Vang auditioned for the Clint Eastwood film
Gran Torino "on a lark". He had no prior acting experience. More than 2,000 actors auditioned for the role that Vang eventually received. He learned later that he had been selected because of his "innocent looks and slight build". Vang portrayed Thao Vang Lor, "a mild-mannered Hmong teenager who as part of a gang initiation tries to steal the prized 1972 Gran Torino of his next-door neighbor, a surly Korean War veteran" played by Eastwood.
Gran Torino grossed nearly $270 million worldwide. In 2009, Vang stated that
Gran Torino was "generally accurate in its portrayal of Hmong, a highlands people who fought for the U.S. during the Vietnam War and later emigrated from Southeast Asia and settled in Minnesota, Wisconsin and California". Vang had become an activist. He collaborated on
social justice film, Internet, and print products with Louisa Schein, a Hmong media expert, Va-Megn Thoj, a Hmong filmmaker, and Ly Chong Thong Jalao, a
University of California Santa Barbara Ph.D. student. He traveled around the United States doing public speaking regarding
Gran Torino and post-
Gran Torino issues related to the Hmong community. Vang also wrote a 2011 editorial criticizing a
KDWB radio comedy segment, saying that it portrayed Hmong people in an offensive manner. Since
Gran Torino, Vang has appeared on
Modern Family and acted in independent films and stage performances. In addition, he acted in "Anatomically Incorrect", "Fallen City", and "Sunset on Dawn". In 2021, he was cast in a lead role in a horror comedy entitled
Dark Christmas. == Filmography ==