Ali Wong
- In full:
- Alexandra Dawn Wong
- Born:
- April 19, 1982, San Francisco, California, U.S.
- Also Known As:
- Alexandra Dawn Wong
- Awards And Honors:
- Golden Globe Award (2024)
- Emmy Award (2024)
- Notable Works:
- “Always Be My Maybe”
Ali Wong (born April 19, 1982, San Francisco, California, U.S.) is a comedian, writer, and actress whose irreverent and incisive work explores themes of cultural identity, motherhood, and sexuality from a feminist perspective. In 2024 she won a Golden Globe Award and an Emmy Award for her explosive performance as entrepreneur Amy Lau in the rage-fueled miniseries Beef (2023), becoming the first Asian American woman to win an Emmy for best lead actress. She is known for her stand-up comedy specials Ali Wong: Baby Cobra (2016), Ali Wong: Hard Knock Wife (2018), and Ali Wong: Don Wong (2022) and for her work (2015–17) on the popular sitcom Fresh Off the Boat (2015–20).
Early life and education
Wong was born in San Francisco, the youngest child of Adolphus Wong, an anesthesiologist of Chinese American descent, and Tam (Tammy) Wong, a social worker who had immigrated to the United States from Vietnam as a student. Wong was raised in the picturesque Pacific Heights neighborhood and attended San Francisco University High School, graduating in 2000. She majored in Asian American studies at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where she discovered her love of performing. Wong befriended actor Randall Park, who was also in the Asian American studies department, and she joined Lapu, the Coyote That Cares Theatre Company, which Park cofounded. During her college years, she spent time studying abroad in Hanoi to learn the Vietnamese language and to gain insight into her mother’s heritage. In a 2004 college essay titled “Discoveries Terrible and Magnificent,” she elaborated on her desire to study Vietnamese.
My mother came alone in 1960, when there were hardly any Vietnamese people in the U.S., and especially where she went to college: the Midwest. Nuns at Duchesne college taught her that in order to survive and assimilate in America, she had to forget her Vietnamese culture.…Through [studying] the language, I wanted to gain access to the Vietnamese-American community, my mother’s history and my own identity.
After graduating from UCLA in 2005, Wong completed additional studies in Vietnam through a Fulbright program.
Career
Wong returned to San Francisco and started performing as a stand-up comic. She moved to New York City to hone her craft, performing as many as nine sets a night in comedy clubs around the city. In 2011 Variety magazine included Wong in its annual “10 Comics to Watch” feature, and she made her television stand-up debut on The Tonight Show. That same year she made her TV acting premiere in the short-lived sitcom Breaking In (2011–12). In 2012 she landed a recurring role in the series Are You There, Chelsea?, a sitcom based on comedian Chelsea Handler’s 2008 book Are You There, Vodka? Later that year Wong made her film debut in director Oliver Stone’s action thriller Savages. She went on to play radiologist Dr. Lina Lark in the medical drama series Black Box (2014).
In 2015 Park, Wong’s friend from UCLA, landed the lead role in producer Nahnatchka Khan’s sitcom Fresh Off the Boat, which follows the adventures of a Taiwanese American family adapting to suburban life in Florida in the 1990s. On Park’s recommendation, Wong joined the show’s writing team. Park praised Wong’s distinctive and original writing in a 2016 interview in The New Yorker.
For a lot of Asian-American…comedians, myself included, the crutch when you first start out is to do hacky ethnic jokes. It’s in a lot of ways an easier laugh. She never really relied on that….Her voice is just so…it’s Ali. If it’s happened to her and if it’s affected her, it’s going to come out.
Wong’s distinctive and raunchy comedic voice shines through in her breakout comedy special Ali Wong: Baby Cobra. Wong filmed Baby Cobra when she was seven and a half months pregnant with her first child, and Netflix released it on Mother’s Day in 2016. She tackles a wide range of topics in the hour-long special, including Yoga, hoarding, cultural stereotypes, and pregnancy. Wong discussed how she redirected her anxious feelings about working while pregnant in a 2016 interview with Elle magazine.
Pregnancy for a working woman is generally perceived as a weakness….I’m lucky because my boss, the showrunner at Fresh Off the Boat, was really cool about me taking time off, but I was still nervous about having that “maternity leave” conversation….I had so much anxiety about my stand-up career taking a big hit, so I wanted to use my pregnancy as a source of power and turn it into a weapon instead of a weakness.
Wong portrayed Doris, a wealthy housewife always ready to offer advice, in the family sitcom American Housewife (2016–21). She delved deeper into motherhood and marriage in her second Netflix comedy special, Ali Wong: Hard Knock Wife, filmed when she was seven months pregnant with her second child. In 2019 she reunited with Park and Khan, cowriting and starring in the romantic comedy Always Be My Maybe. Later that year she authored the comedic memoir Dear Girls: Intimate Tales, Untold Secrets, & Advice for Living Your Best Life, written as letters of advice to her young daughters. Wong went on to play assistant district attorney Ellen Yee in the 2020 DC Comics superhero film Birds of Prey. Khan directed Wong’s 2022 comedy special, Ali Wong: Don Wong, a bawdy and clever exploration of ambition, midlife crises, and marital infidelity.
Wong is also an accomplished voice actress. She voiced roles in the animated films The Angry Birds Movie (2016), The Lego Ninjago Movie (2017), Ralph Breaks the Internet (2018), Onward, and Phineas and Ferb the Movie: Candace Against the Universe (both 2020), and from 2019 to 2022 she voiced the role of Roberta (“Bertie”) Songthrush in 30 episodes of the animated sitcom Tuca & Bertie. Wong also lent her voice to roles in several other animated series, including Maddie in BoJack Horseman, Sylvia in American Dad!, Ali in Big Mouth, and Becca Lee in Human Resources.
In 2023 Wong starred as entrepreneur Amy Lau alongside Steven Yeun, who played struggling contractor Danny Cho, in the darkly comic miniseries Beef (2023). The miniseries follows the lives of Lau and Cho, who are involved in a road-rage incident that leads to a bitter and escalating rivalry. In addition to Wong’s Emmy Award for best actress in a limited series, Beef won an Emmy for outstanding limited series. In a 2023 interview with The Cut, Wong discussed pouring her own experiences and emotions into her portrayal of Lau.
I always come back to instinct and emotion in everything that I do. It’s always an abstraction of the truth. Like with Beef, even though I didn’t write it, all of those emotions are connecting to something real for me, and whatever that is specifically I could never articulate because it all came from some sort of instinct when I read those words.
Personal life
Wong married entrepreneur Justin Hakuta in 2014, and they have two children together. In 2022 Wong and Hakuta announced that they had separated, and Wong filed for divorce in 2023.