Jodi Long
Jodi Long (born January 7, 1954) is an American actress, theater performer, and labor advocate renowned for her versatile career spanning stage, film, television, and music videos, as well as her leadership in advancing equity for performers in Hollywood.[1] Born in New York City to a family of vaudeville entertainers, she made her Broadway debut at age seven and later trained at the High School of Performing Arts before earning a BFA from the Conservatory of Theatre Arts at SUNY Purchase in 1976.[2][3][4] Long's early career focused on theater, where she appeared in numerous Off-Broadway productions and five Broadway shows, including a revival of Flower Drum Song in 2002 for which she received an Ovation Award during its Los Angeles tryout.[3] Transitioning to screen work, she gained prominence with roles in films such as Splash (1984), Patty Hearst (1988), RoboCop 3 (1993), The Hot Chick (2002), and Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings (2021), often portraying strong, multifaceted Asian American characters amid industry stereotypes.[1][3] On television, she is best known for recurring roles as Madame Ybarra in Café Americain (1993–1994), Mrs. Kim in All-American Girl (1994–1995), Ok Cha in Sullivan & Son (2012–2014), and supporting parts in series like Dash & Lily (2020), earning her a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Daytime Fiction Program in 2021.[3][2] Additionally, she appeared in New Order's music video for "Bizarre Love Triangle" (1986) and has credits as a writer and producer.[3] Beyond performing, Long has been a vocal advocate for diversity, particularly for Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) representation, drawing from her experiences facing typecasting as an Asian actress in Hollywood.[2] In 2021, she was elected president of the SAG-AFTRA Los Angeles Local in a landslide victory, representing approximately 160,000 members nationwide, and served in that role until 2025, leading the local through the union's 118-day strike in 2023 and negotiating protections against artificial intelligence misuse, including requirements for performer consent and compensation in the resulting contract.[5][3][2] She currently serves as SAG-AFTRA National Vice President for Los Angeles. Her efforts also include initiatives to combat ageism—such as advocating for the removal of birthdates from IMDb profiles—and implementing unconscious bias training within the industry.[2] As of 2025, Long continues to champion quality roles for AAPI performers, citing milestones like the success of Everything Everywhere All at Once as evidence of progress while emphasizing the need for sustained systemic change.[2][6]Early life and education
Early life
Jodi Long was born on January 7, 1954, in Manhattan, New York City.[7] She was raised in the Woodside neighborhood of Queens, New York, after her family relocated there shortly after her birth.[8] Long's parents were both performers in the vaudeville and nightclub circuits. Her father, Lawrence K. "Larry" Long (born Larry Leung), was an Australian-born tap dancer of Chinese and Scottish descent who served in the Australian Navy during World War II, and later appeared in U.S. nightclubs and on Broadway, including the original 1958 production of Flower Drum Song.[9] Her mother, Kimiye "Trudie" Long (née Tsunemitsu), was a Japanese-American showgirl and dancer born in Portland, Oregon, to Issei parents; she was interned at the Minidoka camp during World War II before moving to New York City at age 18 to work as a clerk and performer at venues like The China Doll nightclub.[9] Together, as the act "Larry and Trudie Leung," they appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show on May 7, 1950; Trudie retired from performing following Jodi's birth, while Larry continued his career in theater before transitioning to professional golf.[9] The couple divorced when Long was a young girl, an event that later informed her personal reflections on family dynamics in her work.[10] From an early age, Long was immersed in the performing arts through her parents' professions, often playing backstage during their nightclub engagements, which provided a natural introduction to show business.[11] She made her stage debut at age seven in the 1962 Broadway production Nowhere to Go But Up, directed by Sidney Lumet.[12] This family legacy of performance profoundly shaped her passion for acting, fostering an early commitment to the stage that would define her path in the arts.[10]Education
Long attended the High School of Performing Arts in New York City, where she sought a rigorous academic environment alongside opportunities to perform, initially considering a career in law but drawn to the school's balance of education and artistic training.[13] There, she experienced greater diversity than in her earlier schooling, which influenced her perspective on inclusive performing arts spaces.[14] She later pursued formal training at the State University of New York at Purchase (SUNY Purchase) Conservatory of Theatre Arts, earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in 1976.[3] [9] Her college curriculum emphasized acting techniques within a conservatory model, building on foundational skills in performance and stagecraft.[3] While her early exposure to dance through family nightclub acts had instilled basic movement training, her SUNY Purchase studies focused primarily on theatrical disciplines, refining her abilities in character development and ensemble work.[10] [3] This structured education served as a critical bridge from her family's vaudeville roots—where her parents performed as actors and entertainers—to her own professional aspirations in theater, providing the technical proficiency and cultural context needed to navigate the industry as an Asian American artist.[13] [9]Career
Theater career
Jodi Long began her professional theater career shortly after graduating from Purchase College in 1976, making her mark in New York productions with roles in both Broadway and off-Broadway shows.[15] Her early Broadway appearances included a supporting role in Michael Weller's Loose Ends in 1979, opposite Kevin Kline, and as a member of the Chorus of Bacchae in the 1980 Circle in the Square production of Euripides' The Bacchae, directed by Theodore Mann.[16] Off-Broadway, she appeared in numerous ensemble and character roles during the late 1970s and 1980s, contributing to the vibrant New York theater scene through works at venues like the Public Theater and Ensemble Studio Theatre, though specific credits from this period highlight her versatility in dramatic and experimental pieces.[13] Long's Broadway career gained prominence in the 1990s and early 2000s, notably with her role as Nam-Jun Vuong in Stephen Sondheim's Getting Away with Murder in 1996, a short-lived production directed by Jack O'Brien that showcased her comedic timing in a dark farce.[17] She achieved a career highlight in the 2002 revival of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Flower Drum Song, adapted by David Henry Hwang, where she portrayed the formidable Madam Liang during its Los Angeles tryout at the Mark Taper Forum and subsequent Broadway run at the Virginia Theatre. For her performance in the revival, Long won a Los Angeles Ovation Award, recognizing her nuanced depiction of a Chinese matriarch navigating cultural clashes in San Francisco's Chinatown.[10] This role was particularly poignant, as it echoed her family's theatrical legacy—her father, Lawrence K. Long (stage name Larry Leung), had performed in the original 1958 Broadway production, and she had toured with him as a child, fostering her lifelong connection to the stage.[11] In regional theater, Long has maintained an active presence, blending classic revivals with new works that often explore Asian American identities. She starred as Madame Armfeldt in a 2023 production of Stephen Sondheim's A Little Night Music at the Pasadena Playhouse, bringing gravitas to the role of the aging dowager in this 50th-anniversary mounting directed by David Lee.[18] Earlier, she developed and performed in one-woman shows drawing from her personal history, including Surfing My DNA (also known as Surfing DNA), which premiered in Los Angeles in 2013 and received an Ovation Award nomination for its intimate exploration of her multicultural heritage.[19] This evolved into American Jade: Surfing the DNA in 2022 at Bucks County Playhouse, a solo piece she wrote and starred in, delving into themes of Asian American experiences, family immigration stories, and the performing arts through anecdotes from her career and ancestry.[13] In 2025, she appeared in the world premiere of Becky and Her Lung Transplant at the Durango PlayFest.[20] These works underscore Long's impact on theater, particularly in amplifying underrepresented voices; her touring productions and family-influenced performances have inspired generations of Asian American artists, bridging traditional musicals with contemporary solo storytelling.[21]Film career
Jodi Long began her film career in the early 1980s, appearing in supporting roles that highlighted her versatility amid limited opportunities for Asian American actresses. Her early breakthrough came in the 1984 romantic comedy Splash, where she portrayed a reporter interviewing the film's central characters, marking one of her initial forays into mainstream Hollywood cinema. This role, though brief, showcased her ability to bring authenticity to professional figures, a recurring motif in her work. Throughout the late 1980s and 1990s, Long continued to secure character parts in notable action and drama films, often embodying resilient Asian American women in ensemble casts. In Paul Schrader's 1988 biopic Patty Hearst, she played Wendy Yoshimura, a real-life member of the Symbionese Liberation Army, contributing to the film's tense portrayal of radical activism and capturing the complexities of second-generation Japanese American identity. By the early 1990s, she appeared in two high-profile thrillers: RoboCop 3 (1993), as Nikko's mother, a displaced family figure amid dystopian corporate oppression, and Striking Distance (1993), as Officer Kim Lee, a dedicated river rescue squad dispatcher navigating police intrigue. These roles underscored her knack for infusing supporting characters with depth, despite the era's stereotypical constraints on Asian portrayals.[22][23][24] Long's film work evolved into more culturally specific narratives in the 2000s, reflecting gradual shifts in Hollywood's approach to Asian American representation. In the 2002 comedy The Hot Chick, she depicted a Korean immigrant mother, emphasizing familial pressures and cultural clashes in a lighthearted body-swap story, which allowed her to explore immigrant experiences with humor and warmth. Her career reached a milestone in 2021 with Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, where she portrayed Mrs. Chen, the supportive mother of protagonist Katy Chen, in Marvel's first Asian-led superhero film; this role involved a full-body digital scan, highlighting emerging technological challenges in actor protections. In 2023, she provided the voice of Wangmu in the animated film The Monkey King. In 2024, she appeared as Lucy Summers in the horror film Night Swim.[1] Over decades, Long has navigated persistent barriers, including a scarcity of substantive roles for Asian women in the 1980s—exacerbated by industry strikes—and ongoing stereotypes that reduced her to "that Asian girl" in casting perceptions. Yet, she has observed incremental progress, with films increasingly featuring Asian actors in multifaceted parts, though she stresses Hollywood still requires deeper equity to combat biases like ageism and unconscious racism.[25][26][27][2]Television career
Jodi Long began her television career with guest appearances on prominent sitcoms in the late 1980s and early 1990s, including roles as Jo Ann on The Cosby Show in episodes "Trust Me" (1988) and "Getting the Story" (1990), Eileen Arata on Designing Women in "Trial and Error" (1992), and a woman in line on Roseanne in "April Fool's Day" (1990). These early spots showcased her versatility in ensemble comedy formats, often portraying sharp-witted supporting characters amid limited opportunities for Asian American actresses during that era.[28][29][30] Her breakthrough to series regular status came with the role of the flamboyant Madame Ybarra on the NBC sitcom Café Americain (1993–1994), where she played a colorful expatriate in a Paris café ensemble, marking her first sustained television lead after transitioning from theater. This was followed by her portrayal of Katherine "Mrs." Kim, the strict Korean immigrant mother, on ABC's All-American Girl (1994–1995), the first primetime network sitcom featuring a majority Asian American cast, starring Margaret Cho as her rebellious daughter. Despite the show's short run due to cultural clashes and network interference, Long's performance highlighted intergenerational family dynamics and earned praise for advancing Asian American visibility, though it also underscored persistent stereotypes of immigrant parents as authoritarian figures.[2][28][13] A notable guest role came as Patty Aston, the confident "power lesbian," on HBO's Sex and the City in the Season 2 episode "The Cheating Curve" (1999), delivering an iconic line reading that has been celebrated for its humor and assertiveness, further cementing Long's reputation for memorable supporting turns in prestige cable series. Later, she recurred as Ok Cha Sullivan, the tough Korean mother employing "tough love" quips, on TBS's Sullivan & Son (2012–2014), blending cultural humor with family loyalty in a blue-collar bar setting. These sitcom roles often navigated the challenges of Asian American representation, where Long confronted typecasting and unconscious bias, noting in interviews that early opportunities were scarce beyond stereotypical immigrant or exotic figures, yet they paved the way for more nuanced portrayals amid Hollywood's slow progress toward inclusivity.[28][4][2] In recent years, Long has balanced drama and genre work, appearing as Da-Xia Wu on Chicago Med in Season 8's "Know When to Hold and When to Fold" (2023) and as an unnamed Imperial warlord on The Mandalorian in Season 3's "The Spies" (2023), contributing to high-profile ensembles that expanded her range into procedural and sci-fi formats. Her standout performance as the eccentric Mrs. Basil E. in Netflix's holiday series Dash & Lily (2020) earned her a historic Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Daytime Fiction Program in 2021, making her the first Asian American to win in any acting category at the Daytimes and symbolizing breakthroughs in streaming-era representation. Through these roles, Long has advocated for equitable casting, emphasizing the need to combat ageism and bias to foster authentic Asian American stories in television.[31][32][2][33]Activism
SAG-AFTRA involvement
Jodi Long's involvement with SAG-AFTRA deepened over her decades-long career as an actress, where she witnessed persistent challenges in performers' rights and representation, motivating her ascent within the union's ranks.[2] As a longtime member of the progressive Membership First faction, she first sought national office in 2019 by running for secretary-treasurer on Matthew Modine's slate, building a foundation for local leadership.[34] In 2021, Long was elected president of the SAG-AFTRA Los Angeles Local, defeating Yvette Nicole Brown in a landslide vote of 7,154 to 6,096, succeeding Patricia Richardson.[5] The Los Angeles Local, representing nearly half of the union's 160,000 members, became a platform for her to champion labor issues amid industry shifts like streaming dominance. She was re-elected to a second two-year term in 2023, continuing her focus on contract enforcement and member support during turbulent times.[35][36] Under Long's leadership, key initiatives centered on advancing performers' rights through rigorous negotiations and advocacy for equitable casting practices. As vice chair of the 2023 TV/Theatrical Negotiating Committee, she played a pivotal role in the union's 118-day strike against major studios, securing groundbreaking contract improvements including higher wages, enhanced residuals from streaming, and protections against AI misuse of performers' likenesses.[37] The resulting agreement, ratified by 78% of voting members in December 2023, marked a historic win for residual structures and consent requirements for digital replicas.[38] Long also prioritized equity in casting by pushing early in her tenure to combat ageism—a discrimination she personally encountered—through policy reforms promoting diverse and inclusive audition processes.[2] Long's term extended through 2025, during which she oversaw post-strike implementation, including informational sessions on new contract provisions and ongoing advocacy for healthcare affordability amid rising costs.[37] In the 2025 Los Angeles Local elections, she transitioned from the presidency, running successfully for and winning the position of National Vice President, Los Angeles, while Joely Fisher assumed the local leadership role.[39][6] Her efforts solidified the local's commitment to intersectional labor protections, influencing broader union strategies for equity and sustainability.[6]Asian American advocacy
Jodi Long has been a prominent advocate for Asian American visibility in the entertainment industry, collaborating with organizations like the Media Action Network for Asian Americans (MANAA) on efforts to combat whitewashing and promote authentic casting. In one notable instance, she joined fellow actors Tzi Ma and the late Elizabeth Sung in protesting the whitewashing casting in M. Night Shyamalan's 2010 film adaptation of Avatar: The Last Airbender, highlighting the importance of Asian performers in roles depicting Asian characters.[40][41] Drawing from her Japanese American heritage—her mother, Trudie Leung, was a second-generation Japanese American performer who faced significant barriers in vaudeville and early television—Long has frequently addressed historical exclusions and stereotypes faced by Asian Americans in media. This personal connection informs her work, including her one-woman show American Jade (2022), which explores her family's show business legacy and the broader struggles of Asian American artists against typecasting and marginalization.[9][13][42] Following her historic 2021 Daytime Emmy win as the first Asian American actress in the Supporting Actress category for Dash & Lily, Long amplified her advocacy through public speaking and interviews, emphasizing progress in AAPI representation while calling for continued quality roles beyond stereotypes. She highlighted the evolution from early projects like All-American Girl (1994), where Asian characters often relied on accents and clichés, to more nuanced portrayals enabled by inclusive writing, expressing optimism about younger creators fostering equity.[43] Long has also responded to surges in anti-Asian hate, particularly amid COVID-19-related xenophobia, by speaking out against racist encounters such as slurs targeting performers of Asian descent. In interviews, she has advocated for storytelling that humanizes AAPI experiences to counter bias, noting instances where audiences fixated on her ethnicity rather than her craft. Her efforts extend to broader diversity initiatives, leveraging her SAG-AFTRA leadership as a platform to implement unconscious bias training and push for inclusive casting practices in Hollywood through 2025.[2][44]Awards and honors
Emmy Awards
Jodi Long received her first Daytime Emmy nomination and subsequent win in 2021 for her performance as Mrs. Basil E. in the Netflix series Dash & Lily. She was awarded Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Daytime Fiction Program at the 48th Daytime Emmy Awards, recognizing her nuanced portrayal of the quirky bookseller in the holiday-themed romantic comedy. The category honors exceptional supporting roles in daytime scripted programming, and Long's victory marked a significant moment in her career spanning decades in television.[45][33] The awards ceremony for children's, family viewing, and animation categories, including Long's win, was held virtually on July 17, 2021, as part of the split format for the 48th Daytime Emmys amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. In a statement following her win, Long expressed profound gratitude for the recognition, stating, "I am honored and incredibly gratified to be the first Asian American actor to win an Emmy, for it has been a long time in coming"—referring to her milestone as the first Asian American actress to win in the Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Daytime Fiction Program category. She dedicated the honor to the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences for acknowledging diverse storytelling and thanked Netflix for the opportunity to embody a character previously played by iconic actresses like Ingrid Bergman.[46][47][48] Long's win held historic importance as the first for an Asian American actress in the Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Daytime Fiction Program category, highlighting progress in representation for AAPI performers in daytime television. This milestone came at a time of increased visibility for Asian American stories, underscoring Long's advocacy for equity in the industry. No further Emmy nominations or wins for Long have been recorded through 2025.[32][46]Theater and other awards
Jodi Long received the 2002 Los Angeles Stage Alliance Ovation Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical for her role in the revival of Flower Drum Song at the Mark Taper Forum.[49] She was also nominated for an Ovation Award in the Solo Performance category for her one-woman show Surfing DNA at East West Players. Long co-wrote the 2008 documentary Long Story Short, directed by Christine Choy, which chronicles her parents' lives as Asian American performers; the film earned the Audience Award for Best Documentary at the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival.[50] It also received the Grand Jury's Honorable Mention for Documentary at the same festival and was selected as one of the top ten documentaries of the year by UCLA's Asia Institute.[13] In recognition of her contributions to theater and performance, Long was honored with the Distinguished Alumni Award from Purchase College's Conservatory of Theatre Arts in 2014.[51] For her broader advocacy and leadership in the performing arts, the City of Los Angeles presented her with a commendation at City Hall on October 3, 2025, celebrating her service as SAG-AFTRA Vice President and former Los Angeles Local President.[6]Filmography
Film
| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1981 | Rollover | Betsy Okamoto |
| 1984 | Splash | Reporter [52] |
| 1987 | The Bedroom Window | Cocktail Waitress |
| 1988 | Soursweet | Mui |
| 1988 | Patty Hearst | Wendy Yoshimura |
| 1989 | Born on the Fourth of July | Reporter #1 |
| 1989 | New York Stories | T.V. Interviewer (segment "Oedipus Wrecks") |
| 1990 | Alice | Park Avenue Couple [53] |
| 1990 | The Exorcist III | First Dream Woman |
| 1993 | Amos & Andrew | Wendy Wong |
| 1993 | The Pickle | Yakimoto Yakimura |
| 1993 | RoboCop 3 | Nikko's Mom [54] |
| 1993 | Striking Distance | Officer Kim Lee |
| 1998 | Celebrity | Father Gladden's Fan |
| 2002 | New Suit | Feng Shui Woman [55] |
| 2002 | The Hot Chick | Korean Mother [56] |
| 2010 | Beginners | Dr. Long [57] |
| 2011 | Without | [] (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1791687/) |
| 2013 | A Picture of You | Mother |
| 2016 | 5 Doctors | Dr. Suzuki |
| 2018 | The Tale | Rebecca [58] |
| 2021 | Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings | Mrs. Chen |
| 2023 | The Monkey King | Wangmu (voice) |
| 2024 | Night Swim | Lucy Summers |
Television
Jodi Long has appeared in numerous television series, miniseries, and TV movies throughout her career, often in supporting and guest roles, with several series regular positions in the 1990s and 2000s.[1]| Year(s) | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1983 | Scarecrow and Mrs. King | Jin Sung | Guest (1 episode) |
| 1984–1990 | The Cosby Show | Jo Ann | Guest (multiple episodes) |
| 1986 | The Equalizer | Marge | Guest (1 episode) |
| 1986 | MacGyver | Dr. Shen | Guest (1 episode) |
| 1989 | Tour of Duty | Lt. McDaniels | Guest (1 episode) |
| 1990 | L.A. Law | Judge | Guest (1 episode) |
| 1990 | Roseanne | Woman in Line | Guest (1 episode) |
| 1990 | Mancuso, F.B.I. | Beth Kurland | Guest (1 episode) |
| 1990 | How to Murder a Millionaire | Check Out Woman | TV movie |
| 1993–1994 | Cafe Americain | Madame Ybarra | Series regular (18 episodes) |
| 1994 | Seinfeld | Mr. Oh's Wife | Guest (1 episode) |
| 1994–1995 | All-American Girl | Mrs. Kim | Series regular (19 episodes) |
| 1995 | New York News | Maggie | Guest (1 episode) |
| 1996 | The Single Guy | Marie | Guest (1 episode) |
| 1997 | His and Hers | Corey Chang | TV movie |
| 2003 | Miss Match | Kate Kong | Series regular (18 episodes) |
| 2004 | House | Judge | Guest (1 episode) |
| 2005 | American Dad! | Woman | Voice, guest (1 episode) |
| 2008 | Cashmere Mafia | Susan Mason | Guest (1 episode) |
| 2012–2014 | Sullivan & Son | Ok Cha Sullivan | Recurring (28 episodes) |
| 2015 | Young & Hungry | Mrs. Park | Guest (1 episode) |
| 2016 | The Blacklist | Col. Jane Wright | Guest (1 episode) |
| 2016–2018 | Falling Water | Kumiko | Recurring (13 episodes) |
| 2020 | Dash & Lily | Mrs. Basil E. | Guest (miniseries, 1 episode) |
| 2023 | Chicago Med | Da-Xia Wu | Guest (1 episode) |
| 2023 | The Mandalorian | Warlord | Guest (1 episode) |