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BD Wong, 62, has certainly made his mark on stage. He’s the only actor in Broadway history to win a Tony Award, Drama Desk Award, Outer Critics Circle Award, Clarence Derwent Award and
Theatre World Award for the same role: Song Liling in_ M. Butterfly. _His on-screen accomplishments include roles in movies such as _Jurassic Park _and TV shows including_ Law & Order:
Special Victims Unit._ In his latest project, he voices Buddha in Netflix’s animated family adventure movie _The Monkey King,_ streaming Aug. 18. _Note: This interview was conducted before
the SAG-AFTRA strike was announced on July 14._ _The Monkey King_ is appropriate for all ages. What do you remember watching when you were growing up? I was a _Batman_ fan — the original
television show _Batman_. I was a big Mary Tyler Moore_ _fan and Carol Burnett fan. I would say those two shows [_The Mary Tyler Moore Show _and _The Carol Burnett Show_]_ _and all the
shows_ _at the time. There were only three channels, so we all watched the same shows. WHAT INSPIRED YOU TO CHOOSE ACTING AS YOUR PROFESSION? I didn’t. I was always rather outgoing and
enjoyed engaging people in what I realize now is a form of performance, but it wasn’t really performance at all. It was kind of fooling around at parties and stuff like that. It wasn’t until
I was in high school, and I had a very, very specific and meaningful relationship with the high school drama teacher, that I really understood the value of the talent that I had, and that I
had potential to do something with it. She [Zora Chanes] really encouraged me and forced me in some ways to use it, to access it, to explore it. [My parents] were trepidatious, and they
were kind of cautious. And Mrs. Chanes was a huge influence in all of us coming to the conclusion that it was something worth exploring. Wong is the voice of Buddha in Netflix’s animated
film “The Monkey King.” Netflix WHILE YOU WERE MAKING YOUR WAY INTO ACTING, WHAT JOBS DID YOU DO TO SUPPORT YOURSELF? The now widely known Roundabout Theatre [in New York City] was
beginning, and I was a house manager, assistant house manager, basically. But it was only two of us running the whole small little theater. It was very romantic. I saw all these wonderful
plays and performances, but I was also working in what I considered a survival job that was not unrelated to what I wanted to do. I worked as an usher a lot when I was younger, right out of
high school, [at] the big theater that was in my hometown, San Francisco. I got a job there and I worked there for years, and I saw some of the great performances that came through town, and
I learned so much from them. Those two jobs didn’t pay as much as big waitering jobs or something like that, but they allowed me to keep my foot in what I felt was the area that I wanted to
be in.