WITH A REBOOT of Magnum P.I., set to debut later this year joining the ongoing series Hawaii Five-O, there comes a new project telling stories from the Hawaiian perspective.
Credit the critical and box office success of Crazy Rich Asians, the Warner Bros. movie featuring an all-Asian cast for encouraging ABC to give the go-ahead for
“The landscape has shifted dramatically in the last 12 months, and maybe in the last week,” writer/journalist Lisa Takeuchi Cullen told The Hollywood Reporter, referencing the renewed interest and demand for Asian and Asian-American stories “Crazy Rich Asians’s” box office and critical success has inspired.
LISA TAKEUCHI CULLEN |
The proposed series is about four hapa women who inherit the family plantation when their grandmother, a kahuna (e.g. a Hawaiian mystic), dies under mysterious circumstances. “Each of the four protagonists is of a different mixed ethnicity — half-white, half-Japanese, half-Filipino, and half-black — and their unexpected shared inheritance will force them to overcome years of jealousies, misunderstandings, resentments, and secrets,” the source details.
If that's not enough to get the AAPI audience's attention, I don't know what will.
“So many Hawaii-set stories have been told from the white point of view,” Cullen told THR. “This is a story we’re passionate about telling from the point of view of native Hawaiians — Pacific Islanders, people of Asian descent, and people of hapa heritage.”
Cullen is writing the project and the JuVee Productions' husband-and-wife team of Viola Davis and Julius Tennon is producing the project.
Ohana is a project that fits JuVee's goal: "embracing cultures and points of view from all over the world and showing that we all can relate and connect to each other,” Davis and Tennon said in a statement.
Cullen worked as a staff writer and foreign correspondent at Time, and has written two books: memoir Remember Me: A Lively Tour of the New American Way of Death and novel Pastors’ Wives. She wrote and produced the 2013 CBS pilot The Ordained, which centered on a priest-turned-lawyer from a Kennedy-esque family.
Cullen told THR that ABC approved the project on Aug. 17, the same day that Crazy Rich Asians premiered.
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