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Kung Fu star Olivia Liang is ready to show the world that ‘Asian women are not to be messed with’ in new CW series

Olivia Liang stars as Nicky Shen in new martial arts TV series Kung Fu. Photo: The CW via AP
Olivia Liang stars as Nicky Shen in new martial arts TV series Kung Fu. Photo: The CW via AP

  • Set in San Francisco’s Chinatown, the martial arts series follows a Chinese-American woman who returns home after living in a Shaolin monastery in China
  • Lead actress Olivia Liang says the TV show ‘hits different’ amid racism in the US: ‘It’s empowering to show that Asian women are not to be messed with’

The pilot script of Kung Fu was written more than a year ago, but its premiere couldn’t be more timely, says star Olivia Liang.

The series, which started airing on American television network The CW on April 7, follows a young Chinese-American woman, Nicky Shen, as she returns home to San Francisco after three years at a remote monastery in China, only to find her family has moved on without her.

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Olivia Liang in Kung Fu. Photo: The CW via AP
Olivia Liang in Kung Fu. Photo: The CW via AP

“She has to reconcile the new Nicky with the Nicky she left behind. She’s figuring out how to use the voice that she’s found back in a place where she felt like she didn’t have a voice,” Liang said. “It’s an apology tour while not apologising for what she did.”

Shen left the US for all the normal university kid reasons: her parents didn’t understand her and she didn’t know what she was doing in life. What she eventually finds in China isn’t normal: a merciless assassin who murders her Shaolin mentor Pei-ling (Vanessa Kai). And what she comes home to isn’t normal either: her parents, Jin (Tzi Ma) and Mei-li (Tan Kheng Hua) are under the thumb of a mysterious gang called the Triad after borrowing money to keep their restaurant alive. Her family’s troubles, more than anything, finally give Shen the purpose she’s been seeking.

Olivia Liang in Kung Fu. Photo: @cfcpac/Twitter
Olivia Liang in Kung Fu. Photo: @cfcpac/Twitter

The martial arts are deliriously fun – a chaotic choreography of kicks and flips that Liang estimated she did about 70 per cent of, with the rest left up to her stunt double. But more impressive than that is the honesty of Kung Fu itself – embracing rather than hiding its culture.

Who would have thought that it would be so relevant and so necessary to humanise us, to empower us, to give us a voice
Olivia Liang