Lydia Gaston channels all Filipino American moms to play Jo Koy's in 'Easter Sunday'

By WALTER ANG
July 20, 2022 | USA.Inquirer.net 

NEW YORK  Seasoned theater actress and dancer Lydia Gaston stars in the crucial role of Tita Susan, the matriarch in Filipino American stand-up comedian Jo Koy's feature film "Easter Sunday." 

Filipino American actor Lydia Gaston (left) in a scene with Jo Koy in the film "Easter Sunday." 
Photo from Amblin Entertainment

Opening in theaters on Aug. 5, the film spotlights Jo Valencia (played by Koy), who returns to his family home "for an Easter week of eating, laughing, drinking and riotous fun." The material draws from Koy's personal experiences and his popular routines.

Audiences familiar with Koy's shows knows how largely his mother looms in his bits. "The woman Lydia [Gaston] that plays my mother, she's phenomenal," Koy says in an interview with Entertainment Weekly. (Koy and girlfriend Chelsea Handler yesterday announced an amicable end to their relationship of one year.)

The film is touted as the first Hollywood studio comedy to showcase an all-Filipino main cast. In addition to Koy and Gaston, other Filipino Americans in the cast include Tia Carrere ("True Lies," "Wayne's World"), Melody Butiu ("Rizzoli & Isles," Off-Broadway and Broadway's "Here Lies Love") and Eva Noblezada (Broadway's "Miss Saigon" and "Hadestown"). Filipino Canadian Elena Juatco is also part of the cast.

Also in the cast are Eugene Cordero ("The Good Place," Disney+'s "Loki"), Joey Guila ("Comedy InvAsian"), Rodney To ("Parks and Recreation," HBO's "Barry"), Brandon Wardell ("Curb Your Enthusiasm"), and Lou Diamond Phillips ("Bluebloods," "Cougar Town").

Excitement

A longtime New Yorker, Gaston hails from Negros Occidental province in the Philippines. Her performing career began with Ballet Philippines where she became a soloist at 16. She moved to New York at 18 to pursue a dance career, eventually working with various dance companies, most prominently with choreographer/playwright Rachel Lampert. She has been in national tours or regional productions of musicals such as "West Side Story" and "South Pacific."

Gaston made her Broadway debut with "Shogun, the Musical." She was most recently in the revival of "The King and I." She has worked with Ma-Yi Theater Group, National Asian American Theatre Company and Pan Asian Rep. She is currently an adjunct professor at Empire State College.

Amalgam

"There were several levels of excitement and disbelief [over several] weeks before I got the final okay," says Gaston of the audition process. "Getting the invitation to submit a self-tape, reading the scenes and loving them, hearing from my agent later to say that they were inquiring about my availability, and then the callback on Zoom with the director Jay Chandrasekhar and Jo Koy."

Lydia Gaston plays Jo Koy's mother in "Easter Sunday."

"I studied some videos of Josie, Jo's mom. She seems very poised and intelligent. Obviously, she's very proud of Jo. Her body language does give me clues that, like most Filipino moms, she's a disciplinarian."

However, as she prepared to create the Tita Susan character, Gaston watched more videos of Koy where he impersonates his mother. "I'm fascinated by the exaggerated version of his mother because woven into it is his response as the recipient of the constant nagging and criticism. I can detect his exasperation with her, his amazement and bafflement at how this woman, his mother, can be completely confident in the ways she thinks she's always right."

"Studying how Jo portrays his mother is seeing an amalgam of Filipino American mothers. And I fit right in. When I first got the [script for the self-tape], I just thought it was so funny and perfect. The way Jo characterizes his mom is very familiar to my ear. I hear my mother's voice and my own voice when I nag or correct my husband and my daughter. My daughter lives in Europe now but my texts to her are always reminders. With my mother in the 1970s, `80s and `90s, she would send me these long letters full of warnings and reminders."

A person with feelings

In addition to mining her personal insights as a mother herself, Gaston also worked on the attributes of her character as a whole. "I think accents, like languages, open up different sides to our personality. I do have, I think, a pretty authentic Filipino accent, Ilonggo accented probably. My acting coach encouraged me to embody the accent."

Stand-up comic Jo Koy (left) and actor Lydia Gaston
in a relaxed moment behind the cameras.

"My coach and I really looked at Tita Susan as a person with feelings, not as a person who speaks with an accent. The way she speaks is part of who she is. As an exercise, I would improvise the English lines in the Filipino dialects that I know in order to explore how Susan would say them."

Gaston says that she and her coach worked hard to build Tita Susan "from a realistic, compassionate point of view. Beneath her toughness is a vulnerability. She is a mom and always wants to be around family. She also wants to be acknowledged for the hard work she always puts in."

Speaking of family, Gaston and the cast formed one of their own of sorts while filming. "Working with Jo Koy and the Filipino Americans and Filipino Canadians on the set was fantastic. The actors had to live in a bubble and quarantine in our rooms for two weeks. On the first shoot day, we were like children finally released on the playground. It also felt like we were an acting company, similar to theater."

"We all got to know Jo and he's just the way we see him onstage: generous, funny, and hardworking. I was also struck by his show of respect and admiration for the actors working with him. It made us do our best work."

~
https://usa.inquirer.net/105863/lydia-gaston-channels-all-fil-am-moms-to-play-jo-koys-in-easter-sunday

Vancouver show recalls stories of first Filipino settlers in Canada

By WALTER ANG
July 15, 2022 | USA.Inquirer.net

VANCOUVER, B.C.  Stories, songs, dances and poetry of how Filipinos have settled in Canada will go onstage in a new show "Buto/Buto: Bones are Seeds."

Directed by Filipino Canadian Dennis Gupa, "Buto/Buto: Bones are Seeds"
will feature Philippine performance traditions such as prusisyon. 

From the 1791 Malaspina Expedition until the present, the show tackles histories of Filipinos arrivals in Canada. The writing team crafted the script based on stories shared by community members in a year-long creative process.

The performance employs the life of Benson Flores, one of the first Filipinos who lived on Bowen Island, British Columbia in the late 19th century, as a jumping off point to showcase a collection of vignettes.

Filipino Canadians in the artistic team include director Dennis Gupa as well as co-librettists Karla Comanda, Christopher Nasaire and Marc Perez.

Cross pollination  

Other Filipino Canadian artistic collaborators include choreographer Alvin Tolentino, set and lighting designer Noreen Sajolan, costume designer Mirabel De Guzman, score and sound designer Eri Kikuchi and voice coach Jeremiah Carag.

Fil-Canadians in the cast include Anjela Magpantay, Ted Ngkaion and Abi Padilla. JR Guerrero is a musician for the production.

Performers from different generations and disciplines will enact dramatic scenes that are emblematic of Philippine performance traditions such as sarsuwela (musical theater), kundiman (love songs), prusisyon (processions) and pasyon (epic chant).

Germination

This theater work was spearheaded by Gupa and is the result of the Jose Rizal Intercultural Theatre Project, a collaboration between the National Pilipino Canadian Cultural Centre and the Southeast Asian Cultural Heritage Society with the special participation of Anyone Can Act Theatre.

The project began its research phase in 2021, which included lectures and discussions on Jose Rizal's life and works and the histories of Filipinos in British Columbia.

This was followed by an arts training phase for the community from September of last year to February this year. Participants attended weekly training sessions with theater professionals and Southeast Asian performance practitioners to learn skills.

The staging of the work is the current phase. Processing lessons learned from the experience will be the next phase.

"This production has been a two year-long effort," said Gupa. "These three organizations each brought their expertise and communities to the table, which allowed for this project to move forward at the level of commitment, funding, and passion that our audience members will experience."

Rooted

"The show is collectively created by immigrants with a heritage rooted to lands elsewhere. The storytelling jumps entire eras and oceans . [with] a circuitous and ebbing memory of arrival, transit, and the specter of departures."

"This original work is an ode to the resilience of the community, filling its longing for home with Jose Rizal's legacy: love for the community, land, and their original country of birth.

"Our mission with this performance is to share with our multicultural Canadian society about Philippine history, languages, heritage, arts and culture, and histories of Filipino migration to Canada and its significance to Canadian society and economy."

"Buto/Buto: Bones are Seeds" runs July 28-31 at Russian Hall, 600 Campbell Ave., Vancouver, Canada. Visit linktr.ee/npc3. 

Filipino American Raven Ong designs costumes for theatrical kings and ghosts

By WALTER ANG
July 13, 2022 | USA.Inquirer.net

NEW YORK  Filipino American costume designer Raven Ong has four shows opening this summer, one of which will have an international staging.

Progressing stages of Raven Ong's (right) costume design
for "The Ecstasy of Victoria Woodhull."

Ong has designed the costumes for a triptych of Shakespeare plays for DeCruit Company and for a play about a woman who wore many hats for Owl and Pussycat Theatre Company.

Ong's credits include "Beautiful: Carole King Musical," "Waitress," "Kinky Boots," "Matilda" and "The Producers," among others. He designed the costumes for Fil-Am playwright Linda Faigao-Hall's "Dying in Boulder." He teaches costume design at Central Connecticut State University.

New material

Ong was approached by Sean Harris, Artistic Director of Playhouse on Park Theater Company, to design one costume for the single actor who carries the play "The Ecstasy of Victoria Woodhull."

It features a clairvoyant who channels the spirit of Woodhull, a woman written out of history for her "radical views." Woodhull was a Suffragette, an activist for women's voting rights, ran her own Wall Street firm and progressive newspaper in New York and was the first woman to run for President. She was also a spiritualist con-artist.

"It's always interesting to collaborate on new material," Ong said. "I joined director Sean Harris, playwright Theo Salter and the actor Ashley Ford for rehearsals in West Hollywood. It was a very rich process where we discovered many things inside the rehearsal room.

The play recently ended its run in Hollywood and will be performed at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival after its New York run.

Multiple characters

DeCruit will be staging adaptations of "Richard III," "Macbeth" and "Henry VI" parts 1, 2 and 3, respectively as: "The Head of Richard," "Make Thick My Blood" and "She-Wolf."

Ong was introduced to the producers of DeCruit through Jason O'Connell, who is directing "The Head of Richard." He'd worked with O'Connell in early 2020 just before the pandemic began, designing a staging of Kate Hammill's adaptation of "Pride and Prejudice."

"The triptych brings so much inspiration and challenge for a designer. Each play has only two actors. This means multiple character changes without leaving the stage. So how can the costumes and costume pieces help in telling the story?

Some of Filipino American costume designer Raven Ong's works
for DeCruit Company's triptych of Shakespeare plays. 

"How do we show the audience the magic of shifting characters right before their eyes in a way that is not confusing? We have three brilliant directors who've all choreographed the character changes seamlessly. It was pure collaboration!"

Meaningful

But more than an opportunity to flex creative muscles with other collaborators, Ong was drawn to the group's ethos. The DeCruit program supports veterans who were recruited into the military to be "de-cruited" for the civilian world by using theater as a tool for processing emotions and behavior.

"The message of these plays and the service to the community that DeCruit producers Stephan Wolfert and Dawn Stern provide is what I find truly meaningful. When we say theater is meant for the audience to have an experience, these are the perfect shows for that.

"As I work more on these kinds of plays as a costume designer, I begin to feel that a spectacle is no longer defined by the lavishness of visuals and effects, rather, a transformative experience that cultivates visibility, accessibility and inclusion."

"The Head of Richard" opens July 15. Visit decruit.org. "The Ecstasy of Victoria Woodhull" runs Jul 17-31. Visit optheatreco.com.

~
https://usa.inquirer.net/105323/fil-am-designs-costumes-for-theatrical-kings-and-ghosts

An all Filipino American showcase at SheLA Summer Theater Fest

By WALTER ANG
July 7, 2022 | USA.Inquirer.net

LOS ANGELES  This year's SheLA Summer Theater Festival will feature two plays written by Filipino Americans, with both directed by Yari Cervas and produced by Leah Vicencio.

Filipino American actors Kristel Dela Rosa (left) and PJ Cimacio in "Too Much Skin."

The two plays explore "narratives of first generation Filipinx Millennials grappling with identity, belonging, and family ties in the diaspora." (Filipinx is a gender-neutral variation for Filipina/o that has gained traction in academic and cultural settings.)

"Too Much Skin" by Carolene Joy Cabrera King follows two Filipino American siblings forging their own identity in the United States as they battle assimilation and white supremacist culture.

Darna has taken in her unemployed brother Christian, dates white dudes obsessed with her "exotic" appearance and cosplays as anime characters to hide her Filipino identity. The siblings confront their fears about who they are and their place in the world through video game fever dreams, bad dates and lots of late night snacking.

Fil-Am cast includes Kristel Dela Rosa, PJ Cimacio and Zeus Oira.

In her play "Electra," Luz Lorenzana Twigg aims to "eviscerate cancel culture" as she adapts Sophocles' masterpiece with the question "What do you have left when the deed is done?"

Electra's mother, a successful white feminist senator and self-appointed leader of the #metoo movement, cancels her father, a human rights lawyer, over allegations of cheating and sexual assault. Passionate and full of rage, Electra wrestles with the inheritance of her biracial identity as she plots to exact justice on her mother.

Fil-Am cast includes Soleil Joun.

Collaborations

Yari Cervas (whose gender identity uses all pronouns), was a cofounding artistic director of MaArte Theatre Collective in San Diego, the city's only theater organization devoted to Filipino American theater makers. Cervas' involvement with both productions grew out of close, long-term collaborations with King and Twigg, some of which were through MaArte.

Filipino American theater makers. (From left) Director Yari Cervas
with playwrights Luz Lorenzana Twigg and Carolene Joy Cabrera King.

Her recent directing credits include "Desert Rock Garden at New Village Arts," "The Fire In Me," "You're Safe Here" and "Your Best American Girl."

Cofounder of Roaming Theatre Collaborative and currently based in New York, Luz Lorenzana Twigg is a playwright and lyrical poet from Santa Barbara, California. Credits include "Platinum Record," "America, Home, Heart," "The Trouble with Paradise" and "Sinner/Saint."

Based out of Escondido, California, King is a poet, playwright, educator and activist. Credits include "Colored," "Stories of Sun Café" and "Halo Halo."

Leah Vicencio is a Creative Producer at Super Awesome Friends and Head of Media and Education of The Broadway Sinfonietta, an all-female, majority women of color orchestral collective.

SheLA is a branch of SheNYC Arts, a nonprofit that showcases emerging gender-marginalized theater writers and composers.

"Electra" runs July 14 and 16; "Too Much Skin" runs July 15 and 16. Zephyr Theatre, 7456 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, California. Visit Shenycarts.org/she-la. 

~
https://usa.inquirer.net/104929/an-all-fil-am-showcase-at-shela-summer-theater-fest