Ming Cho Lee
Theatrical Set Designer
Ming Cho Lee was born in Shanghai in 1930 into a rather westernized
family. His father was a 1919 Yale graduate and his maternal uncle was a
1918 Yale graduate. He always believed he would come to the United States
for his higher education. He left Shanghai permanently for Hong Kong in
1948 without completing his high school education, just prior to the
Communist take-over of the city months later. He came to the U.S. in
October 1949 to attend Occidental College in Los Angeles. He was only one
of three students from China in a college of 900. Occidental College was
actually Ming's father's choice as the best college for his son as he felt
Ming should have a real American liberal arts education in a place where
he could be most quickly assimilated. Ming's father's choice of Occidental
for his son was excellent. Ming became so comfortable in his new
environment that he chose to study design for the theater, much to his
father's dismay!
Ming Cho Lee had gained such a profound respect and appreciation for the American system of government and justice and America's founding by immigrants that he had no intention of leaving the U.S. He was granted permanent residence as part of a general amnesty. In the years since then, Mr. Lee became one of the top set designers in the country. Mr. Lee has won numerous awards for his work, including: the first Joseph Maharam Award for Electra in 1965, a Tony nomination for Billy in 1970, the National Opera Institute Special Award for Service to American Opera in 1980, a Tony Award, an Outer Critics Circle Award, a Drama Desk Award, and a Maharam Award in 1983 for his work on K2. Mr. Lee has also been named Man of the Year by the Chinatown Planning Commission in New York City and has received the Mayor's Award for Arts and Culture in New York City. Mr. Lee is currently Co-chair of Yale University's School of Drama Design Department where he has taught since 1969. |