Victor Wong (September 24, 1906 – April 7, 1972) was a Chinese American actor. While Wong appeared in numerous films through the 1930s and 1940s, they were largely small uncredited parts. His memorable role was as Charlie the Cook in the movies King Kong (1933) and Son of Kong (1933). Wong's most memorable scene came in the original film when he finds evidence that natives have kidnapped Ann Darrow. He yells, "All hands on deck! Everybody on deck!" This causes panic aboard ship which begins the quest for Ann's whereabouts. The Charlie character in the sequel was more prominent to the story and included significantly more screen time for Wong. The character has since been criticized for being a racist stereotype, particularly for his exclamation of "Crazy black man been here!".
1945
as Joe
1944
as Japanese Officer (uncredited)
1943
as Japanese Diplomat (uncredited)
1942
as Trainman
1942
1940
as Willie Ming
1940
as John, Tom's Houseboy
1940
as Charley Won
1939
as Second Bandit
1939
as Cholly Wong
1939
as Restaurant Proprietor (uncredited)
1939
as Chinese Radio Broadcaster
1939
as Cop
1938
as Mikichan (uncredited)
1938
as Gardener
1937
as Bandit Leader (uncredited)
1936
as Wong
1936
as Lee Fin - Karney's Enemy
1936
as Cheng (uncredited)
1933
as Charlie the Cook
1933
as Ship's Cook Charlie
1932
as Wu Sun
1932
as Chinese Officer (uncredited)