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Jessica Lu
View on WikipediaJessica Lu is an American actress. She is best known for her portrayal of Ming Huang on the MTV television series Awkward.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Jessica Lu was born and raised in Schaumburg,[1] a northwest suburb of Chicago, Illinois. Her parents are from South Korea, with her father being Chinese and Japanese, and her mother Chinese. They speak English, Mandarin and Korean at home. Her father is a photographer, and her mother, a singer. After arriving in the United States, they established a restaurant in Chicago.
Lu has been a natural performer since early childhood. At 6 years old, she started dancing, specializing in ballet, tap, and jazz. After watching Kristi Yamaguchi and Michelle Kwan compete in the 1992 Olympics, she pursued figure skating and took private lessons at 4am every morning before school. She also had singing, piano, and violin lessons. With her parents’ restaurant as her stage with a daily rotating audience, Jessica would entertain each table with a theatrical reading, violin playing, a tap dance, or a song.
After starting modeling and acting, she became a sought after child talent in Chicago. By the time she was 10 years old, she had worked on ad campaigns such as Calvin Klein, Oshkosh, Marshall Field's, Got Milk?, and Chicago Place, as well as commercials for McDonald's, Ford Motors, Orville Redenbacher's, Samsung, and Kaiser Permanente.
Lu graduated with honors from Columbia College Chicago[1] with a degree in Musical Theater Performance.
Career
[edit]Lu moved to Los Angeles, California in 2008. Soon after, she was cast in the role of Ming Huang on the critically acclaimed MTV series Awkward. Other work followed, in both drama and comedy, including roles such as an insufferable hipster opposite Kathy Bates on FX's American Horror Story: Hotel, for which Popsugar listed her as one of “The 25 Best American Horror Story Guest Stars”; an upscale escort opposite Tim Robbins on HBO's Here and Now, with a performance that The A.V. Club wrote was “one of the subtlest, best motivated characters”; an adoring admirer opposite Ashton Kutcher and Jon Cryer on CBS's Two and a Half Men; and a lovesick teenager with a terminal illness on FOX's Red Band Society.
In 2018, Lu played tech genius CEO Alexis Barrett on NBC's Reverie,[1] starring alongside Sarah Shahi, Dennis Haysbert, Sendhil Ramamurthy and Kathryn Morris. IndieWire called her a “promising scene stealer” in the pilot episode. SYFYWIRE, as well as other fan sites, expressed their appreciation for Lu's performance week after week, and she quickly became a favorite character. TVLine gave her a "Performer of the Week" honorary mention by the last episode of the first season, for her “tender performance”. Jessica co-starred on the CBS television drama God Friended Me as Joy.
Filmography
[edit]| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Mortal Kombat: Rebirth | Whitney | Short film |
| 2014 | About Last Night | Ad executive | |
| 2019 | Line of Duty | Clover |
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | Life | Riceburner Girlfriend | Episode: "Re-Entry" |
| 2009 | 90210 | Catholic School Girl #2 | Episode: "The Dionysian Debacle" |
| 2009 | CSI: Crime Scene Investigation | Lily | Episode: "Appendicitement" |
| 2010 | Law & Order: LA | Kai Ng | Episode: "Hollywood" |
| 2011–2014 | Awkward | Ming Huang | Recurring role (seasons 1–2); main cast (season 3) |
| 2012 | The New Normal | Tabitha | Episode: Pilot |
| 2014 | Two and a Half Men | Jean | Episode: "Alan Shot a Girl" |
| 2014 | Salvation | Hayley Stern | TV movie |
| 2015 | Red Band Society | Mae | 2 episodes |
| 2015 | Weird Loners | Molly | Episode: "Pilot" |
| 2015–2016 | American Horror Story: Hotel | Bronwyn | 2 episodes |
| 2018 | Reverie | Alexis Barrett | Main cast |
| 2019–2020 | God Friended Me | Joy | Guest star (season 1), recurring role (season 2) |
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013–2014 | Storytellers | Mai Himura | Main cast (season 1) |
| 2015 | Saving the Human Race | Emma Carlsen | Main cast (Season 1) |
Theater
[edit]- Flower Drum Song — Lead
- West Side Story — Supporting
- Ragtime! — Supporting/Ensemble
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Metz, Nina (May 29, 2018). "My worst moment: Jessica Lu on battling for a parking spot before an audition". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2019-09-29.
External links
[edit]- Jessica Lu at IMDb
- Saving the Human Race on CW Seed; in Norwegian
Jessica Lu
View on GrokipediaEarly life and education
Family background and childhood
Jessica Lu was born on April 18, 1985, in Schaumburg, Illinois, a northwest suburb of Chicago, to parents who immigrated from South Korea.[7] Her father, of Chinese and Japanese descent, worked as a photographer, while her mother, of Chinese descent, pursued a career as a singer.[7] The couple raised Lu and her younger brother, Andy, in a household where English, Mandarin, and Korean were spoken, reflecting their multicultural heritage.[1][8] Growing up in this artistic environment, Lu developed an early passion for performance. At the age of six, she began dance training in ballet, tap, and jazz, participating in numerous recitals that honed her expressive skills.[4] Her interest in movement extended to figure skating, sparked by watching the 1992 Winter Olympics, where athletes like Kristi Yamaguchi inspired her to take up the sport competitively.[4] By age ten, Lu had entered the world of modeling and acting, quickly becoming a sought-after child talent in the Chicago area. She appeared in national ad campaigns for brands including Calvin Klein, McDonald's, OshKosh B'Gosh, Got Milk?, and Marshall Field's, marking the start of her professional exposure to the entertainment industry.[4][8] These early experiences laid the foundation for her later artistic pursuits.Academic and artistic training
Jessica Lu attended Hanover Highlands Elementary School in Hanover Park, Illinois, during her early years, laying the foundation for her interest in performance.[9] She later progressed to James B. Conant High School in Hoffman Estates, Illinois, where she actively participated in theater activities, fostering a deep passion for musical theater and the performing arts.[7] These experiences in school productions helped sharpen her skills in acting and singing, transitioning her childhood curiosity into more structured artistic pursuits.[10] Building on this foundation, Lu enrolled at Columbia College Chicago, majoring in Musical Theater Performance.[11] During her time there, she starred in key productions, including the lead role in the musical Flower Drum Song, which allowed her to refine her vocal and dramatic techniques under professional guidance.[12] She graduated with honors in May 2008, earning a degree that solidified her training in the discipline.[13] While pursuing her degree, Lu balanced her studies with early professional opportunities, such as print modeling and appearances in local commercials and theater gigs, which served as practical stepping stones without demanding full-time commitment.[7] These endeavors provided real-world exposure to the industry, complementing her academic honing of performance skills and preparing her for future aspirations in acting.[14]Acting career
Entry into the industry
After graduating from Columbia College Chicago in 2008 with a degree in musical theater, Lu relocated to Los Angeles on August 8 of that year to pursue acting professionally.[13] Her musical theater training provided a strong foundation in performance, helping her transition to on-camera work.[7] In 2009, Lu secured her first television guest roles, appearing as Riceburner's Girlfriend in the episode "Re-Entry" of the NBC series Life, as Catholic School Girl #2 in the episode "The Dionysian Debacle" of The CW's 90210, and as Lily in the episode "Appendicitement" of CBS's CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. These minor parts helped build her resume amid the competitive Los Angeles acting scene. The following year, Lu entered genre filmmaking with a role as Whitney in the short fan film Mortal Kombat: Rebirth, a proof-of-concept project directed by Kevin Tancharoen that explored darker tones for the video game adaptation. Early in her Los Angeles tenure, Lu navigated common newcomer challenges, such as the high-stakes pressure of auditions; in one instance shortly after her move, she became embroiled in a heated dispute over a parking spot en route to a callback, highlighting the city's logistical hurdles for aspiring actors.[15] To sustain herself, she continued leveraging her prior modeling experience from Chicago, where she had worked in print ads and commercials during high school, balancing gigs with frequent acting tryouts.[7]Breakthrough role
Jessica Lu landed her breakthrough role as Ming Huang on the MTV teen comedy-drama series Awkward, appearing in 36 episodes from 2011 to 2013. Initially recurring in seasons 1 and 2, she was promoted to series regular for season 3.[16] Ming is portrayed as Jenna Hamilton's sharp-witted, loyal best friend, an Asian-American teen who navigates high school dynamics with humor and resilience in the ensemble-driven narrative.[17] Lu's performance as Ming contributed to the series' exploration of friendship and personal growth among adolescents, earning acclaim for the show's fresh take on teen tropes.[3] Critics noted the character's role in subverting stereotypes, adding layers to themes of cultural identity and peer relationships through Ming's evolving storylines.[18] The visibility from Awkward significantly elevated Lu's profile, leading to increased audition opportunities and recognition within the industry.[19] Concurrently, during the height of her run on the series, Lu starred as Mai Himura in the web series Storytellers in 2013, a supernatural drama produced by Joey Graceffa that further showcased her versatility in genre work.Established career and notable roles
Following her breakthrough on MTV's Awkward, Jessica Lu transitioned into more prominent guest and ensemble roles that showcased her comedic timing and dramatic versatility. In 2012, she guest-starred as Tabitha in the pilot episode of Fox's The New Normal. In 2014, she appeared as an adoring admirer named Jean in a guest spot on CBS's Two and a Half Men, marking an early foray into mainstream sitcom territory.[4] That same year, Lu joined the ensemble cast of FOX's Red Band Society as Mae, a lovesick teenager battling cystic fibrosis, a role that allowed her to explore emotional depth in a hospital drama centered on young patients' struggles.[4] Critics noted the series' heartfelt portrayal of illness and relationships, with Lu's performance contributing to the show's poignant ensemble dynamics.[20] She also featured in the romantic comedy film About Last Night as an ad executive, a supporting part in the Kevin Hart-led remake that highlighted her ability to blend into high-energy ensemble scenes.[4] In 2015, Lu starred as Emma in the CW Seed web series Saving the Human Race, a six-episode zombie apocalypse comedy where she played a resourceful survivor navigating teen romance amid chaos, demonstrating her range in genre-blending formats.[21] That year, she also appeared as Babe #2, an insufferable hipster, in American Horror Story: Hotel. By 2018, her career shifted toward more complex dramatic characters; she portrayed Famiko, an upscale escort entangled in family secrets, on HBO's Here and Now, a role praised for adding layers of tension to the series' exploration of racial and philosophical issues.[4] That year, Lu landed a lead role as Alexis Barrett, the introverted tech CEO and founder of Onira-Tech, in NBC's Reverie, a sci-fi thriller delving into virtual reality and AI ethics, where her character grapples with the dangers of immersive simulations.[22] Lu has reflected on the significance of such empowered roles, noting they represent progress for Asian-American visibility on screen.[14] Lu continued building momentum with a recurring role as Joy Chen on CBS's God Friended Me from 2019 to 2020, playing a key ally in the series' mystery-of-faith narrative, which involved helping strangers connected by a divine app.[4] In film, she took on the part of Clover Nestel, a determined journalist, in the 2019 action thriller Line of Duty, opposite Aaron Eckhart, further establishing her in investigative drama. Her most recent project, as of 2025, is a cameo as a TV host in the biographical musical drama Better Man, which chronicles Robbie Williams' life through innovative puppetry and animation.[23] Over the decade, Lu's trajectory has evolved from youthful side characters to mature, multifaceted leads, addressing longstanding gaps in representation for Asian-American actresses by embodying tech innovators, survivors, and professionals who defy stereotypes.[14]Filmography
Television
- Life (2009): guest star as Riceburner's Girlfriend (1 episode)[24]
- 90210 (2009): guest star as Catholic School Girl #2 (1 episode: "The Dionysian Debacle")
- CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (2009): guest star as Lily (1 episode: "Appendicitement")
- Law & Order: LA (2010): guest star as Kai Ng (1 episode: "Hollywood")
- Awkward. (2011–2013): recurring (seasons 1–2; 24 episodes), main cast (season 3; 12 episodes) as Ming Huang (36 episodes total)[24]
- The New Normal (2012): guest star as Tabitha (1 episode: "Pilot")
- Storytellers (2013–2014): main cast as Mai Himura (10 episodes)
- Two and a Half Men (2014): guest star as Jean (1 episode: "Alan Shot a Little Girl")[25]
- Salvation (2014): TV movie as Hayley Stern
- Red Band Society (2014–2015): guest star as Mae (2 episodes)[26]
- Weird Loners (2015): guest star as Molly (1 episode: "The Weird Escape")
- American Horror Story: Hotel (2015): guest star as Babe (1 episode: "Room Service"); guest star as Bronwyn (1 episode: "Flicker")
- iZombie (2016): guest star as Lorelei (1 episode: "Pour Some Sugar, Zombie")[27]
- Nashville (2017): guest star as Nell (1 episode: "The Night Before (Life Goes On)")[28]
- Saving the Human Race (2017): recurring as Emma (6 episodes)[29]
- Disjointed (2017–2018): recurring as Kara (9 episodes)[5]
- Here and Now (2018): guest star as Famiko (1 episode: "Eleven Eleven")[30]
- Reverie (2018): main cast as Alexis Barrett (10 episodes)
- God Friended Me (2019; recurring season 2, 2019–2020): guest star as Joy Chen (1 episode, season 1); recurring as Joy Chen (7 episodes, season 2) (8 episodes total)[31]
- The Blank's YPF (2020): guest star as Rachel Wanyan (1 episode: "Week 3")
Film
Jessica Lu's cinematic work spans short films and feature films, providing opportunities to portray diverse characters outside her television roles. These appearances have occasionally complemented her TV career by allowing her to explore action, comedy, and drama genres in a theatrical context.[32] Her film credits, listed chronologically, include:- Mortal Kombat: Rebirth (2010, short film) as Whitney[33]
- About Last Night (2014, feature film) as Ad Executive
- The Young Kieslowski (2015, feature film) as Hi Jing[4]
- The Barber (2015, feature film) as Sandrine[4]
- Namour (2017, feature film) as Grace[4]
- From Straight A's to XXX (2017, feature film) as Amanda[4]
- Line of Duty (2019, feature film) as Clover Nestel
- Better Man (2024, feature film) as TV Host[34]