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- Hop_Sing abstract "Hop Sing was the fictional Cartwright family's cook on the US television series Bonanza which ran on the NBC network from 1959 to 1973. US born actor Victor Sen Yung played the character, who was a Chinese immigrant.A servile character named Hop Sing first appeared as a laundryman in 1876, in Bret Harte's play Two Men of Sandy Bar. Folklorist Wolfgang Mieder cites his comically accented Pidgin English diction as the likely source for the proverbial ethnic slur, "No Tickee, no Washee". Although in his considerably toned down reincarnation as a TV character, the character of Hop Sing still incorporated some Chinese-American stereotypes, such as being a servant (an economic niche also shared by African Americans in the American South), he is not commonly cited as an offensive use of an Asian (known as Oriental at the time) character. The Chinese were historically marginalized in the labor market of the American west into niches where they would not compete with Caucasians. Marlo Thomas was once cast as a militant, Chinese woman. Some prominent Asian-Americans, such as Benson Fong, would also appear on Bonanza.The character had to deal with bigotry on occasion. In "Shanklin" episode #409, he is repeatedly referred to by a confederate doctor as "yellow", to which a Cartwright states, "He's not a yellow, he's Chinese". During the western's fourteen-year run, just two episodes centered on the character. The first episode, #316 was "Mark of Guilt" which dealt with Hop Sing clearing Little Joe of a murder charge via the ancient science of fingerprinting- or (as Hop Sing termed it) "chops". The second episode, #404 was "The Lonely Man", which chronicled legal biases against Asians, when Hop Sing unlawfully gets engaged to a white woman.Throughout the series Hop Sing was a faithful, considerate character. The Cartwrights considered him almost family, with Hoss virtually in tears whenever the cook threatened to resign. When riled, he is often heard spouting Chinese expletives, but otherwise, Hop Sing's presence was a source of common sense. He once used martial arts to assail a threatening family foe ("Stage Door Johnnies", 7/28/68).In 2001-02, the character was revived in David Dortort's PAX-TV prequel, Ponderosa. The depiction of Hop Sing here, played by Gareth Yuen, was quite different from the original series, where he was sometimes used as a comic figure wielding a butcher knife. The glaring pidgin English was replaced with a softer, wiser delivery. Hop Sing was depicted as a trusted family counselor and herbal healer.".
- Hop_Sing wikiPageExternalLink ch0069969.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageID "4217229".
- Hop_Sing wikiPageLength "3101".
- Hop_Sing wikiPageOutDegree "28".
- Hop_Sing wikiPageRevisionID "669514989".
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink African_American.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink African_Americans.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink American_South.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink American_west.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Asia.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Benson_Fong.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Bonanza.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Bret_Harte.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fictional_American_people_of_Chinese_descent.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink China.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Chinese-American.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_Americans.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink David_Dortort.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Ethnic_slur.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink File:Victorsenyung.gif.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Fingerprint.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Fingerprinting.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Gareth_Yuen.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Herbal.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Ion_Television.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Labour_(economics).
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Labour_economics.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink List_of_English-based_pidgins.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink List_of_ethnic_slurs.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Little_Joe_(character).
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Marlo_Thomas.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Murder.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Niche_market.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink PAX-TV.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Pidgin_English.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Ponderosa_(TV_series).
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Proverb.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Southern_United_States.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Victor_Sen_Yung.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Western_United_States.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:counselor.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLink Wolfgang_Mieder.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hop Sing".
- Hop_Sing hasPhotoCollection Hop_Sing.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Bonanza.
- Hop_Sing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Hop_Sing subject Category:Fictional_American_people_of_Chinese_descent.
- Hop_Sing hypernym Cook.
- Hop_Sing type Article.
- Hop_Sing type Person.
- Hop_Sing type Article.
- Hop_Sing comment "Hop Sing was the fictional Cartwright family's cook on the US television series Bonanza which ran on the NBC network from 1959 to 1973. US born actor Victor Sen Yung played the character, who was a Chinese immigrant.A servile character named Hop Sing first appeared as a laundryman in 1876, in Bret Harte's play Two Men of Sandy Bar. Folklorist Wolfgang Mieder cites his comically accented Pidgin English diction as the likely source for the proverbial ethnic slur, "No Tickee, no Washee".".
- Hop_Sing label "Hop Sing".
- Hop_Sing sameAs m.0wz3f7y.
- Hop_Sing sameAs Q5898929.
- Hop_Sing sameAs Q5898929.
- Hop_Sing wasDerivedFrom Hop_Sing?oldid=669514989.
- Hop_Sing isPrimaryTopicOf Hop_Sing.