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Haing S. Ngor

 
Biography: Haing S. Ngor

A survivor of the reign of terror of the Khmer Rouge in his native Cambodia, Haing S. Ngor (c. 1947 - 1996) became known for his role in the 1984 film "The Killing Fields",which told of atrocities in Cambodia. Although a physician, not an actor, he won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for the film. Until his tragic death, Ngor was a human rights activist, using his fame and income to help refugees, and to tell the story of the holocaust experienced by his people.

In an article entitled "Haing Ngor: Witness for Cambodia, Champion for Peace," Charles L. Bland of the University at Buffalo recalled that Ngor, his friend and colleague, viewed himself as "an historical witness" who had a story to share, with The Killing Fields remaining as "his legacy." Bland concluded, "Through this film, [Ngor] eloquently gave eyes to a sightless world to see and know about the horrifying genocidal destruction of Cambodia."

Childhood in Cambodia

Ngor was born to a Khmer mother and a Chinese father in Samrong Yong, which was south of the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh. The details on his birthdate and family life vary. Some sources state that 1947 was his birth year, while others list 1941, 1950, or 1951. In addition, some sources say he was born into a wealthy family, while others say his family was poor farmers. Nonetheless, sources do agree that Ngor had an ordinary, happy childhood until civil war came to Cambodia.

Established Medical Practice

Despite the unrest in his country, Ngor was able to attend medical school. While a medical student, Ngor fell in love with a young woman. Her name was Chang My Hoa (variant spelling of Huoy), and she was training to be a teacher. They would later marry.

Eventually, Ngor set up his own practice in Phnom Penh, where he specialized in gynecology and obstetrics. He also served as a medical officer in the Cambodian Army. It would appear that Ngor was successful and living a quiet life. That all changed, however, when the Khmer Rouge, guerrilla rebels led by Pol Pot, took over the capital in 1975.

As noted in an article about Ngor on the BBC Website, the rebels were initially greeted as saviors, and the citizens truly thought peace would be restored to their country. The article continued, "Little did the population of Cambodia know, but this was to be the start of one of the greatest human catastrophes and acts of barbarity ever to be seen by the modern world."

The Khmer Rouge believed that Cambodia must be freed from all influences of Western culture, and if force was necessary, so be it. They "evacuated" cities and towns, sending millions of people into the countryside to do labor and be "re - educated." Owning personal property was illegal. People who were considered educated or intellectual were executed, and Ngor had to practice medicine in secret.

"The Killing Fields"

Writing for People Weekly, Bill Hewitt recalled that eventually, Ngor, his family, and his fiancée were taken to a labor camp and forced to work. In his years in the labor camp - He would be a prisoner of the Khmer Rouge regime from 1975 - 1979 - Ngor endured terrible abuse. Hewitt wrote that Ngor "smashed rocks from dawn to midnight and was made to wear a yoke and plow the earth like an ox. His tormentors starved and flogged him, clamped his head in a vise, cut off part of his little finger and strung him up on a cross above a smoldering fire." Ngor endured the torture, and saved himself by insisting he was illiterate or a taxi driver.

Ngor's family was not so lucky. His parents, sisters, brothers, and their wives were murdered by execution squads. But the ultimate loss was that of his wife and child. Ngor was forced to watch his wife die, as she went into premature labor with their son. Although a cesarean section might have saved her life, Ngor had no surgical tools and could do nothing. Hewitt noted that his wife "died an agonizing death in his arms." In all, it is estimated that the Khmer Rouge murdered over two million people during its reign of terror.

Escaped Labor Camp; Began New Life

In May of 1979, Vietnamese forces took over Cambodia and the Khmer Rouge regime collapsed. Ngor rescued his young niece and escaped with her and a friend to Thailand. For approximately 18 months, he worked as a doctor in refugee camps. Ngor tried to immigrate to both Australia and the United States, but was denied entry. In the fall of 1980, however, he was finally allowed to enter the United States, and he settled in Los Angeles, California.

Ngor had to start his life over. He was not allowed to practice medicine because his credentials were not recognized in the United States. He found work as a security guard, and later took a position as a job counselor, working with refugees. Some of his clients were Cambodian refugees, just like him, and he was happy to be able to help them.

Movie Role and Honors

In the early 1980s, Hewitt noted, Ngor, along with thousands of others, answered a casting call for a movie entitled The Killing Fields, a true - life account of the Khmer Rouge reign of terror in Cambodia. Initially, Ngor was indifferent about the project, but most sources concur that Ngor had promised his late wife that he would tell the world about Cambodia's sufferings. By participating in this project, he could fulfill that promise. He agreed to take a part in the film.

It was when production began in Thailand that Ngor learned he would have a major role in the film. He would be playing Dith Pran, a real - life Cambodian news photographer who had helped New York Times reporter Sydney Schanberg escape the country, but then had been captured by the Khmer Rouge. Ngor and Pran shared a similar history and memories of "the killing fields" as both had endured years of torture and hardship before escaping.

Released in 1984, Ngor's performance in The Killing Fields received critical acclaim. His portrayal of Pran earned him several honors, including the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. He was the first "non - professional" to win an Academy Award since 1946. He also won the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor, and the British Academy of Film and Television Arts Awards for Best Actor and Best Newcomer to Film. In interviews, he often said he really was an actor, but that his best acting had been done in Cambodia when he was a prisoner of the Khmer Rouge.

Continued to Act; Helped Others

Ngor continued to take acting jobs, and using his fame and money to help others in need. He took guest starring roles on American television series such as "Miami Vice," "China Beach," "Highway to Heaven," and "Hotel." He also appeared in other films, most notably Oliver Stone's Heaven and Earth and My Life, starring Nicole Kidman and Michael Keaton.

In a 1993 interview with Jim Hill of CNN, Ngor reflected, "I have a house, I have everything, but I have no family . . . How rich you are, but you can't buy a happy family." He lived very modestly, with his focus on helping others. Hill added, "Ngor's money did buy help for the people of Cambodia . . . Ngor . . . supported two clinics and a school in his Southeast Asian home country." He even continued his position as a job counselor, and worked on behalf of Cambodian refugees in Thailand, France, and Belgium.

In 1987, Ngor and journalist Roger Warner co - wrote his autobiography A Cambodian Odyssey, which received critical acclaim. He did some speaking engagements, and in 1991, he founded the Haing S. Ngor Foundation. A sawmill and a school were established in Cambodia. Eventually, Ngor was spending most of time and money in Cambodia instead of in the United States. He was regarded as a very dedicated, but private man.

Tragic Ending

On the evening of February 25, 1996, Ngor was shot and killed in the driveway of his home in Los Angeles. Since Ngor had been active in helping fellow Cambodians and had someday hoped to bring the Khmer Rouge war criminals to justice, some of his friends and family wondered if he was the victim of an assassination. Initially, Time reported, "Police [were] looking into whether Ngor, an outspoken benefactor of L.A.'s Cambodian - refugee community, was a victim of robbery or politics."

Friends were shocked by Ngor's untimely death. Bland wrote that it was "truly heartbreaking" and that "the people of Cambodia, the people of the world, deserve better than this." Schanberg, who had befriended Ngor during the filming of The Killing Fields, told People Weekly, "The Cambodians believe that the spirit returns after death - Ngor's spirit will always be around. You just don't kill a spirit - not his."

Shortly after the crime, the Los Angeles Police theorized that Ngor had been the victim of robbery, and had perhaps been shot for refusing to give up jewelry that contained his late wife's picture. Eventually, three teenage gang members were arrested and in April of 1998, they were convicted of the crime. (According to IMDb, the Internet Movie Database Website, the conviction was overturned in April of 2004).

Contemporary Authors focused on the irony of Ngor's death, noting, "Ngor survived the killings fields of Cambodia's brutal Pol Pot dictatorship, but he did not survive the streets of Los Angeles."

Books

Contemporary Film, Theater, and Television, Volume 16, Gale, 1997.

Ngor, Haing, and Roger Warner, A Cambodian Odyssey, Macmillan, 1987.

Notable Asian Americans, Gale, 1995.

Periodicals

Maclean's, March 11, 1996.

People Weekly, March 11, 1996.

Time, March 11, 1996.

U.S. News & World Report, April 27, 1998.

Online

"Actor Haing Ngor founded gunned down outside L.A. home," February 27, 1996, CNN website, http://www.cnn.com/US/9602/Haing - ngor (November 25, 2004).

"Biography for Haing S. Ngor," Internet Movie Database Website,http://www.imdb.com (December 2, 2004).

Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2005, http://galenet.galegroup.com (April 10, 2005).

"Dr Haing S Ngor and the Killing Fields," BBC - h2g2 - The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy,http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/hub/A842979 (December 12, 2004).

"Haing Ngor," Ski Canada Magazine, March 3, 1996; April 23, 1996; April 27, 1996; and May 15, 1996. http://www.skicanadamag.com/JamMoviesArtistsN/ngor.html (November 25, 2004).

"Haing Ngor: witness for Cambodia, champion for peace," March 7, 1996 - Vol. 27, No. 21: Letters, University at Buffalo: Reporter,http://www.buffalo.edu/reporter/vol27/vol27n21/n10.html (November 25, 2004).

Other

American Decades CD - ROM, Gale Research, 1998.

"Biography of Dr. Haing S. Ngor," The Killing Fields, Goldcrest Films & Television Ltd., Warner Home Video, (1984) 2001.

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Actor: Dr. Haing S. Ngor
Top
  • Born: Mar 22, 1940 in Samrong Young, Cambodia
  • Died: Feb 25, 1996 in Los Angeles, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '80s-'90s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Action
  • Career Highlights: The Killing Fields, Heaven & Earth, My Life
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Killing Fields (1984)

Biography

A obstetrician and gynecologist in his native Cambodia, Dr. Haing S. Ngor was plunged into a five-year hell when his country was overwhelmed by the Khmer Rouge. Ngor spent four years as a slave laborer, subjected to endless persecution and torture. Things would have been even worse had his captors known of his medical and intellectual background. To avoid extermination, he went without his much-needed eyeglasses, and was forced to stand by helplessly when his pregnant wife died after going into premature labor. Finally escaping to the U.S. in 1980, he was unable to secure work in his chosen profession because his French medical qualifications weren't recognized. His fortunes took a dramatic swing upward when director Roland Joffe cast him as real-life Cambodian translator Dith Pran in The Killing Fields (1981). Having already literally "lived" his role, Ngor delivered a powerhouse performance, one which earned him an Academy Award. Careful to avoid exploiting or cheapening this triumph (at the Oscar ceremony, he dedicated his win to the memory of his murdered family), Ngor chose his subsequent films carefully. His best post-Killing Fields roles include the heroine's father in Oliver Stone's Heaven and Earth and The General in the syndicated TV series Vanishing Son (1994). For Ngor, acting was always secondary to tireless fund-raising efforts on behalf of his fellow Cambodians, and his dogged determination to bring his Khmer Rouge persecutors to justice. In 1988, he wrote his chillingly graphic autobiography, Haing Ngor: A Cambodian Odyssey. After enduring so much hardship and heartbreak, Ngor's death was particularly tragic: he was murdered while standing next to his car in the garage of his Los Angeles home. For a while, suspicion fell upon Khmer Rouge assassins; it turned out, however, that Haing Ngor's killers were nothing more than drug-dealing street gang members. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Haing S. Ngor
Top
Haing Somnang Ngor
Born March 22, 1940(1940-03-22)
Samrong Yong, Cambodia
Died February 25, 1996 (aged 55)
Los Angeles, California, USA
Spouse(s) My-Huoy Ngor

Dr. Haing S. Ngor (Traditional Chinese: 吳漢,[1] March 22, 1940 – February 25, 1996) was a Cambodian American physician, actor and author who is best known for winning the 1985 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in the movie The Killing Fields, in which he portrayed journalist and refugee Dith Pran in 1970s Cambodia, under the rule of the Khmer Rouge.[2] His mother was Khmer and his father was of Chinese descent.[3] Ngor and Harold Russell are the only two non professional actors to win Academy Awards in an acting category.[citation needed]

Contents

Life under the Khmer Rouge

Born in Samrong Young, Cambodia, Ngor trained as a surgeon and gynecologist. He was practicing in the capital, Phnom Penh, in 1975 when Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge seized control of the country and proclaimed it Democratic Kampuchea.[4] He was compelled to conceal his education and medical skills (and indeed the fact that he wore spectacles) to avoid the new regime's intense hostility to intellectuals and professionals. He was expelled from Phnom Penh, along with the bulk of its two million inhabitants, as part of the Khmer Rouge's "Year Zero" social experiment and imprisoned in a concentration camp along with his wife, My-Huoy, who subsequently died during childbirth in the camp. Although a gynecologist, he was unable to treat his wife who required a Cesarean section as he would have been exposed, and both he and his wife (as well as the child) would very probably have been killed.[5] After the fall of the Khmer Rouge regime in 1979, Ngor worked as a doctor in a refugee camp in Thailand and left with his niece for the United States on August 30, 1980.[4] Ngor was not able to resume medical practice in the U.S.[6] He never remarried.

In 1988, he wrote Haing Ngor: A Cambodian Odyssey, describing his life under the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia. In the second edition of Survival in the Killing Fields, Roger Warner, Ngor's co-author, adds an epilogue telling the story of Ngor's life after winning the Academy Award.

The "Dr. Haing S. Ngor Foundation" was founded in his honor in 1997 to assist in raising funds for Cambodian aid. As part of his humanitarian efforts, Ngor built an elementary school and operated a small sawmill that provided jobs and an income for local families.[4] Ngor's niece, Sophia Ngor Demetri, who testified at the trial of his murderers and with whom he arrived to the U.S., is the current President of the Foundation.[7]

Actor

Ngor, despite having no previous acting experience, was cast as Dith Pran in The Killing Fields, a role for which he later won three awards, including a Golden Globe Award and an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.[6] Ngor also appeared in other movies and TV shows, most memorably in Oliver Stone's Heaven & Earth and the Vanishing Son miniseries. He also appeared in the classic Hong Kong film Eastern Condors, which was directed by and starred Sammo Hung. He guest-starred in a two-episode storyline on the acclaimed series China Beach (episodes "How to Stay Alive in Vietnam 1 & 2[1]") as a wounded Cambodian POW who befriends Colleen McMurphy while under her care. He also guest-starred in an episode of Miami Vice called "The Savage / Duty and Honor".

Murder

On February 25, 1996, Ngor was shot dead outside his home in Chinatown, in downtown Los Angeles, California. Ngor was buried at the Rose Hills Memorial Park in Whittier, Los Angeles. Many Cambodians claimed they had a stake in his estate, with one woman claiming he had married her after coming to the U.S. Most of Ngor's Cambodian assets went to his brother, Chan Sarun, while his American assets were used up in legal fees staving off claims to his estate.[8]

Charged with the murder were three reputed members of the "Oriental Lazy Boyz" street gang who had a prior history of snatching purses and jewelry. They were tried together in the Superior Court of Los Angeles, though their cases were heard by three separate juries.[5] Prosecutors argued that they killed Ngor because, after handing over his gold Rolex watch willingly, he refused to give them a locket that contained a photo of his deceased wife, My-Huoy. Defense attorneys suggested the murder was a politically motivated killing carried out by sympathizers of the Khmer Rouge, but offered no evidence to support this theory.

Some criticized the theory that Ngor was killed in a bungled robbery, pointing to the US$2,900 in his car that had been left behind, and the fact that the thieves had not rifled his pockets. Why the thieves would have demanded his locket has never been answered; Ngor typically wore the locket next to his skin under his clothing, so it would not have been in plain sight. As of 2003, the locket has not been recovered.[9]

All three were found guilty. Tak Sun Tan was sentenced to 56 years to life; Indra Lim to 26 years to life; and Jason Chan to life without parole. In 2004, the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California granted Tak Sun Tan's habeas corpus petition, finding that prosecutors had manipulated the jury's sympathy by presenting false evidence. This decision was reversed, and the conviction was ultimately upheld by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in July 2005.

After the release of The Killing Fields, Ngor had told a New York Times reporter , "If I die from now on, OK! This film will go on for a hundred years."[citation needed]

Dith Pran, whom Ngor portrayed in The Killing Fields, said of Ngor's death, "He is like a twin with me... He is like a co-messenger and right now I am alone."[10]

Filmography

Year Film Role Other notes
1984 The Killing Fields Dith Pran (as Dr. Haing S Ngor)
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor
BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role
BAFTA Award for Best Newcomer
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture
BSFC Award for Best Actor
1986 Dung fong tuk ying (Eastern Condors) Yeung Lung
1989 Vietnam War Story: The Last Days Major Huyen segment "The Last Outpost"
The Iron Triangle Colonel Tuong, NVA
1990 Vietnam, Texas Wong
1991 Ambition Tatay
1993 My Life Mr. Ho
Heaven & Earth Papa
Fortunes of War Khoy Thuon
1994 The Dragon Gate Sensei
1996 Hit Me Billy Tungpet

References

  1. ^ Famous Chinese-Americans in Entertainment: Acting
  2. ^ "Ngor, Haing S.". Encyclopædia Britannica. http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9113310/Ngor,%20Haing%20S. Retrieved 2007-10-06. 
  3. ^ Hyung-chan Kim, Stephen Fugita, Dorothy C. L. Cordova (1999). Distinguished Asian Americans: A Biographical Dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 264–5. ISBN 0313289026. 
  4. ^ a b c "Biography". Dr. Haing S. Ngor Foundation. http://www.haingngorfoundation.org/. Retrieved 2007-10-06. 
  5. ^ a b "Court Revives Convictions in Murder of ‘Killing Fields’ Survivor". Metropolitan News. 2005-07-08. 
  6. ^ a b "Famous Chinese-Americans in Entertainment: Acting; Haing S. Ngor". Yellow Bridge. http://www.yellowbridge.com/people/actingM.html. Retrieved 2007-10-06. 
  7. ^ "Foundation". Dr. Haing S. Ngor Foundation. http://www.haingngorfoundation.org/. Retrieved 2007-10-06. 
  8. ^ Ngor, Haing; Roger Warner (2003). Survival in the Killing Fields. New York: Carroll & Graf. pp. 512–513. ISBN 978-0-78671-315-1. 
  9. ^ Ngor & Warner, p. 515.
  10. ^ "Actor Haing Ngor found gunned down outside L.A. home". CNN. http://www.cnn.com/US/9602/haing_ngor/. Retrieved 2007-09-06. 

External links

Further reading

  • Ngor, Haing with Roger Warner. A Cambodian Odyssey. Macmillian Publishing Company, 1987. ISBN 0-02-589330-0.
  • Ngor, Haing with Roger Warner. Survival in the Killing Fields. Carroll & Graf Publishers, 2003. ISBN 0786713151.

 
 

 

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