Archives for the month of: February, 2024

TFP has seen Warrior on Netflix go up to #6, and currently it is down to #8. The Last Airbender remake is currently at #1 – Congratulations to all. TFP doesn’t mind admitting that some of her very dear friends worked on The Last Airbender, and hey – they served.

However, back to Warrior. We need a Season 4 – because we need to KNOW what happened to the stories we were following at the end of Season 3. Thus, as TFP told you – keep an ipad or a tv in another room running on Netflix. Personally TFP has one on in the kitchen, which she runs without sound, but tuned in because she wants to see how it all works out! This support she gives the show is purely selfish, she just is crazy about it.

Congrats to Tony winning playwright – David Henry Hwang who wrote the libretto (that is ‘the book’ for the Broadway crowd) , AINADAMAR, which he wrote with GRAMMY Award winning Argentinian composer, Osvaldo Golijov, will premiere at…hold on THE METROPOLITAN OPERA in the 2024-2025 season!

This is Mr. Golijov’s first opera – and it dramatizes the life of the poet-playwright Ferderico Garcia Lorca (House of Bernarda Alba, anyone?) who was assassinated by Fascist forces at the start of the Spanish Civil War. Why, you ask? Because he was a Socialist and a Homosexual.

The story is told through his muse, Catalan actress Margarita Xirgu, as she recounts the tale to her student, Nuria. Lorca appears as a dreamlike persona and is sung as a ‘pants role’ – aka a mezzo dressed as a man. Directed and choreographed by Brasilian Deborah Colker (best known for her work with Cirque du Soleil) – this looks incredible.

If you cannot get to New York – you can go see live broadcasts-

Also – do you know how HARD it is to get a new opera up and running, much less premiering at one of the world’s most revered stages? It is beyond impossible- and yet, there is DHH quietly doing the work. Showing up, writing, creating, teaching at Columbia, mentoring – and best of all, collaborating with others of like mind.

May they get all the flowers and world premieres available to them, TFP is honored to know him.

Is this Mr. Hwang’s first opera?

No.

He also wrote the libretto for Icarus at the Edge of Time with Brian Greene, music by Philip Glass. The Fly, where he wrote with composer Howard Shore – based on the 1986 film. Alice in Wonderland with Unsuk Chin, based on the novel and premiered in 2007 in Bavaria – where it was hailed as the “World Premiere of the Year”. The Silver River, based on a 4000 year old Chinese story about forbidden love between a Goddess and a mortal, where he worked with composer Bright Sheng. In 1992, he wrote the libretto on commission from The Met for The Voyage, music by Philip Glass, and again with Mr. Glass and Jerome Sirlin, in 1998, he wrote 1000 Airplanes.

TFP got her Certification in Opera Direction from Ithaca College in May, so she is very excited to see this production.

Congrats to BD Wong as he stars in the play, BIG DATA, at San Francisco’s American Conservatory Theater – he plays M, a lively personification of the technology we use regularly.

This looks super fun and, frankly, BD has great taste – if he is choosing to do a play and you are in the area? You should get a ticket.

Now, we are going to turn our attention to…Florida.

Yes, TFP knows. However, a lot of theater happens in Florida and that is because there are a lot of people who retire there – and retired people who have means, go to theater. Are there more matinees in Florida? Very likely, or at least, earlier curtain times during the week.

Recently in Florida, the American Stage Theater had an incident where they were producing Lloyd Suh‘s The Chinese Lady, giving it it’s Florida premiere. TFP wants to explain that Playwrights really only make money when their plays are up and running – so for American Stage to take the step to produce it, is great. TFP holds Lloyd in great esteem, and she did ask him for a statement, which, if he responds, she will insert in this piece.

The Chinese Lady is about Afong Moy, who is allegedly the first Chinese woman to step on U.S. soil in 1834, when she was 14 – some descriptions of the her place her at 16 years old. She is placed on display – yes, that is what TFP said – and for the next 50 years, she performs for curious white people. She had bound feet, and the ticket buying public could not get enough.

In 2022 it was presented in a co-production by Ma-Yi Theater Company and The Barrington Stage at NY’s Public Theater. It starred Shannon Tyo and Daniel K. Issac, let’s hear from them, as they are the ‘OG’s”…

Shannon just was awarded this past year’s OBIE Award for Sustained Achievement in Theater, just fyi.

Now, let’s hear from Daniel, whose work on BILLIONS has made him a household name.

Please note what Daniel said about showing history – this play portrays a little known piece of both American and Chinese history, which took place in America, and makes it one of the first pieces of Asian American history.

It is often said that if we do not know history, we are doomed to repeat it. Florida is conservative Marco Rubio country – the land of COVID denial, they have taken a stand against the teaching of Black history in America – and as we all know, Black History IS American history – and that is the tip of the iceberg in terms of their batshit crazy that seems to be ‘just a Wednesday’, down there.

They also have Disneyland and Universal Studios. So it is a land of chaos.

TFP has friends that now feel unsafe to go to Florida for performance jobs, and she does not blame them at all. She has had friends move their lives to live there, only to spend time there and come racing back to New York even with the taxes. They could not take the bigotry and they, were not minorities.

Is Florida hostile to minorities? Yes. It is. Is everyone in Florida like this? No, of course not.

Therefore when initial rumblings came out of Florida, and from American Stage with this statement,

TFP was confused – what had happened?

Now, Actors are excitable people and the initial recounting of what happened was concerning – an Actor was fired for wearing a keffiyeh at curtain call. Cue the multiple reactions. Very hyperbolic.

This is not what happened.

TFP is going to repeat – this is not what happened.

The Keffiyeh was worn along with an ink on chest tatoo which read “Free Palestine” and was present for the last 3-5 minutes of the show. During the course of the play. Starting, as stated by the Director, on page 40 of the play. The play ends at page 41.

The Actor was not fired. The actor was placed on hold, aka they were not allowed on the stage or in the theater because they inserted a political message into a play that is already political, and subverted the intention of the Playwright. The Actor in question is still being paid their full wage.

The issue for the theater, one supposes, is trust.

The Actor has lost the trust of the Producers.

Does TFP think it is an over-reaction?

Did the Actor do this alone? No. The Director thought of it, and without telling Production, Designers, or the other Actors in the piece, on the Wednesday of the last week of the run, inserted it without rehearsal and did it intentionally to be an act of agitation. In fact, they cited where it was to occur – page 40 – in the play on a message board.

Screenshot of a text message TFP was sent.

TFP was tagged in it, and this is her response. She took off the Director’s name, but it is their response to a question.

TFP has worked in a lot of places as an Actor, a few as a Director, and even more as a Producer – she knows that the place for her personal expression is after the show. She has been on panels after a show and actually been encouraged to speak and express views – and that is the correct place for it – not until the story on the stage is complete and actors are out of wardrobe.

Do not be mistaken that this is a “Noble Call” moment a la HAMILTON speaking to Mike Pence from the stage. In that case, the show was over, the bows were taken – and the Production Team endorsed and co-wrote the words the Actor spoke to the Then Vice President of the Orange one’s reign.

Production was consulted. They all agreed to take the moment.

They took this “Noble Call” concept from the Irish Theater tradition of, AFTER the show is done, they talk about a current political moment – this concept is hundreds of years old. It takes place AFTER the bows. It oftimes has guests to speak to these points. People who are experts at the subject.

What happened at American Stage was not a Noble Call. No one was consulted. No one was prepped. No one here was an expert in geo-politics.

This is not the story that the playwright wanted to tell, in a play that is already political. This is American history representing the outsider-ness that Chinese people and by extension all Asian groups as we all are perceived to ‘look alike’ – it is enough of a message.

Because we still experience it. In this, the Year of the Wooden Dragon, 2024, we still experience it.

It is because we do still experience it, we have murders at a day spa, we have murders in apartment buildings, we have our elders beaten to death or grave injury in public spaces and no one comes to help – we have the largest single lynching in US History, and we have an entire group of concentration camp survivors whose relatives are still processing what happened to them. We have people who are mistaken for other members within the Asian diaspora and are beaten to death – performing a play with Asian heritaged actors that was directed by an Asian American and written by an Asian American in and of itself, is a form of protest.

We still need the following hashtag to remind people to treat us as people!

Asian American history is enough. The act was done because the Director and the Actor did not trust that the play was enough. That’s it. They did not trust the play. The kick in the pants is that both of the people in question, have Asian heritage.

TFP knows this because she has the screenshot from the director responding on a public message board. She has it, it is in her phone – however she thinks the best thing to do is not put these ‘Chaos Monsters’ on blast on a blog that has international reach – because, they seem young. The response on the message board uses hyperbolic language about how devastated this Director is – and yet, the theater which is – yes, run by white people – is honestly handling it correctly.

Sometimes, white people can do that.

She personally would have suspended the actor for one show and had the Director in for a discussion about parameters. However, trust had been broken – and this Director has, by their own admission – less interest in directing a play, and more in causing chaos.

There is nothing wrong with chaos or ‘good trouble’ – but there are venues for that – nightclubs, performance art spaces, marches, rallies, instagram and social media – all of those are where we express our personal feelings. All of those were available to the Director and the Performer.

We do not go to a subscription based house who does not have an history of producing works by Asian Americans in super conservative St. Petersburg, and destroy whatever community feelings are invested because our inner chaos monster needs to be fed. We particularly do not go into a Union house and subvert the ways in which things are designed to run and decide we know better, if we are under the age of 35. Do you think this theater will now be looking to produce other works by Asian American playwrights and in fact, hire Asian American directors and casts because of this experience?

The Patriarchy is super happy about this, one imagines.

If what you want to do is protest art – then write your own piece so we all know exactly where you stand.

TFP loves protest art – this blog is a form of protest, and she has taken the hits for it since she began writing it 12 years ago. She has been banned, she has been canceled, she has had vitriol directed directly to her and her Family – yes she has, but it is HER work. She stands by it.

If you want to make political parallels about what is happening in this play and what is currently happening – have a talk-back after the show. Answer questions from the audience. It is not that theater does not allow room for political discussion – but the playwright has the right to have their work done as written. That is what the contract says – by word and deed you do not change the play.

You do not get to steal context from a writer.

Every play is a form of protest. Every word, every written in pause – it has been labored over again and again.

What happened here is that the Director and the Actor decided they knew better than the Writer, than Production, and than the rest of the Company. It’s hubris. Just because it is AA hubris, does not mean it is not.

The theater has rules and the theater makes allowances for differences of opinion, but those rules are in place to protect people. Overall, it is the mission of the Director to safeguard the Playwright’s work, and guide the actors – and that was not done here.

No care to safeguard the Playwright was taken by this Director, so Management had to step forward and do it.

If you were a Playwright, and someone inserted themselves in your play – something you had work on for years and sweated over, and stayed up late over, endless cups of coffee and multiple investments by theater companies to keep it going – how would you feel?

Imagine how Lloyd Suh feels.

FFS don’t be this kind of Florida Man either.

Finally, TFP wishes to extend her condolences to the Family and Friends of 16 year old Indigenous descended, Non Binary person, Nex Benedict. Nex was attacked in their High School bathroom by three older female students, who enacted extreme violence upon their person, and Nex succumbed to those injuries after the fact.

Nex’s Mother, Sue, is an enrolled member of the Choctaw Nation, and they were living on a Cherokee Reservation, where Nex was in school.

May Their Spirit Rest.

TFP out.

The Fairy Princess, as anyone who reads this blog knows, is a huge fan of the series, WARRIOR.

Why you ask? She loves a good martial arts series with Asian heritaged actors – some from England, some from Australia, Indonesia, Canada, and many from the Downtown NY Scene and from Broadway as well. In short – it is a series where both her Irish heritage and Chinese heritage come together and give her severe anxiety and yet, enjoyment.

TFP is complicated.

Now, WARRIOR has bounced around quite a bit – first Cinemax and then HBO and now…Netflix.

Netflix is going to bring about a huge global fan base for this show – much in the way that Peaky Blinders did to it’s cast. This series is a giant one for AAPI’s and that is because it comes from…the Bruce.

Yes, this is Bruce Lee‘s vision, as brought to life by his daughter, Shannon Lee. In this show we see the origin of the Chinese in America, but we also see mixed race people, because as we know, Bruce was Mixed Asian AND Mixed Asian people are always going to be around as long as different groups intertwine.

What is magical about this show is that they have built the ‘origin’ stories of the mixed race characters into the show, and then left it. Ah Sam, played by Andrew Koji, makes reference to his American Grandfather, and boom, there it is. Young Jun, played by Jason Tobin, is the result of a relationship his father, Father Jun, played by Perry Yung, had with a white prostitute. In fact, Mixed race Asians are a plot point all around, with Wang Chao’s daughter and supporting her, being a major plot point for the character played by Hoon Lee.

All of it makes dramatic sense as they go through the show. Now, there are three seasons already on Netflix, however fans NEED a fourth season – perhaps even a fifth, and there IS a way to get it. That way is interest. We need to get WARRIOR to Number 1 for a a few weeks. It is currently at #6.

So TFP is going to tell you her strategy – she also used this with The Brothers Sun on Netflix, and she is going to ask that you all follow suit. Why? Season 4 baby – the producers say it depends on how Netflix responds to the numbers for the show. If we can get it to Number 1 for say, a month – TFP is pretty sure a Season 4 will be ordered.

This is her strategy – she leaves the television on WARRIOR when she is at home at all times. Numbers cannot be faked – well they likely can but she does not know how as she is not a criminal, she just enjoys shows about criminals – and she is willing to give over her screen to a show that she has already watched. If you have more than one television/ipad/laptop you can devote to this, then great! And if you don’t, TFP appreciates your devotion.

Keeping on the theme of Bruce Lee, have you all realized that his goddaughter, Diana Lee Inosanto, has joined the Star Wars Universe on the cast of Ahsoka on Disney Plus?

She is making her rounds of all of the conventions right now, and seemingly having the best of all possible times. You can follow her on Insta – @therealdianaleeinosanto . She has also written a children’s book on autism with her son, Sebastian, as well as being the writer/director/star of the indie film, The Sensei.

In addition to Ahsoka, in her latest role, she voices Horse in The Tiger’s Apprentice, alongside Henry Golding, Lucy Liu, Sandra Oh, Brandon Soo Hoo, Michelle Yeoh, Bowen Yang, Leah Lewis, Deborah S. Craig, Sherry Cola, and Kheng Hua Tan.

The Tiger’s Apprentice is streaming on Paramount Plus.

Turning to Broadway, much mention must be made for the Broadway debut of Lola Tung, from The Summer I Turned Pretty, in Hadestown. She is playing Eurydice – the same part that was originated by Eva Noblezada (who is heading towards the opening of The Great Gatsby on Broadway with lightening speed). This image is from the Hadestown Insta account, and in terms of performance, TFP thinks it is best to let your ears do the listening.

She and Jordan Fisher nail it, it is quite exciting – so many congratulations to them, may it have an SRO.

Last but certainly not least – in anyone’s mind – is the upcoming Broadway debut of former Pussycat Doll, Nicole Scherzinger – just announced.

This looks entirely different from any other Sunset Blvd in recent memory – but in the best way – AND, this proves TFP‘s point that this coming season – that this year, the year of the Wooden Dragon – will be the MOST Asian Broadway has ever been in a season with no show set in Asia!

TFP out.

The Fairy Princess wishes you a Happy New Year – whether you call it Lunar, Chinese, Tet, or Seollal (Japan does not celebrate Lunar New Year since 1873) – have some noodles, dance with a lion, and let’s just be glad that pesky bunny is gone in favor of the Wood Dragon. TFP had an pretty awful 2023, so 2024 does not need to do any heavy lifting, per se – just not be as awful as 2023. The bar, as they say, is low.

Speaking of which, she is doing a concert at 54 Below on March 16 at 9:30pm- day before St. Patrick’s Day called Mom’s Night Out, where your favorite musical theater Mama’s dazzle audiences with their songs and stories about the journey that is motherhood. Megan Minutillo is the producing mama puttin’ it all together, so a thanks for the invite, and TFP will see you in March. (Use the code MOM5 for $ off your dining and bar tab) Tix here.

Now, there have been some kind of amazing things happening for AAPI’s in Musical Theater around the globe, as well as in Mid town Manhattan, and TFP wanted to discuss.

First off – Congratulations to Shannon Tyo, who won at the 67th OBIE Awards for Sustained Performance in Achievement for her role as Mora in Lloyd Suh‘s THE FAR COUNTRY at The Atlantic Theater Company.

Congrats on their OBIE to Hansol Jung for The Wolf Play, who won for playwriting here is their acceptance speech.

The King & I is playing in London for a limited time, and starring Darren Lee as The King!

He plays opposite Call The Midwife‘s star, Helen George – and frankly, TFP is down for it – reports from friends are great and reviews are better. Only for 6 weeks – if you are popping across the pond, here is your ticket link.

Let’s start with the most recent of events in New York City – last evening at HADESTOWN on Broadway, TIMOTHY H. LEE went on for Orpheus for the first time – meaning he is the FIRST Orpheus of Asian heritage to play the role.

TFP is including the Artist’s Instagram posts- these moments, though huge globally, remains personal.

Is this huge? Yes. Does TFP get tired of counting firsts? Also yes. When we stop needing to count in order to justify our existence on stage and screen TFP will be fully satisfied.

TFP extends hearty congratulations to Mr. Lee – who immigrated from Korea, and considers English to be his second language. This is an enormous accomplishment by any standard, and it is fitting, that Hadestown, which has always been an inclusive and diverse cast under the direction of Rachel Chavkin, crossed this barrier willingly.

Likewise attention must be turned to CHICAGO on Broadway where Kristen Faith Oei became the first Asian American to play Velma Kelly. She also goes on for Miss Katlin Hunyak in addition to covering the role of Velma. Currently CHICAGO has Lili Thomas playing Matron Mama Morton, and Fil-Am Red Concepciòn as Mr. Amos Hart aka Mr. Cellophane. They also had Japanese star Ryoko Yonekura as Roxie Hart in 2012. CHICAGO is combining ‘old’ Broadway with some much needed upgrades. Bravo!

Also, many salutations to Courtney Reed, who is currently starring as Satine in Moulin Rogue. You likely know her from her long running role as Princess Jasmine in ALADDIN on Broadway, and as one of the stars of Lauren Yee‘s CAMBODIAN ROCK BAND, but she has been holding down Satine first on tour in 2022, and now on Broadway since August of 2023. Go see her, she is delightful – and hey – Boy George is there too.

Some celebrate Lunar New Year by eating and hanging with family, while others take their families to see theater at Pan Asian Rep in New York City. (The others is TFP) Now in it’s almost unheard of 47th Season under the Artistic Direction of NY legend, Tisa Chang – they premiered their latest play – Warrior Sisters of Wu yesterday, Superbowl Sunday.

Adapted from “Romance of the Three Kingdoms’ one of the most famous Chinese classic tales, it has very few English language adaptations, which is of course, why Playwright Damon Chua chose it as his next project. (Why pick easy?) He paired that with a framework in his head of the English classic, Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice.

The result is a Family friendly Rom Com from 200 A.D., with swords. TFP‘s son really enjoyed this – and as a parent, it is beyond a relief to be able to take him to the theater, have a genuine story be told, and to hear his responses, again, TFP wants to stress, her son really enjoyed this.

We follow the Qiao sisters, best known nowadays in their modern avatars as characters in the Dynasty Warriors video game series, as they fall in love and kick ass against the backdrop of impending war. Ably directed by LA staple, Jeff Liu paired with deft fight choreography by Michael G. Chin – it is one to see.

One only hopes that the impending snow storm takes it easy on New York so they get the crowd they deserve.

Pictured in the photo, Director Jeff Liu, Liam Kong, and Damon Chua.

It is hard, as a New York based actor, to truly have words about what the steadiness of Pan Asian Rep has done for the New York AAPI Actor. Much as East West Players in Los Angeles has been sometimes the lone flag waving in the distance to give us hope – Pan Asian has – for 47 seasons – been there. Telling AAPI stories, encouraging them, commissioning them, holding workshops, and helping shape the ways ‘we’ get to be seen. Over the years they have offered classes, mentorship, and hope – Tisa was on Broadway in a show, and used her own money to start Pan Asian – and 47 seasons later, she is still there.

(If this were a Marvel show, we’d be calling her The Hand of AAPI Theater. It is a compliment.)

Warrior Sisters of Wu is a specifically Chinese story, told entirely in English, with modern sensibilities. Many of the questions TFP‘s 11 year old whispered in her ear, were answered seconds later in the dialogue and actions – he was seeing part of his own story told on a stage in front of him for 100 minutes.

When TFP was a child, the best her parents were able to show her in terms of a Chinese story starring Asian people, was taking her to see a troupe of martial artists and acrobats from China.

Did she still love it? Of course. However we cannot underestimate the value of younger minds at the theater, seeing versions of themselves that are ‘allowed’ to play different characters who have just as much dignity and gravitas as is often only allowed with white stories.

All stories can be told specifically and deliberately- it is that which makes the understanding of it universal.

TFP really hopes that the story told, that of two woman warriors who battle gender norms, gets butts in the seats, and gets the Lortels to sit up and notice.

The show is playing at the A.R.T./NY Mezzanine Theater – 502 W. 53RD STREET – go see it – running until MARCH 10th.

Tix link here

Ok, ok, ok – go Lion Dance and watch some fireworks – Happy Year of the Wood Dragon!

Hope you get rich!