Showing posts with label Jessica Hagedorn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jessica Hagedorn. Show all posts

Monday, October 17, 2022

#FAHM2022 Jessica Hagedorn: Focusing on cultural representation can limit your humanity

Filipino American writer Jessica Hagedorn


By IVAN NATIVIDAD
BERKELEY NEWS
REPRINTED BY PERMISSION

In mainstream media, art and literature, there is a lack of Filipinx American representation and recognition. But Filipina American writer Jessica Hagedorn says that artists who make their work solely about their own culture and history are placing themselves into institutional “niches” that “limit your humanity.”

Hagedorn’s literature, which spans nearly 50 years, is featured in an online Bancroft Library exhibit released Wednesday, and centers on Philippine and Filipinx American histories. Her archives include drafts and notes from her work as a novelist, poet and playwright, public relations material and correspondence dating back to 1976.

Berkeley’s Ethnic Studies Library also has an in-person exhibit — “An Unfinished Revolution: Transnational Filipinx Activism in the 1970s” — that will be displayed at the library through the end of October to honor Filipinx American History Month.

Born in Manila, Hagedorn moved to San Francisco in 1963 when she was 14. Her writing examines the influence of American imperialism and pop culture on the development of Asian American and Filipinx American identity. Hagedorn’s many honors include the 2021 Rome Prize for Literature, a Guggenheim Fiction Fellowship and a Philippine National Book Award.

Her award-winning book, Dogeaters, was published in 1990 and captured life in the Philippines during the Ferdinand Marcos era of martial law. The novel won the American Book Award and has been adapted for the stage and performed at venues across the country.

Berkeley News spoke with Hagedorn recently about the time she spent as a “young activist writer” in the Bay Area, and how writers can break through the identity niches that institutions have placed them in.

Berkeley News: The Berkeley campus will celebrate and acknowledge Filipinx American History Month this year. Are these “identity month” recognitions important to acknowledge?

Jessica Hagedorn: Yes, I think they are for students of color. But why has it taken so long for UC Berkeley to celebrate and acknowledge Filipino Americans? Kinda ironic.

I’m friends with many distinguished Filipino scholars and artists who came out of Berkeley, and it’s very discouraging to me to hear that this recognition is just happening now after all this time. I don’t even think many people at Berkeley know that my archives are in their library and have been for years.

Do you think the accomplishments and influence of Philippine literature and Filipinx American writers often get ignored by institutions?

Yes. I think that’s why I try to be vocal and public about this situation, because I feel like I’ve had the privilege of having a bigger platform.

Charlie Chan Is Dead, an anthology of contemporary Asian American fiction, which I edited and was first published by Penguin in 1990, featured pioneering Filipino writers like Bienvenido Santos and N.V.M. Gonzalez, alongside young writers like Gina Apostol and R. Zamora Linmark.

We’ve been around a long time!

There are a lot of literary institutions that have awarded funding to writers, including yourself, to help them continue to produce literature. Would it also help if writers from the Filipinx American community got more of that financial pie?

Having support is crucial. We all need money to live and continue to make our art. And sometimes these prizes and awards can be a sort of validation.

But money and prizes don’t mean that the work you produce is going to be any good. Sometimes those accolades actually get in the way. The lean times are often when the good stuff happens. So, let’s not get fixated on fame and money.

Dogeaters was adapted for the stage in 1998. This swag shows the face of former first lady of the Philippines, Imedla Marcos, whom a character was loosely based. (Courtesy of UC Berkeley Bancroft Library)

Write like you’re on fire, be fearless, dream and explore.

Some of your writing reflects on specific moments in Philippine history. Is it important for Filipinx/Filpinx American storytellers to focus on Philippine culture and history in their work?

No. You should feel free to write whatever you want to write.

We don’t make art to represent. That has to happen organically. Filipinos are not a monolith. Humans aren’t a monolith. We all have different experiences and need to write across the different identities we hold. As artists, we should be free to write about a wide range of complicated characters and subjects.

Don’t limit yourself to only what you know. But definitely do your homework! Being a writer is hard work.

So, in a sense, are you saying that focusing solely on your identity and/or cultural history can limit your imagination and creativity?

That depends. It can limit not just those things, but it can limit your humanity. And that’s something Gina Apostol and I hope to talk about at this event on Wednesday.

How are history and memory and literature connected? How do different writers deal with these complicated topics? Is everything political? What is our role in the world?

Hagedorn was featured in this Kearny Street Workshop/Balay virtual histories series that explores the cultural impact of the Filipinx and Asian American arts activism community in San Francisco.

Those are questions that many students at Berkeley may be asking themselves at this point in their lives, as well. What is your advice to them?

When I was a young activist writer in the Bay Area, I thought I had all the answers. Sometimes I was right, and a lot of times I was just plain ignorant and wrong. There were a few positive things that came from my impatience, energy and anger: I dared to do things with my artistic comrades that hadn’t been done before.

We came together in writing collectives to make books because most writers of color were not being published at the time. We didn’t know how to publish, but we learned how to do it guerrilla-style. We organized readings, performances and concerts, made posters and came out to support each other big-time.

We brought the noise. And got it done.

It all boils down to that old cliche: believe in yourself. Trust in your creative vision and the power of your distinct writer’s voice.

Sunday, September 8, 2019

First Filipino American musical to hit the boards Off-Broadway met with welcoming reviews

FELIX STARRO

Broadway has never seen anything like Felix StarroThe first Filipino American musical to be staged Off-Broadway was hailed by most critics as a new voice and perspective to theatergoers.

The Sept. 3 debut of Felix Starro was put into context by New York Times theater critic Jesse Green:

"That's no small thing, if the (musical) form is to keep from shrinking into a souvenir of itself. And there is much to like about a work that brings the tropes of classic musicals to a story about people usually ignored by them. But you may also find yourself wondering whether those time-tested techniques are really capable of doing justice to a story so unlike the ones for which they were devised."


Felix Starro originally was to run through Sept. 15 at Theatre Row (410 West 42nd Street, Manhattan) after an opening night of Sept. 3. After the mostly positive reviews came out, the production was extended an extra week to Sept. 21.
The musical was adapted to the stage by author and playwright Jessica Hagedorn and Fabian Obispo from a Lesley Tenorio short story. Directed by Ma-Yi's Producing Artistic Director Ralph B. Peña (The Chinese Lady, Among The Dead) and choreographed by Brandon Bieber (FX's Fosse/Verdon), Felix Starro marks the 30th anniversary of the Ma-Yi Theater Company, which started as a Filipino American company but has since expanded its productions to include works of other Asian Americans. 

Directed by Ma-Yi's Producing Artistic Director Ralph B. Peña (The Chinese Lady, Among The Dead) and choreographed by Brandon Bieber (FX's Fosse/Verdon), Felix Starro also marks the long overdue return to New York stages of novelist and playwright Hagedorn.


In Felix Starro, protagonist Felix is a famous faith healer in the Philippines, whose clients once included celebrities and big politicians. After falling on hard times, Felix decides to go to San Francisco for one last healing mission with ailing Filipinos in the Bay Area. Junior, Felix Starro's 19-year-old, orphan grandson, goes along as his assistant. Unbeknownst to Felix, Junior has plans of his own.

Besides exploring issues of faith, family, love, loss, betrayal, the timely musical touches on what it means to be an undocumented immigrant in America.

"Still, a strength of the musical, ... is the authentic feeling glimpse into a world seldom seen on a New York stage," writes J
onathan Mandell in New York Theater. "That impression is enhanced thanks to a spot-on seven-member cast, who invest the characters with psychological credibility. Not so incidentally in a musical, they also sing powerfully enough to make the most of a well-orchestrated if not especially memorable score that mixes pop, rock, tango, and a kind of staccato, Sondheim-sounding musical theater."



    The cast of the world premiere is made up of Alan Ariano, Nacho Tambunting, Caitlin Cisco, Francisca Muñoz, Ryan James Ortega, Diane Phelan, and Ching Valdes-Aran.

    Rounding out the creative team are choreographer Brandon Bieber, scenic designer Marsha Ginsberg, costume designer Becky Bodurtha, lighting designer Oliver Wason, and sound designer Julian Evans. Orchestrations are by Paulo K Tiról, Ian Miller is the musical director, Cristina Sison is production stage manager, and Jorge Z. Ortoll is executive producer.

    The only other musical with a Filipino theme and characters that hit Off-Broadway was the hit Here Lies Love, about the rise and fall of Imelda Marcos. That production, which had an extended run at the Public Theater, was created by nonFilipinos, David Byrne and Fatboy Slim, both Broadway veterans.
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    Thursday, June 27, 2019

    TGIF Feature: Filipino American musical to debut off-Broadway


    ASAM NEWS

    A new musical,  Felix Starro, will make its debut in September 2019. It will be the first-ever off-Broadway musical created by Filipino Americans, according to Playbill.
    The musical version of Felix Starro is written by Filipino American playwright Jessica Hagedorn, who previously turned her novel Dogeaters into a play.

    According to Balitang America News, the musical is inspired by Lysley Tenorio’s short story of the same title. Felix Starro tells the story of a young, undocumented Filipino immigrant boy name Felix, whose father is a famous faith healer in San Francisco. His family’s faith healing business, however, is a scam, and Felix is forced to go along with this lie. He soon develops a plan to leave his family business and start a new life in America.

    The musical is produced by Ma-Yi Theater Company in New York. Ma-Yi Theater Company is known for bringing more Asian playwrights and actors onto the stage. 

    In February of 2019, the company produced Suicide Forest, written and starred by Kristen Haruna Lee. Based on the legendary Japanese myth, Suicide Forest is a bilingual play that tells a tale of female submissiveness in the Japanese patriarchal society. The play shows how the protagonist breaks her silence and overcomes this challenge.
    Felix Starro will be directed by Ralph B. Peña from Ma-Yi Theater Company. The orchestra will be conducted by Paulo K Tiról, and choreography by Brandon Bieber, according to Playbill. 

    The opening night for Felix Starro is set to be on September 3. Previews will begin on August 23. For tickets and more information visit Ma-YiTheatre.org.