Dr.Fu Manchu is afictional character in novels byBritishauthorSax Rohmer in the first half of the 20th century.
The character was also featured in cinema, television, radio,comic strips andcomic books for over 90 years He is anarchetype of the evil genius.
The author's description of him was:
A master criminal, Fu Manchu's murderous plots are marked by a use ofbiological warfare. He usually avoids guns or explosives, preferringdacoits,thuggee, and members of other secret societies as his agents. They use knives, or "pythons andcobras ...fungi and my tiny allies, thebacilli ... my black spiders" and other peculiar animals or natural chemical weapons.
In the earliest books, Fu Manchu is an agent of the secret society, theSi-Fan. and is the mastermind behind a wave of assassinations of Western imperialists. In later books, he seeks control of the Si-Fan. The Si-Fan is largely funded through criminal activities, particularly thedrug trade and whiteslavery. Dr. Fu Manchu has extended his already considerable lifespan by use of theelixir vitae (elixir of life), a formula he spent decades trying to perfect.[1][2]
Fu Manchu is opposed by a typical English detective of theSherlock Holmes type: Denis Nayland Smith. Fu Manchu's daughter, Fah Lo Suee, is a devious mastermind in her own right, plotting to usurp her father's position in the Si-Fan, and aiding his enemies within and outside of the organisation. Her real name is unknown; Fah lo Suee was a childhood term of endearment. She has been played byAnna May Wong,Myrna Loy, and several other actresses.
Dr. Fu Manchu has been criticized as an overtly racist creation.[3][4] A review inThe Independent, says "These magnificently absurd books, glowing with a crazed exoticism, are really far less polar, less black-and-white, less white-and-yellow, than they first seem".[5]
Actors who have played Fu Manchu in movies includeBoris Karloff (once),Warner Oland (four times), andChristopher Lee (five times).
Actresses who played his daughter Fa Lo Suee includeMyrna Loy andAnna May Wong, but most of all byTsai Chin, who played the role five times in the 1960s. The character of Fa Lo Suee was usually renamed to a form which could be pronounced more easily.
The other female character who appears in several of the stories, and hence in some of the films, is Karamaneh, styled "Kâramanèh".The story-line is that she was sold to the Si-Fan by Egyptian slave traders while she was still a child. She appears in five novels of the series as a love interest.