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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, August 21, 2006

Ming-Na fired up about new FBI role

By BRIDGET BYRNE
Associated Press

From left, Gale Harold, Ming-Na and Lisa Lackey on the set of "Vanished," Fox television's new serial thriller.

DAMIAN DOVARGANES | Associated Press

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'VANISHED'

Premiere

8 tonight

Fox

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"I love my gun," exclaims Ming-Na, as a prop man secures a heavy weapon in the holster under her neat, brown jacket.

A name tag identifies her as FBI agent Lin Mei, a member of the investigative team probing the mysterious disappearance of the wife of a U.S. senator from Georgia.

That's the plot line for the premiere season of "Vanished," Fox's new serial thriller debuting tonight.

The role is more than a few action sequences away from Ming-Na's previous TV characters — Dr. Deb Chen of NBC's "ER" and attorney Rachel Lu in the network's short-lived "Inconceivable."

"It's so much fun to have this incredible fantasy of playing this strong, brave woman," Ming-Na says, chatting between camera setups outside the Paramount Studios sound stage in Los Angeles where "Vanished" is produced.

Fantasy, indeed, she stresses. "She (Lin Mei) is completely opposite of who I am. If there's just a spider, I'll run the other way!"

Hard to believe when one considers Ming-Na's lively persona.

Married to music producer and actor Eric Zee, the 42-year-old mother of two young children laughs heartily when told how young and fit she looks.

"I lead a happy life, and I have good genes, and my kids keep me young," she responds. "You only get one life. You have to have a good time!"

Ming-Na is her first name and means "enlightenment" in Chinese, she explains, amused but also frustrated by American confusion over such names, despite their distinct syllables.

"It still amazes me how people butcher and mix it up ... you can say Schwarzenegger but you can't say Ming-Na," she laughs. "What is the problem! Ming-Na, it's like Ma-Donna," she teases, also stressing that the hyphen makes it like Ann-Margret "and nobody questions her."

She had kept her father's name, Wen, even after her mother remarried, but dropped it when she married Zee.

Born in what was then Portuguese Macau, she had little recollection of her father, having moved from nearby Hong Kong to America with her mother when she was a small child.

But about a year ago, she met up with her dad, and has stayed in touch.

"It put a lot of pieces of the puzzle together ... He's a nice guy," she says.

Her mother wasn't keen on Ming-Na becoming an actress. "I think she had this awful preconceived idea that I would have to sleep my way to the top," she chuckles.

Ming-Na hopes ethnic actors appearing in TV series will become so natural that they won't be notable and their roles won't be necessarily hooked to ethnicity.

"I embrace my culture. I love my culture. I love my language. I love my food. It's all part of me. That's why my name is still Chinese. I haven't Anglicized it," she says. "But, at the same time, what I've been really happy about in my career is that I've continuously gotten roles that were not specifically written Asian."

That's what happened on "Vanished."

Ming-Na met with the producers for the role of investigative reporter Judy Nash. Rebecca Gayheart got that part, but the FBI agent role was offered in its place. It's been beefed up considerably from the pilot episode, to capitalize on what the show's creator Josh Berman calls Ming-Na's "strength and sensitivity."

The large ensemble cast includes Esai Morales, John Allen Nelson, Lisa Lackey and Josh Hopkins. Gale Harold plays Graham Kelton, the senior FBI agent and Lin's partner.