EDITORIALS LEGACY
OF BRUCE LEE "Before Lee's
time, Asian men had been largely depicted as emasculated and
childlike coolies, domestics, etc. in American popular culture,"
said Hye Seung Chung, a postdoctoral fellow at the Department
of Asian Languages and Cultures at the University of Michigan.
"Lee proved
that the image of the Asian man can be tough, strong and sexy.
However, the Bruce Lee craze of the 1970s created a new stereotype
of the Asian man: namely, the martial artist, which still permeates
in Hollywood cinema."
AMERICAN
CINEMA "American cinema is a reflection of
its society," said Hye Seung Chung - a postdoctoral fellow at
the Department of Asian Languages and Cultures at the University
of Michigan. "When I taught a course on "Asians in American
Film" at the University of Michigan this past winter, many of
my students of Asian descent all American-born complained
of how strangers white Americans would approach them and
ask where they were born and how they say 'Hello' in their native
tongue. In other words, many people in the United States still
don't have a concept of Asian-Americans and treat them as foreigners."
GEORGE
LUCAS' WORDS OF ADVICE
Lucas said he became a filmmaker not to become a powerful mogul,
which he is, but because he simply loved movies. He said film
students today are driven by different motivations. "Now it
is a career move. People are looking to get a really good job.
They love movies but the idea is that they want to make hit
movies. Those of us who have success basically didn't care about
any of that stuff."
AMERICAN
CEO MISCONCEPTIONS OF ASIA
As far back as Marco Polo and even the Ancient Greeks, the West
has considered "The Orient" to be a place of danger, exoticism,
sensuality and intrigue. Those perceptions remain today. Even
tame and safe Japan, which has among the lowest crime rates
in the developed world, was called "The Wild, Wild East" in
just one example of a recent headline in BusinessWeek. And China,
in a recent Fortune Small Business headline, became "China:
Dangerous Business." Casting Asia through this filter of "Asian
Mystique," as a "dangerous" place that must be "conquered,"
sets up an us-vs.-them divide that keeps us in the West from
fully understanding the subtleties of those markets.
CHINESE
GROWTH MEAN CHANGE FOR U.S. WORKERS
CEOs and other top executives of Chinese companies have also
lived less privileged lives than many of their American counterparts.
Because of their own less privileged pasts, Chinese bosses expect
such qualities as tenacity, loyalty, respect and frugality from
employees in addition to hard work that Americans are not accustomed
to. The more closely linked the U.S. and Chinese economies become,
the more secure U.S.-China relations will be. "The more China
advances economically, the more interconnected it is with the
U.S.
Even with large-scale immigration and multiculturalism
a fact of life in many western communities, and international
contact increased by global travel, Asians
- whether in their native countries or in the diaspora - are
seen through a filter of "received cultural perceptions",
reinvigorated by Hollywood
and other media.
HIP-HOP
UNLOCKS LITERARY CLASSICS
On the last day of class, he said, a girl walked up to his desk,
shyly slid him a note, waved goodbye and quickly left. The note
explained that she had been considering suicide until she read
Dylan Thomas' "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night," with
its admonition to "rage, rage against the dying of the light.
If one poem can do that for a student, think of the power of
a book."
WHERE
DOES HIP-HOP END & GANG CULTURE BEGIN
On the last day of class, he said, a girl walked up to his desk,
shyly slid him a note, waved goodbye and quickly left. The note
explained that she had been considering suicide until she read
Dylan Thomas' "Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night," with
its admonition to "rage, rage against the dying of the light.
If one poem can do that for a student, think of the power of
a book."
VIEW
OF CHINESE IN 1912
We need the Chinese,
but we do not need Chinatown
in his present condition or location. The Chinese
now have one of the best parts of town, and they have forfeited
their right to it by their habits of life.
For more years than we care to recall, there
has been politics in keeping the Chinese
and their dens in an obnoxious condition. When the plague
threatened to reach our shores if it did not actually reach
them, as the greatest experts in the land declared it did,
it became a supremely important precaution to clean and fumigate
Chinatown.
Our local Board of Health, with a discretion
that it would have been criminal
not to have exercised under the circumstances, ordered a thorough
cleansing of Chinatown.
"WELCOME
TO THE NEIGHBORHOOD" "I didn't think that people
would be this nervous," Andrea
Wong, head of alternative programming at ABC, said before
Wednesday's decision to ditch the show. "Because I really think
it's such a positive show and such a good thing to put on TV
and cause viewers to look at themselves, I'm surprised by the
negative reaction to it."
SISTERS OF THE TRAVELING PANTS
Upon reading the first two paragraphs, which breezily compare
the dungarees to a beloved dog that one would give away if one
were moving to someplace like Korea, where people eat dogs.
But what gives those guys the right to decide
what's offensive to another group? Who are they to say what
hurts someone else's community, someone else's family, what
wounds someone else's child?
What would I do if my little girl came home
crying because some Shaq-worshipping kid on the playground
-- as a joke -- pulled up his eyes at her and chanted, "Ching-chong
Chinaman?"
The state of California, surplus-rich, had
originally offered to fund it after initial $70,000. Nagano
invited the innovative stage director Robert Wilson to create
a theatrical vision with a budget that was to be in the millions
- along with Ernest Fleischmann and composer Naomi Sekiya.
The original "Manzanar" project had its
life abruptly interrupted when the state suddenly withdrew
funding after the energy blackouts and other fiscal crises
that transform it into a grass roots project with Philip Kan
Gotanda brought into the project.
TREATMENT
OF CHINESE AT ANGEL ISLAND
While being detained at Angel
Island, the Chinese immigrants had encountered terrible
experiences, such as going to take medical examinations and
dealing with unreasonable, lengthen interrogation, all of worse
than what they had expected before coming to America. Suffered
from imprisonment, many Chinese
immigrants expressed and released their feelings of anger
with poems which were discovered on the barracks walls on Angel
Island.
SUCCESS
OF "THE CHINA BOYS"
At first (in the 19th Century), the Chinese
were cheerfully welcomed as ''The China Boys,'' invited to official
functions and praised for the quality of their work. The next
thing they knew, the governor was denouncing them as avaricious
''coolies,'' whites were chasing them out of the mines and legislators
were targeting them with punitive taxes.
STATE
OF ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES
Jeff Chang stated at the June 20, 2005 Asian American Studies
Commencement Speech the following: "As the great Glenn Omatsu
reminds us, the fundamental practice of Asian American Studies
is to build community. Building community goes beyond centering
the self. It is about imagining what it takes to revere justice,
to respect difference, to reduce hurt, to correct wrong, to
nurture growth, and to discover joy. It is about activating
and propagating these values within a conception of 'we' that
continually expands, and is always concerned with caring for
the least of us first."
CHINESE
AMERICAN PLEDGE
Because
we have learned how to disagree with our parents
they no longer know how to communicate with us.
Because we have learned American justice,
we have forgotten the old Chinese traditions.
Because we have lost our memories of the Japanese armies
In World War II,
we no longer recognize our culture.
Because we are speaking a foreign language,
our parents no longer understand us.
Because we have learned how to lie,
our parents no longer have faith in us.
Because we have disrespected our parents,
they have started to penalize us.
Therefore, we pledge to cluster our families in unison again,
To obey our elders,
To value our Chinese traditions,
To respect our culture,
To have integrity,
To retain our own language,
To respect our parents, understanding that
they deserve all our esteem and obedience.
In honor of all our cherished parents who, suffered and tolerated
all our foolishness, we make this pledge.
APA
& MEDIA NEWS
DEMISE OF CHINESE-VIETNAMESE "BLACK DRAGONS"
The Black
Dragon gang (formed in 1984 in Lincoln Heights) made money
mainly by extorting prostitution houses in the San Gabriel Valley.
This small, loosely knit, but vicious gang ran brothels, extorted
prostitution houses, intimidated witnesses, killed and committed
home-invasion robberies. The gang's three alleged leaders Khoanh
Lam, 37, Minh Thang Tran, 52, and Cham Hoang, 23, were convicted
of attempted murder and conspiracy to commit assault with a
deadly weapon (on two members in Rosemead). Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
TONY JAA - NEXT BRUCE LEE, JET LI & JACKIE CHAN Up-and-coming
movie star Tony Jaa has heard the inevitable comparisons: He's
the next Bruce Lee, Jackie Chan and Jet Li, the heir-apparent
to the action star throne. But Jaa doesn't mind. He grew up
admiring Lee, Chan and Li. However, the 28-year-old Thai star
of "Ong-Bak: The Thai Warrior," which opened nationwide in the
United States last Friday, wants to make one thing clear: He
doesn't want to erase Lee's legend. He is only carrying on his
legacy. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
SHADOWS OF BRUCE LEE
In Bruce Lee's Shadow: Asians Struggle to Create New Hollywood
Images Actors Try to Show They Are More Than Martial Artists
and Madame Butterflies. Bruce Lee gave Asian men a powerful,
sleek image in Hollywood, but his popularity spawned the martial
artist stereotype. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
GENIUS OF HAYAO MIYAZAKI
When we think of feature-length animation, our thoughts turn
immediately to "Shrek" and Pixar (or less fondly, to "Robots"
and "Madagascar"). The animated world is round - created in
three dimensions by teams of computer wizards and enlivened
by noisy, knowing references to American pop culture, past and
present. It may seem somewhat paradoxical, then, that the world's
greatest living animated-filmmaker
- a designation that his
fans at Disney and Pixar would be unlikely to challenge
- is Hayao
Miyazaki. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
JUSTIN IS DIRECTING "FAST AND FURIOUS 3"
Acclaimed young filmmaker Justin
Lin has been signed to direct the latest installment in
the motion picture series built on speed: "The Fast and the
Furious 3" (tentative title). The Universal Pictures release
will be produced by Neal H. Moritz, who served in the same capacity
on both global blockbuster hits "The Fast and the Furious" and
"2 Fast 2 Furious." Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
ETHNIC MEDIA IS A HIDDEN GIANT
The first-ever comprehensive survey of ethnic American adults
on their media usage reveals that ethnic media reach 51 million
ethnic Americans - almost a quarter of all (or one in four)
American adults. Of these media consumers, 29 million ethnic
American adults, or 13 percent of all adult Americans, not only
use ethnic media regularly but prefer ethnic media to its mainstream
media counterparts. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
NAGANO CONDUCTS "REGARDING EXECUTIVE ORDER 9066 Explaining
his reason for including three composers in his project to create
a narrative symphonic work about the experiences of Japanese
Americans in the World
War II internment camp Manzanar, Kent
Nagano stated that he felt the context was broad. There
were many stories to relate, he well knew, his parents and grandparents
having been among those interned, and he liked the idea of more
than one musical point of view. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
AMON MIYAMOTO'S PACIFIC OVERTURES RECORDING
With its
haiku-like lyrics and pointillistic approximation of Japanese
musical styles, this 1976 musical remains one of the riskiest
and most inventive of Stephen Sondheim's always risky and inventive
scores. A 2004 New York revival put Japanese director Amon Miyamoto
in charge of an American cast and its recording. However, there's
frustratingly little to recommend its purchase. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
LEGEND OF JAE YANG
Billy Yang's father
never wanted this for his son. He didn't want him to toil behind
the counter of an L.A.
liquor store. That was the job Jae Yang, an immigrant, did
for 20 years only so his children could go to college and
lead more interesting lives. But in December masked robbers
shot and killed the father. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
MICHAEL WONG EYES HOLLYWOOD
Michael Wong's older brother (Russell
Wong) built a career in Hollywood, while he became a film
heartthrob in Hong Kong. Now the American-born star (who has
made 50 movies in 20 years) is eyeing a return to his home country
amid the rise of Chinese cinema in the West. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
ZHANG JINGCHU IN WOO'S "RED CLIFF"
Chinese mainland actress Zhang Jingchu (who speaks English and
Chinese) will join the cast of Hollywood master John
Woo's latest epic The War of Red Cliff. Zhang's performance
in the recent Jury Grand Prize winner film Peacock at the Berlin
Film Festival greatly impressed director John Woo. Also, Peacock's
director, Gu Changwei, has been persuaded by John Woo to take
care of photography on the film. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
PORTLAND'S CHINATOWN
The heart of Portland's Chinatown, at Northwest Third and Fourth
avenues from Burnside to Glisan streets, contains two dozen
Chinese establishments, a dozen social service agencies, another
dozen taverns and nightclubs, a parole transition project, an
upscale condo development, a Chinese herb shop run by an Iranian,
an Italian cafe run by Albanians, a Jewish museum, a legendary
drag club, and many people and properties in transformation.
Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
LISA LING - THE RUNNER I started
running when I
was 21 years old and studying in China. I
was studying Chinese in Beijing. It was just such a carefree
time for me that I
was eating nonstop. I
ended up actually gaining weight in the beginning of my trip
there. I
decided that I
had to do something about it. That's when I
started running. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
MINORITY ACTORS IN WHITE ROLES
When Jackie Gleason was growing up in the Bedford-Stuyvesant
section of Brooklyn in the 1930s, many of his neighbours resembled
his family, Irish and working-class. Today, the residents remain
mostly working-class, but almost all are black. Perhaps, then,
it makes sense that a film remake of Gleason's classic TV comedy
The Honeymooners would feature a mostly black cast, with Cedric
the Entertainer as the new face of loudmouthed Ralph Kramden.
Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
CHINESE AMERICANS SHRUG OFF FOLKLORE
Love is blooming among the dim sum shops of Chinatown this year,
as it always has, even though traditionalists consider this
particular year an inauspicious time to wed. A quirk in the
Chinese calendar meant that the Year of the Rooster, which began
in February, was missing "lichun" the day that traditionally
marks the beginning of spring. Folk wisdom holds that such years
called Widow Years by some can be an unlucky time for a
couple to begin a new life. But the custom has faded fast upon
contact with new cultures. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
ASIAN VILLAGE - ATLANTA
Asian Village Atlanta would combine cultural fare including
an Asian history museum, performing arts theater and a Chinese
garden with retail stores, restaurants, a hotel, a sports
complex, condos and office buildings. For all its reputation
as an international city, Atlanta still lacks a walkable Asian
district that attracts shoppers and tourists like Chinatowns
in New York and San Francisco. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
REUNION OF INTERNED SCOUTS
The Boy Scouts of Troop 343, no longer boys (now in their 70s
and 80s, were among the 120,000 Japanese Americans sent to live
in internment camps during World War II), met here last week
for their first reunion in more than 60 years. A little older,
a little grayer and a smidge wiser, they greeted their fellow
Scouts with delighted grins. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
JIN - RAP CAREER OVER
Jin has announced through his myspace site that he's throwing
in the towel on his rap career and is putting his job as an
emcee on hold, while he explores other options. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
SALON'S REVIEW OF "SAVING FACE"
Writer-director Alice Wu's "Saving Face" doesn't fit into any
oversimplified marketing genre: It isn't just a culture-clash
comedy, or a love story about Asian-American lesbians. And it
really isn't "My Big Fat Chinese Wedding." But it has the heart
and spirit of a true romantic comedy, and a lightness of touch
that you rarely see in a debut picture. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
TONGAN AMERICAN GANGS
The two Bay Area police officers had traveled to the Kingdom
of Tonga searching for answers. Like students seeking the wisdom
of an ancient sage, the officers asked about an issue that befuddled
them: How do we quell violence among warring gangs of Tongan
American youths? Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
SCOTT SASSA LEAVES FRIENDSTER
Former NBC executive Scott Sassa has resigned as chief executive
of Friendster, a job he took just one year ago. Sassa will hand
the reins to Taek Kwon, an executive vice president at Citysearch.com.
Sassa's reason for leaving is personal, according to a venture
capital backer of Friendster. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
STUDIOS WELCOME ENTREPRENEURS' COST EFFICIENCY For
more than half a century, big Hollywood studios dominated all
facets of animation moviemaking. Not anymore. Buoyed by soaring
consumer demand, and with plummeting technology costs lowering
barriers to entry, animation entrepreneurs like John Williams
(former member of the creative team that made DreamWorks' "Shrek"
and its sequel, Williams' small independent production house,
Vanguard Animation made "Valiant" for less than half of the
normal cost of an animation feature of $80M) are quietly transforming
the business. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
DARLENE CHAN'S 2005 PLAYBOY JAZZ FESTIVAL
This year,
however, festival producer Darlene
Chan compensated for the absence of such larger-than-life
figures as the late greats Count Basie, Miles Davis and Duke
Ellington by picking a collection of artists colorful and diverse
enough to reflect the social and cultural complexities of Los
Angeles Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
DEAN CAIN IN "LOST"
"Lost," a taut thriller in the best B-picture tradition, has
a title that has more than one meaning. It's soon clear that
Dean Cain's Jeremy Stanton, a Santa Barbara bank vice president,
has not only lost his way in the Mojave Desert because of a
maze of flood-closed roads but also lost his bearings as a man.
Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
LUPE VELEZ AS "MING TOY"
And 1930's "East Is West" (during Hollywood's Pre-Code era)
offers Mexican actress Lupe Velez, of all people, as the beautiful
Chinese Ming Toy, put up for sale at a love- slave auction.
Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
VICTOR HWANG'S LARTA INSTITUTE
Eight minutes could determine the fate of Rick Holman's start-up
company, Industrial Origami. That is all Holman will get to
spark interest among more than 300 potential investors gathering
in downtown Los Angeles for an annual forum sponsored by Victow
Hwang's Larta Institute, a nonprofit group that connects
technology start-ups with funding. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
GORILLAZ'S "DEMON DAYS"
The hit single from the Gorillaz's 2001 debut was "Clint Eastwood."
This time the single honors his fictional character "Dirty Harry."
Does that mean that the "band" already a conceit presented
as four cartoon street urchins moves even further into its
gritty fantasy world? Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
GISH JEN'S "THE LOVE WIFE"
Full of serious issues, "The Love Wife" is cunningly disguised
as an easy, funny read. Immigration, the Cultural Revolution,
Alzheimer's disease, racism, adoption, and the lurking prospect
of infidelity are all tackled thoughtfully and thoroughly by
Gish Jen, a writer whose eye for detail can find humour in even
the saddest situation. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
OHNO'S "NOTHING" WILL BRING GLORY
In 1998, when Ohno
was a wild
16-year-old talent, that burden had proved too much. He
skated a terrible race in the Olympic trials, finishing last,
and was forced to watch the Nagano Games - in his father's native
Japan - on television. That experience made his 2002 success
all the more fulfilling, but it also put it in perspective.
"He has never lost where he
came from," Yuki Ohno said. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
DANIEL DAE KIM
Today, Dan's a big-shot TV/film star who's home for the summer
to recharge his batteries in the Lehigh Valley before returning
to wander the shores of Hawaii as Jin on the blockbuster ABC
series, Lost. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
MTV-DESI
Niharika Desai - a fresh take on Carson Daly, if ever there
were one - will be the first face of MTV Desi, the first to
introduce this channel to its audiences (second-generation desis,
or immigrants from the Indian subcontinent) and then, perhaps,
to introduce their vibrant, hyphenated culture to the larger
world. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
AA SUICIDES @ CORNELL
Asian students at Cornell commit 50 percent of completed student
suicides, even though they make up only 17 percent of the entire
Cornell population. Asian students are also most likely to report
problems with stress, sleep, sexually or physically abusive
relationships and hopelessness. Asian students are least likely
to utilize CAPS (Counseling and Psychological Services), and
when they do, they are often very reluctant, referred by a faculty
member and visit only a few times. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
AZN TV
With films like "American Desi," which specifically address
the conflicted identity issues possessed by second generation
children of immigrants, AZN Television attempts to offer a chance
at reconciling the anxieties of people who might feel connections
with multiple backgrounds. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
INTERRACIAL MARRIAGES
Couples of different ethnicities and faiths uphold wedding traditions
by blending them. According to the U.S. Census Bureau's 2002
Current Population Survey, 2.9% of the country's 58 million
married couples are interracial (up from 1.8% in 1990 and 1.3%
in 1980). In many instances, that translates into a confluence
of traditions and styles. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
TAN DUN'S OPERA FOR "THE MET
Both the Met and Tan
Dun are gambling that an apparent culture clash will create
something that will appeal to the new, younger audiences that
the Met craves without turning off the Puccini set or alienating
the traditionalists who tend to be the Met's biggest patrons.
Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
MAILER VS. KAKUTANI
Dreaded New York Times book critic Michiko Kakutanifor whom
"the death of the author" is less a new-critical trope than
a career goal is said to be livid over Norman Mailer's quasi-racist
remarks about her in the new Rolling Stone. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
LUCY LIU'S NEW PROJECTS Lucy Liu
will star in two new films - The Cleaner, in which Liu
will star opposite Cedric the Entertainer. In the action comedy
being directed by Les Mayfield, Liu
plays an FBI agent posing as a waitress to Cedric's amnesiac
janitor who thinks he's an undercover agent. Liu will also topline
and executive produce Devil to Pay, an indepdent thriller. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
DEMISE OF MENTOR PROGRAM
I (Alice Tuan) am forever grateful that the Mark Taper Forum
gave me my start as a playwright. The year was 1992 when Oliver
Mayer, a playwright and the then literary manager, and Oskar
Eustis invited me into the Mentor/Playwright Program. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
LISA SEE'S "SNOW FLOWER"
The women of 19th century China whom Lisa See writes about in
her tenderhearted new novel were a brutally oppressed class.
They were the reproductive oxen of a culture that was ruled
by men for men, a culture that insisted upon absolute obedience
and lots and lots of baby boys from "bed business." Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
DR. MIN KAO DONATES $17.5 Million
Garmin Chairman and Chief Executive Min Kao has given $17.5
million to his alma mater, the University of Tennessee. The
school said in a statement that the billionaire's gift to the
college of engineering is the largest private donation ever
bestowed upon the institution of higher learning. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
CA'S SUNJAY KUMAR FACE NEW INDICTMENT
Sanjay Kumar, Computer Associates International Inc.'s former
chief executive, paid $3.7 million in 2003 to buy the silence
of a businessman who threatened to report an improper transaction,
a new indictment alleges. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
TARZAN ON BROADWAY IN 2006 "Disney
Presents Tarzan" will reach Broadway next spring with Phil
Collins expanding his score for Disney's 1999 animated "Tarzan,"
and David Henry Hwang ("M. Butterfly" and the recent "Flower
Drum Song") adapting the screenplay. Bob Crowley will direct
and design the sets and costumes. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
MANLIN CHEE IN JAIL
Manlin
Chee had been a nationally recognized lawyer for her work
with immigrants, some of it pro bono, and much of it for Muslims,
but things soured for her soon after she appeared on a panel
discussing the PATRIOT Act in March 2003. Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
US ASIANS:
In the past, which one of your roles portrayed the worst Asian
Pacific American stereotype? In addition, which role allowed you the opportunity
to bring to life the most realistic portrayal of an Asian Pacific American? LYNN
CHEN: The
“Saturday Night Live” skit was probably the worst, not my
role exactly, but through the other actors who were in the skit. It was
supposed to be the Vietnam War, and they had some of the SNL cast members
pretend they were Vietnamese women, and they used some pretty horrendously
racist accents. I wondered why they even felt the need to hire Asian actors
to play extras for that scene, they should have just gotten some Caucasian
extras and given them slanted eye makeup or something if they were trying
to prove a point about stereotypes. I was horrified when I first saw the
skit, complete with all accents, during final dress, but at that point
it was a little too late to back out.
My
role in “Fortune”
was probably the most realistic, in that it dealt with the feelings a
young woman has coming to terms with being the only American-born Asian
working in a higher-status job amongst Asian, immigrant co-workers.
US
ASIANS:
Do you think that it is appropriate and/or effective for APA actors
to complain about such stereotyped/racially offensive roles? LYNN
CHEN: Sure.
Though I’m not sure the creators of such roles would agree, they
probably don’t know that they’re doing anything wrong –
nobody likes being accused of being a racist. But it’s important
to let people know when they’re being offensive.
US
ASIANS:
What do you think is the present state of diversity is in the
television/theater/film communities? LYNN
CHEN: It’s
getting better, but it’s not too good.
US
ASIANS:
What do you think needs to be addressed first? LYNN
CHEN: For
Asian Americans specifically, there should be more than one “token
Asian.” And, if there is more than just one, their storylines should
not be focused on them being Asian.
US
ASIANS:
What do you think about the APA showcases at PSNBC? LYNN
CHEN: I’ve
never taken part in them so I don’t know much about it firsthand.
If someone books a job as a result of a showcase, then I’m happy
it exists.
US
ASIANS:
How do you think that Asian American soap actors before you (i.e.
Kelly Hu, Lindsey
Price, Christine Toy Johnson, Lia Chang, etc.) have helped you in your
participation in “All My Children?” LYNN
CHEN: I
never saw any of them in soap opera action, but I’m glad they are
there…it takes a lot of pressure off of being “a first.”
I wouldn’t want the people watching to think that my character was
representative of all Asian Americans on daytime dramas just because I
was the only one that existed.
US
ASIANS:
What Asian/Asian Pacific American and/or Chinese/Chinese American
organizations have honored you for your achievements? LYNN
CHEN: None.
(sadly)
US
ASIANS:
Why do you think that “a lot of actors in general, no matter
what their ethnic background is, are typecast?” LYNN
CHEN: I
think that a lot of the time, unfortunately, actors are cast by what their
“type” is – by age, by body, by looks. A lot of huge
stars are constantly playing the same roles movie after movie. Maybe it’s
because audiences are used to seeing a certain formula, so that formula
is usually recreated to satisfy them.
US
ASIANS:
What was your most “gratifying” role? LYNN
CHEN: The
parts I play in NiteStar
are really satisfying, because we impact the audience and teach them important
things that they need to know.
US
ASIANS:
What changes, if any, do you think will be as the direct result
of the success of MTV Films/Paramount Pictures’ “Better Luck
Tomorrow?” LYNN
CHEN: Hopefully
there will be some mainstream films with more than one token Asian actor,
and production companies will make more movies with Asian-American casts.
Click
Here to Read More>>>>>
With
a Buddhist prayer ceremony, filming began in fall of 2003 at the Brooklyn
and the Chinese-American enclave of Flushing, Queens of Alice Wu's "Saving
Face" – the first movie wholly about Chinese-Americans bankrolled
by Hollywood since Disney released "The Joy Luck Club" in 1993
that featured veteran Joan Chen and rising young actresses Michelle Krusiec
and Lynn Chen. It’s a romantic comedy about three generations of
an immigrant family: a deeply traditional grandfather, his middle-aged
daughter (widowed and mysteriously pregnant) and his lesbian doctor granddaughter,
who happens to fall in love with a ballerina.
This
daughter born in San Jose of Taiwanese immigrants sought to fulfilled,
after having earned her Ph.D. in computer science at Stanford University
and the program manager at Cinemania and Music Central - Microsoft's CD-ROM
entertainment offerings, her desire to become a writer. As a result, she
began writing a novel inspired by her experience of coming out as a lesbian,
along with her mother's difficulties in middle age during down time. Recognizing
cultural traits of her characters saying things they didn't mean - the
chasm between their words and conflicting facial expressions – she
decided that the best vehicle to effectively communicate her thoughts
would be through a film.
Her
future included screenwriting/filmmaking classes and quitting her job
at Microsoft within a pre-designated period of five years to achieve success.
In 2002, she won a CAPE (Coalition of Asian Pacifics in Entertainment)
contest that provided ample opportunities to meet most Asian American
studio executives.
She
coped with suggestions to have White characters, to eliminate speaking
Mandarin in the picture (in the final cut, the film’s dialogue is
half in Mandarin and half in English) and/or to make the love affair heterosexual
– along with conflicts involving her directing the picture. Fortunately,
she found a person that totally supported her vision – Teddy Zee
– formerly president of Will Smith’s production company, Overbrook
Entertainment. As a result, Will Smith and James Lassiter of Overbrook
committed to produce the film if financing could be found – which
led to securing this element ($2.5M) with Ben Feingold – president
of Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. At the end, Alice Wu has completed
a film that she has stated was a love letter to her mother, and it shows.