Yang related to Willis's feeling of invisibility and struggle to break out of background roles, mirroring his own career journey from minor parts to leading roles.
The show plays with stereotypes by having characters like Willis Wu use background roles (delivery guy, tech guy) to gain access and influence, challenging societal expectations.
Yang bought a beat-up Toyota Corolla to experience the daily struggles of someone like Willis Wu, who has never left Chinatown and lives in an SRO.
Yang's father, Richard O. Yang, started acting after seeing his son succeed, booking roles due to a lack of older Asian actors in the talent pool.
Working together on projects, such as a Toyota commercial and 'Patriots Day,' allowed them to bond and have open conversations about their lives and careers.
Yang based his character on authenticity, drawing from his own observations of immigrants and people he knew, aiming to create a real human rather than a caricature.
Yang, having been a foreigner himself, feels a soft spot for immigrant characters and believes portraying them authentically is important, even if it challenges stereotypes.
Yang had to learn martial arts to realistically portray a character who has trained in kung fu but is not very good, understanding the language of kung fu to look believable.
In his new Hulu comedy series,* Interior Chinatown*, Jimmy O. Yang plays a waiter who inadvertently becomes central to a crime story. As an Asian American actor, he says he relates to the character's feeling of invisibility. Yang talks with Ann Marie Baldonado about auditioning for Silicon Valley, working alongside his dad, and feeling like an outsider among other Asians in California. Also, film critic Justin Chang reviews the Indian movie All We Can Imagine as Light.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices)NPR Privacy Policy)