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(The working title is) HOW to Love an Asian Woman
written by Melissa Koh
with Vincent Chong, Juhyung Lee, Nicole Bazelais, Lisa Cisneros, Laura
Green, and Sage Morgan-Hubbard
contact: Melissa Koh
submitted: 2/27/03
2. Main Body: or, "Why I am imploring you all to read this proposal and
take it into serious consideration"
what i want to talk about is family.
this is about my mother, my sisters, and me.
this is because i met my grandmother once, in Korea when i was 14, before
she passed away.
this is about my grandfather, my father.
this is about circles that never break.
this is about my sisters, strong in spirit stretching forever into
faith.
this is because sharing blood means that you are a part of me.
this is for the lifetimes spent kindling the fire inside this one
woman.
this is for centuries upon centuries of memory.
this is for all the ways we can forget in just one lifetime.
this is for acts of insanity committed in the name of something
sacred.
this is for family.
this is my love.
this is for spirit.
this is for living.
this is love.
love letters.
How to Love an Asian Woman is a slam-poetry show.
Spoken-word slam-poetry is a performance art that I believe has
the potential to change the world. Speak the truth. Because when done
with a social conscience, with a true passion for words and performance,
with honesty, and with talent and courage and sense of community...the
power of one poet and one microphone armed with only her words is truly
unlike any speech, concert, or play I have ever seen.
Slam poetry (in case the reader has never seen a truly dynamic poetry
slam) is a form of spoken word that synthesizes theatre, hip-hop, and
spoken-word poetry into listener-palatable pieces that can incorporate
anything from beatboxing to opera. Slam and spoken word have been gaining
popularity in recent years, with Russell Simmons' Def Poetry Jam entering
it's third season on HBO, as well as the nationwide-tour of some of the
best spoken-word-slam-poets in the country-Mayda Del Valle, Lemon, Beau
Sia included-yelling their souls out in (now on-Broadway) the "live"
version of Def Poetry Jam.
Slam poetry is performed in 3-minute-long-poems for purposes of
scoring,
judges, and competition. How to Love will be a series of interlinked,
slam-style poems that adapt the performance and writing aspects of slam.
I envision incorporating more traditional theatre elements into this
piece, such as lighting, blocking, props, and costumes. There are also
pieces in How to Love that call for acoustic guitar, djembe, banjo,
trombone, singing, and a variety of dance.
Please allow me to introduce myself: My name is Melissa Koh, and
I am a senior Ethnic Studies concentrator with a focus in Performance Art,
culminating the script of her year-long senior project-How to Love an
Asian Woman-at the end of March. (I write more about the script-writing
process in this section-please, I hope you will read on.) Although I have
written, directed, and performed at Rites & Reason Theatre since 1998, it
wasn't until last year that I had the honor of performing in my first
Production Workshop play, GoldenChild, by David Henry Hwang.
Last year's GoldenChild was the first time in over ten years that an
Asian-American play had been cast and produced at Brown University, and
even so, in the history of Brown University, it remains one of the few
Asian-American plays, period. While I am not bitter (!), GoldenChild (and
the ensuing Golden Lotus, at Rites & Reason last fall semester) sharply
called my attention to the lack of Asian Americans in the history of Brown
University theatre, and then to the subsequent lack between theatre and
the Asian American community at Brown.
Why am I bringing this up? I am not trying to win a sympathy vote!
No!
I am bringing this up in hopes that the reader of this proposal might
thus
understand my drive to write this collection of pieces.
I believe...I have things to say that I have never seen or heard in any
theatre performance before. I believe...that I would bring a unique,
powerful show to the arts/theatre/activist/Asian/student/human community.
I believe....no, I know! That this is a damn good show, and I'm not just
saying that because I will be writing and performing in this myself!
I believe a week in the space would be an AMAZING opportunity to
produce this show, for two big reasons: 1. resources, 2. the space.
1.) Money + Time = Heaven on Earth.
Typically, slam poets work for free, and receive zero (zero!) time in
their performance space to prepare. One week would be an absolutely
INCREDIBLE opportunity to do everything I have ever wanted to do with
poetry! There would be live music! We could block dances! And poems!
Adding elements of light, music, costume, and dance to the performance
pieces would bring it even closer to a poetry show. Which brings me to
what I cannot stress enough: I have never been in a poetry show with the
monetary resources to pull the performance up to it's maximum potential.
For example: one backdrop? Sewed from 4 bedsheets at 14.99 each? Out of
the question!
2.) The student-friendly atmosphere.
PW is a wonderful space
for many
reasons: the stage, the size, the amazingly receptive communities that
come out to support the productions. I would be thrilled to have the
opportunity to work in this space.
I have had the honor to work with WORD! this 2002-2003 year, a new
poetry performance group on campus (new = zero funding). We had our first
show last fall, in which we just began to uncover the potential we have
together as writers and performers. Since October, I have performed with
them in a variety of venues, from the downtown stage at AS220, to the
Chinese New Year Banquet, to conferences with 900-person audiences. To
prepare for this production, I would want to invite them to collaborate on
some key pieces with me. We would meet weekly between now and the
second-to-last week of April, in two capacities: 1. Monday night
workshops to foster community, self-reflection, material for poetry. 2.
Individual or small-group meetings that be writing-workshops, and
one-on-one direction. Presently, the show is loosely structured around
three themes:
Part I: How to Love Your History
Part II: How to Love Your Family
Part III: How to Love-who do I love and why? (familial, friend,
romantic)
I would like to ask WORD! Members to write around themes of love,
family, and history, in order to spark a dialogue between voices and
contextualize my own experiences. So, this will be a poetry show, and
ostensibly "my" show, but I believe that a lot of the art I create is
focused on the importance of community, and so I would like to do some
performance collaboration with my peers. Our weekly workshops would keep
the community together, and constantly creatively approaching the theme of
"love." And during 1-on-1/small-group meetings I would be able to give and
receive performance input, and keep an eye out for the progress of the
show as a whole. The days before the performance would most likely be:
dry tech, wet tech, tech run, dress rehearsal, and then show.
This is inspired by family, by spirit, by living, by love.
I have tried to convey to you why I have been inspired to write
this piece. All I can think of to say is, How to Love an Asian Woman is a
piece about Me.
And I don't mean just about me in my personal relationships. This
is not purely autobiographical. I have interviewed several Korean
American/women, and translated their experiences with love as best as
possible into pieces of this performance.
But this is a piece about me like I have never seen on a Brown
stage before. Or for that matter, on any stage, anywhere. And if I want
to think in terms of my life growing up as an Asian American woman in the
United States: not in the movies, not on television, not in newspapers,
not anywhere. Ever.
This is inspired because I have never felt that my stories have
been heard.
And on the flip-side, this is inspired because I believe these
stories need to be told.
3. Budget
Publicity: $70
Costumes: $160
Media Service Rentals& Set: $200
Props: $25
Total: $455
4. Staff
Production Manager: Vincent Chong
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