A new cultivar of Wisteria sinensis named `Angie` characterized by strong upright stem growth, characterized by thick non-twining stem growth, large pink and violet flowers and leaf foliage, initially taking a gold color and later changing to bronze and green during a three week period, seed pods are lacking.
`Angie` was discovered by the inventor in Concord Calif., a Mediterranean climatic zone, in 1999 as a young plant derived from the plants known as Cook's Chinese Wisteria. The cultivar has been asexually reproduced in Martinez, Calif. by a process of layering over a period of ten years and appears to be stable and be reproducible from generation to generation.