Category Archives: art

Secret Identities – 9066

This is the second of 8 trailer for Secret Identities. The chapter is entitled “9066”, which can be found on Page 25 of SECRET IDENTITIES: The Asian American Superhero Anthology (in stores April 2009). The story centers around a Japanese American superhero who is sent into an internment camp after President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs Executive Order 9066 on February 19, 1942 in response to the attack on Pearl Harbor — using his authority as Commander-in-Chief to exercise war powers to send ethnic groups to internment camps.

Executive Order 9066 was finally rescinded by Gerald Ford on February 19, 1976.

“9066” was written by Jonathan Tseui and drawn by Jerry Ma — and is one of the several “shadow history” pieces in the book inspired by actual historic events pertaining to Asians in America.

Get your copy of “SECRET IDENTITIES: The Asian American Superhero Anthology” today.

Secret Identities – 9066

UPDATE:

Secret Identities Book Trailer

In the Beginning

9066

You Are What You Eat

Secret Identities panel at New York Comic Con

Secret Identities at ECAASU 2009

The Blue Scorpion & Chung

A Day At CostumeCO.

The Citizen

S.O.S.

Secret Identities with Lynn Chen

Secret Identities with Secret Asian Man Tak Toyoshima

Secret Identities – In the Beginning

Last week we had a post on the Secret Identities Book Trailer. The crew producing the book is gonna have a series of 8 trailers for the book. The first in the series is for the preface of the book entitled “In The Beginning”. It details a fun behind the scenes look into the how’s & why’s the book came to existence. It answers how the editors all met and explains why this particular anthology, right now? “In the Beginning” – Story by: Jeff Yang, Art by: Jef Castro. A full pdf version of the preface is viewable here.



Get your copy of “SECRET IDENTITIES: The Asian American Superhero Anthology” today.

Secret Identities – In the Beginning

UPDATE:

Secret Identities Book Trailer

In the Beginning

9066

You Are What You Eat

Secret Identities panel at New York Comic Con

Secret Identities at ECAASU 2009

The Blue Scorpion & Chung

A Day At CostumeCO.

The Citizen

S.O.S.

Secret Identities with Lynn Chen

Secret Identities with Secret Asian Man Tak Toyoshima

The Terra-Cotta Warriors

In a chance discovery, an entire army of terracotta warriors is found. The first emperor of China had them created and buried with him, to protect him in the afterlife. A group of them is coming to National Geographic Museum in November 2009.

The Terra-Cotta Warriors

The Terra-Cotta Warriors

The Joy Luck Club on Stage

The Joy Luck Club on Stage

THE JOY LUCK CLUB

By Susan Kim, adapted from the novel by Amy Tan

Directed by Jon Lawrence Rivera

Original Music by Nathan Wang

A best-selling novel and also a major motion picture. Family bonds transcend history as four young Chinese American women and their Chinese-born mothers struggle to understand each other. When the children’s present lives begin to mirror their parent’s past accomplishments and failures, a seemingly uncrossable divide grows into a bridge as generation unite to form THE JOY LUCK CLUB.

LOS ANGELES PREMIERE

Previews Performances November 6 – 9, 2008

$20 all seats, $12 w/ valid student I.D.

Opening Night November 12, 2008

$65 all seats, including pre-show hosted bar & post-show reception with cast and crew

Performance Run November 13 – December 7, 2008

Wednesday – Saturday @ 8 pm, Sunday @ 2:00pm

$45 Orchestra, $40 Balcony

Ladies Night Out Friday, November 14 at 7PM

Light refreshments, wine & champagne & manicures.

Next Generation Community Night Wed, November 19 at 7PM

Free Pizza, Soda & Live Music. $1 Opportunity Drawing Tickets.

Prizes include Mahjong set & autographed The Joy Luck Club items.

Pay-What-You-Can Performance Friday, November 28 at 8PM

Minimum of $1. Tickets go on sale 1 hour prior to performance time.

American Sign Language-interpreted Performance Sunday, November 30, 2008 @ 2PM

$20 Tickets for Deaf & Hard of Hearing Patrons

Location:

David Henry Theatre

The Union Center for the Arts

120 Judge John Aiso St.

Los Angeles, CA 90012

Intro scene for The Joy Luck Club Movie

"Black White Whatever" by Kelly Tsai

Sick and tired of politicians’ endless claims to fight for the rights of all people? In a dynamic collaboration between spoken word artist Kelly Zen-Yie Tsai, director Jazzmen Lee-Johnson, and producer Alli Maxwell, Moving Earth Productions has produced a spoken word video version of Kelly Zen-Yie Tsai’s “Black, White, Whatever…” a witty spoken word poetry call to arms for politicians everywhere to stand up for underrepresented communities, like the Asian Pacific Islander American community and all those who fight to have their voices and lives heard OUT LOUD!

KELLY ZEN-YIE TSAI (Spoken Word Poet, Producer “Black, White, Whatever”) is a Chicago-born, Brooklyn-based Chinese Taiwanese American spoken word artist who has featured at over 300 performances worldwide including 3 seasons of “HBO Def Poetry.” She constantly strives push the boundaries of spoken word poetry and innovate it for the stage, page, and screen. “Black, White, Whatever” is her third spoken word video and the first produced by her production company, Moving Earth Productions. Her previous spoken word videos include “By-Standing: The Beginning of An American Lifetime” (Dir. Karen Lin) which won special recognition at the Media That Matters & VIBE UrbanWorld Film Festivals. Her second spoken word video “Weapons of Mass Creation” (Dir. Kamilah Forbes) was commissioned by San Francisco not-for-profit Youth Noise’s nationwide Youth Summit Tour.

“Black White Whatever” by Kelly Tsai

Artist Statement:

The real genesis for “Black, White, Whatever” came to me one day while listening to Kelly Rowland of Destiny’s Child gushing on the radio about how Destiny’s Child loves ALL people, “black, white, whatever you are!”

Although it was probably the millionth time that I’d heard that phrase, it was the last time I could stomach its flippant, simultaneous embrace and dismissal of the complexities of American diversity today. I filed away my annoyance and hoped for a more fully formed poem to come to me eventually.

Lo and behold, as the presidential campaigns for the 2008 election began, I found myself rapt and rabid in front of the television screen and the radio speaker hoping, praying, begging that somebody, anybody would even mention the word, “Asian,” in ANY of their speeches.

I found myself making touchdown victory-like dances at the rare mention of “Asian” or just muttering, “Damn,” on the more likely occasion of its omission. My standards for politicans were sinking to new lows: “Just SAY Asian pleeeeease!”

In the midst of all the media spin, mud-slinging, and rare dialogue on real policy issues, I wondered shouldn’t we expect and want more from our candidates? Our candidates need to not only acknowledge us, but also take on the charge to advocate for the rights and freedoms of every single one of us.

Alli Maxwell (Producer) and Jazzmen Lee-Johnson (Director) passionately took on the task of translating this crowd-pleaser to video capitalizing on Jazz’s background in animation and the able talents of still photographers Sona Z, Matt Weiss, and Michelle Woo.

“Black, White, Whatever” was shot over two days in Brooklyn at the DUMBO Arts Center and the Brooklyn Navy Yards to provide a stripped-down authenticity as a backdrop for our beautifully unique and dynamic crew of over 20 extras representing the fluidity and complexity of this generation with clarity and impact.

Flower Drum Song – 50th Anniversary

Flower Drum Song celebrates its 50th anniversary this year. The musical opens tomorrow for 2 week. For those in the San Francisco Bay Area, this is one of the rare opportunities to see a full Asian American cast performing a Broadway Musical. Get tickets at SanFranciscoChinatown.com or at the American Musical Theatre.



Flower Drum Song synopsis

Set in the late 1950s, this new adaptation centers on Mei-Li who arrives in San Francisco’s Chinatown after fleeing communist China. The naïve young refugee is befriended by Wang, who is struggling to keep the Chinese Opera theatrical tradition alive despite his son’s determination to turn the family theatre into a rowdy nightclub. A unique blending of American razz-ma-tazz and stylized Chinese traditions, this beautiful theatrical tapestry is highlighted by its wonderful score, that is both romantic and showbiz-brassy and includes “I Enjoy Being a Girl,” “A Hundred Million Miracles,” “Sunday” and “Chop Suey.”

Flower Drum Song – Movie Clip