Ming Cho Lee | |||||||||||
Birth Date: | 3 October 1930 | ||||||||||
Birth Place: | Shanghai, China | ||||||||||
Death Place: | Manhattan, New York City, NY, United States[1] | ||||||||||
Occupation: | Set designer, professor | ||||||||||
Spouse: | Elizabeth (Betsy) Lee | ||||||||||
Children: | Richard Lee, Christopher Lee, David Lee | ||||||||||
Parents: | Lee Tsu Fa Tang Ing | ||||||||||
Relatives: | Lee Tsu Fa (grandfather) | ||||||||||
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Ming Cho Lee (; October 3, 1930 – October 23, 2020)[2] was a Chinese-American theatrical set designer and professor at the Yale School of Drama.
Lee was born on Oct. 3, 1930, in Shanghai, China to Lee Tsu Fa and Tang Ing. Lee, whose father (Lee Tsu Fa) was a Yale University graduate (1918), moved to the United States in 1949 and attended Occidental College.
Lee married Elizabeth (Rapport) Lee in 1958. They had three sons Richard, Christopher, and David.
Lee first worked on Broadway as a second assistant set designer to Jo Mielziner on The Most Happy Fella in 1956. His first Broadway play as Scenic Designer was The Moon Besieged in 1962; he went on to design the sets for over 20 Broadway shows, including Mother Courage and Her Children, King Lear, The Glass Menagerie, The Shadow Box, and For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf.
He also designed sets for opera (including eight productions for the Metropolitan Opera and thirteen for the New York City Opera, ballet, and regional theatres such as Arena Stage, the Mark Taper Forum, and the Guthrie Theater.
He designed over 30 productions for Joseph Papp at The Public Theater, including the original Off-Broadway production of Hair (musical). Starting in 1969, Lee taught at the Yale School of Drama, where he was co-chair of the Design Department. In February 2017, he announced that he would be retiring at the end of the fall semester.[3] He was on the Board of Directors for The Actors Center in Manhattan. Lee is the subject of Ming Cho Lee: A Life in Design by Arnold Aronson, which was published by TCG Books in 2014.[4] In 2013, the Yale school of Architecture and School of Drama staged a retrospective of his work at the architecture gallery. [5]