as the Chinese detective's "number two son", Jimmy Chan. Sen Yung played Jimmy Chan in 11 Charlie Chan films between 1938 and 1942. Moonlighting from the popular Chan series, Sen Yung won critical acclaim playing the nuanced role of Ong Chi Seng, a young attorney assisting Howard Joyce, in defending Leslie Crosbie, in The Letter. Like other Chinese-American actors, he was cast in Japanese parts during World War II, like his role as the treacherous Japanese-American Joe Totsuiko in the 1942 Humphrey Bogart film Across the Pacific. During World War II he joined the U.S. Army Air Forces just as his erstwhile co-star Sidney Toler was set to revive the dormant Charlie Chan series at Monogram Pictures. Sen Yung's military obligations forced him to decline rejoining the series immediately, but Monogram gave him a standing invitation to work there after his tour of duty. Sen Yung's military service included work in training films at the First Motion Picture Unit and a role in the Army Air Forces' play and film Winged Victory. In 1946 Sen Yung resumed his Hollywood career at Monogram, now billed as Victor Sen Young, and reunited with Sidney Toler. Toler's health was failing; Monogram was conserving Toler's waning energy, limiting his scenes and giving him long rest periods during filming. To relieve the burden on Toler, Monogram entrusted much of the action to Victor Sen Young; he and either Mantan Moreland or Willie Best shared much of the footage in Toler's final three films, Dangerous Money, Shadows Over Chinatown, and The Trap. The addition of Moreland as Chan's black chauffeur, Birmingham Brown, reflected the fact that by this time the Chan pictures had a significant following among black Americans, who liked a film series that for once did not feature a white hero. Moreland's popularity in the Chan pictures was so great that he was booked for a nationwide vaudeville tour. Following Toler's death in 1947, Victor Sen Young appeared in five of the remaining six Charlie Chan features. His character "Jimmy" was renamed "Tommy". Victor Sen Young continued to work in motion pictures and television in roles ranging from featured players (affable or earnest Asian characters) to bit roles (clerks, houseboys, waiters, etc.). Arguably even more than for his work in the Charlie Chan films, Victor Sen Yung is remembered as "Hop Sing," the irascible cook and general factotum on the iconic television series Bonanza, appearing in 107 episodes between 1959 and 1973. Sen Yung was also an accomplished and talented chef. He frequently appeared on cooking programs and authored The Great Wok Cookbook in 1974.
Known for

Valley of Fire
1951 · Movie

The Red Pony
1973 · Movie

Trader Tom of the China Seas
1954 · Movie

G.I. War Brides
1946 · Movie

The Letter
1940 · Movie

Lost Angel
1943 · Movie

The Movie Orgy
1968 · Movie

The Killer Elite
1975 · Movie

Peking Express
1951 · Movie

The Sniper
1952 · Movie

The Good Earth
1937 · Movie

They Met in Bombay
1941 · Movie

Manila Calling
1942 · Movie

Double or Nothing
1937 · Movie

Secrets of Monte Carlo
1951 · Movie

Woman on the Run
1950 · Movie

The Mad Martindales
1942 · Movie

Tuna Clipper
1949 · Movie

Charlie Chan's Murder Cruise
1940 · Movie

Blood Alley
1955 · Movie

The Breaking Point
1950 · Movie

The Blue Gardenia
1953 · Movie

Charlie Chan at the Wax Museum
1940 · Movie

China
1943 · Movie

Charlie Chan at Treasure Island
1939 · Movie

Rogues' Regiment
1948 · Movie

Flight to Hong Kong
1956 · Movie

Men in War
1957 · Movie

The Saga of Hemp Brown
1958 · Movie

Castle in the Desert
1942 · Movie

Kung Fu: The Way of the Tiger, the Sign of the Dragon
1972 · Movie

Flower Drum Song
1961 · Movie

Moontide
1942 · Movie

Port of Hell
1954 · Movie

The Left Hand of God
1955 · Movie

Forbidden
1953 · Movie

Winged Victory
1944 · Movie

Torchy Blane in Chinatown
1939 · Movie

The Sickle or the Cross
1949 · Movie

Across the Pacific
1942 · Movie

The Law and the Lady
1951 · Movie

Key to the City
1950 · Movie

Charlie Chan in Reno
1939 · Movie

International Settlement
1938 · Movie

Barricade
1939 · Movie

The Man with Bogart's Face
1980 · Movie

The Shanghai Chest
1948 · Movie

Half Past Midnight
1948 · Movie

Betrayal from the East
1945 · Movie

The Hawaiians
1970 · Movie

Charlie Chan in Panama
1940 · Movie

Red Light
1949 · Movie

The Trap
1946 · Movie

A Ticket to Tomahawk
1950 · Movie

Soldier of Fortune
1955 · Movie

Jubilee Trail
1954 · Movie

20,000 Men a Year
1939 · Movie

Charlie Chan in Rio
1941 · Movie

Murder Over New York
1940 · Movie

Little Tokyo, U.S.A.
1942 · Movie