Six Chinese passengers survived the sinking of the Titanic – more than 100 years later their stories reach China
- The Six, a documentary about the Chinese passengers aboard the RMS Titanic, is released in China on April 16, a day after the anniversary of the ship’s sinking
- Under the United States’ Chinese Exclusion Act, the survivors were sent to Cuba, what happened after that has been unclear – until now

American historian Steven Schwankert clearly recalls the day in 1997 when he watched the blockbuster movie Titanic in a crowded, smoke-filled cinema in Beijing.
“The cinema experience back then wasn’t great,” says Schwankert, on a Zoom call from his home in Beijing. “It was like watching a movie in your tiny high school gymnasium. The sound wasn’t great and the film was slightly out of focus … and there wasn’t any popcorn.”
Fast forward more than two decades and documentary The Six, the untold story of the Chinese passengers aboard the RMS Titanic, and on which Schwankert was lead researcher, opens in cinemas across China on April 16.
“If someone had told me 20 years ago that I’d be releasing a documentary about the Chinese passengers on the Titanic and the film was being released across China with support from [Titanic director] James Cameron, I would have told them they’re crazy.”
Cameron is an executive producer of The Six.
Schwankert, who has called China home for more than 30 years, says releasing the documentary there made sense considering the popularity of the 1997 film, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet, which became the all-time highest grossing movie to be released in China at the time.