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Tamlyn Tomita, a first generation Japanese-American (issei), was born on a military base in Okinawa and grew up in Los Angeles. Her Japanese-American father was in an internment camp during World War II. He met her mother while stationed in Okinawa between the Korean and Vietnam Wars. Her mother was of half-Okinawan Japanese and half-Filipino descent, born in Manila and emigrated to Okinawa after World War II. Her father became an LAPD officer upon returning to Los Angeles. | Tamlyn Tomita, a first generation Japanese-American (issei), was born on a military base in Okinawa and grew up in Los Angeles. Her Japanese-American father was in an internment camp during World War II. He met her mother while stationed in Okinawa between the Korean and Vietnam Wars. Her mother was of half-Okinawan Japanese and half-Filipino descent, born in Manila and emigrated to Okinawa after World War II. Her father became an LAPD officer upon returning to Los Angeles. | ||
Tomita graduated from Granada Hills High School and attended UCLA, where she studied history and planned to become a history teacher. While a junior at UCLA, she participated in Nisei Week, where she was crowned its 1984 queen. She and several other Japanese-American girls were asked by [[Helen Funai]], the 1963 pageant queen, to audition for the role of Kumiko in [[The Karate Kid Part II | Tomita graduated from Granada Hills High School and attended UCLA, where she studied history and planned to become a history teacher. While a junior at UCLA, she participated in Nisei Week, where she was crowned its 1984 queen. She and several other Japanese-American girls were asked by [[Helen Funai]], the 1963 pageant queen, to audition for the role of Kumiko in [[The Karate Kid Part II]]. She promised her parents that she would finish college, and then explore acting. | ||
Tamlyn won the 1984 Little Tokyo Nisei Week Queen in 1984. | Tamlyn won the 1984 Little Tokyo Nisei Week Queen in 1984. |