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Jennifer Lim in Worth, a play about a family with Hong Kong roots. The British actress talks about acting in the first show written to be viewed on phones, and her work fighting for fair representation of Asians on TV and in theatre. Photo: Ikin Yum

Profile | Jennifer Lim on standing up for fellow British Asian actors, her role in the first series written for phone viewing, and learning Cantonese to fit in in London

  • British actress Jennifer Lim recalls 2006 horror series When Evil Calls, the first show designed to be watched on phones, as ‘clever, like a web series now’
  • The actress also touches on her more recent work, including plays about Hong Kong, and her organisation that combats ‘harmful portrayals’ of Asians in the arts

These days, everyone’s at it. Streaming films and television shows on their mobile phones, posting them, being inspired, making their own.

It’s easy to forget the eye-straining micro-screen era, but into that brave new technological world went actress and producer Jennifer Lim in history-making, 2006 comic-horror series When Evil Calls: the first designed to be watched on a mobile phone.

“If it had arrived slightly later it would have been perfect!” recalls Lim fondly during a Zoom call from her native London. “But it was way ahead of its time, long before people started watching films on YouTube and before smartphones. It was a clever concept, a pioneer in some ways – and like a web series now.”

Born and raised in the British capital, Lim, an advocate for Asians in the entertainment industry, has a full work diary. She will soon be seen in feature film The Monster Beneath Us, which she calls “a period horror movie set in Yorkshire”.

“Quite fun! It takes place in 1898,” says Lim. “I play a governess with a Yorkshire accent. I like a bit of variety.”

She has just begun work on British independent film Say His Name (further details restricted); and last year found her starring in the London stage production of Worth.

Lim has a fair bit of experience in the horror genre; she featured in 2005 gore fest Hostel. Photo: Sony Pictures

“That’s a dark comedy,” says Lim, “revolving around a British-Chinese family, with Hong Kong roots, in the aftermath of the matriarch’s death. It’s very much in the vein of Succession.”

But featuring smaller amounts of money? “The mother leaves £44 [HK$440] to her four children,” she adds – children who then scramble to find their missing inheritance.

Concurrently, Lim has established a personal niche on the London theatre scene. “I’m also running my little theatre company, Moongate, currently company-in-residence at the Omnibus Theatre, in Clapham,” she says.

Jennifer Lim on stage in Worth. Photo: Instagram / @ xanadujenn

“For the last year or so I’ve been curating salon sessions called Moongate Mix. The idea of a salon, where you invite people round and talk about the arts, came because I was really in love with Russian literature.

“So when we were offered company-in-residence I started curating these monthly events for up to 70 people. They range from a symposium to a panel event to a screening to stand-up comedy, live music, other live performances – and there’s always a pop-up kitchen.

“It’s a place for people to connect and be creative and events are always sold out.”

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Lim’s own family roots are in Singapore and although Britain is her home, Asia plays a significant role in her life and work.

Last November, she was heard in the BBC Radio 4 adaptation of Han Suyin’s 1952 novel A Many-Splendoured Thing. Hong Kong has informed her work in other ways, too.

“Hong Kong, I love the place,” she says, “and in the last few years I’ve been involved in a couple of projects about it.” The first was 2020’s Freedom Hi!

Lim in Key Workers Cycle, a play about the unsung heroes of the Covid-19 pandemic, at the Almeida Theatre in London. Photo: Facebook / @ Jennifer Lim
Freedom Hi! started as a collective of predominantly Hong Kong artists coming together as a creative response to what was going on in Hong Kong at the time, 2019,” says Lim. “The production was an extension of that.”

Dreamers, similarly, was “a highly creative exploration [of] the loss of democratic freedom in Hong Kong” as one review put it.

Again, mobile phones were essential: messages sent via social media between cast and audience were central to both productions and even influenced dialogue.

We’ve highlighted dubious casting, stereotypes or harmful portrayals
Lim, on fighting racist stereotypes on TV with her non-profit organisation Beats

Meanwhile, should Lim ever write an autobiography it might conceivably be called Speaking in Tongues. “I grew up speaking English to my mum, Mandarin to my dad and Teochew to my grandmother,” she says. “And growing up in London, you’re surrounded by Cantonese speakers.

“I didn’t want to go to Chinatown and not be able to speak Cantonese, so I taught myself. It’s like the best of all worlds!

“I’ve done a few things in Mandarin, although I’d love to act in Mandarin more. A short film I was in recently, Our Child, written and directed by [British-Chinese Londoner] Anatole Sloan, won an award and that was all in Mandarin. On stage I speak Mandarin and Cantonese when required. I do enjoy it.”

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Such a facility no doubt helps with yet another of Lim’s roles: co-founder of non-profit organisation Beats, formed in 2017 to represent British East and South East Asians Working in Theatre and Screen.

It does this by aiming “to humanise” their “representation in arts and culture” and secure equal employment opportunities.

“We’ve highlighted dubious casting, stereotypes or harmful portrayals,” says Lim. “For example, in 2019 we protested against the BBC’s commissioning of a pilot episode of a comedy called Living with the Lams.” The series was subsequently cancelled.

“It wasn’t funny at all, it was for propagating stereotypes. It was about a Chinese takeaway, written by white writers. One character played in a band called Wok and Roll and they had the grandmother spitting all the time – really cheap, racist shots.”

Lim, indefatigable, sees the impact that Beats can have, but is the wider industry taking note? “Things are changing,” she says. “But not fast enough for my liking.”

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