Lia Chang Photos: BD Wong in Rehearsal for “Passing It On: An Evening of Mentorship to Benefit Rosie’s Theater Kids”

Last weekend, I caught up with BD Wong at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York, where he was rehearsing a number which will be performed in “Passing It On: An Evening of Mentorship to Benefit Rosie’s Theater Kids,” on Tuesday, March 27, 2012, at the Alvin Ailey Citigroup Theater, 405 W. 55th St. @ 9th Ave in New York.

BD Wong rehearses with Rosie’s Theater Kids at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

BD Wong rehearses with Rosie’s Theater Kids at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

BD will also be hosting the event, (also honoring Tom Viola, Executive Director of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights Aids), which features Rosie’s Theater Kids alongside Derick K. Grant, Brandon Victor Dixon, Zakiya Young, and special taped video appearances by Audra McDonald and John Tartaglia. A highlight of the evening is sure to be an original piece conceived and co-written by BD, in which he will perform with 11 of the children from the “Rosie’s Theater Kids” program.
BD Wong rehearses with Rosie’s Theater Kids at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

BD Wong rehearses with Rosie’s Theater Kids at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

In Manhattan, thousands of children live near the “Great White Way” but never have the opportunity to step inside one of the theaters and experience Broadway. As Rosie O’Donnell says, it’s “like living in Hawaii and not having access to the beach.” Today, New York City public schools rely largely on private funding for arts education and they continue to struggle due to a constant shortage of public funding. This is where Rosie’s Theater Kids comes in, providing theater exposure and theater training to hundreds of NY City Public school kids each week.
BD Wong rehearses with Rosie’s Theater Kids at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

BD Wong rehearses with Rosie’s Theater Kids at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th Street in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

BD shared, “For several weeks now, I have been rehearsing with 11 of Rosie’s Theater Kids, Music Director Steven Jamail and RTK Vocal Performance Teacher Lisa Danser. Everyone on the staff there is a gem.”
BD Wong rehearses with Rosie’s Theater Kids at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

BD Wong rehearses with Rosie’s Theater Kids at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

“My pal Wayne Barker (Broadway composer of PETER AND THE STARCATCHERS) and I wrote a mini-musical for me to perform with the RTKs, based upon a beloved Polish children’s story called KING MATT THE FIRST. Each kid has a featured role in the piece, and they have taken to the material like bees to honey.”
BD Wong rehearses with Rosie’s Theater Kids at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

BD Wong rehearses with Rosie’s Theater Kids at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang


“I really recommend you check this out. I’m really kind of proud of it, and it is just a lot of fun. And it is a great, great cause.
…They are all totally remarkable. There’s not an ounce of bad energy. Get a ticket! Smiles guaranteed.”
 Rosie’s Theater Kids rehearse at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

Rosie’s Theater Kids rehearse at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

The Tony award-winning actor has just returned from attending the world premiere of his latest film (in which he is featured with Joan Chen, Booboo Stewart, Harry Shum, Jr.) WHITE FROG, directed by Quentin Lee at the SFIAAFF30 in San Francisco.
Cast and crew of White Frog — with BD Wong, Gregg Sulkin, Quentin Lee, Tyler Posey, Boo Boo Stewart, Harry Shum Jr., Ellie Wen, Joan Chen, David Henry Hwang, Kathryn Layng at the  Castro Theatre in San Francisco on March 8, 2012. Photo by Michael Jeong/Courtesy of SFIAAFF

Cast and crew of White Frog — with BD Wong, Gregg Sulkin, Quentin Lee, Tyler Posey, Boo Boo Stewart, Harry Shum Jr., Ellie Wen, Joan Chen, David Henry Hwang, Kathryn Layng at the Castro Theatre in San Francisco on March 8, 2012. Photo by Michael Jeong/Courtesy of SFIAAFF

He is also currently appearing as Dr. John Lee in NBC’s new critically acclaimed drama “Awake,” which also stars Jason Isaacs, Laura Allen, Steve Harris, Dylan Minnette, Michaela McManus, Wilmer Valderrama and Cherry Jones.
BD Wong as Dr. John Lee on NBC's "Awake".

BD Wong as Dr. John Lee on NBC's "Awake".

In 2003, thanks to the generosity and vision of Founder Rosie O’Donnell, Artistic and Executive Director Lori Klinger created RTKids, dedicated to providing quality instruction in music, drama and dance at no cost to New York City public school students, inspired by O’Donnell’s life-long concern for children, love of theater, and dream of teaching. Eighty-six percent of students who participate in Rosie’s Theater Kids are from low-income families. Rosie’s Theater Kids annually involves more than 5,000 teachers, students, and their family members at 17 schools. There are currently programs in Harlem, Midtown West,Chelsea, Lower East Side, East Village, and Chinatown.
Rosie’s Theater Kids rehearse at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

Rosie’s Theater Kids rehearse at the Maravel Arts Center on 445 W. 45th St. in New York on March 17, 2012. Photo by Lia Chang

“PASSING IT ON: An Evening of Mentorship to benefit ROSIE’S THEATER KIDS”
6:30PM Doors open
7:00PM Performance
8:00PM VIP after party

Purchase tickets online or call: 646-434-2774.
General Admission – $225 -includes one general admission ticket for the performance
VIP Ticket – $500 – includes one VIP ticket for the performance and after-party, listing in the program.

Other articles by Lia Chang:
The SFIAAFF30 Kicks Off with World Premiere of White Frog Featuring Booboo Stewart, Harry Shum, Jr., Joan Chen, Kelly Hu and BD Wong, at the Castro Theater on March 8
Tony award-winning actor BD Wong stars in NBC’s Awake; video preview and interview
Photos: Highlights of Shinsai: Theaters for Japan (3pm) with Andre Bishop, Mary Beth Hurt, Jennifer Lim, Angela Lin, Philip Kan Gotanda, Thom Sesma, Sab Shimono, Richard Thomas, Jay O. Sanders, and more
Photos: Highlights of Shinsai: Theaters for Japan (8pm) with Oskar Eustis, Patti LuPone, Lisa Emery, Ann Harada, Paolo Montalban, Thom Sesma, Sab Shimono, Henry Stram, Richard Thomas, John Weidman and more
Photos: In Rehearsal with Director Bartlett Sher and the cast of Shinsai: Theaters for Japan
Thom Sesma, Patti LuPone, Cindy Cheung, Jennifer Lim, Sab Shimono, James Yaegashi and more set for Shinsai: Theaters for Japan Benefit on March 11 at the Great Hall at Cooper Union in New York
Multimedia: Exclusive photos and video of Disney’s The Lion King Las Vegas -In the Makeup Chair with Thom Sesma
David Henry Hwang to Receive 2012 William Inge Distinguished Achievement in the American Theatre Award
Chinglish Playwright David Henry Hwang Moderates “RepresentAsian: The Changing Face of New York Theater” at Pope Auditorium at Fordham University
Photos: Yellow Fever Playwright Rick Shiomi Explores New Territory with An All-Female Cast
Coming to America through The Angel Island Immigration Station
Orville Mendoza Joins the Broadway Cast of Peter and the Starcatcher, Previews Begin March 28 at the Brooks Atkinson
Photos: Laila Robins, Sean Dugan, C.J. Wilson, Peter Francis James, Bill Irwin and Tricia Paoluccio at Signature Theatre Company’s revival of Edward Albee’s The Lady From Dubuque
Photos: “How To Succeed” stars Daniel Radcliffe, Rose Hemingway and John Larroquette at Lord & Taylor for Windows Unveiling
Multimedia: Promises, Promises’ Stars Kristin Chenoweth and Sean Hayes at Lord & Taylor Fifth Ave
Broadwayworld.com Photo Flash: Library of Congress’ IN REHEARSAL Exhibit
Photos: David Duchovny, John Earl Jelks, Amanda Peet, Tracee Chimo at Opening Night Party of Neil LaBute’s Break of Noon
Celebrating my mom – AN ACTIVE VISION: BEVERLY UMEHARA…LABOR ACTIVIST…1945-1999
Click here for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.

Lia Chang. Photo by Brianne Michelle Photography

Lia Chang. Photo by Brianne Michelle Photography


Lia Chang is an actor, a performance and fine art botanical photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2012 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at lia@backstagepasswithliachang.com.

Lia Chang Picks: THE NEW DEAL and other plays from The Christine Toy Johnson Portfolio and TRANSCENDING: THE WAT MISAKA STORY

Two tasty treats that I recommend to usher in the Year of the Rabbit and beyond, come from Christine Toy Johnson, the award-winning playright/actor/filmmaker.

First up is THE NEW DEAL and other plays from The Christine Toy Johnson Portfolio, her anthology of four plays, that are included in the Library of Congress Asian Pacific American Performing Arts Collection, available for purchased on Amazon.com. The book is currently in syllabi at the University of Michigan/Flint (Multi-cultural Drama) and Wesleyan University (Playwriting Workshop), on the required reading list.


The DVD of the award-winning documentary feature Johnson and her husband Bruce Alan Johnson produced, TRANSCENDING – THE WAT MISAKA STORY, about Japanese American basketball star Wat Misaka, the first person of color to be drafted into what is now the NBA by the 1947 New York Knicks, was initially released in April 2010. TRANSCENDING – THE WAT MISAKA STORY had preview screenings across the U.S. in 2009, and garnered multiple festival awards for the couple. The film has since been augmented with an original score by Pixar composer Scot Stafford (Presto), featuring a post script on what effects the film has had on sports history since it previewed (including a special shout out by President Obama!), and is available for purchase on the film’s website, www.watmisaka.com .

More information about the book and other projects Johnson is working on can be found at www.christinetoyjohnson.com.

Related Articles:
Photos:Leviathan Lab’s reading of Christine Toy Johnson’s Adventures of a Faux Designer Handbag
Christine Toy Johnson, U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein, Etsu Mineta Masaoka, Roxanna Saberi to be honored by JACL
Christine Toy Johnson Plays Christmas Eve in AVENUE Q at Weston Playhouse Theatre in Vermont
Dr. Leroy Chiao and Wat Misaka to Receive 2010 OCA Pioneer Awards in Houston
Screening of “Transcending: The Wat Misaka Story”, Kicks Off OCA National Convention and 6th Annual Houston APA Film Festival on June 17; Wat Misaka and Dr. Leroy Chiao to Receive 2010 OCA Pioneer Awards
Harada, Leung, Llana, Johnson, Takara Et Al. Sing Once On This Island on May 16 at Theatre at Saint Peter’s Church
A Helluva Town DVD Release Celebration and Fundraising Concert for Transcending: The Wat Misaka Story
New York Knicks to Honor Wat Misaka at Madison Square Garden
Offical List of Films for the 2009 San Diego Film Festival
Making Work Now: The Asian American Artistic Community
Transcending: The Wat Misaka Story Screens at Rhode Island International Film Festival on 8/8 Wat Misaka: First Person of Color Drafted in NBA
Christine Toy Johnson’s Paper Son at Queens Theatre in the Park Studio Theatre

Other Articles by Lia Chang:
Photos: A.B. Cruz III and Lillian Kimura Receive 2011 AALDEF Justice in Action Awards
Photos of Lion Dancers in Los Angeles Chinatown
Spend Valentine’s Day with André De Shields in The Sovereign State of Boogedy Boogedy at the Abingdon Theatre
Photos: Chinese New Year Festival at The Huntington in San Marino
Kevin Anderson, Catherine Dent, Tracee Chimo, John Earl Jelks in Neil La Bute’s The Break of Noon at the Geffen 1/25-3/6
Photos: David Duchovny, John Earl Jelks, Amanda Peet,Tracee Chimo opening night of Neil LaBute’s The Break of Noon
A.B. Cruz III of Scripps Networks Interactive, Inc., Lillian Kimura To Receive 2011 Justice in Action Awards
Photos:The Working Theater’s Off-Broadway production of HONEY BROWN EYES by Stefanie Zadravec at The Clurman
Jarlath Conroy Leads Cast of Pinter’s The Homecoming at CENTERSTAGE in Baltimore
Reverend Jesse Jackson & Beau Sia slated for 1st Annual Fred Korematsu Day Celebration on 1/30/11 at UC Berkeley
Museum of Chinese in America Programs in Jan.to Celebrate the Lunar New Year in NYC
Sesame Street’s Alan Muraoka & Friends celebrate Lunar New Year at Metropolitan Museum of Art on 2/5
Andy Warhol, Romare Bearden, Alexander Calder, Lia Chang in Art & Healing Exhibit at Snug Harbor on SI
André De Shields leads cast of Charles Smith’s Knock Me A Kiss at Abrons Arts Center
Photos & Video Disney’s The Lion King Las Vegas-In the Makeup Chair with Thom Sesma
Multimedia: Promises, Promises’ Stars Kristin Chenoweth and Sean Hayes at Lord & Taylor Fifth Ave
Click here for the Lia Chang Articles Archive.


Bookmark and Share

All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2011 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com.

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an actor, performance and fine art botanical photographer, and an award-winning multimedia journalist.

As a photographer and videographer, Lia collaborates with artists, organizations and companies in establishing their documentary photo archive and social media presence. She has been documenting her colleagues and contemporaries in the arts, fashion and journalism since making her stage debut as Liat in the National Tour of South Pacific, with Robert Goulet and Barbara Eden.

This year, selections of Lia’s archive of Asian Pacific Americans in the arts, fashion, journalism, politics and space will become part of newly created LIA CHANG THEATER PHOTOGRAPHY PORTFOLIO in the ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN PERFORMING ARTS COLLECTION housed in the Library of Congress Asian Division’s Asian American Pacific Islander Collection.

Lia’s portraits and performance photos have appeared in Vanity Fair, Gourmet, German Elle, Women’s Wear Daily, The Paris Review, TV Guide, Daily Variety, Interior Design, American Theatre, Broadwayworld.com, Life & Style, OUT, New York Magazine, InStyle, Timeout.com, Villagevoice.com, Playbill.com, Theatermania.com, thelmagazine.com, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, USA Today, The Boston Globe, New York Times and Washington Post. A former syndicated arts and entertainment columnist for KYODO News, Lia is the New York Bureau Chief for AsianConnections.com. She writes about culture, style and Asian American issues for a variety of publications and this Backstage Pass with Lia Chang blog.

Lia Chang: Photo Call of BD Wong and the Cast of Heading East at the Asia Society

BD Wong as Siu Yee Tong in Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang

BD Wong as Siu Yee Tong in Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang


Tonight I am going to the staged concert performance of Heading East, a Richard Rodgers Development Award-winning musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, starring BD Wong, Cindy Cheung, Fay Ann Lee, Manu Narayan, Lydia Gaston, MaryAnn Hu, Ming Lee, Angela Lin, Kelvin Moon Loh, Hazel Anne Raymundo, Jon Norman Schneider and Rodney To, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York.
BD Wong (center) and the cast of Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang

BD Wong (center) and the cast of Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang


Tonight’s show is sold out, but you can still get tickets to the May 25th and 26th performances through the box office 212-517-ASIA or Tickets.AsiaSociety.org. Proceeds from the Heading East concert performances, directed by Darren Lee and co-produced by Andrew Asnes, will benefit the Asia Society.
BD Wong (center) and the cast of Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang

BD Wong (center) and the cast of Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang


Heading East is set primarily in San Francisco from 1848-1981. This funny yet gripping musical tells the story of Siu Yee Tong, a brazen young man who travels from drought- and famine-ridden China to the shores of Gold Rush-era California determined to be the next great American success story. Siu Yee’s lifelong quest to reinvent himself plays out against the tumultuous backdrop of a century and a half of American history: although the narrative spans 133 years, the characters age over the course of a single lifetime.
Manu Narayan (center) and the cast of Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang

Manu Narayan (center) and the cast of Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang


BD Wong as Siu Yee Tong in Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang

BD Wong as Siu Yee Tong in Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang


Actor BD Wong who portrays Siu Yee Tong, currently plays FBI forensic psychiatrist Dr. George Huang on the long-running NBC series Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. Broadway debut: M. Butterfly (Outer Critics’ Circle Award, Drama Desk Award, Theatre World Award, Clarence Derwent Award, Tony Award). Films include: The Freshman, Father of the Bride (1 & 2), Jurassic Park, And the Band Played On, Seven Years in Tibet, Executive Decision, Slappy and the Stinkers, Mulan (1 & 2), The Salton Sea, Stay. Six seasons as Father Ray Mukada on HBO’s Oz. Other Broadway: Pacific Overtures, Face Value, You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown. Author of the critically acclaimed memoir Following Foo (The Electronic Adventures of the Chestnut Man) (Harper Collins). Other Off-Broadway and regional theatre: Shanghai Moon, As Thousands Cheer, A Language of Their Own, and four productions of Herringbone.
 Cindy Cheung in Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang

Cindy Cheung in Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang


Robert Lee (Books & Lyrics) is a lyricist and librettist whose original musicals include Journey to the West (music by Leon Ko), Heading East (music by Ko) and The Sweet By and By (book and music by Maria .S. Seigenthaler). His work as a music director includes the recordings Stage 1 and Stage 2. He and Ko received the Richard Rodgers Development Award for Heading East and an AT&T First Stage Grant for their musical Chinese Hell, the latter developed with producer Margo Lion and San Francisco’s American Conservatory Theater. Most recently, Robert and Leon were commissioned by East of Doheny to create a musical stage adaptation of Jean Kerr’s Please Don’t Eat the Daisies. They are currently at work on an original musical for London’s Theatre Royal Stratford East with a planned 2011 opening. Robert is an alumnus of Princeton University and the Graduate Musical Theatre Writing Program at NYU’s Tisch School Of The Arts (where he currently serves on the faculty), and is an Artistic Associate at TRSE, where he leads its Musical Theatre Writing Workshop with composer Fred Carl (the workshop is the subject of the 2005 film Rappin’ at the Royal from Blast Films).
Angela Lin and Rodney To in Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang

Angela Lin and Rodney To in Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang


Leon Ko (Music)
Leon Ko’s music for The Good Person of Szechwan, The Legend of the White Snake and Field of Dreams won Best Score honors at the 2003, 2006 and 2009 Hong Kong Drama Awards. He and collaborator Robert Lee received a Richard Rodgers Development Award for their musical Heading East. For his work on the film Perhaps Love, he received a Golden Horse Award for Best Original Film Song, a CASH Golden Sail Music Award for Best Alternative Composition as well as a Hong Kong Film Award, an Asia-Pacific Film Festival Award and a Golden Bauhinia award for Best Film Score. He was nominated for a Golden Horse Award and a Hong Kong Film Award in 2008 for his score to the film The Warlords. He was the music director of Hong Kong pop legend Jacky Cheung’s 2004 world tour of Snow.Wolf.Lake, and The Year of Jacky Cheung World Tour ’07, penning a 30-minute musical for the latter. In 2006, he wrote a new opening song and incidental music for the classic Cantonese opera Princess Changping for Chor Fung Ming Troupe. In 2009, he wrote an opening number and finale for Liza Wang’s musical Liza the Diva. Other works include the scores to the movie Mr. Cinema, the stage musical Angel Falls for Hong Kong Dance and the stage play Cross-Mopolitan for Chung Ying Theatre. Leon is currently working on a stage adaptation of Please Don’t Eat the Daisies for the New York stage.
Manu Narayan in Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang

Manu Narayan in Heading East, a musical by Robert Lee and Leon Ko, at the Lila Acheson Wallace Auditorium at Asia Society in New York, May 24-26, 2010. © Lia Chang


Darren Lee (Director)
Directing and/or Choreography, Broadway: Associate Choreographer, Pacific Overtures. New York: Bronx Express (Fringe Festival), Andy Warhol Was Right (NYMF), Stephen Sondheim’s 75th Birthday Celebration (New Amsterdam). Regional: The Music Man (Oregon Shakespeare Festival), Miss Saigon (St. Louis MUNY, Paper Mill Playhouse, Music Theatre of Wichita), Kiss Me, Kate (Glimmerglass Opera Festival), Herringbone (La Jolla Playhouse, McCarter Theatre and Williamstown Theatre Festival), Up in the Air (Japan Festival, Washington, DC), Thoroughly Modern Millie (Diamond Head Theatre, HI), Chicago (Riverside Theatre, FL), Carnival (UNLV), Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (Westchester Broadway), Pacific Overtures (North Shore, Cincinnati Playhouse, Atlanta Alliance), Jesus Christ Superstar, Aida, Joseph and the Amazing…, The Fantasticks (MUNY), Guys and Dolls (Trinity University, TX), High School Musical (Lyric Theatre, La Comedia, Casa Mañana), High School Musical 2 (Lyric Theatre), and Christmas with the Symphony 2007-2009 (Omaha Symphony).

Lex Liang (Production design)
Lex Liang’s work includes scenic and costume design for theatre, film and dance, as well as architectural interior design and project management. Liang’s recent theatre work includes (NYC/Off-Broadway): The Yellow Wood (NYMF), Secrets of a Soccer Mom (Snapple Theater), After Luke/When I Was God (Irish Rep., Tina Santi Flaherty Award nomination for Best Design of a Play), and Made in Heaven (SoHo Playhouse). He was Resident Scenic and Costume Designer at Penobscot Theatre for 3 years, designing over 25 productions – most recently Spunk and Hedwig and the Angry Inch (as guest artist). Design for dance includes Gibney Dance at Baryshnikov Dance Center, Unbounded for the Internationale Tanzmesse in Dusseldorf, Germany, and View Partially Obstructed in Montreal. Liang’s film work includes Love is Hell and The Louisiana Conversation, both shot in NYC. His architectural design projects include RED, a vintage boutique in the East Village; Lemonade, a children’s boutique on the Upper East Side; VBAR St. Marks, a bar and restaurant in the East Village; and most recently 25 Park, a women’s l’atelier boutique on the Upper East Side, Bridgehampton, and Malibu. He is a 2010 Princess Grace Award nominee for theatrical design.

Andrew Asnes (Co-producer)
Andrew Asnes has produced, for Broadway: Superior Donuts, All My Sons, Legally Blonde the musical, The Color Purple Musical, as well as the National Tours of: Legally Blonde the Musical, The Color Purple Musical and the original cast album of Legally Blonde the Musical. As a performer, he has appeared on Broadway in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and Jumpers. Previous to Broadway, Mr. Asnes was a lead dancer for 11 years with The Paul Taylor Dance Company.

Click here for more photos of Robert Lee and Leon Ko’s Heading East at the Asia Society.

All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2010 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. for permission, please contact Lia at liachang@hotmail.com.

Lia Chang Photo by Brianne Michelle Photography

Lia Chang Photo by Brianne Michelle Photography

Lia Chang is an actor, performance and fine art botanical photographer, and an award-winning multimedia journalist.

As a photographer and videographer, Lia collaborates with artists, organizations and companies in establishing their documentary photo archive and social media presence. She has been documenting her colleagues and contemporaries in the arts, fashion and journalism since making her stage debut as Liat in the National Tour of South Pacific, with Robert Goulet and Barbara Eden. Lia currently plays Nurse Lia on “One Life to Live”. She has appeared in Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and “New York Undercover”.

Selections of Lia’s archive of Asian Pacific Americans in the arts, fashion, journalism, politics and space are in the newly created LIA CHANG THEATER PHOTOGRAPHY PORTFOLIO in the ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN PERFORMING ARTS COLLECTION housed in the Library of Congress Asian Division’s Asian American Pacific Islander Collection.

Lia’s portraits and performance photos have appeared in Vanity Fair, Gourmet, German Elle, Women’s Wear Daily, The Paris Review, TV Guide, Daily Variety, Interior Design, American Theatre, Broadwayworld.com, Life & Style, OUT, New York Magazine, InStyle, Timeout.com, Villagevoice.com, Playbill.com, Theatermania.com, thelmagazine.com, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, USA Today, The Boston Globe, New York Times and Washington Post. A former syndicated arts and entertainment columnist for KYODO News, Lia is the New York Bureau Chief for AsianConnections.com. She writes about culture, style and Asian American issues for a variety of publications and this Backstage Pass with Lia Chang blog.

Other Articles by Lia Chang
Hollywood Chinese: The Arthur Dong Collection Exhibition at the Chinese American Museum in Los Angeles, has been extended through November 7, 2010
BD Wong to Star in Heading East at Asia Society, May 24-26Multimedia: BD Wong, Anastasia Barzee, Clarke Thorell, Cindy Cheung and Orville Mendoza at Rattlestick Playwrights Theaters’ Musical Mix ‘n’ Mingle
BD Wong, Anastasia Barzee, Cindy Cheung and Orville Mendoza in Rattlestick’s Musical Mix ‘n’ Mingle
Lia Chang’s Botanical Beauties Portrait Commission at School of Nursing at Kings County Hospital Center
Multimedia: Promises, Promises’ Stars Kristin Chenoweth and Sean Hayes at Lord & Taylor Fifth Ave
Multimedia: The 52nd Street Project Benefit Photos: Michael Cerveris, James Monroe Inglehart, Rebecca Naomi Jones, Matthew Morrison, Greg Naughton and Kelli O’Hara
Multimedia: George Takei, Nancy Kwan, Lisa Lu and Tsai Chin attend Hollywood Chinese: The Arthur Dong Collection Exhibition Opening Night
The Chinese American Museum partners with Academy award nominated filmmaker Arthur Dong on a groundbreaking exhibition about Hollywood’s forgotten past
In Arthur Dong’s Hollywood Chinese, Chinese Tinseltown Tales told by Asian Silver Screen Icons
ONE Musical stars Paolo Montalban, Manu Narayan, Pearl Sun and Michael Winther
BD Wong Stars in the La Jolla Playhouse Production of Herringbone, August 1-30
Denise Burse and Peter Jay Fernandez Featured in INTAR Reading of Andrew Dolan’s The Many Mistresses of Martin Luther King, 9/21-22
Multimedia-Photos and Video: Disney’s The Lion King Las Vegas- In the Makeup Chair with Thom Sesma
Crafting a Career
Making the Fred Korematsu Day of Civil Liberties and the Constitution Bill a Reality
Photos by Lia Chang at the Shanghai World Expo 2010’s USA Pavilion, Library of Congress and Hollywood Chinese: The Arthur Dong Collection in L.A.
Click here for the Lia Chang Articles Archive.

Lia Chang: Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival Lineup

2009 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival

2009 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival

The 2009 Philadelphia Asian American Film Festival, presented by the Philadelphia Asian American Film & Filmmakers and sponsored by HBO, runs from October 9-11, 2009 at the Ibrahim Theater at iHouse and the Asian Arts Initiative in Philadelphia, PA.

This year, the Festival will showcase 6 feature films, 5 documentaries, 29 short films, with a Q & A featuring rising Hollywood star and University of Pennsylvania alum Aaron Yoo (Disturbia, 21), in addition to parties and networking opportunities. For the latest updates on the Festival check out the official website.

Tze Chun's Children of Invention

Tze Chun's Children of Invention


NARRATIVE FEATURES
Opening Night Film – Children of Invention Tze Chun & Mynette Louie
Centerpiece Presentation – Formosa Betrayed Adam Kane & Will Tiao
Closing Night Film – Story of Wine Cheol-ha Lee & Cha Seung-jae
Karma Calling Sarba Das & Sarthak Das
Second Moon Masahiro Sugano & Sanghoon Lee
Why Am I Doing This? Tom Huang & N.D. Brown
Barnali Das and Samrat Chakrabarti in Karma Calling

Barnali Das and Samrat Chakrabarti in Karma Calling


DOCUMENTARIES
Operation Babylift Tammy Nguyen Lee
A Song For Ourselves Tadashi Nakamura
Sounds of New Hope Eric Tandoc
A Village Called Versailles S. Leo Chiang
Whatever It Takes Christopher Wong
Christopher Wong's Whatever It Takes

Christopher Wong's Whatever It Takes


SHORT FILMS
Blood Colony Jacob Holcomb
Boba and Melon Gum Alice Park
Cotabato City Karen Lin
Evolution Kenji Lui
Fine Threads Adele Pham
Fortune Cooking Jason Karman
Foxes Rob Schwartz
Half Kenneth Ken Ochiai
The Humberville Poetry Slam Emily Chang
I Don’t Sleep I Dream J.P. Chan
Imprint Van Blumreich
In Search of Colors Will Kim
Interpretation Lin Oeding
Let Old Ghosts Rest Gregory Cooke
The Letter Kris Mendoza
Lui Lui in America Vera Wing Lui
Manoj Zia Mohajerjasbi & Hari Kondabolu
Memory Block Hari Alluri
Motoo Bao Nguyen & Adele Pham
Mr. Cupcakes Angela Chen
Pho Dac Biet Christina Tran
Plan B Kaidy Kuna
Seen/Unseen Sara Suleman
Subconscious Jason Chen
Survivors Soham Mehta
Tatang Jean “Nico” Paolo
The Veiled Commodity Vinh Dickson
Wake Up Dawen Wang


Bookmark and Share

Related Articles:
Hollywood Chinese “The Arthur Dong Collection” on view at the Chinese American Museum in Los Angeles in October
Samrat Chakrabarti is featured in Claire McCarthy’s The Waiting City, which screens at the Toronto International Film Festival
AAIFF 09 Closing Night Awards and H.P. Mendoza’s Fruit Fly
AAIFF Karma Calling, You Don’t Know Jack and Children of Invention
Jeff Adachi’s You Don’t Know Jack and Tzi Chun’s Children of Invention Screen at AAIFF 09
Multimedia: AAIFF 09 Opening Night Screening of Claustrophobia
Schedule at a Glance: Asian American International Film Festival AAIFF 2009
Transcending: The Wat Misaka Story Screens at Rhode Island International Film Festival on 8/8
Japan Cuts Festival of New Japanese Film
BD Wong Stars in La Jolla Production of Herringbone 8/1-8/30
Asian American International Film Festival 09 runs 7/23-7/26
NAATCO’s LOVE! VALOUR! COMPASSION! with special guest Terrence McNallyNAATCO’s pitch perfect Falsettoland hits all the right notes
David Henry Hwang’s Yellow Face starring Francis Jue, Pun Bandu and Thomas Azar at TheatreWorks through 9/20Nothing is Sacred in David Henry Hwang’s Comedy of Mistaken Racial Identity
Francis Jue, At Home on the Stage
Flower Drum Song: An American Story
ONE Musical stars Paolo Montalban, Manu Narayan, Pearl Sun and Michael Winther
The Bacchae Opening Night photos: Andre De Shields, Jonathan Groff and Anthony Mackie
Herringbone is BD Wong’s Tour de Force
In Arthur Dong’s Hollywood Chinese, Chinese Tinseltown Tales told by Asian Silver Screen Icons
Wat Misaka, First Person of Color Drafted in NBA
BD Wong Performs in Symphony Space’s Wall to Wall Broadway
Thom Sesma Stars as Scar in Disney’s The Lion King at Mandalay Bay
Review: HBO’s China’s Unnatural Disaster the Tears of Sichuan Province
BD Wong Performs in Symphony Space’s Wall to Wall Broadway
Amuse-Bouche with BD Wong
David Henry Hwang, Kathryn Layng and BD Wong at the Asian American Writers Workshop Literary Awards
Thom Sesma, Peter Kim, Andrew Cristi Star in Durango
BD Wong is a Tour de Force in Herringbone
Amuse Bouche with Manu Narayan
The Romance of Magno Rubio
Spotlight on Shanghai Moon’s Thom Sesma

Lia Chang Multimedia: AAIFF 09 Opening Night Screening of Claustrophobia


It was standing room only last night at the New York premiere of Ivy Ho’s Claustrophobia, starring Karena Lam, Ekin Cheng, Felix Lok, Derek Tsang, Chucky Woo, Eric Tsang and Andy Hui, which kicked off the 32nd Asian American International Film Festival, presented by Asian CineVison, at Clearview Chelsea Cinemas.

The screening was followed by a brief Q & A with screenwriter and director Ivy Ho, moderated by Asia Society’s La Frances Hu, Senior Program Officer of Cultural Programs and Performing Arts at the Asia Society. Ms. Hui will conduct a One-on-One with director Ivy Ho on Saturday, July 25 at 3pm @ MOCA. One-on-One with Ivy Ho

After the Q&A, opening night attendees were shuttled in Toyotas to BLVD on the Lower East Side for the afterparty.

This year’s slate includes 14 feature films, 50 short films, panels, workshops and film receptions. The films will be screened at three locations: Clearview Chelsea Cinemas, 260 West 23rd St, across the street at the brand new School of Visual Arts Theater, and the new Museum of Chinese in America building, 215 Centre St. (between Howard and Grand Sts.), one block north of Canal St.

The Centerpiece Presentation on Saturday, July 25, will showcase a festival circuit favorite, Children of Invention, directed by Tze Chun. Concluding the festival will be the Closing Night Presentation, the New York Premiere of Fruit Fly, a musical comedy directed by H.P. Mendoza.

The 32nd Asian American International Film Festival (AAIFF) runs through July 26, 2009.

Friday 7.24.09
5pm @ MOCA Home Is Where the Heart Is, Canada, South Korea, USA
Immigration is more than a series of border crossings. Whether in New York, San Francisco, or Taiwan, the immigrants in these shorts must reconcile their places in the new world with their foundations in the old. Their lives, by choice or by force, plot a new course for the meaning of “home.”

Included shorts:
The Veiled Commodity, dir. Dickson Chow, Vinh Chung
A Green Mountain in the Drawer, dir. Hwa Jun Lee
20 30 40, dir. Mei-Yu Lee
Here to Stay, dir. ManSee Kong
Lower East Side: An Endangered Place, dir. MA Shumin

Ngawang Choephel's Tibet in Song

Ngawang Choephel's Tibet in Song


6pm @ Clearview Chelsea Tibet In Song, USA
Dir: Ngawang Choephel
Ethnomusicologist Ngawang Choephel travels across Tibet to record and study the rich diversity of traditional folk songs but is arrested by the Chinese government for suspected espionage.

Director Ngawang Choephel will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.

Sarba Das' Karma Calling

Sarba Das' Karma Calling


6:15pm @ SVA Karma Calling, USA
Dir: Sarba Das
Cast: Darshan Jariwala, Sulekha Das, Gargi Mukherjee, Samrat Chakrabarti, Kavi Ladnier
The Raj family is definitely not a household comprised of your stereotypical Asian model minorities living the American Dream. On top of the family’s troubled finances, the family hosts a recently widowed relative, Mausi, a fount of comic disasters.

Director Sarba Das, Co-writer/Producer Sarthak Das, Producer Rita Parikh, Kavi Ladnier, Gargi Mukerjee, and Samrat Chakrabarti will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.

7pm @ Tribeca Cinemas
Work-In-Progress Workshop
Anna May Wong: In Her Own WordsIndependent film producer Karin Chien leads our annual WORK IN PROGRESS program, which guides filmmakers through the process of molding an unfinished work into the final cut. This event was organized as part of the Media Coalition for Artists of Color Networking Salon. Admission is free for all members of Media Coalition organizations.

Anna May Wong was the first Asian American actress to achieve critical acclaim in Hollywood, ultimately becoming a fashion icon and international starlet. Her success in the face of overt racism and discrimination has fascinated historians and filmmakers alike. This new documentary is staged from the dressing room of her one woman cabaret show in Europe during the late 1930s. Relying on primary source material from the actress herself, filmmaker Yunah Hong interweaves reenactments of the show with archive footage and interview clips to finally tell the story of Wong’s life in her own words.

Space is limited, so please RSVP in advance if you wish to attend this program by clicking the “Purchase Tickets” link above or by emailing wips@asiancinevision.org.

Director Yunah Hong will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.
72HOUR500
7:15pm @ MOCA 72 Hour Shootout
View the top 10 films from the Asian American Film Lab’s 6th annual 72 Hour Shootout, a competition in which teams have 72 grueling hours to write, shoot, and edit a short film on a surprise theme. This year’s surprise theme is TIME’S UP.

This program is presented by the AAFilmlab, a collaborative of New York based Asian American filmmakers who meet regularly to hone their craft and to share resources. Please visit aafilmlab.org for more information.

Hubad by Mark Gary and Denisa Reyes

Hubad by Mark Gary and Denisa Reyes


8:45pm @ Clearview Chelsea Hubad, Phillipines
Dir: Mark Gary and Denisa Reyes
Cast: Peque Gallaga, Irma Adlawan, Nonie Buencamino
In a conservative atmosphere, theater director Andre tries to break new ground with a hyper sexual play. He faces obstacles in funding his project and working with his actors, but passion ignites between the two middle aged leads as theater and life becomes intertwined.

Directors Mark Gary and Denisa Reyes will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.

Adam Kane's Formosa Betrayed

Adam Kane's Formosa Betrayed


8:45pm @ SVA Formosa Betrayed, USA
Dir: Adam Kane
Cast: James Van Der Beek, Wendy Crewson, Will Tiao, Kenneth Tsang
FBI agent Jake Kelly’s investigation of a loved professor’s murder leads him to Taiwan, where he finds that the killers are part of a terrible web of politics that he only starts to cut through when he finds a friend in a local activist.

Director/Producer Adam Kane, Producer/Writer/Actor Will Tiao, and Actor Tzi Ma will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.
10pm @ SLATE AAIFF SoundMiX
The AAIFF SoundMiX showcases an eclectic range of music videos from up and coming artists. With live performances by Big Phony, P.I.C., and Guest DJ set by Ahmed Hashim!

Slate
54 West 21st St.
New York, NY 10010

10:00 p.m. – 2:00 a.m. (Doors open at 9:00 p.m.)
Free for guests with same day festival ticket. Must present stub at the door.
$5 General admission for the entire night.
21+

Music videos being screened include:

YOU WILL REMEMBER
Lumaya
Dir. Yasmine Gomez
Trt. 4 min.

HUNT
OK|OK
Dir. Yohei Ito, Shingo Igata
Trt. 2:20 min.

RETURN OF THE B-GIRL
Masia One
Dir. Cazhmere
Trt. 3:31 min.

BAG OF HAMMERS
Thao With the Get Down Stay Down
Dir. Norman Foreman
Trt. 3:02 min.

WORDS THAT DEFINE
Big Phony
Dir. Chris Chan Lee
Trt. 5:00 min.

DANCE LIKE MICHAEL JACKSON
Far East Movement
Dir. Wong Fu Productions
Trt. 5:00 min.

Saturday 7.25.09
12pm @ MOCA
Youth Shorts Program
Through the medium of film, these young artists who are all under the age of 21 document the issues surrounding them. They provide fresh perspectives on subjects that might ordinarily be overlooked by their seniors.

Included shorts:
Vote for Change, dir. Clin Xu
America’s Next Top Immigrant, dir. Daichka Danastar, Theodore Duleh, Frantzsis Casimir, Caleale Goodridge, Natacha Jean, Tatiana Lam Lo, Corina Leu, Jean Tejada, Sarah Singh, Godwina Titus
Free Matt Wong, dir. Akio Mitsunaga
That Ain’t Right, dir. Rayhan Islam and Ericka Vasquez
Ayi’s Story, dir. Iemi Hernandez-Kim
Ladies in Armor, dir. Masami Kubo
Dick, Dick & Jane: The Modern American Family, dir. Mari Jacobson
Beautify Our Town, dir. Bingie Huang
Splinters, dir. Nancy Huang
12pm @ Clearview Chelsea Karma Calling, USA
Dir: Sarba Das
Cast: Darshan Jariwala, Sulekha Das, Gargi Mukherjee, Samrat Chakrabarti, Kavi Ladnier
The Raj family is definitely not a household comprised of your stereotypical Asian model minorities living the American Dream. On top of the family’s troubled finances, the family hosts a recently widowed relative, Mausi, a fount of comic disasters.

Director Sarba Das, Co-writer/Producer Sarthak Das, Producer Rita Parikh, Kavi Ladnier, Gargi Mukerjee, and Samrat Chakrabarti will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.

Preceded by Incongruent Body.
2:15pm @ MOCA Love, Lust, & Desire, Taiwan, Australia, USA, Singapore, Brazil, South Korea
(this is a short films program)
total running time: 1hr 26m
Love, be it between father and daughter or husband and wife, often comes with a price. Things are not always what they seem; sometimes love leads you to very dark places. This series of shorts dares viewers to journey into the hearts and minds of women who must challenge gender roles in the face of familial dictatorship, loneliness, sexuality and jealousy.

Included shorts:
The Eighteenth Birthday Party, dir. Ching-Shen Chuang
Aquarium, dir. Motoko Shimizu
The Perfect Woman, dir. Anthony Ma
Laura, dir. Jon Maxwell
Like Crazy (à la folie), dir. Sanif Olek
26, Best Korean Girl (Om Tchin A), dir. Paula Un Mi Kim

One on one with Ivy Ho

One on one with Ivy Ho


3pm @ MOCA One-on-One with Ivy Ho
One of Hong Kong’s most celebrated film writers, Ivy Ho makes her directorial debut with 2009’s CLAUSTROPHOBIA. Born in Hong Kong, Ivy began writing screenplays when she was nineteen years old. As a young woman, she wrote numerous scripts for television on a freelance basis while tending to a full-time career in public relations and advertising. Her career breakthrough was the 1996 success of COMRADES: ALMOST A LOVE STORY, which was directed by Peter Chan.

Ivy continued to write screenplays to critical and popular acclaim, winning awards for her contributions to Ann Hui’s JULY RHAPSODY in 2001 and Benny Chan’s DIVERGENCE in 2005. Her work has covered a wide range of genres, from romantic love stories to suspenseful crime thrillers. In this rare chance to meet Ivy in person, the esteemed filmmaker will discuss her creative process as a screenwriter as well as the challenges and discoveries that come with her new role as a director.

Moderated by La Frances Hui, Senior Program Officer of Cultural Programs and Performing Arts at the Asia Society.

Jeff Adachi's You Don't Know Jack

Jeff Adachi's You Don't Know Jack


3:30pm @ Clearview Chelsea You Don’t Know Jack, USA
Dir: Jeff Adachi
Way before Harold and Kumar’s search for sliders, before we learned about Drifting in Tokyo’s parking structures, and before the All-American Girl Margaret Cho’s foray into network television, there was Jack Soo.

You Don’t Know Jack, reveals the inspiring story of Jack Soo, who grew up in Oakland as Goro Suzuki. Soo, a six-foot-tall man who was turned down for hundreds of roles because he was too tall for an Asian, is an extraordinary example of someone who followed his dreams to be an actor, but refused to play stereotypical roles. An intimate look at comedy, community, and ethnic identity, the film features rare photographs of Soo’s life and career and fond recollections by his daughter, fellow cast members, high-school friends, and fans. Filmmaker Jeff Adachi has created a film that demands not only that we know Soo and his legacy, but also that we learn from his spirit, which was alive and unyielding, in spite of the discrimination of his time.

Director Jeff Adachi will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.
4:30pm @ MOCA Life On The Edge, USA, Singapore
this is a short films program)
total running time: 1hr 08m
This series of documentaries highlights the lives of those who, in their pursuit of an ideal, cannot afford to take anything for granted. Standing up for the displaced, the marginalized, and the silenced, the figures in these films aren’t larger than life. This, in fact, is what makes their stories so vital.

Included shorts:
Crossing Midnight, dir. Kim Snyder
A Song for Ourselves, dir. Tadashi Nakamura
Story of a Businesswoman, dir. Mikiko Sasaki
No Joke Burma, dir. Li-Anne Huang
4:45pm @ SVA White on Rice, USA
Dir: David Boyle
Cast: Hiroshi Watanabe
Hung up over his divorce and sharing a room with his 10 year-old nephew, Jimmy can’t even keep a job without help from brother-in-law, Tak. When Jimmy falls for Tak’s niece, Ramona, it seems like he may be heading for trouble, but all is not yet lost in this quest for love.

Director David Boyle and Actor Hiroshi Watanabe will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.
6pm @ Clearview Chelsea Whatever It Takes, USA
The first year of the Bronx Center of Science and Mathematics is documented in this film. With a stated mission of patching the cracks in the education system, it’s clear that the odds are stacked against it.

Director Christopher Wong and Edward Tom, Principal of Bronx Center for Science and Mathematics, will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.

Preceded by The Call Center.
6:45pm @ MOCA Here…Look At Me, USA, South Korea, Japan, Canada
(this is a short films program)
total running time: 1hr 31m
Identity is more than the sum of innate qualities—when born out of minority status, it can emerge as a form of personal creation. Here, we witness stories of individuals and communities whose identities reveal as much about their environments as they do about themselves.

Included shorts:
Fragmented Identities, dir. Stevan Mraovitch
Witness to Hiroshima, dir. Kathy Sloane
Incongruent Body, dir. Jian Lee
Beautiful Sisters, dir. Connie Chung
Red, Yellow, & Blue, dir. Changhee Chun
You Can Call Me Nikkie, dir. Irene Herrera
I Want to be a Desi 2, dir. Allan Tong
State of Yo, dir. Jason Karman
Waiting for a Train, dir. Oscar Bucher

Tze Chun's Children of Invention

Tze Chun's Children of Invention


7:45pm @ SVA Centerpiece Presentation: Children of Invention, USA
Dir: Tze Chun
Cast: Cindy Cheung, Michael Chen, Crystal Chiu, Stephen Gevedon
When their home is foreclosed on, the Cheng family moves into a unit in an unfinished apartment building, pushing mother and children to look for ways to pull in some extra income.

Director Tze Chun and actors Cindy Cheung and Crystal Chiu will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.

To be followed by a reception at 310 Lounge.

9pm @ Clearview Chelsea Li Tong, China
Dir: Nian Liu
Cast: ZhIcun Zhao
Li Tong, a restless young girl, loses her bus pass one day after school. Her meandering trip home is the thread of this poignant “day in the life” tale, which wends its way through the various homes, personae and urban landscapes of contemporary Beijing.

Director Nian Liu and Producer Grady Granros will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.

Preceded by Tatang.

Curtis Choy's Manilatown is in the Heart

Curtis Choy's Manilatown is in the Heart


Sunday 7.26.09
12pm @ Clearview Chelsea
Manilatown is in the HeartUSA
Dir: Curtis Choy
A documentary about the Manongs in San Francisco’s Manilatown and a look into the life of the late poet Al Robles, Manilatown Is In the Heart is a touching eulogy to an activist/historian who was outlived by the vanishing subject that he strived to preserve.

Preceded by A Song for Ourselves.
12pm @ MOCA Family Matters, Philippines, China, USA, France, Taiwan
(this is a short films program)
total running time: 1hr 28m
Family is taken to be a foundation, but in reality is a process: sometimes graceful, sometimes turbulent. This series of films exposes family members in moments of change and explores the motions of their growth as well as their dissolution.
Included shorts:
Tatang, dir. Jean Paolo (Nico) Hernandez
I Love Lakers, dir. Ying Liang
Arithmetic Lesson, dir. Wenhwa Ts’ao
Tiger, dir. Wing-Yee Wu
Family Viewing (Sèance Familiale), dir. Cheng-Chui Kuo
1pm @ MOCA Screenplay Reading: The Emperor has Arrived
Dir: Jay Paramsothy
“The Emperor Has Arrived” is a fish-out-of-water tale that centers on Raj Selvam, a cynical young Indian-American architect whose estranged father suddenly dies. Raj and his sister, Kavita, fly from New York City to Malaysia, where he must unexpectedly perform his father’s Hindu funeral ceremonies. Against a vibrant Malaysian backdrop, Raj performs an often-comical assortment of funeral rites, from washing his father’s body with coconut oil to bathing in the local river, all under the watchful eyes of his gregarious – and often bossy – Indian relatives. Meanwhile, Raj grows increasingly suspicious of his Uncle Siva, the family patriarch, whom he suspects of stealing his father’s will. As his father’s mysterious past slowly comes to light, Raj eventually discovers a long-hidden secret, one which has the power to change him, and the entire family, forever.

“The Emperor Has Arrived” was written by Jay Paramsothy and Catherine Torphy.

Admission to the Screenplay Reading is free, and complimentary tickets will be available at the venue beforehand on a first come, first serve basis.
2:15pm @ MOCA Fun & Fantasy, USA, Canada, Taiwan
this is a short films program)
total running time: 1hr 33m
Ranging from boisterous humor to out-of-body experiences, this set of shorts takes as much pleasure in bending reality as it does in making light of it. These films capture the whimsical, the supernatural, and the unexpected with a variety of takes on life.
Included shorts:
Civilian, dir. Seaton Lin
The Call Center, dir. Rumana Huq
Fate Scores, dir. Albert M. Chan
The Humberville Poetry Slam, dir. Daniel De Lorenzo, Emily Chang
Take Out, dir. Gerry Kim
I Don’t Sleep I Dream, dir. J.P. Chan
Walking While Sleeping, dir. Han Lee
Once…, dir. YuYing Chien
My Four Inch Precious, dir. Sou Yun Sim

2:45pm @ Clearview Chelsea Pastry, Hong Kong
Dir: Risky Liu
The youngest in a long line of daughters traces the story of her life through the weddings of her sisters. As each member of the family comes to terms with her own womanhood, a simple egg tart becomes the anchor of their experiences and emotions.

Director Risky Liu will be in attendance and available for Q&A after the film.

Preceded by The Eighteenth Birthday Party.
3:30pm @ MOCA Copyright Panel
As technology evolves, the area that copyright laws govern has become more and more grey, spawning much debate on ownership and sharing. Join the discussion on this relevant topic for artists in a new era of media.
4:30pm @ MOCA CUNY Shorts Program
In collaboration with Asian American/ Asian Research Institute at the City University of New York, AAIFF showcases the best short films by CUNY student filmmakers. Covering a whole spectrum of genres including narrative, documentary and experimental films, these eight shorts demonstrate the vibrant energy from students testing the water in film media.
Included shorts:
Conflict Resolution, dir. Pyeunghun Baik
High or Low, dir. Kosuke Ikeda
The Edge of Heaven, dir. Juoak Kim
Julya, dir. Jon-Carlos Evans
Waste: Not in My Back Yard, dir. Youg-Hyun (Brad) Cho
Fantastic Glass Portrait, dir. Munjon Kim
Mama’s Heart, dir. Ben (Siu Pan) Ng

H.P. Mendoza's Fruitfly

H.P. Mendoza's Fruitfly


6pm @ Clearview Chelsea Closing Presentation: Fruit Fly
Dir: H. P. Mendoza
Cast: L.A. Renigen, Mike Curtis, Theresa Navarro, Aaron Zaragoza, E. S. Park
A naughty, fast-paced, punchy romp of a musical, Fruit Fly follows young performance artist Bethesda on her soul-searching journey to find a place for herself while trying her luck in the art scene.

To be followed by a reception at Velour.
AAIFF Website

ABOUT ASIAN CINEVISION (ACV)
Asian CineVision, Inc. is a not-for-profit national media arts organization dedicated to the development, promotion and preservation of film and video arts by and about people of Asian descent. Founded in 1976 by Hong Kong cinema legend Tsui Hark, Oscar-nominated director Christine Choy, Danny Yung, and Peter Chow, ACV began as a media activism organization. The organization continues to serve the Asian American community by promoting the works of Asian and Asian American filmmakers, and providing a window to the diverse experiences and livelihoods of the Asian diaspora. For more information on ACV, please visit www.asiancinevision.org.

ABOUT THE ASIAN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL (AAIFF)
AAIFF is the first and longest running festival in the country devoted to showcasing films created by media artists of Asian descent and about the Asian community. Founded in 1978, AAIFF continues to be a leading showcase for Asian American film and video. For more information on AAIFF ’09, please visit www.aaiff.org.

FESTIVAL SALES: JULY 23-JULY 26
In-Person:
Tickets for programs can only be purchased at their respective venues.
Prices & Packages
Regular Screenings
12.50 General
11 Seniors/Students
10 ACV Members

Opening Presentation
50 Screening+Gala (General)
40 Screening+Gala (ACV Members)
30 Screening Only
30 Gala Only

Centerpiece Presentation (+Reception)
15 General
10 ACV Members

Closing Presentation
25 Screening+Gala (General)
20 Screening+Gala (ACV Members)
20 Screening Only
15 Gala Only

Three-for-two tickets valid for three regular screenings
25 General
22 Seniors & Students
20 ACV Members

Three-for-two ticket passes are only available for purchase over the phone & in-person.

All panels and workshops are 10 dollars except for Youth Workshop and Screenplay Reading which are free.

Related Articles:
Related Articles:
AAIFF 09 Closing Night Awards and H.P. Mendoza’s Fruit Fly
AAIFF Karma Calling, You Don’t Know Jack and Children of Invention
Jeff Adachi’s You Don’t Know Jack and Tzi Chun’s Children of Invention Screen at AAIFF 09
Multimedia: AAIFF 09 Opening Night Screening of Claustrophobia
Schedule at a Glance: Asian American International Film Festival AAIFF 2009
BD Wong Stars in La Jolla Production of Herringbone 8/1-8/30
Transcending: The Wat Misaka Story Screens at Rhode Island International Film Festival on 8/8
Japan Cuts Festival of New Japanese Film
Asian American International Film Festival 09 runs 7/23-7/26
In Arthur Dong’s Hollywood Chinese, Chinese Tinseltown Tales told by Asian Silver Screen Icons
Wat Misaka, First Person of Color Drafted in NBA
Review: HBO’s China’s Unnatural Disaster the Tears of Sichuan Province
Mark Shaw, A Retrospective at Monroe Gallery of Photography in Santa Fe
Charmed by Audrey, Life on the Set of Sabrina Book Signing

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 43 other followers