“The Joy Luck Club ”Stars Reunite 30 Years Later to Recreate Photo – See the Sweet Shot
Rosalind Chao, Lauren Tom, Ming Na Wen and Tamlyn Tomita celebrated the holidays together
The Joy Luck Club “sisters” are back together!
Former castmates and friends Rosalind Chao, Lauren Tom, Ming Na Wen and Tamlyn Tomita are proving their bond is stronger than ever with an Instagram post recreating a scene from the film.
“Kicking off the holidays with my #JoyLuckClub sisters!” Wen captioned a sweet video of the women now compared to when they first met. “Thanks for hosting the fab dinner and getting us all to do this, Lauren [Tom] & Curt [Kaplan]! Thanks Ollie for doing the video! You're an awesome instagram/Tiktok son!??."
“Happy Holidays!!??????#FriendsForever," Wen continued.
Tomita went to the comment section to spread holiday joy.
"The food was fabulous, the friendships everlasting, the fun infectious, and the festiveness was joyous and shining...Thank you, Lauren and Curt, and Ollie for sharing the warmth of your home and your hearts!!!" she wrote. "Happy Holidays, Merry Christmas, and Happy New Year!!!!???????????"
"Grateful to you gals for hanging with me despite all my protestations and text mutings ! Love celebrating with you… truly a sister vibe happening between us and the Husband Boy Luck Club!" Chao added.
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Even author Amy Tan left a message on the post, saying, "And I am the honorary Auntie of these amazing women." Tan, 71, wrote the novel and co-wrote the film with Ronald Bass.
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The Joy Luck Club was the first Hollywood movie to feature an all-Asian cast and celebrated its 30th anniversary in September. The 1993 film is set in San Francisco, where four Chinese-American women, along with their Chinese immigrant mothers, gather to play Mahjong and swap stories that are full of happiness, hardship and the culture clashes that arise between generations."
Sherry Cola, who starred in Joy Ride and presented members of The Joy Luck Club cast with the Gold Generation Award at the Gold House Gold Gala in May, told PEOPLE the film was a "unicorn" when it was released.
"I feel like there was such a lack of representation for us that when we saw it, we held on tight and Joy Luck Club is one of those things that gave us hope, made the dream feel feasible," Cola told PEOPLE. "So being able to [present] them that honor is just, I still have chills."
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The Joy Luck Club was also central to the documentary Amy Tan: Unintended Memoir, which premiered at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival. The documentary, directed by the late James Redford, centers on Tan's life and career.
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