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Playwrights Dipika Guha, Adam Gwon, Octavio Solis and Lauren Yee to Explore the Intersections of Orange County Diversity Through SCR’s CrossRoads this Summer

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Dipika Guha, Adam Gwon, Octavio Solis and Lauren Yee are among the second group of playwrights chosen to participate in  CrossRoads, South Coast Repertory’s new play commissioning initiative, thanks to funding from the Time Warner Foundation. This is the second time the foundation has provided funding for the initiative.

header_19The community-based CrossRoads project works with writers to develop plays after they undertake residencies through which they explore the diversity of Orange County. With the generous grant renewal, SCR has commissioned four more playwrights, each of whom will have the opportunity to find inspiration in the Orange County community.

The quartet join the first group of CrossRoads playwrights: Luis Alfaro, Marc Bamuthi Joseph, Carla Ching, Aditi Brennan Kapil, Qui Nguyen, Mona Monsour and Tanya Saracho.

During the summer of 2015, the four new CrossRoads playwrights are each spending 10 days in Orange County, getting fully immersed in the county’s rich cultural, social and political life. Through their explorations, they discover diverse stories and personal connections, and then will write plays either directly or indirectly informed by their residency experiences. These experiences are made possible by the generosity of community groups and leaders in the area.

About the 2015 CrossRoads Playwrights:

Dipika Guha

Dipika Guha

Dipika Guha was born in Calcutta and raised in India, Russia and the United Kingdom. Her work has been developed at Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Playwrights Horizons, Hedgebrook Women Playwrights Festival, Naked Angels, Fault Line Theatre, Judson Church, One Coast Collaboration and the Tobacco Factory (UK), amongst others. www.dipikaguha.com

Adam Gwon

Adam Gwon

Adam Gwon is a composer/lyricist whose musicalsOrdinary Days and Cloudlands (co-written with Octavio Solis) were produced at South Coast Repertory. His honors include the Kleban Award, the Ebb Award, the Rodgers Award and the Loewe Award. His songs have been performed by such luminaries as Audra McDonald, Kelli O’Hara and Brian d’Arcy James. www.adamgwon.com

Octavio Solis

Octavio Solis

Octavio Solis is a playwright and director living in Oregon. Author of over 20 plays, he is considered by many to be one of the most prominent Latino playwrights in America. His works have been mounted at theatres across the country, and many have been published, including his anthology, The River Plays. For South Coast Repertory, he wrote the long running La Posada Magica and Cloudlands, a musical co-written with Adam Gwon.

Lauren Yee

Lauren Yee

Lauren Yee is a playwright born and raised in San Francisco. Her work has been produced and developed around the country, including Victory Gardens Theater (Samsara), San Francisco Playhouse (in a word), Pan Asian Repertory Theatre (Ching Chong Chinaman) and Playwrights Realm (The Hatmaker’s Wife). Yee is a former Dramatists Guild fellow, MacDowell Colony fellow and Public Theater Emerging Writers Group member and is currently a member of the Ma-Yi Writers’ Lab and a Playwrights’ Center Core Writer. She is the 2015 resident playwright at Anaheim’s Chance Theatre, which recently produced the west coast premiere of Samsara. www.laurenyee.com

“Through this initiative, we’ve deepened or made new relationships with other organizations within the Orange County community. It’s also having an impact on how we think about our commissioning program and playwright residencies,” said Masterson. “We’re developing an exciting model for the future. This second round of commissions will allow us to perfect that model.”

“We’ve already begun to yield great dividends from our first round of CrossRoads writers,” said Artistic Director Marc Masterson. “It has produced great plays, like Qui Nguyen’s Vietgone, opening the Julianne Argyros Stage season, and Aditi Kapil’s Orange, read at the Pacific Playwrights Festival earlier this year.”

Following its world premiere at SCR, Nguyen’s Vietgone also will be produced at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in 2016. In July, Ching’s Nomad Hotel continued development as part of the National Playwrights Conference at the Eugene O’Neil Theater Center. Monsour’s unseen was on The Kilroys’ “The List” 2015—a list of the top un- and under-produced plays by female playwrights. It also gained further development at New York Stage and Film and a Studio Retreat at the Lark Play Development Center.

Learn more about CrossRoads: http://www.scr.org/get-connected/crossroads

ABOUT SOUTH COAST REPERTORY: Tony Award-winning South Coast Repertory, founded in 1964 by David Emmes and Martin Benson, is led by Artistic Director Marc Masterson and Managing Director Paula Tomei. It is widely recognized as one of the leading professional theatres in the United States. While its productions represent a balance of classic and modern theatre, SCR is renowned for its extensive new-play development program, which includes the nation’s largest commissioning program for emerging and established writers. Of SCR’s 491 productions, one-quarter have been world premieres. SCR-developed works have garnered two Pulitzer Prizes and eight Pulitzer nominations, several Obie Awards and scores of major new-play awards. Located in Costa Mesa, Calif., SCR is home to the 507-seat Segerstrom Stage, the 336-seat Julianne Argyros Stage and the 94-seat Nicholas Studio. www.scr.org

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee,  a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

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THE WIZ: A Celebration in Dance and Music featuring André De Shields, Phylicia Rashad, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ebony Jo-Ann, Inaya Day and more at SummerStage in Central Park on 8/12; Marcus Garvey Park on 8/13, 8/14
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Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com

 



George Gee Swing Orchestra, Ebony Jo-Ann, King Solomon Hicks Blues Quintet, Ray Schinnery in Free Concert – Great Jazz on the Great Hill – August 8

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George Gee. Photo by Lia Chang

George Gee. Photo by Lia Chang

Free Concerts in New York are a summer pleasure, and today it’s going to be a perfect afternoon for Jazz on the Great Hill, a Jazz, Swing, and Blues Festival featuring performances by George Gee Swing Orchestra, King Solomon Hicks Blues Quintet Legendary Blues Guitarist, Ray Schinnery, Blues Vocalist, Ebony Jo-Ann and other special guests from 4pm to 7pm. (enter at 106th St and Central Park W)

Solomon Hicks. Photo by Lia Chang Ebony Jo-Ann

Presented by the Central Park Conservancy and Jazzmobile to celebrate 35 years of Central Park Conservancy restoring, managing, and enhancing Central Park, The Festival is free and open to the public.

Live music, swing dancing, and food truck fare available for purchase on-site, or bring your own picnic. Family activities take place all day long. Tickets are not required.

THE WIZ: A Celebration in Dance and Music featuring André De Shields, Phylicia Rashad, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ebony Jo-Ann, Inaya Day and more at SummerStage in Central Park on 8/12; Marcus Garvey Park on 8/13, 8/14 
Photos and Video:’The Visit’ Broadway cast performance and CD signing at Barnes & Noble with Chita Rivera, John Kander, Graciela Daniele and Co.

Ebony Jo-Ann Celebrates PLEASE SAVE YOUR LOVE FOR ME CD Release, with a concert at Ashford & Simpson’s Sugar Bar on July 15

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

Other Articles
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AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 

Photos: #EmptyMet Tour with Chief Digital Officer Sree Sreenivasan
China: Through the Looking Glass Exhibition Extended through September 7 at Metropolitan Museum
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Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com

 


Sid Bernstein Presents 2015: The Brooklyn Invasion – A 50th Anniversary of The Beatles at Shea Stadium featuring The London Souls, Lawrence and The Myles Mancuso Band tonight at Brooklyn Bowl

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Brooklyn InvasionSid Bernstein Presents 2015: The Brooklyn Invasion – a 50th Anniversary celebration of The Beatles historic August 15, 1965 concert at Shea Stadium – featuring THE LONDON SOULS plus special guests LAWRENCE and THE MYLES MANCUSO BAND. The concert will take place on Saturday, August 8 at 8:00PM at Brooklyn Bowl (61 Wythe Avenue, Brooklyn, NY). DJ Kevin Barker will spin classic 45s from 6:00 PM. General Admission tickets are $15 for standing room only. Click here to order tickets go to or visit the Brooklyn Bowl box office.

Sid Bernstein, legendary impresario and rock concert promoter, brought The Beatles to America and was known as the father of the British Invasion. Sid passed away on August 21, 2013 at the age of 95. With the evening’s mix of youthful talent, the Bernstein family continues the spirit and legacy of their father who always looked to present new, emerging artists to the world.

A newly launched website dedicated to Sid Bernstein (www.sidbernsteinpresents.com) includes the first release of a fascinating 50-piece poster collection from Sid’s most famed events, curated from the Bernstein family archives.

THE LONDON SOULS’ unique reinterpretation of classic hard-hitting rock and roll formula recalls elements of the past with an ever-present boundless energy, fit to cement their place in the future. Tash and Chris have been nothing short of a best-kept-secret among New York City concertgoers since the band’s formation in 2008, building a fervent and dynamic fan base leveraged by their ever-substantiated reputation for consistently well-rehearsed and impassioned, explosive live performances. The band’s celebrated sound and spirit draws significant influence from the driving force of British rock pioneers Cream and Led Zeppelin, to billowing and bouncing funk and soul, to the layered harmonies and memorable hooks of The Beatles and The Hollies, to the contemporary psychedelia of My Morning Jacket among many others. They are currently opening for Lenny Kravitz in Europe.

LAWRENCE is an 8-piece soul-pop group based in New York City led by siblings Clyde and Gracie Lawrence. Drawing from the songwriting of The Beatles and the soul of Stevie Wonder, Lawrence (formerly Clyde Lawrence) released its debut EP, Homesick, in 2013, and has since been performing regularly at clubs and colleges in the Northeast. Their high-energy live shows combine soul and funk, R&B and pop, weaving dynamic vocal harmonies, crisp horns, and a tight rhythm section into their keyboard-based grooves to create a distinctively vintage yet modern sound.

MYLES MANCUSO was first introduced to and presented by Sid Bernstein at the age of 10 at The Cutting Room in NYC. “Myles is a bona fide prodigy who will thrill and captivate an audience,” Bernstein said. Now at age 19, Myles is a nationally recognized prodigy who fronts his own band, singing and playing guitar and keyboards. Myles recently performed on June 26th at “Daryl’s House” (Daryl Hall’s venue) in Pawling, NY. After a sold out performance, The Club posted, “He is 19. He is a genius. The audience got to see someone who is destined to be one of the all-time greats, at his beginning.” He has performed on some of the top stages in New York City… BB Kings in Times Square, The Cutting Room, Tera Blues, The Iridium Jazz Club, The Bitter End, Kenny’s Castaways and others. His band has opened for major National acts Such as Levon Helm, Buddy Guy and Derek Trucks. He continues to perform to large audiences at Music Clubs, Gala Events, Festivals and other venues around the world.

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

Other Articles
AsAmNews.com: Future Looks Bright for Asian American Cinema
#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
Photos: #EmptyMet Tour with Chief Digital Officer Sree Sreenivasan
China: Through the Looking Glass Exhibition Extended through September 7 at Metropolitan Museum
Coming to America through The Angel Island Immigration Station
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com

 


Pork Filled Productions Presents World Premiere of Maggie Lee’s THE TUMBLEWEED ZEPHYR at the 12th Avenue Arts MainStage, August 14 to 29

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the tumbleweed zephyr

Pork Filled Productions presents the world premiere of The Tumbleweed Zephyr by Maggie Lee (The Clockwork Professor), directed by Amy Poisson (These Streets, Fast Company), at the 12th Avenue Arts Mainstage (1620 12th Ave., Seattle), August 14 to 29, 2015.

Two brothers, Atticus and Kai, climb aboard the Tumbleweed Zephyr, a transcontinental train headed from New Providence for the wilds of the Western Territories. But what starts as a simple journey by rail soon veers off-track, with airship bandits, twists of fate, wayward sparks of romance and the lonely call of a train whistle echoing across the clear desert sky.

The Tumbleweed Zephyr features Michael Blum, Manuel Cawaling, Linnea Ingalls, Madison Jade Jones, Stephanie Kim-Bryan, Kevin Lin, Troy Lund and Tadd Morgan. Producers are Maggie Lee, May Nguyen and Roger Tang.

Shows are Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8pm, Sundays at 2 pm and Monday Pay-What-You-Can Industry Nights at 8pm.

“We had such a great audience response with The Clockwork Professor in 2013, so we’re really excited to revisit the New Providence world with a brand new adventure,” says Executive Director Roger Tang.

“It’s a spinoff from The Clockwork Professor—it’s several years later with a new group of characters, facing new challenges and exploring areas outside the city of New Providence. We’re mixing up bits from our favorite genres, from Westerns to romance to steampunk science fiction.. An important part of our mission at PFP is to give multicultural artists the opportunity to create their own narratives however they choose, and to have fun doing it!”

Advance purchase tickets are $15 General Admission and $12 Student/Senior at Brown Paper Tickets. There is also a Double Date Deal (four General Admissions for $50). At the door, tickets are $18 General Admission, $15 Student/Senior/TPS. PFP also participates in Teen Tix. The Tumbleweed Zephyr is rated PG-13 for suggestive dialogue and combat situations. For more information, please email Pork Filled Productions at info@porkfilled.com.

Maggie Lee is a Seattle playwright whose work reflects her love of comedy, science fiction, and horror; her produced plays include The Journey of the Bell (The 14/48 Projects), The Clockwork Professor (Pork Filled Productions), The Sunshower Bride and Paper and Ink (Live Girls! Theater), Last Light (Playing in Progress), the Revealed! walking tours (SIS Productions), collaborating on Greetings from Styx and King Arthur and the Knights of the Playground (Balagan Theatre), Kindred Spirits (ReAct Theatre), H.P. Lovecraft adaptations (Open Circle Theater), the Double Shot Theatre Festival, and 14/48. Maggie is also the lead sketch writer and a performer with the Pork Filled Players, Seattle’s Asian American sketch comedy group, as well as designing lights, props, and puppets for many local fringe theaters. She was a panelist for Asian American Women in Comedy at the 2011 National Asian American Theater Conference in Los Angeles, and was twice featured at ACT’s Local Writers Showcase at the REPRESENT! Multicultural Playwrights’ Festival. She is a member of the SIS Writers Group, Rain City Projects, the Sandbox Artists Collective, and an Artist in Residence at Theatre Off Jackson.

Amy Poisson is thrilled to be joining PFP for her third show as director – previous shows include Fast Company by Carla Ching (2014 Seattle Times Footlight Award) and The Clockwork Professor by Maggie Lee, both at Theatre Off Jackson. Most recently, Amy directed Blood/Water/Paint by Joy McCullough-Carranza at TOJ for Live Girls! Theater. She also directed These Streets by Gretta Harley & Sarah Rudinoff at Central Heating Lab at ACT and The Strange Misadventures of Patty by Allison Moore at Annex Theatre. She was the Associate Director for Robin Hood with Allison Narver at Seattle Children’s Theatre and Assistant Director with Sheila Daniels on Elektra at Seattle Shakespeare Company. Amy has directed small various projects for 14/48, Live Girls!, and Book-It, and is a former Equity stage manager and worked at the Seattle Rep for five seasons. She has also managed shows at the Intiman, Empty Space, ACT, and many other small theaters that have come and gone over the years. Amy holds a Certificate in Directing for Stage and Screen from the UW, a BA in Theatre from Eckerd College and is currently adjunct faculty at Cornish College of the Arts and Seattle University.

Spun off from the long running sketch comedy group the Pork Filled Players, Pork Filled Productions stretches the boundaries of Asian American theatre.. Channelling the boundless imagination and creativity of modern Asian American artists, Pork Filled Productions embraces a spectrum of unexpected genres, such as steampunk (The Clockwork Professor by Maggie Lee), supernatural comedies (Big Hunk o’ Burnin’ Love by Prince Gomolvilas), mistaken race farces (Yellow Face by David Henry Hwang), crime family (Fast Company by Carla Ching) and even Kung-fu zombie Shakespeare (Living Dead in Denmark by Qui Nguyen).

The Tumbleweed Zephyr is supported by 4Culture and the Office of Arts & Culture Seattle and is an Associated Program of Shunpike. Shunpike is the 501(c)(3) non-profit agency that provides independent arts groups in Washington with the services, resources and opportunities they need to forge their own paths to sustainable success.

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

Other Articles
AsAmNews.com: Future Looks Bright for Asian American Cinema
#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
Photos: #EmptyMet Tour with Chief Digital Officer Sree Sreenivasan
China: Through the Looking Glass Exhibition Extended through September 7 at Metropolitan Museum
Coming to America through The Angel Island Immigration Station
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com

 


Paul Iacono, Peter Mark Kendall, Jack DiFalco, Bradley Fong, Emily Cass McDonnell, Sea McHale, Zane Pais and Tony Revolori set for The New Group’s Off-Broadway premiere of Philip Ridley’s Mercury Fur; opens August 19

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MF Artwork

Paul Iacono and Peter Mark Kendall in Mercury Fur.

Paul Iacono and Peter Mark Kendall in Mercury Fur.

The New Group opens its 2015-2016 season with the Off-Broadway premiere of Philip Ridley’s Mercury Fur, a terrifying yet tender look at just how far people will go to protect those they love the most. Scott Elliott directs. Previews began August 5th in The Romulus Linney Courtyard Theatre (480 West 42nd Street), and the Official Opening Night is Wednesday, August 19th.

In a society ravaged by warring gangs and a hallucinogenic-drug epidemic, Elliot and Darren, under the sway of the ruthless Spinx, throw parties for rich clients in abandoned apartment buildings, parties that help guests act out their darkest, most sinister fantasies. As the teenage brothers prepare for the latest festivities, some unexpected guests threaten the balance of the world they have created in the midst of this dystopian nightmare.

Mercury Fur features Jack DiFalco, Bradley Fong, Paul Iacono, Peter Mark Kendall, Emily Cass McDonnell, Sea McHale, Zane Pais and Tony Revolori.

The design team includes Derek McLane (Scenic Design), Susan Hilferty (Costume Design), Jeff Croiter (Lighting Design) and M.L. Dogg (Sound Design). Valerie A. Peterson is the Production Stage Manager. Casting by Judy Henderson, CSA.

Philip Ridley’s play The Fastest Clock in the Universe received its US premiere in 1998 at The New Group. Mercury Fur premiered in February 2005 at the Plymouth Theatre Royal and transferred to the Menier Chocolate Factory, London in March 2005.

Productions in The New Group’s 2015-2016 Season take place at The Pershing Square Signature Center, 480 West 42nd Street.

Subscriptions and memberships for The New Group’s 2015-2016 Season available now. For subscription & season info, please visit www.thenewgroup.org. Subscriptions can be purchased by calling Ticket Central at(212) 279-4200, or in person at 416 West 42nd Street (12-8pm daily).

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

Other Articles
AsAmNews.com: Future Looks Bright for Asian American Cinema
#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
Photos: #EmptyMet Tour with Chief Digital Officer Sree Sreenivasan
China: Through the Looking Glass Exhibition Extended through September 7 at Metropolitan Museum
Coming to America through The Angel Island Immigration Station
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com

 


SINGLE ROOM OCCUPANCY, written by and starring Ben Rauch Set for New York International Fringe Festival, 8/14-27

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Single room occupancy

Single Room Occupancy, a new pop/rock comedy musical will be presented as part of the 2015 New York International Fringe Festival on August 14, 17, 20, 21 and 27. Written by and starring popular theatre, film and television actor Ben Rauch (HBO’s “Girls,” Jersey Boys-The Movie, “Gossip Girl”), Single Room Occupancy has lyrics by Gaby Gold, Rory Scholl, and Ben Rauch. Joey Murray directs.

The musical will run at the Lynn Redgrave Theatre at Culture Project (Venue #13), 45 Bleecker Street (at Lafayette) for five shows only- Friday, August 14 @ 2:15pm, Monday, August 17 @ 9:30pm, Thursday, August 20 @ 7:15pm, Friday, August 21 @ 2:15pm and Thursday, August 27 @ midnight.

A hilarious musical for anyone whose biggest obstacle is themselves, the production features Rauch, who plays multiple instruments, Cali Elizabeth Moore, Jay Paranada, Kat Liz Kramer, Lane Kwederis, Rory Scholl and Dianne Kaye as well as a live band.

The production team includes set design by You-Shin Chen, lighting design by Suzanne Immarigeon, sound design by Joshua D. Reid, choreography by Jebbel Arce, musical direction by Noriko Sunamoto.

In Single Room Occupancy, a single guy’s comedic singer/songwriter dream is challenged by the distractions of social media, relationships and his fear of performing beyond the confines of his tiny apartment in Secaucus, New Jersey.

General admission tickets are $18 and are available online  or at the door (convenience fees may apply). www.singleroommusical.com

Ben Rauch, an actor/singer/composer/musician, who hails from Marlboro, NJ, recently appeared in the film Jersey Boys, directed by Clint Eastwood, as the pianist/singer for the Four Seasons. He was seen in The Bronze which was the official opening night selection at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival and will be in theaters in October. His television credits include an upcoming role on HBO’s “Girls,” recurring role on “Gossip Girl,” “ED,” and “Strangers with Candy” among others. His additional film work includes Tenderness (with Russell Crowe). His work on stage includes: A Few Good Men (with Lou Diamond Phillips), People Are Living There (Signature Theatre), Lost in Yonkers (Theatre Virginia), Miklat (Florida Stage), The Unexpected Guest, The Sunshine Boys, Spring Awakening (Broadway Workshop), Ludlow Ladd (Tada), Starmites, The Gifts of the Magi, Mental: The Musical (Cherry Lane), Snow White and the 7 Dwarfs (Papermill), Jack and the Beanstalk (Symphony Space). Ben partnered with The NJ Hurricane Sandy Relief Fund to release, At The Water’s Edge, a fundraising music video for victims of Hurricane Sandy. The 2013 USA Songwriting Competition honored his song, “I Love Asian Girls” in their top 10 Comedy/Novelty category. Ben has also headlined at the NY Funny Song Festival for the last two years. www.benrauchsite.com

Joey Murray (Director) is a New York City-based stage and concert director currently directing Under Construction at NYMF 2015. Most recently, he directed and choreographed The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee and Pinkalicious The Musical at Jenny Wiley Theatre in Eastern Kentucky and is associate director for the Broadway-bound production of CAN-CAN atPaper Mill Playhouse. Resident Stage Director for The Broadway Dolls, a “Best of Manhattan” award-winning stage show that has played major performing art centers all over the United States and China. NYC directing credits include: America’s Breath of Fresh Air (FRINGE); Bashert (New York Musical Theatre Festival); Tour de Fierce (NYMF); The Hole (New York Theatre Barn); The Gallery (NYTB); Love Letter (Zipper Theatre); The Pride Concert (Joe’s Pub/Public Theatre); An Evening of Firsts (featuring Mary Testa/Stage 72) and numerous concerts/readings/workshops. Off Broadway, he provided the book for the controversial rock musical The Hole (with collaborators Rob Baumgartner and Heidi Heilig), at Theatre at St. Clements. Joey developed and directed the world premiere Kander and Ebb revue City Lights, and the premiere 80’s rock event Take Me Home at Downstairs Cabaret Theatre in Rochester, NY. Associate Director of Grease (Gateway Playhouse). Graduate of Catholic University of America. Studied playwriting and directing at New York University and The Barrow Group.

Cali Elizabeth Moore did her first national commercial at age 8 and went on to work in film, TV, commercials, voice over, video games, and theatre. Favorite roles include: NBC’s “30 Rock” (Vanessa), Off Broadway’s “The Brady Bunch” (Marcia), Little Shop of Horrors (Audrey), Smokey Joe’s Café (Pattie), How To Succeed… Hedy LaRue (Winner of Knot Award for Best Supporting Actress), and Funked Up Fairytales (Originated role of Titania. Directed by Jerry Dixon) Currently, Cali can be seen in the short films The Shvitzing (premiering September 2015) and Micro (premiering August 2015).

Jay Paranada’s stage work includes Bloody Bloody Andrew Jackson (Van Buren, Piper Theatre), Guys and Dolls (Nicely, Genesis Rep), Merrily We Roll Along (Scotty, Astoria Performing Arts Center), Thoroughly Modern Millie (Bun Foo, Gallery Players), Suites By Sondheim (Alice Tully Hall), Alice Unraveled (NYMF), Odyssey: The Epic Musical (The Araca Project). Select regional credits include: Miss Saigon (Engineer, Best Actor BWW Denver Award), Spelling Bee (Chip), Flower Drum Song (Sammy Fong). Upcoming: Into The Woods (Baker) and A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Bottom) at Redhouse Arts Center.

Kat Liz Kramer was most recently seen in the 20th Anniversary National Tour of Smokey Joe’s Cafe. Additional credits include Man in the Mirror (world tour), Reno Sweeney in Anything Goes (regional), Bakers Wife, Into The Woods (regional). Her first major role was Clara in the San Francisco Ballet’s production of the Nutcracker. Kat joined the Kids Next Door Performing Group opening up for the late great Don Ho’s Christmas show in Vegas for two seasons and performing all over LA and Orange County. In 2012 the singer/songwriter/guitarist released her album, My Wonderland EP.

Lane Kwederis is an actor, writer, and improviser based in NYC. She performs regularly with the house team Characters Welcome at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre, Legend at the Magnet Theater, and Title of Team at the PIT. Television credits include “Broad City” (Comedy Central), “The Untitled Aziz Ansari Project” (Netflix), and “Redrum” (Discovery ID). She was the understudy for Baby in the first national tour and original Toronto cast of Dirty Dancing.

Rory Scholl recently made his Off Broadway debut in Mallorca (Abingdon Theater). He is on the improv house team Royals every Friday night at the Peoples Improv Theater, producer of the touring improv show ARTPROV, and is the lead in Ghostblasters, a musical parody of Ghostbusters debuting Aug 2 at the Peoples Improv Theater. He produces a “Good Sense of Tumor” for NPR’s Studio 360 and is the head writer for ABC’S “Shark Tank,” “The Mark Cuban Show,” was a contestant on Mark Burnett’s “Jingles” reality show, and is spokesperson for Cornell University where he performs with Wynton Marsalis at the Lincoln Center.

Dianne Kaye is a singer/actor/dancer from Sydney, Australia. Some of her performances include; On Stage and On Screen, Baggage (NYFA), Les Miserables (Willoughby Theatre Company), Hairspray (RMS/CTG), Princess Plum’s Prophecy (Australian Theatre for Young People) and Forbidden Broadway (Cleveland Street Theatre). She recently performed as a soloist at theApollo Theatre, and co-wrote, produced, and acted in an original comedy short film ‘Grasshoppers Don’t Fly’ (pending release). She was named Star Central Magazine’s ‘Female Artist to Watch Out For in 2014′.

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

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Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com

 


Cultural Interplay between the East and West in “China: Through the Looking Glass”; extends at The Met through September 7

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Gallery View Anna Wintour Costume Center, Imperial China. Designs from Laurence Xu, a “Dragon Robe” dress, 2011, Yellow silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metal thread, Courtesy of Victoria and Albert Museum, London. Given by Laurence Xu; John Galliano for the House of Dior, (French, founded 1947) Dress, autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture Yellow silk damask embroidered with polychrome silk and gold metallic thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture, on display with a Semiformal Robe for the Qianlong Emperor (1736-95) and a Formal Robe for the Tongzhi Emperor, 1862-1874 Silk and metallic thread, Rogers Fund, 1945 (45.37), in the Metropolitan Museum's Costume Institute exhibition "China: Through the Looking Glass." Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Anna Wintour Costume Center, Imperial China.
Designs from Laurence Xu, a “Dragon Robe” dress, 2011, Yellow silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metal thread, Courtesy of Victoria and Albert Museum, London. Given by Laurence Xu; John Galliano for the House of Dior, (French, founded 1947) Dress, autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture Yellow silk damask embroidered with polychrome silk and gold metallic thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture, on display with a Semiformal Robe for the Qianlong Emperor (1736-95) and a Formal Robe for the Tongzhi Emperor, 1862-1874 Silk and metallic thread, Rogers Fund, 1945
(45.37), in the Metropolitan Museum’s Costume Institute exhibition “China: Through the Looking Glass.” Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Anna Wintour Costume Center, Imperial China. Ralph Lauren (American, born 1939), Ensemble, autumn/winter 2011–12 Jacket of red silk shantung and black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and gold metallic thread; shirt of white cotton broadcloth; pants of black and white pinstriped wool-synthetic twill, Courtesy of Ralph Lauren Collection; Chinese Theatrical costume Made during the Reign of the Qianlong Emperor, 1736-95, Red silk satin brocaded with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of the Palace Museum, Beijing. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Anna Wintour Costume Center, Imperial China.
Ralph Lauren (American, born 1939), Ensemble, autumn/winter 2011–12
Jacket of red silk shantung and black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and gold metallic thread; shirt of white cotton broadcloth; pants of black and white pinstriped wool-synthetic twill, Courtesy of Ralph Lauren Collection;
Chinese Theatrical costume Made during the Reign of the Qianlong Emperor, 1736-95, Red silk satin brocaded with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of the Palace Museum, Beijing. Photo by Lia Chang

China: Through the Looking Glass at The Metropolitan Museum of Art has been extended by three weeks through Labor Day, September 7th. The exhibition, organized by The Costume Institute in collaboration with the Department of Asian Art, opened to the public on May 7th, and as of July 31st, has drawn more than 500,000 visitors according to WWD.com.

Encompassing approximately 30,000 square feet in 16 separate galleries in the Museum’s Chinese and Egyptian Galleries and Anna Wintour Costume Center, it is The Costume Institute’s largest special exhibition ever, and also one of the Museum’s largest. With gallery space three times the size of a typical Costume Institute major spring show, China has accommodated large numbers of visitors without lines.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture Coat of gold lamé matelassé and black fox fur; trousers of black silk velvet, Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé–Yves Saint Laurent, Paris; Chinese Ritual Wine Container (Hu) Eastern Zhou dynasty, Spring and Autumn period (770–476 B.C.), early 5th century B.C. Bronze inlaid with copper, Rogers Fund, 1999 (1999.46a,b). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008),
Ensemble, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture
Coat of gold lamé matelassé and black fox fur; trousers of black silk velvet, Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé–Yves Saint Laurent, Paris;
Chinese Ritual Wine Container (Hu) Eastern Zhou dynasty, Spring and Autumn period (770–476 B.C.), early 5th century B.C.
Bronze inlaid with copper,
Rogers Fund, 1999
(1999.46a,b). Photo by Lia Chang

“This exhibition is one of the most ambitious ever mounted by the Met, and I want as many people as possible to be able see it,” said Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of the Met. “It is a show that represents an extraordinary collaboration across the Museum, resulting in a fantastic exploration of China’s impact on creativity over centuries.

To date, the exhibition’s attendance is pacing close to that of Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty (2011), which was the most visited Costume Institute exhibition ever, as well as the Met’s eighth most popular.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952), Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1997-haute couture Dress of red-purple and gold silk brocade; jumpsuit of gray silk crêpe de chine and gray cockerel feathers, Purchase, Friends of the Costume Institute Gifts, 2013, (2013.564a,b); Chinese Female Dancer, Western Han dynasty (206 B.C.–A.D. 9), 2nd century B.C., Earthenware with pigment, Charlotte C. and John C. Weber Collection, Gift of Charlotte C. and John C. Weber, 1992 (1992.165.19). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952), Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1997-haute couture Dress of red-purple and gold silk brocade; jumpsuit of gray silk crêpe de chine and gray cockerel feathers, Purchase, Friends of the Costume Institute Gifts, 2013, (2013.564a,b);
Chinese Female Dancer, Western Han dynasty (206 B.C.–A.D. 9), 2nd century B.C., Earthenware with pigment, Charlotte C. and John C. Weber Collection, Gift of Charlotte C. and John C. Weber, 1992
(1992.165.19). Photo by Lia Chang

The exhibition explores the impact of Chinese aesthetics on Western fashion and how China has fueled the fashionable imagination for centuries. High fashion is juxtaposed with Chinese costumes, paintings, porcelains, and other art, including films, to reveal enchanting reflections of Chinese imagery. The exhibition, which was originally set to close on August 16, is curated by Andrew Bolton. Wong Kar Wai is artistic director and Nathan Crowley served as production designer.

Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010), Philip Treacy (British, born Ireland, 1967), “Chinese Garden” headdress, spring/summer 2005, Carved cork, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Alfred Z. Solomon–Janet A. Sloane Endowment Fund, 2007 (2007.307). Photo by Lia Chang

Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010), Philip Treacy (British, born Ireland, 1967), “Chinese Garden” headdress, spring/summer 2005,
Carved cork, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Alfred Z. Solomon–Janet A. Sloane Endowment Fund, 2007 (2007.307). Photo by Lia Chang

Below are excerpts from Wong Kar-Wai’s speech.

Filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai attends the 'China: Through the Looking Glass' press preview at the Temple of Dendur at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 4, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai attends the ‘China: Through the Looking Glass’ press preview at the Temple of Dendur at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 4, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

“Putting together this show has been a truly remarkable journey for myself and everyone involved. Our creative team was comprised of experts across various disciplines including fine arts, fashion and cinema.Together we hope to offer you a collective perspective that is both compelling and provocative.

One of the most fascinating parts of this journey for myself was having the opportunity to revisit the Western perspective of the East through the lens of early Hollywood. Whether it was Fred Astaire playing a fan dancing Chinese man or Anna May Wong in one of her signature Dragon Lady roles, it is safe to say that most of the depictions were far from authentic.

Unlike their filmmaking contemporaries, the fashion designers and tastemakers of that period take those distortions as their inspiration and went on to create a Western aesthetic with new layers of meanings that was uniquely their own.

 

Anna May Wong in “Limehouse Blues,”1934.

Anna May Wong in “Limehouse Blues,”1934.

In this exhibition, we did not shy away from these images because they are historical fact in their own reality. Instead, we look for the areas of commonality and appreciate the beauty that abounds.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Travis Banton (American, 1894–1958) Evening dress, 1934, worn by Anna May Wong, Black silk charmeuse embroidered with gold and silver sequins, Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Anna May Wong, 1956; Film Still of Anna May Wong in “Limehouse Blues,”1934, courtesy of Paramount Pictures, Archive Photos, and Getty Images. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Travis Banton (American, 1894–1958) Evening dress, 1934, worn by Anna May Wong, Black silk charmeuse embroidered with gold and silver sequins, Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Anna May Wong, 1956; Film Still of Anna May Wong in “Limehouse Blues,”1934, courtesy of Paramount Pictures, Archive Photos, and Getty Images. Photo by Lia Chang

With China: Through the Looking Glass, we have tried our best to encapsulate over a century of cultural interplay between the East and West that has equally inspired and informed. It is a celebration of fashion, cinema and creative liberty. It is an important time in the human history for cross cultural dialogue and I’m proud and delighted to contribute to the conversation.”

 

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936-2008) Evening ensemble, spring/summer 1980 Jacket of black silk gazar embroidered with gold metallic thread, gold beads, and silver sequins; skirt of black silk satin with gold lamé, Gift of Diana Vreeland, 1984 (1984.607.28a-c). Photo by Lia Chang “Anna May Wong in Picadilly,” 1929 Film still courtesy of the Kobal Collection

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936-2008)
Evening ensemble, spring/summer 1980
Jacket of black silk gazar embroidered with gold metallic thread, gold beads, and silver sequins; skirt of black silk satin with gold lamé, Gift of Diana Vreeland, 1984
(1984.607.28a-c). Photo by Lia Chang
“Anna May Wong in Picadilly,” 1929 Film still courtesy of the Kobal Collection

In Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There (1871), the heroine enters an imaginary, alternative universe by climbing through a mirror in her house. In this world, a reflected version of her home, everything is topsy-turvy and back-to-front. Like Alice’s make-believe world, the China mirrored in the fashions in this exhibition is wrapped in invention and imagination.

 

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008) Jacket, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture Black and red silk ciré Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé - –Yves Saint Laurent, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008)
Jacket, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture
Black and red silk ciré
Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé – –Yves Saint Laurent, Paris.
Photo by Lia Chang

“From the earliest period of European contact with China in the 16th century, the West has been enchanted with enigmatic objects and imagery from the East, providing inspiration for fashion designers from Paul Poiret to Yves Saint Laurent, whose fashions are infused at every turn with romance, nostalgia, and make­ believe,” said Andrew Bolton, Curator in The Costume Institute. “Through the looking glass of fashion, designers conjoin disparate stylistic references into a fantastic pastiche of Chinese aesthetic and cultural traditions.”

Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Dress, 1920s Black silk chiffon embroidered with polychrome plastic beads Courtesy of Didier Ludot; Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Verreries Brosse (French, founded 1892), “Joy” perfume presentation, 1931, Flacon of green glass and red bakelite; box of gold paper Courtesy of Christie Mayer Lefkowith; Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Verreries Brosse (French, founded 1892), “1000” perfume presentation, 1972, Flacon of black glass, red bakelite, and gold metal; box of gold paper Courtesy of Christie Mayer Lefkowith; Chinese Snuff bottle with stopper, 18th-19th century Smoky quartz rock crystal, red coral, gilt metal, Gift of Heber R. Bishop, 1902 (02.18.937a,b).  Photo by Lia Chang

Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Dress, 1920s Black silk chiffon embroidered with polychrome plastic beads Courtesy of Didier Ludot; Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Verreries Brosse (French, founded 1892), “Joy” perfume presentation, 1931, Flacon of green glass and red bakelite; box of gold paper Courtesy of Christie Mayer Lefkowith; Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Verreries Brosse (French, founded 1892), “1000” perfume presentation, 1972, Flacon of black glass, red bakelite, and gold metal; box of gold paper Courtesy of Christie Mayer Lefkowith; Chinese Snuff bottle with stopper, 18th-19th century Smoky quartz rock crystal, red coral, gilt metal, Gift of Heber R. Bishop, 1902 (02.18.937a,b).
Photo by Lia Chang

Designers featured in China: Through the Looking Glass include Cristobal Balenciaga, Bulgari, Sarah Burton for Alexander McQueen, Callot Soeurs, Cartier, Roberto Cavalli, Coco Chanel, Christian Dior, Tom Ford for Yves Saint Laurent, John Galliano for Christian Dior, Jean Paul Gaultier, Valentino Garavani, Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pierpaolo Picciolo for Valentino, Craig Green, Guo Pei, Marc Jacobs for Louis Vuitton, Charles James, Mary Katrantzou, Karl Lagerfeld for Chanel, Jeanne Lanvin, Ralph Lauren, Judith Leiber, Christian Louboutin, Ma Ke, Mainbocher, Martin Margiela, Alexander McQueen, Alexander McQueen for Givenchy, Edward Molyneux, Kate and Laura Mulleavy, Dries van Noten, Jean Patou, Paul Poiret, Yves Saint Laurent, Paul Smith, Vivienne Tam, Isabel Toledo, Giambattista Valli, Vivienne Westwood, Jason Wu, and Laurence Xu.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 2003 haute couture, Jacket of polychrome printed silk velvet with yellow, blue, and green silk organdy; skirt of white and blue-printed silk georgette, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture; Anne Allen (British, born 1749/50–1808 (?)), After Jean Pillement (French, 1728-1808), Chinoiserie from Nouvelle Suite de Cahiers Arabesques Chinois, 1790-1799 Etching à la poupée, Rogers Fund, 1921 (21.91.20); a British pair of mirror, ca. 1760, carved and gilt linden wood, glass Purchase, Morris Loeb Bequest, 1955 (55.43.1, .2). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries
House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 2003 haute couture, Jacket of polychrome printed silk velvet with yellow, blue, and green silk organdy; skirt of white and blue-printed silk georgette,
Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture; Anne Allen (British, born 1749/50–1808 (?)), After Jean Pillement (French, 1728-1808), Chinoiserie from Nouvelle Suite de Cahiers Arabesques Chinois, 1790-1799 Etching à la poupée, Rogers Fund, 1921 (21.91.20); a British pair of mirror, ca. 1760, carved and gilt linden wood, glass Purchase, Morris Loeb Bequest, 1955 (55.43.1, .2). Photo by Lia Chang

The Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Gallery
Emperor to Citizen
There are a series of “mirrored reflections” through time and space, focusing on the Qing dynasty of Imperial China (1644-1911); the Republic of China, especially Shanghai in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s; and the People’s Republic of China (1949-present) in The Anna Wintour Costume Center’s Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Gallery. These reflections, as well as others in the exhibition, have been illustrated with scenes from films by such groundbreaking Chinese directors as Zhang Yimou, Chen Kaige, Ang Lee, and Wong Kar-Wai, artistic director of the exhibition. Several of the galleries also feature original compositions by internationally acclaimed musician Wu Tong.

“China: Through The Looking Glass,” on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, includes film clips from The Last Emperor and the robe, center, worn by China’s last emperor, Pu Yi, when he was 4 years old. Photo by Lia Chang

Upon entering the Costume Institute galleries, there’s a video tunnel showing Bertolucci’s The Last Emperor, a broad and sweeping journey of Chinese history, and at the end of the tunnel is a festival robe worn by the last emperor, Pu Yi, when he was four years old.

Semi-formal Robe for the Xuantong Emperor, 1909-1911 Yellow silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metallic thread Courtesy of The Palace Museum, Beijing. Photo by Lia Chang

Semi-formal Robe for the Xuantong Emperor, 1909-1911
Yellow silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metallic thread Courtesy of The Palace Museum, Beijing. Photo by Lia Chang

Western designers have been inspired by China’s long and rich history, with the Manchu robe, the modern qipao, and the Zhongshan suit (after Sun Yat-sen, but more commonly known in the West as the Mao suit, after Mao Zedong), serving as a kind of shorthand for China and the shifting social and political identities of its peoples, and also as sartorial symbols that allow Western designers to contemplate the idea of a radically different society from their own.

Yves Saint Laurent (French, founded 1961) Tom Ford (American, born 1961) Evening dress, autumn/winter 2004–5 Red silk satin embroidered with polychrome plastic sequins; gray fox fur Gift of Yves Saint Laurent, 2005 (2005.325.1). Photo by Lia Chang

Yves Saint Laurent (French, founded 1961)
Tom Ford (American, born 1961)
Evening dress, autumn/winter 2004–5
Red silk satin embroidered with polychrome plastic sequins; gray fox fur Gift of Yves Saint Laurent, 2005
(2005.325.1). Photo by Lia Chang

Manchu Robe
In terms of the Manchu robe, Western designers usually focus their creative impulses toward the formal (official) and semiformal (festive) costumes of the imperial court in all of their imagistic splendor and richness. Bats, clouds, ocean waves, mountain peaks, and in particular, dragons are presented as meditations on the spectacle of imperial authority. Most of the robes in this gallery—several of which belong to the Palace Museum in Beijing—were worn by Chinese emperors, a fact indicated by the twelve imperial symbols woven into or embroidered onto their designs to highlight the rulers’ virtues and abilities: sun with three-legged bird; moon with a ”jade hare” grinding medicine; constellation of three stars, which, like the sun and moon, signify enlightenment; mountains to signify grace and stability; axe to signify determination; Fu symbol (two bow-shaped signs) to signify collaboration; pair of ascending and descending dragons to signify adaptability; pheasant to symbolize literary elegance; pair of sacrificial vessels painted with a tiger and a long-tailed monkey to signify courage and wisdom; waterweed to signify flexibility; flame to signify righteousness; and grain to signify fertility and prosperity.

Dries Van Noten (Belgian, born 1958) Ensemble, autumn/winter 2012–13. Jacket of black wool-silk hammered satin printed with polychrome dragon motifs; trousers of black wool twill. Courtesy of Dries Van Noten Archive Photo by Lia Chang

Dries Van Noten (Belgian, born 1958) Ensemble, autumn/winter 2012–13. Jacket of black wool-silk hammered satin printed with polychrome dragon motifs; trousers of black wool twill. Courtesy of Dries Van Noten Archive
Photo by Lia Chang

 

In a surrealist act of displacement, the British milliner Stephen Jones, commissioned by the museum to create the headpieces in the exhibition, has relocated these symbols, whose placement on the imperial costumes of the emperor was governed by strict rules, to the head, where they appear as three-dimensional sculptural forms.

Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel (French, 1883–1971), Evening jacket, ca. 1930, Reconfigured Chinese robe of blue silk gauze embroidered with polychrome silk and metal thread, Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of the Smithsonian Institution, 1984, (2009.300.8101). Photo by Lia Chang

Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel (French, 1883–1971), Evening jacket, ca. 1930, Reconfigured Chinese robe of blue silk gauze embroidered with polychrome silk and metal thread, Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of the Smithsonian Institution, 1984, (2009.300.8101). Photo by Lia Chang

The Carl and Iris Barrel Apfel Gallery
Traditional and haute couture qipaos as interpreted by Western designers are on display in The Carl and Iris Barrel Apfel Gallery along with film clips from Wong Kar Wai’s The Hand from Eros, 2004 and In the Mood for Love, 2000; The Goddess, a 1934 film directed by Wu Yonggang; Lust, Caution, 2007 directed by Ang Lee; The World of Suzie Wong, 1960 directed by Richard Quine. 

Nancy Quan and William Holden in The World of Suzie Wong, 1960 Directed by Richard Quine (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Paramount Pictures)

Nancy Quan and William Holden in The World of Suzie Wong, 1960 Directed by Richard Quine (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Paramount Pictures)

Maggie Cheung in Wong Kar Wai's In the Mood for Love, 2000 (Block 2 Pictures, Courtesy of Block 2 Pictures Inc., © 2000 Block 2 Pictures Inc.) All rights reserved

Maggie Cheung in Wong Kar Wai’s In the Mood for Love, 2000 (Block 2 Pictures, Courtesy of Block 2 Pictures Inc., © 2000 Block 2 Pictures Inc.) All rights reserved

Joan Chen and Tang Wei (center) in Lust, Caution, 2007 directed by Ang Lee (Focus Features, Courtesy of EDKO FILMS LIMITED)

Joan Chen and Tang Wei (center) in Lust, Caution, 2007 directed by Ang Lee (Focus Features, Courtesy of EDKO FILMS LIMITED)

In the period between the two world wars, film actresses in Shanghai, known as the Hollywood of the East, were in the vanguard of fashion. Through their images on screen as well as in lifestyle magazines, they led new trends in the modern qipao. In the 1930s, the most eminent actress was Hu Die (Butterfly Wu), whose qipaos are on view.

Chen Jiazhen (Chinese)
“Miss Hu Die,” 1934, from Portrait Albums of Chinese Actresses, series 1, no. 3, 1930s Ink on paper,
 Courtesy of Private lender

Chen Jiazhen (Chinese)
“Miss Hu Die,” 1934, from Portrait Albums of Chinese Actresses, series 1, no. 3, 1930s Ink on paper,
 Courtesy of Private lender

Chu Hongsheng (Chinese, born 1918), Cheongsams, 1930s, Worn by Hu Die (Butterfly Wu, Chinese, 1908-1989) Cream silk lace, Courtesy of Collection Hanart 1918, Shanghai. Photo by Lia Chang

Chu Hongsheng (Chinese, born 1918), Cheongsams, 1930s, Worn by Hu Die (Butterfly Wu, Chinese, 1908-1989) Cream silk lace, Courtesy of Collection Hanart 1918, Shanghai. Photo by Lia Chang

Elected the Queen of Cinema after a nationwide poll by the Star Daily newspaper in 1933, she won favor with her on-screen depictions of virtuous women and her off-screen persona of ladylike sophistication. In the West, Hu Die became an embodiment of Chinese femininity. Her photograph appeared in a 1929 issue of American Vogue as the example of modern “Chinese elegance.”

“China: Through The Looking Glass,” on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in The Carl and Iris Barrel Apfel Gallery features traditional and haute couture qipaos with film clips from Wong Kar Wai’s “In the Mood for Love.” Photo by Lia Chang

Over time, the silhouette of the qipao evolved, quoting Western, specifically Parisian and Hollywood, aesthetics. Its columnar, body-skimming silhouette of the 1920s, a narrower expression of the flapper’s chemise, became a contour-cleaving fit in the 1930s, similar to the haut monde’s and screen sirens’ glamorous bias-cut gowns.

Chinese Cheongsams, 1920s and 1930s. Courtesy of Hong Kong Museum of History. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese Cheongsams, 1920s and 1930s. Courtesy of Hong Kong Museum of History. Photo by Lia Chang

From the 1920s to the 1940s, the modern qipao was considered a form of national dress in China. An aristocratic version was promoted during this period by images of Oei Hui- Ian, the third wife of the Chinese diplomat and politician Vi Kuiyuin Wellington Koo, and Soong Mei-ling, the wife of Chiang Kai-shek, a military and political leader and eventual president of the Republic of China.

Qipaos worn by Oei Hui- Ian, the third wife of the Chinese diplomat and politician Vi Kuiyuin Wellington Koo, and Soong Mei-ling, the wife of Chiang Kai-shek, a military and political leader and eventual president of the Republic of China. Photo by Lia Chang

Qipaos worn by Oei Hui- Ian, the third wife of the Chinese diplomat and politician Vi Kuiyuin Wellington Koo, and Soong Mei-ling, the wife of Chiang Kai-shek, a military and political leader and eventual president of the Republic of China. Photo by Lia Chang

While the qipao became the signature style of both women, who were known in the West for their sophistication, Oei Hui-Ian was also a couture client and would often mix her qipaos with jackets by Chanel and Schiaparelli. A 1943 issue of American Vogue features a Horst photograph of Oei Hui-Ian wearing the version on view here, which is embroidered with the traditional motif of one hundred children. The article in the same issue describes her as “a Chinese citizen of the world, an international beauty.”

Modern day qipao designs by Jean Paul Gaultier and John Galliano for the House of Dior on display in 'China: Through The Looking Glass' at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Modern day qipao designs by Jean Paul Gaultier and John Galliano for the House of Dior on display in ‘China: Through The Looking Glass’ at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

The modern qipao is a favorite of Western designers, not only because of its allure and glamour but also because of its mutability and malleability, and it can be rendered in any print, fabric, or texture, conveying whatever desires and associations they stimulate in the minds of designers.

Jean Paul Gaultier (French, born 1952), Evening dress, autumn/winter 2001–2 haute couture Black lacquered silk satin and nude silk tulle embroidered with black synthetic thread Courtesy of Jean Paul Gaultier. Photo by Lia Chang

Jean Paul Gaultier (French, born 1952), Evening dress, autumn/winter 2001–2 haute couture Black lacquered silk satin and nude silk tulle embroidered with black synthetic thread Courtesy of Jean Paul Gaultier. Photo by Lia Chang

Egyptian Art Landing 
In the Egyptian Art Landing, film clips of Chung Kuo: Cina (1972) directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, In the Heat of the Sun (1994) directed by Jiang Wen, and The Red Detachment of Women (1970) directed by Fu Jie and Pan Wenzhan play on the screens above the garments on display. The Zhongshan suit, or Mao suit as it is more commonly known in the West, remains a powerful sartorial signifier of China, despite the fact that it began disappearing from the wardrobes of most Chinese men and women, aside from government officials, in the early 1990s. For many Western designers, the appeal of the Mao suit rests in its principled practicality and functionalism.

Chinese Ensemble, 1983, Jacket and pants of blue polyester twill, Courtesy of Claire E. and Norma J. Taylor; Chinese Ensemble, 1980s, worn by Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950-1990),  Gray cotton twill, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950–1990) “New York, New York, 1979,” From the East Meets West series, 1979–89 Silver gelatin print, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Vivienne Westwood (British, born 1941) Ensemble, spring/summer 2012, Gray cotton poplin, Courtesy of Vivienne Westwood. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese Ensemble, 1983, Jacket and pants of blue polyester twill, Courtesy of Claire E. and Norma J. Taylor; Chinese Ensemble, 1980s, worn by Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950-1990), Gray cotton twill, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950–1990) “New York, New York, 1979,” From the East Meets West series, 1979–89 Silver gelatin print, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Vivienne Westwood (British, born 1941) Ensemble, spring/summer 2012, Gray cotton poplin, Courtesy of Vivienne Westwood. Photo by Lia Chang

Its uniformity implies an idealism and utopianism reflected in its seemingly liberating obfuscation of class and gender distinctions. During the late 1960s, a time of international political and cultural upheaval, the Mao suit in the West became a symbol of an anti- capitalist proletariat. In Europe, it was embraced enthusiastically by the left-leaning intelligentsia specifically for a countercultural and antiestablishment effect.

Chinese Ensemble, 1980s, worn by Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950-1990), Gray cotton twill, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950–1990) “New York, New York, 1979,” From the East Meets West series, 1979–89 Silver gelatin print, Courtesy of Muna Tseng. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese Ensemble, 1980s, worn by Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950-1990), Gray cotton twill, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950–1990) “New York, New York, 1979,” From the East Meets West series, 1979–89 Silver gelatin print, Courtesy of Muna Tseng. Photo by Lia Chang

For Tseng Kwong Chi, who was born in Hong Kong and active in the East Village in the 1980s, the Mao suit was a vehicle to explore Western stereotypes of China. From his self- portrait series East Meets West (also known as the Expeditionary Series, 1979-90), he masqueraded as a visiting Chinese dignitary wearing mirrored sunglasses and a Mao suit, and stood in front of various cultural and architectural landmarks and natural landscapes. Exploiting the fact that people treated him differently based on his dress, the artist used his adopted persona, which he described as an “ambiguous ambassador,” to illustrate the West’s naïveté and ignorance of the East. The catalyst for East Meets West was President Richard M. Nixon’s trip to China in 1972, an event that the artist defined as “a real exchange [that] was supposed to take place between the East and West. However, the relations remained official and superficial.

Chinese Red Guard uniform, 1966–76, Suit of green cotton twill; armband of printed red synthetic satin, Courtesy of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, Sydney, Australia; Purchased 1998; Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou), “Mao Portrait Dress,” spring/summer 1995 Polychrome printed nylon mesh; Courtesy of Vivienne Tam; Andy Warhol (American, 1928-1987) “Mao,” 1973, Acrylic and silkscreen on canvas, Gift of Halston, 1983 (1983.606.1); Vivienne Tam “Mao Suit,” spring/summer 1995, White and black polyester jacquard, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam; House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 1999 Jacket of green silk shantung with red silk satin piping and gold metallic frogging; skirt of pleated green silk jacquard, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese Red Guard uniform, 1966–76, Suit of green cotton twill; armband of printed red synthetic satin, Courtesy of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, Sydney, Australia; Purchased 1998; Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou), “Mao Portrait Dress,” spring/summer 1995 Polychrome printed nylon mesh; Courtesy of Vivienne Tam; Andy Warhol (American, 1928-1987) “Mao,” 1973, Acrylic and silkscreen on canvas, Gift of Halston, 1983 (1983.606.1); Vivienne Tam “Mao Suit,” spring/summer 1995, White and black polyester jacquard, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam; House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 1999 Jacket of green silk shantung with red silk satin piping and gold metallic frogging; skirt of pleated green silk jacquard, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

The art of the Cultural Revolution (1966-76) profoundly influenced the American and European avant-garde. Andy Warhol created his first screen-printed paintings of Mao Zedong in 1973, immediately following President Richard M. Nixon’s visit to China in 1972, and over time made nearly two thousand portraits in various sizes and styles. Both model and multiple, Warhol’s Mao is undeniably of the masses, like the original 1964 portrait that was reproduced in the millions as the frontispiece to the Little Red Book.

Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou) “Mao Suit,” spring/summer 1995, White and black polyester jacquard, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam, Unidentified artist (Chinese, active 1960s) Chin Shilin (Chinese, born 1930) “Chairman Mao,” 1964, Gelatin silver print, Twentieth-Century Photography Fund, 2011 (2011.368). Photo by Lia Chang

Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou) “Mao Suit,” spring/summer 1995, White and black polyester jacquard, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam, Unidentified artist (Chinese, active 1960s) Chin Shilin (Chinese, born 1930) “Chairman Mao,” 1964, Gelatin silver print, Twentieth-Century Photography Fund, 2011 (2011.368). Photo by Lia Chang

In his Chairman Mao series (1989), Zhang Hongtu, who grew up during the Cultural Revolution, extended a Warholian sensibility to his own mode of Political Pop, lending a satirical eye to the 1964 portrait. For her spring/ summer 1995 collection, designer Vivienne Tam, who was born in Guangzhou, collaborated with Zhang to create a dress printed with images from the Chairman Mao series. The same collection also included a silk jacquard suit of the 1964 portrait.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Photo by Lia Chang

In China: Through the Looking Glass, the Astor Forecourt gallery has been devoted to Chinese-American actress Anna May Wong. Haute Couture designs by Yves Saint Laurent, Ralph Lauren, Paul Smith and John Galliano for the House of Dior inspired by Ms. Wong, are displayed alongside a Travis Banton gown she wore in Limehouse Blues(1934). Ms. Wong can be seen in a montage of rare film clips edited by Wong Kar-Wai, vintage film stills and photographs by Edward Sheriff Curtis and Nickolas Muray.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt, Anna May Wong Evening dress, John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960) for House of Dior (French, founded 1947), autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture; Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang; Anna May Wong, 1925 Photograph by Edward Sheriff Curtis (American, 1868-1952)

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt, Anna May Wong Evening dress, John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960) for House of Dior (French, founded 1947), autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture; Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang; Anna May Wong, 1925 Photograph by Edward Sheriff Curtis (American, 1868-1952)

In terms of shaping Western fantasies of China, no figure has had a greater impact on fashion than Ms. Wong. Born in Los Angeles in 1905 as Huang Liushuang (”yellow willow frost”), she was fated to play opposing stereotypes of the Enigmatic Oriental, namely the docile, obedient, submissive Lotus Flower and the wily, predatory, calculating Dragon Lady.

Anna May Wong in The Toll of the Sea, 1922 directed by Chester M. Franklin (Metro Pictures Corporation, UCLA Film & Television Archive)

Anna May Wong in The Toll of the Sea, 1922 directed by Chester M. Franklin (Metro Pictures Corporation, UCLA Film & Television Archive)

Anna May Wong in Daughter of the Dragon, 1931 directed by Lloyd Corrigan (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC).

Anna May Wong in Daughter of the Dragon, 1931 directed by Lloyd Corrigan (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC).

Marlene Dietrich and Anna May Wong in Shanghai Express, 1932 directed by Josef von Sternberg (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC).

Marlene Dietrich and Anna May Wong in Shanghai Express, 1932 directed by Josef von Sternberg (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC).

Film clips featuring Chinese-American actress Anna May Wong include Daughter of the Dragon, 1931 Directed by Lloyd Corrigan (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC); Limehouse Blues (1934) directed by Alexander Hall (Paramount Pictures UCLA Film & Television Archive); Piccadilly (1929) directed by E. A. Dupont (British International Pictures, Courtesy of Milestone Film & Video and British Film Institute); Shanghai Express, (1932) directed by Josef von Sternberg (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC); and The Toll of the Sea (1922) directed by Chester M. Franklin (Metro Pictures Corporation, UCLA Film & Television Archive) run on overhead screens in The Astor Forecourt.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Ralph Lauren (American, born 1939), Evening dress, autumn/winter 2011–12 Black synthetic double georgette and net embroidered with black silk thread and beads Courtesy of Ralph Lauren Collection. Photo by Lia Chang; Film still of Anna May Wong in “Daughter of the Dragon,” 1931, courtesy of Paramount/The Kobal Collection.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Ralph Lauren (American, born 1939), Evening dress, autumn/winter 2011–12
Black synthetic double georgette and net embroidered with black silk thread and beads Courtesy of Ralph Lauren Collection. Photo by Lia Chang; Film still of Anna May Wong in “Daughter of the Dragon,” 1931, courtesy of Paramount/The Kobal Collection.

Limited by race and social norms in America and constrained by one- dimensional caricatures in Hollywood, she moved to Europe, where the artistic avant-garde embraced her as a symbol of modernity. The artists Marianne Brandt and Edward Steichen found a muse in Anna May Wong, as did the theorist Walter Benjamin, who in a 1928 essay describes her in a richly evocative manner: “May Wong the name sounds colorfully margined, packed like marrow-bone yet light like tiny sticks that unfold to become a moon-filled, fragranceless blossom in a cup of tea,” Benjamin, like the designers in this gallery, enwraps Anna May Wong in Western allusions and associations, In so doing, he unearths latent empathies between the two cultures, which the fashions on display here extend through their creative liberties.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. House of Dior (French, founded 1947) John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960) Dress, autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture Pink silk jacquard and black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang. Anna May Wong, 1931 Photograph by Nickolas Muray (American, born Hungary, 1892-1965), courtesy of Paramount/The Kobal Collection. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. House of Dior (French, founded 1947)
John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960)
Dress, autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture
Pink silk jacquard and black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang.
Anna May Wong, 1931
Photograph by Nickolas Muray (American, born Hungary, 1892-1965), courtesy of Paramount/The Kobal Collection. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery- Astor Garden
The exhibition’s subtitle “Through the Looking Glass” translates into Chinese as “Moon in the Water,” that alludes to Buddhism. In the Met’s Astor Chinese Garden Court, a moon was projected onto the ceiling and reflected in what appears to be a shallow pool. Dresses by John Galliano and Martin Margiela—which appear like apparitions on the water—were inspired by Beijing opera.

“Through the Looking Glass” translates into Chinese as “Moon in the Water.” In the Met’s Astor Chinese Garden Court, a moon was projected onto the ceiling and reflected in what appears to be a shallow pool. Dresses by John Galliano and Martin Margiela—which appear like apparitions on the water—were inspired by Beijing opera. Photo by Lia Chang

“Through the Looking Glass” translates into Chinese as “Moon in the Water.” In the Met’s Astor Chinese Garden Court, a moon was projected onto the ceiling and reflected in what appears to be a shallow pool. Dresses by John Galliano and Martin Margiela—which appear like apparitions on the water—were inspired by Beijing opera. Photo by Lia Chang

Like “Flower in the Mirror,” it suggests something that cannot be grasped, and has both positive and negative connotations. When used to describe a beautiful object, “moon in the water” can refer to a quality of perfection that is either so elusive and mysterious that the item becomes transcendent or so illusory and deceptive that it becomes untrustworthy.

Chinese Theatrical Robe for the Role of a Guard, 18th century, Silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metallic-thread with silk appliqué Rogers Fund, 1929 (30.76.33). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View of The Astor Court- Chinese Theatrical Robe for the Role of a Guard, 18th century, Silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metallic-thread with silk appliqué Rogers Fund, 1929 (30.76.33). Photo by Lia Chang

The metaphor often expresses romantic longing, as the eleventh-century poet Huang Tingjian wrote: “Like picking a blossom in a mirror/Or grabbing at the moon in water/I stare at you but cannot get near you.” It also conveys unrequited love, as in the song “Hope Betrayed” in Cao Xueqin’s mid-eighteenth-century novel Dream of the Red Chamber: “In vain were all her sighs and tears/In vain were all his anxious fears:/As moonlight mirrored in the water/Or flowers reflected in a glass.”

Gallery View of The Astor Court- House of Dior (French, founded 1947)John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960)Ensemble, spring/summer 2003 haute coutureCoat of pink silk jacquard embroidered with green and blue silk and gold metallic thread; dress of pink silk organza, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View of The Astor Court- House of Dior (French, founded 1947)John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960)Ensemble, spring/summer 2003 haute coutureCoat of pink silk jacquard embroidered with green and blue silk and gold metallic thread; dress of pink silk organza, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

Two other garments by Maison Martin Margiela are recycled opera costumes from the 1930s that have been repurposed as haute couture, an extraordinarily East-meets-West display of technical virtuosity.

Two other garments by Maison Martin Margiela are recycled opera costumes from the 1930s that have been repurposed as haute couture, an extraordinarily East-meets-West display of technical virtuosity. Photo by Lia Chang

Two other garments by Maison Martin Margiela are recycled opera costumes from the 1930s that have been repurposed as haute couture, an extraordinarily East-meets-West display of technical virtuosity. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View of The Astor Court- Maison Martin Margiela (French, founded 1988),Smoking coat, autumn/winter 2013-14 Artisanal Black silk satin and black wool suiting embroidered with polychrome sequins and crystal bugle beads, Courtesy of Maison Martin Margiela. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View of The Astor Court- Maison Martin Margiela (French, founded 1988),Smoking coat, autumn/winter 2013-14 Artisanal Black silk satin and black wool suiting embroidered with polychrome sequins and crystal bugle beads, Courtesy of Maison Martin Margiela. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery Ming Furniture Room
Film clips of Raise the Red Lantern (1991) directed by Zhang Yimou, Farewell My Concubine (1993) directed by Chen Kaige, Mei Lanfang’s Stage Art (1955) and Two Stage Sisters (1964) directed by Xie Jin serve as a vivid backdrop to the designs on display in the Ming Furniture Room.

Ming Furniture Room Gallery View-Evening dresses, Valentino SpA (Italian, founded 1959), “Shanghai” collection 2013; Courtesy of Valentino SpA. Photo by Lia Chang

Ming Furniture Room Gallery View-Evening dresses, Valentino SpA (Italian, founded 1959), “Shanghai” collection 2013; Courtesy of Valentino SpA. Photo by Lia Chang

Ming Furniture Room Gallery View-Evening dresses, Valentino SpA (Italian, founded 1959), “Shanghai” collection 2013; Courtesy of Valentino SpA. Photo by Lia Chang

Ming Furniture Room Gallery View-Evening dresses, Valentino SpA (Italian, founded 1959), “Shanghai” collection 2013; Courtesy of Valentino SpA. Photo by Lia Chang

In Chinese culture, the color red, which traditionally corresponds to the element of fire, symbolizes good fortune and happiness. After the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, red also came to represent the communist revolution. In the West, the color is so strongly associated with China that it has come to stand in for the nation and its peoples. When Valentino presented its Manifesto collection in Shanghai in 2013, the creative directors Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pierpaolo Piccioli dedicated it to “the many shades of red.” In choosing the color as the theme, they were also referencing the history of Valentino, as red has long been a signature color of the house. As early as the 1960s, its founder, Valentino Garavani, employed it throughout his collection, especially in his lavish evening designs. In this gallery are several gowns from the Manifesto collection, which epitomize the atelier’s exquisite lacework and meticulous and magnificent embroideries.

Gallery: Export Silk
Ever since the silk trade between China and the Roman Empire blossomed in the late first and early second centuries, Western fashion’s appetite for Chinese silk textiles has been insatiable. This craving intensified in the sixteenth century, when sea trade expanded the availability of Chinese luxury goods, giving rise in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to a lasting taste for chinoiserie.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Export Silk- Chinese Shawl, early 20 century, White silk crepe embroidered with polychrome silk floral motifs, Gift of Mrs. Maxime L. Hermanos, 1968 (C.I.68.64.1) and two evening dresses by  Cristóbal Balenciaga (Spanish, 1895–1972), 1962 White silk dupioni embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of Hamish Bowles; 1960 White silk satin embroidered with crystals and polychrome silk and metal thread, Courtesy of Cristóbal Balenciaga Museoa, Getaria, Spain. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Export Silk. Chinese Shawl, early 20 century, White silk crepe embroidered with polychrome silk floral motifs, Gift of Mrs. Maxime L. Hermanos, 1968 (C.I.68.64.1) and two evening dresses by Cristóbal Balenciaga (Spanish, 1895–1972), 1962 White silk dupioni embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of Hamish Bowles; 1960 White silk satin embroidered with crystals and polychrome silk and metal thread, Courtesy of Cristóbal Balenciaga Museoa, Getaria, Spain. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese export silks, like export wallpapers, have sometimes been subsumed into the history of the applied arts in the West.  Yet despite their Western-inspired decoration, they remain part of the history of the material culture of China, particularly the port city of Canton (now Guangzhou). The relationship between producer and consumer, however, is complicated by the transmission of design elements between East and West. Like the sinuous motifs on the painted silks and wallpapers in these galleries, Chinese export art reveals multiple meanderings of influence from the earliest period of European contact with China, leading to the accumulation of layers and layers of stylistic translations and mistranslations.

American Robe à la Polonaise, 1780-85 Yellow silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs. Gift of heirs of Emily Kearny Rodgers Cowenhoven, 1970 (1970.87a,b); French Robe à la Polonaise, ca. 1780, White silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs Purchase, Mr. and Mrs. Alan S. Davis Gift, 1976 (1976.146a, b). Photo by Lia Chang

American Robe à la Polonaise, 1780-85
Yellow silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs. Gift of heirs of Emily Kearny Rodgers Cowenhoven, 1970 (1970.87a,b); French
Robe à la Polonaise, ca. 1780, White silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs Purchase, Mr. and Mrs. Alan S. Davis Gift, 1976 (1976.146a, b). Photo by Lia Chang

Cristobal Balenciaga (Spanish, 1895–1972) Ensemble, 1955–56 White silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs Courtesy of The Henry Ford, Dearborn, Michigan. Photo by Lia Chang

Cristobal Balenciaga (Spanish, 1895–1972)
Ensemble, 1955–56
White silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs Courtesy of The Henry Ford, Dearborn, Michigan. Photo by Lia Chang

Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010) Dress, autumn/winter 2006–7 Cream and polychrome silk brocade Courtesy of Alexander McQueen. Photo by Lia Chang

Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010) Dress, autumn/winter 2006–7
Cream and polychrome silk brocade Courtesy of Alexander McQueen. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery – Calligraphy
Western fashion’s abiding interest in Chinese aesthetics embraces the graphic language of calligraphy, which in China is considered the highest form of artistic expression. Designers are typically inspired by calligraphy for its decorative possibilities rather than its linguistic significance. Chinese characters serve as the textile patterns on the dresses by Christian Dior and Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel in this gallery.

(L-R) Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel (French, 1883–1971) Dress, ca. 1956 White silk surah printed with black Chinese character motifs Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of H. Gregory Thomas, 1959 (2009.300.261a–c); Christian Dior (French, 1905–1957) “Quiproquo” cocktail dress, 1951 White silk shantung printed with black Chinese character motifs Gift of Mrs. Byron C. Foy, 1953 (C.I.53.40.38a–d). Zhang Xu (ca. 675–759); Letter about a Stomachache 19th-century rubbing of a 10th-century stone carving Ink on paper Seymour and Rogers Funds, 1977 (1977.375.31a). Photo by Lia Chang

(L-R) Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel (French, 1883–1971) Dress, ca. 1956 White silk surah printed with black Chinese character motifs Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of H. Gregory Thomas, 1959 (2009.300.261a–c); Christian Dior (French, 1905–1957) “Quiproquo” cocktail dress, 1951 White silk shantung printed with black Chinese character motifs Gift of Mrs. Byron C. Foy, 1953 (C.I.53.40.38a–d). Zhang Xu (ca. 675–759); Letter about a Stomachache 19th-century rubbing of a 10th-century stone carving Ink on paper Seymour and Rogers Funds, 1977 (1977.375.31a). Photo by Lia Chang

Because this language is seen as “exotic” or “foreign,” it can be read as purely allusive decoration. Dior and Chanel were likely unaware of the semantic value of the words on their dresses, which in the case of Dior has resulted in a surprising and humorous juxtaposition. The dress is adorned with characters from an eighth- century letter by Zhang Xu in which the author complains about a painful stomachache. Language that constitutes communication, it would seem, is also capable of conveying miscommunication. Here, the letter is presented as a rubbing, as are the other calligraphic examples in the surrounding cases. Before photography, rubbings were the key technology for transmitting calligraphy across generations. Some of the greatest treasures of Chinese calligraphy, including the Letter on a Stomachache that inspired Dior, survive only through such impressions.

Frances Young Tang Gallery – Blue and White Porcelain 
The story of blue-and-white porcelain encapsulates centuries of cultural exchange between East and West. Developed in Jingdezhen during the Yuan dynasty (1271– 1368), blue-and-white porcelain was exported to Europe as early as the sixteenth century.

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain. Chinese Vase with plum blossoms, 19th century, Porcelain with underglaze blue and white decoration, Gift of Mrs. Donald V. Lowe (63.173); Chinese Covered Jar with Decoration of Blossoming Plum and Cracked Ice, late 17th-early 18th century, Porcelain painted in underglaze blue, Purchase by subscription, 1879 (79.2.265a, b); Chinese Dish, Yongzheng period (1723 – 1735), Blue-ground porcelain with reserve decoration and relief, Purchase by subscription, 1879 (79.2.129) Chinese Vase with Decoration of Blossoming Plum, Kangxi period (1662–1722) Porcelain painted in underglaze blue, H.O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929 (29.100.304). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain. Chinese Vase with plum blossoms, 19th century, Porcelain with underglaze blue and white decoration, Gift of Mrs. Donald V. Lowe (63.173); Chinese Covered Jar with Decoration of Blossoming Plum and Cracked Ice, late 17th-early 18th century, Porcelain painted in underglaze blue, Purchase by subscription, 1879 (79.2.265a, b); Chinese Dish, Yongzheng period (1723 – 1735), Blue-ground porcelain with reserve decoration and relief, Purchase by subscription, 1879 (79.2.129) Chinese Vase with Decoration of Blossoming Plum, Kangxi period (1662–1722) Porcelain painted in underglaze blue, H.O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929 (29.100.304). Photo by Lia Chang

As its popularity increased in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, in tandem with a growing taste for chinoiserie, potters in the Netherlands (Delft), Germany (Meissen), and England (Worcester) began to produce their own imitations.

Evening dress, Roberto Cavalli (Italian, born 1940), autumn/winter 2005–6; Courtesy of Roberto Cavalli. Photo by Lia Chang

Evening dress, Roberto Cavalli (Italian, born 1940), autumn/winter 2005–6; Courtesy of Roberto Cavalli. Photo by Lia Chang

One of the most familiar examples is the Willow pattern, which usually depicts a landscape centered on a willow tree flanked by a large pagoda and a small bridge with three figures carrying various accoutrements. Made famous by the English potter Thomas Minton, founder of Thomas Minton & Sons in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, it was eventually mass- produced in Europe using the transfer-printing process.

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain. (L-R) House of CHANEL (French, founded 1913),Karl Lagerfeld (French, born Hamburg, 1938), House of Lesage (French, founded 1922), Evening dress, spring/summer 1984 haute couture, White silk organza, tulle, and taffeta embroidered with blue, white, and crystal beads Courtesy of Collection CHANEL, Paris; Guo Pei (Chinese, born 1967), Evening gown, spring/summer 2010 haute couture, Blue and white silk satin embroidered with crystals and blue and white silk thread, Courtesy of Guo Pei. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain.
(L-R) House of CHANEL (French, founded 1913),Karl Lagerfeld (French, born Hamburg, 1938), House of Lesage (French, founded 1922), Evening dress, spring/summer 1984 haute couture, White silk organza, tulle, and taffeta embroidered with blue, white, and crystal beads Courtesy of Collection CHANEL, Paris; Guo Pei (Chinese, born 1967), Evening gown, spring/summer 2010 haute couture, Blue and white silk satin embroidered with crystals and blue and white silk thread, Courtesy of Guo Pei. Photo by Lia Chang

With the popularity of Willow-pattern porcelain, Chinese craftsmen began to produce their own hand-painted versions for export. Thus a design that came to be seen as typically Chinese was actually the product of various cultural exchanges between East and West.

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain. (L-R) Valentino Garavani (Italian, born 1932), Evening gown, autumn/winter 1968–69, haute couture White and blue-printed silk satin, Courtesy of Valentino S.p.A.; Valentino S.p.A. (Italian, founded 1959) Dress, autumn/winter 2013, White and blue-printed silk organza, Gift of Valentino S.p.A., 2015 (2015.491.1); Giambattista Valli (Italian, born 1966), Coat, autumn/winter 2013 haute couture, White and blue-printed silk faille, embroidered with navy, blue, and white silk thread, clear synthetic sequins, crystals, and appliqué of blue and white silk organza, Courtesy of Giambattista Valli; Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture, House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Evening gown, spring/summer 2009 haute couture, White silk organza and lace, and white silk satin embroidered with blue silk thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture; House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 2005 haute couture, Coat of white silk jacquard embroidered with blue and white silk thread; dress of white silk organza embroidered with crystals, gold and green silk, and silver metallic thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain. (L-R) Valentino Garavani (Italian, born 1932), Evening gown, autumn/winter 1968–69, haute couture White and blue-printed silk satin, Courtesy of Valentino S.p.A.; Valentino S.p.A. (Italian, founded 1959) Dress, autumn/winter 2013, White and blue-printed silk organza, Gift of Valentino S.p.A., 2015 (2015.491.1); Giambattista Valli (Italian, born 1966), Coat, autumn/winter 2013 haute couture, White and blue-printed silk faille, embroidered with navy, blue, and white silk thread, clear synthetic sequins, crystals, and appliqué of blue and white silk organza, Courtesy of Giambattista Valli; Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture, House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960),
Evening gown, spring/summer 2009 haute couture, White silk organza and lace, and white silk satin embroidered with blue silk thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture; House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 2005 haute couture, Coat of white silk jacquard embroidered with blue and white silk thread; dress of white silk organza embroidered with crystals, gold and green silk, and silver metallic thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery – Perfume
Part of the power of perfume lies in its synesthetic possibilities, and the idea of China, confected from Western imagination, affords the perfumer a multiplicity of olfactory opportunities charged with the seductive mysteries of the East. Paul Poiret, famous for his fashions a la chinoise, was the first designer to produce a perfume fueled by the romance of China. Called Nuit de Chine, it was created in 1913 by Maurice Schaller and presented in a flacon inspired by Chinese snuff bottles designed by Georges Lepape, In the early 1920s, Poiret, excited by his dreams of Cathay, crafted several other perfumes, including orient and Sakya Mouni, both packaged in bottles inspired by Chinese seals.

Perfume bottles on display in

Perfume bottles on display in “China: Through the Looking Glass” at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Photo by Lia Chang

The 1910s and 1920s saw an influx of China-inflected perfumes, partly stimulated by the well- publicized archaeological excavations of the Mogao Caves in Dunhuang, Like Nuit de Chine, many were presented in flacons fashioned after Chinese snuff bottles, including Jean Patou’s Joy, Roger & Gallet’s Le Jade, and Henriette Gabilla’s Pa-Ri-Ki-Ri, named after a musical revue starring Mistinguett and Maurice Chevalier.

Chinese Shoe, 1800–1943, Red silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Gift of Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, 1943 (C.I.43.90.60a, b). One of the more unusual flacons was created by the Callot Soeurs for the perfume La Fille du Roi de Chine. Shaped after a ''lotus shoe'' for a bound foot, it explicitly associated perfume, in Western eyes, with the exotic practice of foot-binding. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese Shoe, 1800–1943,
Red silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Gift of Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, 1943 (C.I.43.90.60a, b).
One of the more unusual flacons was created by the Callot Soeurs for the perfume La Fille du Roi de Chine. Shaped after a ”lotus shoe” for a bound foot, it explicitly associated perfume, in Western eyes, with the exotic practice of foot-binding. Photo by Lia Chang

One of the more unusual flacons was created by the Callot Soeurs for the perfume La Fille du Roi de Chine. Shaped after a ”lotus shoe” for a bound foot, it explicitly associated perfume, in Western eyes, with the exotic practice of foot-binding.

(ALCOVE)

Paul Poiret (French, 1879–1944), “Steppe” coat, 1912 Black wool embroidered with blue, white, and gray silk thread; gray fox fur Catharine Breyer Van Bomel Foundation Fund, 2005 (2005.209) Paul Poiret (French, 1879–1944) “Mademoiselle” dress, 1923, Black and red wool crepe with polychrome striped wool twill Catharine Breyer Van Bomel Foundation Fund, 2005 (2005.210) Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann (French, 1879-1933) “Chinoise” dressing table, ca. 1927, Lacquered wood, silver plated bronze, and mirror Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Chow, 1986 (1986.399.3a,b) Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann (French, 1879-1933), “Retombante” stool, ca. 1916-18, Lacquered beech wood, silvered bronze, and modern upholstery, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Chow, 1986 (1986.399.4). Photo by Lia Chang

Paul Poiret (French, 1879–1944), “Steppe” coat, 1912
Black wool embroidered with blue, white, and gray silk thread; gray fox fur Catharine Breyer Van Bomel Foundation Fund, 2005 (2005.209)
Paul Poiret (French, 1879–1944) “Mademoiselle” dress, 1923, Black and red wool crepe with polychrome striped wool twill Catharine Breyer Van Bomel Foundation Fund, 2005 (2005.210)
Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann (French, 1879-1933) “Chinoise” dressing table, ca. 1927, Lacquered wood, silver plated bronze, and mirror Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Chow, 1986 (1986.399.3a,b)
Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann (French, 1879-1933), “Retombante” stool, ca. 1916-18, Lacquered beech wood, silvered bronze, and modern upholstery, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Chow, 1986 (1986.399.4). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery – Saint Laurent & Opium 
To this day, fashion’s most flamboyant expression of chinoiserie is Yves Saint Laurent’s extravagant fall/winter 1977 haute-couture collection. In a dazzling mélange of Chinese decorative elements, Saint Laurent reimagined Western ideas of Genghis Khan and his Mongol warriors and the imperial splendor of the Qing court under Dowager Empress Cixi (1835–1908). Of the collection, Saint Laurent commented, “I returned to an age of elegance and wealth. In many ways I returned to my own past.”

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008), Jacket, 1977 Black silk ciré embroidered with gold, black and white silk, and gold sequins Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé –Yves Saint Laurent, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008), Jacket, 1977
Black silk ciré embroidered with gold, black and white silk, and gold sequins Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé –Yves Saint Laurent, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

His designs merge authentic and imaginary elements of Chinese costume into a polyglot bazaar of postmodern amalgamation. Scallop patterns, pagoda shoulders, and frog and tassel closures are combined with conical hats and jade and cinnabar jewelry to convey a sumptuous, seductive impression of Chinese style as luxurious and glamorous as Paul Poiret’s fantasies five decades earlier.

Japan, Edo period (1615–1868), Inrō (Portable Tiered Medicine Container) with Phoenix and Paulownia, first half 19th century, Four cases; lacquered wood with gold and silver hiramaki-e and gold foil application on red lacquer ground, H. O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929 (29.100.839): Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008) “Opium” perfume bottle, 1977, Plastic and silk cord, Courtesy of Dominique Deroche. Photo by Lia Chang

Japan, Edo period (1615–1868), Inrō (Portable Tiered Medicine Container) with Phoenix and Paulownia, first half 19th century, Four cases; lacquered wood with gold and silver hiramaki-e and gold foil application on red lacquer ground, H. O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929 (29.100.839): Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008) “Opium” perfume bottle, 1977, Plastic and silk cord, Courtesy of Dominique Deroche. Photo by Lia Chang

The collection coincided with the launch of Saint Laurent’s fragrance Opium, a name controversial even in the hedonistic 1970s because of its perceived endorsement of drug use; trivialization of the mid-nineteenth-century Opium Wars between China and Britain; and objectification of women through its highly sexualized advertisement photographed by Helmut Newton and featuring Jerry Hall. Setting the tone for the so-called power scents of the 1980s, the perfume is composed of myrrh, amber, jasmine, mandarin, and bergamot notes.

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture, Polychrome printed black silk damask, Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé - Yves Saint Laurent, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture, Polychrome printed black silk damask,
Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé – Yves Saint Laurent, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Film Clips Edited by Wong Kar-Wai: Broken Blossoms, 1919, Directed by D. W. Griffith, (D.W. Griffith Productions, Courtesy of Kino Lorber); Flowers of Shanghai, 1998 Directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien (3H Productions and Shochiku Company, Courtesy of Shochiku Company) © 1998 Shochiku Co., Ltd.; Once Upon a Time in America, 1984 Directed by Sergio Leone (Courtesy of Warner Bros. Entertainment); The Grandmaster, 2013 Directed by Wong Kar Wai (Block 2 Pictures, Courtesy of Block 2 Pictures Inc.) © 2013 Block 2 Pictures Inc. All rights reserved.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie-Yves Saint Laurent (French, founded 1961), Tom Ford (American, born 1961), Ensemble, autumn/winter 2004–5, Jacket of purple-red quilted silk satin; skirt of red silk satin Ensemble, autumn/winter 2004–5, Jacket of blue-green quilted silk satin; skirt of green silk crepe with green silk satin and tulle, Courtesy of Tom Ford Archive. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie-Yves Saint Laurent (French, founded 1961), Tom Ford (American, born 1961),
Ensemble, autumn/winter 2004–5, Jacket of purple-red quilted silk satin; skirt of red silk satin
Ensemble, autumn/winter 2004–5, Jacket of blue-green quilted silk satin; skirt of green silk crepe with green silk satin and tulle, Courtesy of Tom Ford Archive. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinoiserie 
The idea of China reflected in the haute couture and avant-garde ready-to-wear fashions in this gallery is a fictional, fabulous invention, offering an alternate reality with a dreamlike, almost hallucinatory, illogic. This fanciful imagery, which combines Eastern and Western stylistic elements into an incredible pastiche, belongs to the tradition of chinoiserie (from the French chinois, meaning Chinese), a style that emerged in the late seventeenth century and reached its pinnacle in the mid-eighteenth century. China was a land outside the reach of most travelers in the latter century (and, for many others, still an imaginary land called “Cathay”), and chinoiserie presented a vision of the East as a place of mystery and romance.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie- Valentino Garavani (Italian, born 1932), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1990-91 haute couture, Jacket and skirt of beige silk satin and organza, embroidered with brown and gold silk yarn and metal thread, red-orange, gold, bronze, and silver plastic sequins, beads, and crystals, Courtesy of Valentino S.p.A.; Chinese Screen with Birthday Celebration for General Guo Ziyi, 1777, Carved red lacquer, Gift of Mrs. Henry-George J. McNeary, 1971 (1971.74a-h). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie- Valentino Garavani (Italian, born 1932), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1990-91 haute couture, Jacket and skirt of beige silk satin and organza, embroidered with brown and gold silk yarn and metal thread, red-orange, gold, bronze, and silver plastic sequins, beads, and crystals, Courtesy of Valentino S.p.A.; Chinese Screen with Birthday Celebration for General Guo Ziyi, 1777, Carved red lacquer, Gift of Mrs. Henry-George J. McNeary, 1971 (1971.74a-h). Photo by Lia Chang

Stylistically, its main characteristics include Chinese figures, pagodas with sweeping roofs, and picturesque landscapes with elaborate pavilions, exotic birds, and flowering plants. Sometimes these motifs were copied directly from objects, especially lacquerware, but more often they originated in the designer’s imagination. Chinoiserie’s prescribed and restricted vocabulary directly produces its aesthetic power.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie- House of Chanel (French, founded 1913), Karl Lagerfeld (French, born Hamburg, 1938), House of Lesage (French, founded 1922), Dress, autumn/winter 1996–97 Red silk organza embroidered with red, gold, and silver plastic sequins, and gold beads, Courtesy of Hamish Bowles; Evening dress, autumn/winter 1996–97 haute couture Red silk organza embroidered with red, gold, and silver plastic sequins, and gold beads Courtesy of Collection CHANEL, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie- House of Chanel (French, founded 1913), Karl Lagerfeld (French, born Hamburg, 1938), House of Lesage (French, founded 1922), Dress, autumn/winter 1996–97
Red silk organza embroidered with red, gold, and silver plastic sequins, and gold beads, Courtesy of Hamish Bowles; Evening dress, autumn/winter 1996–97 haute couture Red silk organza embroidered with red, gold, and silver plastic sequins, and gold beads Courtesy of Collection CHANEL, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery- Ancient China

China’s varied and vibrant artistic traditions have served as sources of continuous invention and reinvention for Western fashion. Works of art from the seventeenth century onward resonate most strongly with designers. As this gallery and the adjacent gallery  reveal, however, designers have also found inspiration in earlier forms, including Neolithic pottery, Shang-dynasty bronzes, Tang-dynasty mirrors, Han-dynasty tomb figurines and architectural models, early Buddhist sculpture and iconography, and ancient Chinese literature, including wuxfa.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China Dress, House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952), autumn/winter 1997-98 haute couture; Courtesy of Givenchy. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China Dress, House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952), autumn/winter 1997-98 haute couture; Courtesy of Givenchy. Photo by Lia Chang

These cross-cultural comparisons, as with others in the show, have an appeal that rests on their clarity and legibility that is, on one’s ability to decode the motifs and stylistic references. The comparisons demonstrate how the creative process is inherently transformative, a phenomenon seen here in works of art that boldly reduce a complex matrix of meanings into graphic signs that say ‘China’ not as literal copies but as explicit allusions to a prototype.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou) “Kuan Yin” dress, spring/summer 1997 Polychrome printed nylon mesh, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou) “Kuan Yin” dress, spring/summer 1997 Polychrome printed nylon mesh, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Jeanne Lanvin (French, 1867–1946), Robe de Style, spring/summer 1924, Black silk taffeta embroidered with green silk and silver metallic thread, and synthetic pearl, silver, black, and gold beads and paillettes; silver lamé and ivory silk tulle embroidered with metallic silver thread, Gift of Mrs. Albert Spalding, 1962 (C.I.62.58.1); Chinese Mirror, Tang Dynasty (618 – 907), 8th century Silver, Gift of Ernest Erickson Foundation, 1985 (1985.214.22). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Jeanne Lanvin (French, 1867–1946), Robe de Style, spring/summer 1924, Black silk taffeta embroidered with green silk and silver metallic thread, and synthetic pearl, silver, black, and gold beads and paillettes; silver lamé and ivory silk tulle embroidered with metallic silver thread,
Gift of Mrs. Albert Spalding, 1962 (C.I.62.58.1); Chinese
Mirror, Tang Dynasty (618 – 907), 8th century Silver, Gift of Ernest Erickson Foundation, 1985 (1985.214.22). Photo by Lia Chang

The Small Buddha Gallery – Guo Pei
Like their Western counterparts, Chinese designers frequently find inspiration in the aesthetic and cultural traditions of the East. Paradoxically, they often gravitate toward the same motifs and imagery. While it is important to distinguish between internal and external views of the East, such affinities support, at least in fashion, a unified language of shared signs. The small Buddha gallery is devoted to this single gown by the Chinese designer Guo Pei, in which Buddhist iconography provides the primary source of inspiration.

Guo Pei (Chinese, born 1967), Evening gown, spring/summer 2007 haute couture, Gold lamé embroidered with gold and silver silk, metal, and sequins Courtesy of Guo Pei. Photo by Lia Chang

Guo Pei (Chinese, born 1967), Evening gown, spring/summer 2007 haute couture, Gold lamé embroidered with gold and silver silk, metal, and sequins Courtesy of Guo Pei. Photo by Lia Chang

The bodice is shaped like a lotus flower, which is one of the eight Buddhist symbols and represents spiritual purity and enlightenment. The motif is also embroidered onto the skirt. In an act of Occidentalism, the shape of the skirt, which has no archetypes in Eastern dress traditions, is based on the inflated crinoline silhouette that emerged as modish apparel in the West in the 1850s. As with the Western designers in this exhibition, Guo Pei does not practice an exoticism of replication but rather one of assimilation, combining Eastern and Western elements into a common cultural language.

Gallery – Wuxia
For many Western designers, some of the most compelling fantasies of China are in wuxia, a literary genre that is more than 2000 years old and scenes from Zhang Yimou’s House of Flying Daggers (2004) and A Touch of Zen (1971) play in this final gallery.

China: Through The Looking Glass Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Wuxia Ensemble, Jean Paul Gaultier (French, born 1952), autumn/winter 2001-2; Courtesy of Jean Paul Gaultier. Photo by Lia Chang

China: Through The Looking Glass
Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Wuxia Ensemble, Jean Paul Gaultier (French, born 1952), autumn/winter 2001-2; Courtesy of Jean Paul Gaultier. Photo by Lia Chang

Wuxia, which roughly translates as “martial hero,” relates the adventures of wandering swordsmen whose martial- arts skills are so highly developed that they can internalize their qi (life force) and unleash such superhuman powers as “thunder palms,” “shout weapons,” and “weightless leaps.” The stories often take place in an underworld calledjiang hu (rivers and lakes), in which martial artists cohabit with monks, bandits, and burglars. The heroes are governed by xia, a strict code of chivalry, whose common attributes include justice, honesty, benevolence, and a disregard for wealth and desire. Such traits have led many wuxia novels to be read as expositions on Buddhism, an association played out in this gallery, which displays some of the museum’s earliest examples of Chinese Buddhist art.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952) Alexander McQueen (British, 1969-2010) Chopine, autumn/winter 1997 haute couture Black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of Alexander McQueen. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952)
Alexander McQueen (British, 1969-2010)
Chopine, autumn/winter 1997 haute couture
Black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of Alexander McQueen. Photo by Lia Chang

Related Content and Programs
A publication by Andrew Bolton accompanies the exhibition, produced by The Metropolitan Museum of Art and distributed by Yale University Press, and is on sale. The exhibition are featured on the Museum’s website, www.metmuseum.org/ChinaLookingGlass, as well as on FacebookInstagram, and Twitter using #ChinaLookingGlass#MetGala, and #AsianArt100.

The exhibition is featured on the Museum’s website, www.metmuseum.org/ChinaLookingGlass, as well as on Facebook,Instagram, and Twitter using #ChinaLookingGlass and #AsianArt100.  It is also on Weibo using @大都会博物馆MET_中国艺术

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Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

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Arthur Dong’s Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 wins American Book Award; Photos from AAIFF2015/MoCA Book Talk & Signing in New York

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Author/filmmaker Arthur Dong at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Author/filmmaker Arthur Dong at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Arthur Dong’s Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 is among this year’s winners of the Thirty-Sixth Annual American Book Awards, presented by the Before Columbus Foundation. The 2015 American Book Award winners will be formally recognized on Sunday, October 25th from 2:00-5:00 p.m. at the SF Jazz Center, Joe Henderson Lab, 201 Franklin Street (at Fell), San Francisco, CA. This event is open to the public.

Arthur Dong introduces his Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 lecture at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Arthur Dong introduces his Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 lecture at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

I  caught up with Dong last month in New York at the Museum of Chinese in America (MoCA) where he presented an entertaining talk about the subjects of his book, Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970. The program, which was followed by a book signing, was part of the 38th Asian American International Film Festival’s two-day tribute to the Oscar®-nominated and three-time Sundance award-winning filmmaker/author.

Forbidden City postcard (ca. 1940's) Photo by Lia Chang

Forbidden City postcard (ca. 1940’s) Photo by Lia Chang

Forbidden City, U.S.A. captures the magic and glamour of the Chinese American nightclub scene, which peaked in San Francisco during World War II.  Previously unpublished personal stories, along with over four hundred stunning images and rare artifacts, are presented in this “sexy and insightful chronicle” of Asian American performers who defied racial and cultural barriers to pursue their showbiz dreams.

Jackie Mei Ling and Jadin Wong, dancers from the Chinatown nightclub era. Photo by Lia Chang

Jackie Mei Ling and Jadin Wong, dancers from the Chinatown nightclub era. Photo by Lia Chang

It was the mid-1930s: Prohibition was repealed and the Great Depression was waning. With a global conflict on the rise, people were out to drink, dine, dance, and see a show to forget their woes—and what a surprise for the world to behold an emerging generation of Chinese American entertainers commanding the stage in their own nightclubs.

Noel Toy lifts bubble and business for the Forbidden City, as in this article from Carnival Show magazine (March 1941). Mary "Butchie Ong, Jessie Tai Sing, Kim Wong, and Helen Kim are featured in Beauty Parade magazine (November 1943). Photo by Lia Chang

Noel Toy lifts bubble and business for the Forbidden City, as in this article from Carnival Show magazine (March 1941). Mary “Butchie Ong, Jessie Tai Sing, Kim Wong, and Helen Kim are featured in Beauty Parade magazine (November 1943). Photo by Lia Chang

Forbidden City, USA reveals the sassy, daring, and sometimes heartbreaking memories of the dancers, singers, and producers who lived this story, and it weaves in a fascinating collection of photos, postcards, menus, programs, and yes, even souvenir chopsticks. Together they recreate a forgotten era, treating readers to a dazzling night on the town.

Forbidden City owner Charlie Low.  (Chinese American Nightclubs)

Forbidden City owner Charlie Low. (Chinese American Nightclubs)

“Forbidden City, USA” is the culmination of Arthur Dong’s nearly thirty-year devotion to the topic of Chinese American nightclubs, originally inspired by his research for his documentary of the same name.

Dancer and talent manager Jadin Wong. Photo by Lia Chang

Dancer and talent manager Jadin Wong. Photo by Lia Chang

I first met Arthur when he came to New York to interview dancer turned manager of Asian American talent Jadin Wong (my former manager) for the documentary. The tome is Dong’s virtual love letter to those who paved the way and made their mark for today’s Asian American performing artists.

On August 18, 1988, filmmaker and author Arthur Dong gathered Chinese American nightclub veterans for a reunion at the Oakland home of singer Frances Chun. Back (l-r): Lily Pon, Stanley Toy, Lenna Chan, and Bob Chan. Middle: Jackie Mei Ling, Larry Ching, Jade Ling, Arthur Dong, Fay Ying (Mary Watson), and Frank Huie. Front: Dottie Sun (Murray), Charlie Low, Frances Chun (Kan), Paul Wing, and Marry Mammon (Amo). Photo by Zand Gee

On August 18, 1988, filmmaker and author Arthur Dong gathered Chinese American nightclub veterans for a reunion at the Oakland home of singer Frances Chun. Back (l-r): Lily Pon, Stanley Toy, Lenna Chan, and Bob Chan. Middle: Jackie Mei Ling, Larry Ching, Jade Ling, Arthur Dong, Fay Ying (Mary Watson), and Frank Huie. Front: Dottie Sun (Murray), Charlie Low, Frances Chun (Kan), Paul Wing, and Marry Mammon (Amo). Photo by Zand Gee

“Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970,” co-authored with his sister Lorraine Dong, features excerpts of interviews with Forbidden City owner Charlie Low; dancers Jadin Wong, Dottie Sun, Ivy Tam (Mrs. Charlie Low #4), Jackie Mei Ling, Jade Ling, Mary Mammon, Noel Toy, Tony Wing, Dorothy Toy and Paul Wing of Toy and Wing; singers Frances Chun, Larry Ching and Toy Yat Mar; and choreographer and producer Walton Biggerstaff. Purchase the book.

The family of Dr. Haing S. Ngor, subject of Arthur Dong's newest film, The Killing Fields of Dr. Haing S. Ngor, joins him at the Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 book talk at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

The family of Dr. Haing S. Ngor, subject of Arthur Dong’s newest film, The Killing Fields of Dr. Haing S. Ngor, joins him at the Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 book talk at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Jack Ong, Executive Director of The Dr. Haing S. Ngor Foundation, and members of the family of Dr. Haing S. Ngor, the subject of Arthur Dong’s newest film, The Killing Fields of Dr. Haing S. Ngor which screened at the Asian American International Film Festival, were in the audience.

Arthur Dong with Wally Wong, brother of dancer Jadin Wong at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Arthur Dong with Wally Wong, brother of dancer Jadin Wong at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Wally Wong, brother of dancer and talent manager Jadin Wong; Broadway performer Baayork Lee, who originated the role of Connie in A Chorus Line and is currently executive artistic director of the National Asian Artists Project; “Orange in the New Black” actress Lori Tan Chinn, who will be coming to Broadway next year in Jerry Mitchell’s Gotta Dance, along with Dong’s long-time partner Young Gee and their son, Reed were in the house.

Arthur Dong and Broadway performer Baayork Lee at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Lee originated the role of Connie in the Chorus Line and is currently executive artistic director of the National Asian Artists Project. Photo by Lia Chang

Arthur Dong and Broadway performer Baayork Lee at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Lee originated the role of Connie in the Chorus Line and is currently executive artistic director of the National Asian Artists Project. Photo by Lia Chang

Arthur Dong and Lori Tan Chinn at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Arthur Dong and Lori Tan Chinn at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Dong’s previously published works as editor and contributing writer include the exhibition catalogues for shows that he also curated: “Chop Suey on Wax: The Flower Drum Song Album” at the Chinese Historical Society of America Museum in, San Francisco and “Hollywood Chinese: The Arthur Dong Collection” at the Chinese American Museum in Los Angeles.

Kevin Scullin and author Arthur Dong at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang Darryl Tom, son of Chinatown nightclub dancer Beatrice Tom, introduces Arthur Dong to the story of his mother at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang Filmmaker/comic book writer Greg Pak (left), John Woo, Asian American International Film Festival executive director, and Arthur Dong at MoCA in New York on July 26, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Arthur Dong
As a film student at San Francisco State University, Arthur Dong produced Sewing Woman, his Academy Award nominated short documentary in 1984. The film focused on his mother’s immigration to America from China. Instead of finding an outside distributer for the film, Dong then started his own company, DeepFocus Productions, and serves as its producer, director and writer. Dong has produced, directed, written, edited, and filmed independent films on social issues such as gay rights and the Chinese American experience. A two-time Rockefeller Media Arts Fellow as well as a Guggenheim Fellow in Film, Dong has served on the boards of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Film Independent, OutFest, and the National Film Preservation Board at the Library of Congress. In addition to the 1995 Peabody Award for his highly praised film “Coming Out Under Fire,” the honors include three Sundance Film Festival awards, an Oscar nomination, the Berlin Film Festival’s Teddy Award, Taipei’s Golden Horse Award, a GLAAD Media Award, and five Emmy nominations.

About the American Book Awards
The American Book Awards were created to provide recognition for outstanding literary achievement from the entire spectrum of America’s diverse literary community. The purpose of the awards is to recognize literary excellence without limitations or restrictions. There are no categories, no nominees, and therefore no losers. The award winners range from well-known and established writers to under-recognized authors and first works. There are no quotas for diversity, the winners list simply reflects it as a natural process. The Before Columbus Foundation views American culture as inclusive and has always considered the term “multicultural” to be not a description of various categories, groups, or “special interests,” but rather as the definition of all of American literature. The Awards are not bestowed by an industry organization, but rather are a writers’ award given by other writers.

Congrats to all of the 2015 American Book Award Winners listed below.

Hisham Aidi

Rebel Music: Race, Empire, and the New Muslim Youth Culture (Vintage)

Arlene Biala

her beckoning hands (Word Poetry)

Arthur Dong

Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 (DeepFocus Productions)

Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz

An Indigenous People’s History of the United States (Beacon Press)

Peter J. Harris

The Black Man of Happiness (Black Man of Happiness Project)

Marlon James

A Brief History of Seven Killings (Riverhead Books)

Martin Kilson

Transformation of the African American Intelligentsia, 1880–2012 (Harvard University Press)

Naomi Klein

This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate (Simon & Schuster)

Laila Lalami

The Moor’s Account (Pantheon)

Manuel Luis Martinez

Los Duros (Floricanto Press)

Craig Santos Perez

from unincorporated territory [guma’] (Omnidawn)

Carlos Santana, with Ashley Kahn and Hal Miller

The Universal Tone: Bringing My Story to Light (Little, Brown and Company)

Ira Sukrungruang

Southside Buddhist (University of Tampa Press)

Astra Taylor

The People’s Platform: Taking Back Power and Culture in the Digital Age (Henry Holt)

Lifetime Achievement:

Anne Waldman

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

Related Articles

Lia Chang Picks: Arthur Dong’s Forbidden City: Chinese-American Nightclubs, 1930-1970
#AAIFF2015 Tribute to Arthur Dong- Screenings of THE KILLING FIELDS OF HAING S. NGOR and FORBIDDEN CITY, U.S.A., plus an on-stage conversation, July 25-26 
2015 Asian American International Film Festival Lineup, July 23-Aug. 1
April 26: The 31st Annual Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival (LAAPFF) Artist Spotlight- Arthur Dong’s FORBIDDEN CITY, U.S.A. and THE KILLING FIELDS OF DR. HAING S. NGOR
CAAMFest 2015 Honors Filmmaker Arthur Dong with World Premiere Screenings of Forbidden City, USA (3/14), The Killing Fields of Dr. Haing S. Ngor (3/15) & In Conversation with B. Ruby Rich (3/20)
April 23-30: The Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival (LAAPFF) Lineup includes EVERYTHING BEFORE US, KTOWN COWBOYS, Shonali Bose’s MARGARITA, WITH A STRAW, Jennifer Phang’s ADVANTAGEOUS, Arthur Dong’s FORBIDDEN CITY, U.S.A. and THE KILLING FIELDS OF DR. HAING S. NGOR

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Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com



Morton’s The Steakhouse celebrates National Filet Mignon Day with $1 petite filet mignon sandwiches on August 13

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int_locationsOn Thursday, August 13th, Morton’s The Steakhouse locations nationwide will celebrate National Filet Mignon Day with $1 petite filet mignon sandwiches in the bar area all day.

“We look forward to commemorating this day with diners each year at any of our over seventy locations across the country,” said Tim Whitlock, Sr. Vice President of Operations for Morton’s The Steakhouse. “We hope our customers will enjoy this special discount and share the experience with family and friends.”

Patrons can enjoy various bar bites with their sandwiches, including Morton’s crowd-favorite parmesan truffle matchstick fries or crisp iceberg wedge bites.

Morton’s The Steakhouse opened its first location in Chicago in 1978 and now boasts 73 locations worldwide. Morton’s strives to exceed guests’ expectations through its food, award-winning wine list, atmosphere, genuine hospitality and unparalleled service.

Morton’s offers diners “The Best Steak… Anywhere,” serving only USDA prime-aged beef. Besides its exceptional steaks, Morton’s offers diners fresh fish and seafood, and hand-picked produce. Morton’s commitment to excellence is unwavering and is showcased in each menu item through the careful preparation and quality ingredients. Whether gathering with friends or enjoying a business dinner, Morton’s guests have come to expect remarkable service and reliable experiences that keep them coming back from more. For more information on Morton’s The Steakhouse, please visit www.mortons.com.

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

 

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AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
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AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
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AsAmNews.com: Lunch with Tony Winner Lea Salonga and George Takei, Stars of ALLEGIANCE
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Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com


THE KING AND I’s Jose Llana, Ruthie Ann Miles and Betsy Morgan, HAND TO GOD’s Steven Boyer, DAMES AT SEA’s Lesli Margherita & More Slated for Broadway in Bryant Park on August 13

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Jose llana as The King of Siam in The King and I. Photo by Paul Kolnik

Jose llana as The King of Siam in The King and I. Photo by Paul Kolnik

On Thursday, August 13th, 106.7 LITE FM will conclude its 15th annual lunchtime theatre summer series, ‘106.7 LITE FM’s Broadway in Bryant Park.’ The 2015 program has presented the best of Broadway, FREE to the public, on six consecutive Thursdays at 12:30 p.m. ET on the Bryant Park Stage.

This week’s line-up will include performances from the casts of Daddy Long Legs, Once Upon a Mattress, The King and I (Betsy Morgan, Jose Llana, Ruthie Ann Miles), Dames at Sea (Lesli Margherita, Danny Gardner), Spring Awakening (Katie Boeck, Sandra Mae Frank) and Hand to God (Steven Boyer, Sarah Stiles).

Ruthie Ann Miles. Photo by Paul Kolnik

Ruthie Ann Miles. Photo by Paul Kolnik

Hosted by LITE FM’s on-air personalities, the annual presentation of open-air, On- and Off- Broadway lunch hour performances in Bryant Park is presented by NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, Aruba Tourism Authority and SheaMoisture.

Broadway in Bryant Park invites New Yorkers to soak up the summer and watch hit musical numbers from current and past Tony Award-winning musicals, including The King and I (four-time 2015 Tony Award winner including Best Revival of a Musical), Something Rotten! (2015 Tony Award Winner for Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Role in a Musical), Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder, STOMP, LES MISERABLES, WICKED, Kinky Boots and CHICAGO.

The Bryant Park stage is located at 6th Avenue between 40th and 42nd Streets. Lawn seating is first-come, first-serve.

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

Other Articles
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#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
AsAmNews.com: A Chat with Broadway’s New King of Siam, Jose Llana
AsAmNews.com: Award-winning Filmmaker Jennifer Phang’s Sci-Fi Film ‘Advantageous’ Available on Netflix and iTunes
AsAmNews.com: Lunch with Tony Winner Lea Salonga and George Takei, Stars of ALLEGIANCE
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Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com


André De Shields, Phylicia Rashad, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ebony Jo-Ann, Inaya Day, Reji Woods and More set for THE WIZ is 40: A Celebration in Dance and Music at SummerStage in Central Park on 8/12; Marcus Garvey Park on 8/13, 8/14

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The Wiz

SUMMERSTAGE 30 PRESENTS!

A FAISON FIREHOUSE THEATER/APAC, INC. PRODUCTION

THE WIZ IS 40

A CELEBRATION IN DANCE & SONG

George Faison & Tad Schnugg, Producers

Tonight, I’m easing on down the Yellow Brick Road to Summerstage at Rumsey Playfield, to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of the The Wiz on Broadway.

Directions: Enter Central Park on 69th and 5th Ave.  Doors open at 7pm, showtime is at 8pm. Click here for directions.

Thursday, August 13th and Friday, August 14th, Summerstage, Marcus Garvey Park, W. 122nd St. and Mt. Morris Park West in New York.  Showtime is at 7pm. Click here for more information.

TO DONATE OR SECURE RESERVED VIP SEATS PLEASE VISIT THE CAMPAIGN BY CLICKING:

http://www.gofundme.com/The-Wiz-2015

The Wiz's André De Shields brought the house down as he sang " Do You Wanted to Meet the Wizard" in his original Broadway costume as part of The Black Stars of The Great White Way Broadway Reunion: Live The Dream at Carnegie Hall in New York on June 23, 2014. Photo by Lia Chang

The Wiz’s André De Shields brought the house down as he sang ” Do You Wanted to Meet the Wizard” in his original Broadway costume as part of The Black Stars of The Great White Way Broadway Reunion: Live The Dream at Carnegie Hall in New York on June 23, 2014. Photo by Lia Chang

Choreographed by Tony Award-winner George Faison with musical direction by Damien L. Sneed, The Wiz: A Celebration in Dance and Music will feature co-host/emcee Tony Award-winner (and Munchkin from the original Broadway run!) Phylicia Rashad; Two-time Tony nominee André De Shields (reprising his role as The Wiz); Tony Award-Winner for the role of Glinda, Dee Dee Bridgewater; Ebony Jo-Ann in the role of Addaperle; singer/songwriter Wallace Gary as The Scarecrow; Inaya Day  and Darlesia Cearcy as Dorothy; Nicole Elaine Phifer as Evillene, Reji Woods as Lion, John Manzari and Anitra McKinney.

A Celebration of the 40th Anniversary of The Wiz at the BC/EFA's Gypsy of the Year featured Dee Dee Bridgewater at The New Amsterdam Theatre in New York on December 9, 2014. Photo by Lia Chang André De Shields. Photo by Lia Chang Ebony Jo-Ann Phylicia Rashad. Photo by Lia Chang Inaya Day

The cast also includes Elijah Avraham, Jahmal Chase, Raymond Matsamura, Nahum McLean, Martell Ruffin Nehemiah Spencer, Jerome Wells, Khalia Campbell, Priscilla Greco, Aqura Lacey, Krystal Mackie, Mahalia Mays, Briana Nuamah, Amber Pickens and Bria Williams.

PIT SINGERS: Chenee Campbell Kojo Littles, Matia Washington and Darrell Williams.

KEYBOARDS: Edward Callahan,  Jeremy Jordan

Assistants to Mr. Faison: Gina Ellis, David Robertson

Production Stage Manager: Gwen Gilliam

Dance Arranger/Musical Supervisor: Timothy Graphenreed

George Faison. Photo by Lia Chang

George Faison. Photo by Lia Chang

George Faison, internationally celebrated producer, writer, composer, director, choreographer and dancer, made history in 1975 when he became the first African American to win a Tony Award for Best Choreography for The Wiz. In honor of the Broadway hit’s 40th anniversary this year, Faison will present performances of original songs and dances from the show. Mr. Faison also heads the Faison Firehouse Theater in Central Harlem, which he founded in 2000 along with Tad Schnugg.The Firehouse is a technologically advanced theater where Mr. Faison develops digital applications for the performing arts as well as original theater pieces. The 130-seat theater, branded “Hollywood of Harlem” by the media, is a full service performing arts and cultural center with fine arts galleries, rehearsal facilities and a cabaret theater. faisonfirehouse.org

Tony Award winners Dee Dee Bridgewater and George Faison celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Broadway debut of THE WIZ on January 5, 2015 at the Faison Firehouse Theater in New York. Photo by Brian Whitted

Tony Award winners Dee Dee Bridgewater and George Faison celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Broadway debut of THE WIZ on January 5, 2015 at the Faison Firehouse Theater in New York. Photo by Brian Whitted

One of the first large-scale, big-budget Broadway musicals to star an all-black cast, The Wiz features music and lyrics by Charlie Smalls and book by William F. Brown. It is a retelling of L. Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in the context of African-American culture.

Actor André De Shields (C) w. cast in a scene fr. the Broadway musical "The Wiz". (c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

Actor André De Shields (C) w. cast in a scene fr. the Broadway musical “The Wiz”. (c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

The Wiz opened on October 21, 1974 at the Morris A. Mechanic Theatre in Baltimore, Maryland, and on January 5, 1975, moved to the Majestic Theatre on Broadway with Geoffrey Holder at the helm.

Actors (Front L-R) Clarice Taylor, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ted Ross & Tiger Haynes w. cast in a scene fr. the Broadway musical "The Wiz".( c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

Actors (Front L-R) Clarice Taylor, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ted Ross & Tiger Haynes w. cast in a scene fr. the Broadway musical “The Wiz”.( c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

The cast starred Stephanie Mills as Dorothy, Hinton Battle as the Scarecrow, Tiger Haynes as the Tin Man, Ted Ross as the Lion, Dee Dee Bridgewater as Glinda, the Good Witch of the South, André De Shields as the Wizard, Mabel King as Evillene, the Wicked Witch of the West, Clarice Taylor as Addaperle, the Good Witch of the North, Tasha Thomas as Aunt Em, Ralph Wilcox as Uncle Henry and Phylicia Rashād as a Munchkin.

Actors (L-R) Clarice Taylor, Stephanie Mills & Phylicia Rashad (rear) in a scene fr. the Broadway musical "The Wiz". (c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

Actors (L-R) Clarice Taylor, Stephanie Mills & Phylicia Rashad (rear) in a scene fr. the Broadway musical “The Wiz”. (c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

The 1975 Broadway production garnered seven Tony Awards including Best Musical, Best Original Score for Charlie Smalls, Best Featured Actor in a Musical – Ted Ross, Best Featured Actress in a Musical – Dee Dee Bridgewater, Best Costume Design For Geoffrey Holder, Best Choreography for George Faison, Best Direction of a Musical for Geoffrey Holder; and five Drama Desk Awards including Outstanding Musical, Outstanding Music and Lyrics for Charlie Smalls, Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Ted Ross, Outstanding Choreography for George Faison, Outstanding Costume Design for Geoffrey Holder.

The Original Poster of the Broadway production of The Wiz. Geoffrey Holder with his Tony Awards for Best Direction of a Musical and Best Costume Design. Photo courtesy of Richard Cameron's Facebook Page.

The Broadway production moved to The Broadway Theatre on May 25, 1977, and closed on January 28, 1979, after four years and 1,672 performances.

Geoffrey Holder, Artist, Actor, Dancer, Choreographer, Two-Time Tony Award-winning Director and Costume Designer for The Wiz, Dies at 84; Son Pens Intimate Account of Last Days

THE WIZ Turns 40- Photos from Original Broadway Production and BC/EFA Gypsy of The Year Celebration Featuring André De Shields, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ken Page, Charl Brown, Carly Hughes, Christina Sajous, Alton Fitzgerald White, Lillias White and More

Photos and Video: The Wiz’s André De Shields sang “So You Wanted to Meet the Wizard” as part of The Black Stars of The Great White Way Broadway Reunion: Live The Dream at Carnegie Hall  

For complete series lineup, please visit SummerStage.org

PLEASE NOTE: SummerStage shows take place outdoors and take place RAIN OR SHINE. Shows are only cancelled in the event of what event organizers consider to be dangerous winds or lightning. Schedule of events and performers is subject to change. The following cannot be brought into the Central Park venue: glass bottles, cans, coolers, folding chairs, bikes, rollerblades, skateboards, beach umbrellas, video cameras, selfie sticks, professional camera gear, tripods or pets. SummerStage is not responsible for prohibited items left outside the venue. Bags subject to search. Alcoholic beverages are forbidden in NYC Parks. The distribution and sale of unauthorized promotional materials is banned. Beer and wine are on sale at the Central Park venue for onsite consumption only. Smoking is prohibited in all NYC parks.

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

The Wiz articles:
THE WIZ: A Celebration in Dance and Music featuring André De Shields, Phylicia Rashad, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ebony Jo-Ann, Inaya Day and more at SummerStage in Central Park on 8/12; Marcus Garvey Park on 8/13, 8/14
Kenny Leon Helmed ‘The Wiz’ Set as NBC’s Next Live Musical to air on Dec. 3; Broadway Revival Slated for 2016-17
THE WIZ Turns 40- Photos from Original Broadway Production and BC/EFA Gypsy of The Year Celebration Featuring André De Shields, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ken Page, Charl Brown, Carly Hughes, Christina Sajous, Alton Fitzgerald White, Lillias White and More
Photos: André De Shields, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ken Page, Charl Brown, Carly Hughes, Alton Fitzgerald White, Lillias White in 40th Anniversary of The WIZ Tribute at BC/EFA’s GYPSY OF THE YEAR; Competition Breaks Records With Over $5 Million as Hugh Jackman’s THE RIVER Brings in Top Donation
Geoffrey Holder, Artist, Actor, Dancer, Choreographer, Two-Time Tony Award-winning Director and Costume Designer for The Wiz, Dies at 84; Son Pens Intimate Account of Last Days

Other articles about André De Shields:
André De Shields in CONFESSIONS OF A P.I.M.P., Black Stars of the Great White Way anniversary concert at NBTF and Broadway-Bound GOTTA DANCE 
Multimedia: CONFESSIONS OF A P.I.M.P. Opening Night with André De Shields; #Ignition Festival Continues through July 19
Video: André De Shields sings Smile in CONFESSIONS OF A P.I.M.P. in Victory Gardens’ 2015 IGNITION Festival of New Plays
Video: André De Shields sings Street Corner Symphony and Mary Mack in CONFESSIONS OF A P.I.M.P. in Victory Gardens’ 2015 IGNITION Festival of New Plays
Photo and Video Preview: Two-time Tony nominee André De Shields Kicks Off Victory Gardens’ 2015 Ignition Festival of New Plays with CONFESSIONS OF A P.I.M.P
Two-time Tony nominee André De Shields, GREY’S ANATOMY star Sandra Oh, Kimberly Lawson, Donica Lynn, Tony Mhoon, Doug Peck, Robert Reddrick, Anjali Bhimani and More set for 2015 IGNITION Festival of New Plays at Victory Gardens Theater, July 16-19
Two-Time Tony nominee André De Shields, Tony Winner Lillias White, ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK’s Lori Tan Chinn, Stephanie Powers, Georgia Engel & More Will Lead Broadway-Bound Musical GOTTA DANCE in Chicago
tcgcircle.org THE GRAND ILLUSION by ANDRÉ DE SHIELDS in FOX FELLOWSHIPS
Click here for more articles on André De Shields.

Other Articles
AsAmNews.com: Future Looks Bright for Asian American Cinema
#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
AsAmNews.com: A Chat with Broadway’s New King of Siam, Jose Llana
AsAmNews.com: Award-winning Filmmaker Jennifer Phang’s Sci-Fi Film ‘Advantageous’ Available on Netflix and iTunes
AsAmNews.com: Lunch with Tony Winner Lea Salonga and George Takei, Stars of ALLEGIANCE
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com


Lia Chang Photos and Video: Behind the Scenes with THE WIZ’s André De Shields at The Wiz is 40 at #Summerstage30; The Free Concerts continue at Marcus Garvey Park on 8/13 and 8/14

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Ebony Jo-Ann, André De Shields, Dee Dee Bridgewater and George Faison after the #summerstageis30 performance of #thewizis40 at Rumsey Playfield in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Ebony Jo-Ann, André De Shields, Dee Dee Bridgewater and George Faison after the #summerstageis30 performance of #thewizis40 at Rumsey Playfield in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

SUMMERSTAGE 30 PRESENTS!

A FAISON FIREHOUSE THEATER/APAC, INC. PRODUCTION

THE WIZ IS 40

A CELEBRATION IN DANCE & SONG

George Faison & Tad Schnugg, Producers

Last night, I eased on down the Yellow Brick Road to Summerstage at Rumsey Playfield, to celebrate the 40th Anniversary of the The Wiz on Broadway.

Phylicia Rashad and George Faison co-emceed The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Phylicia Rashad and George Faison co-emceed The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Co-host/emcee Tony Award-winner (and Munchkin from the original Broadway run!) Phylicia Rashad. Photo by Lia Chang

Co-host/emcee Tony Award-winner (and Munchkin from the original Broadway run!) Phylicia Rashad. Photo by Lia Chang

Choreographed by Tony Award-winner George Faison with musical direction by Damien L. Sneed, The Wiz: A Celebration in Dance and Music featured co-host/emcee Tony Award-winner (and Munchkin from the original Broadway run!) Phylicia Rashad; Two-time Tony nominee André De Shields (reprising his role as The Wiz); Tony Award-Winner for the role of Glinda, Dee Dee Bridgewater; Ebony Jo-Ann in the role of Addaperle; Garry Q. Lewis as The Scarecrow; Inaya Day  and Darlesia Cearcy as Dorothy; Nicole Elaine Phifer as Evillene, Reji Woods as Lion, John Manzari as The Tin Man and Anitra McKinney as Aunt Em.

Below André De Shields sings So You Wanted to Meet the Wizard.

John Manzari as The Tinman, Garry Q Lewis as The Scarecrow, Darlesia Cearcy as Dorothy and Reji Woods as The Lion. Photo by Lia Chang

John Manzari as The Tinman, Garry Q Lewis as The Scarecrow, Darlesia Cearcy as Dorothy and Reji Woods as The Lion. Photo by Lia Chang

The cast also includes Elijah Avraham, Jahmal Chase, Raymond Matsamura, Nahum McLean, Martell Ruffin Nehemiah Spencer, Jerome Wells, Khalia Campbell, Priscilla Greco, Aqura Lacey, Krystal Mackie, Mahalia Mays, Briana Nuamah, Amber Pickens and Bria Williams.

Darlesia Cearcy as Dorothy, Ebony Jo-Ann and Addapearle and the Munchkins in The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Darlesia Cearcy as Dorothy, Ebony Jo-Ann as Addapearle and the Munchkins in The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

PIT SINGERS: Chenee Campbell Kojo Littles, Matia Washington and Darrell Williams.

KEYBOARDS: Edward Callahan,  Jeremy Jordan

Assistants to Mr. Faison: Gina Ellis, David Robertson

Production Stage Manager: Gwen Gilliam

Dance Arranger/Musical Supervisor: Timothy Graphenreed

Inaya Day as Dorothy and Reji Woods as The Lion in The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Inaya Day as Dorothy and Reji Woods as The Lion in The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Don’t miss De Shields and the extraordinary cast tonight and tomorrow in the free concerts at Summerstage, Marcus Garvey Park, W. 122nd St. and Mt. Morris Park West in New York.  Showtime is at 7pm. Click here for more information and check back for my highlights of the night.

André De Shields as The Wiz in The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

André De Shields as The Wiz in The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

TO DONATE OR SECURE RESERVED VIP SEATS PLEASE VISIT THE CAMPAIGN BY CLICKING:

http://www.gofundme.com/The-Wiz-2015

 Nicole Elaine Phifer as Evilene in The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Nicole Elaine Phifer as Evilene in The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

André De Shields at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

André De Shields at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

George Faison. Photo by Lia Chang

George Faison. Photo by Lia Chang

George Faison, internationally celebrated producer, writer, composer, director, choreographer and dancer, made history in 1975 when he became the first African American to win a Tony Award for Best Choreography for The Wiz. In honor of the Broadway hit’s 40th anniversary this year, Faison presented performances of original songs and dances from the show. Mr. Faison also heads the Faison Firehouse Theater in Central Harlem, which he founded in 2000 along with Tad Schnugg.The Firehouse is a technologically advanced theater where Mr. Faison develops digital applications for the performing arts as well as original theater pieces. The 130-seat theater, branded “Hollywood of Harlem” by the media, is a full service performing arts and cultural center with fine arts galleries, rehearsal facilities and a cabaret theater. faisonfirehouse.org

The VIP line for The Wiz is 40 at #summerstage30 stretched down Central Park in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang Postcards of The Wiz is 40. Photo by Lia Chang André De Shields and Warrington Hudlin at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang George Faison, Carmen de Lavallade, André De Shields, Kathleen Battle, Warrington Hudlin and guest at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang André De Shields and Carmen de Lavallade at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang Reji Woods and André De Shields at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang A guest, Ebony Jo-Ann and Adrian Bailey at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang Dee Dee Bridgewater and Ebony Jo-Ann at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang André De Shields and George Faison at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang André De Shields signs posters at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang André De Shields is greeted by fans at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang Terria Joseph, André De Shields, Elain Graham André De Shields and George Faison at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang Breaking down the stage at Summerstage, Rumsey Playfield in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang André De Shields at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang André De Shields displays his original costume from the Broadway production of The Wiz backstage at at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang André De Shields' original accessories from the Broadway production for The Wiz in the dressing room at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang André De Shields' The Wiz cape and boot in the dressing room at The Wiz is 40 at Rumsey Playfield, Summerstage in New York on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

One of the first large-scale, big-budget Broadway musicals to star an all-black cast, The Wiz features music and lyrics by Charlie Smalls and book by William F. Brown. It is a retelling of L. Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in the context of African-American culture.

Actor André De Shields (C) w. cast in a scene fr. the Broadway musical "The Wiz". (c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

Actor André De Shields (C) w. cast in a scene fr. the Broadway musical “The Wiz”. (c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

The Wiz opened on October 21, 1974 at the Morris A. Mechanic Theatre in Baltimore, Maryland, and on January 5, 1975, moved to the Majestic Theatre on Broadway with Geoffrey Holder at the helm.

Actors (Front L-R) Clarice Taylor, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ted Ross & Tiger Haynes w. cast in a scene fr. the Broadway musical "The Wiz".( c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

Actors (Front L-R) Clarice Taylor, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ted Ross & Tiger Haynes w. cast in a scene fr. the Broadway musical “The Wiz”.( c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

The cast starred Stephanie Mills as Dorothy, Hinton Battle as the Scarecrow, Tiger Haynes as the Tin Man, Ted Ross as the Lion, Dee Dee Bridgewater as Glinda, the Good Witch of the South, André De Shields as the Wizard, Mabel King as Evillene, the Wicked Witch of the West, Clarice Taylor as Addaperle, the Good Witch of the North, Tasha Thomas as Aunt Em, Ralph Wilcox as Uncle Henry and Phylicia Rashād as a Munchkin.

Actors (L-R) Clarice Taylor, Stephanie Mills & Phylicia Rashad (rear) in a scene fr. the Broadway musical "The Wiz". (c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

Actors (L-R) Clarice Taylor, Stephanie Mills & Phylicia Rashad (rear) in a scene fr. the Broadway musical “The Wiz”. (c.1974) Photo by Martha Swope courtesy of THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DIGITAL COLLECTIONS

The 1975 Broadway production garnered seven Tony Awards including Best Musical, Best Original Score for Charlie Smalls, Best Featured Actor in a Musical – Ted Ross, Best Featured Actress in a Musical – Dee Dee Bridgewater, Best Costume Design For Geoffrey Holder, Best Choreography for George Faison, Best Direction of a Musical for Geoffrey Holder; and five Drama Desk Awards including Outstanding Musical, Outstanding Music and Lyrics for Charlie Smalls, Outstanding Featured Actor in a Musical – Ted Ross, Outstanding Choreography for George Faison, Outstanding Costume Design for Geoffrey Holder.

The Original Poster of the Broadway production of The Wiz. Geoffrey Holder with his Tony Awards for Best Direction of a Musical and Best Costume Design. Photo courtesy of Richard Cameron's Facebook Page.

The Broadway production moved to The Broadway Theatre on May 25, 1977, and closed on January 28, 1979, after four years and 1,672 performances.

Geoffrey Holder, Artist, Actor, Dancer, Choreographer, Two-Time Tony Award-winning Director and Costume Designer for The Wiz, Dies at 84; Son Pens Intimate Account of Last Days

THE WIZ Turns 40- Photos from Original Broadway Production and BC/EFA Gypsy of The Year Celebration Featuring André De Shields, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ken Page, Charl Brown, Carly Hughes, Christina Sajous, Alton Fitzgerald White, Lillias White and More

Photos and Video: The Wiz’s André De Shields sang “So You Wanted to Meet the Wizard” as part of The Black Stars of The Great White Way Broadway Reunion: Live The Dream at Carnegie Hall  

For complete series lineup, please visit SummerStage.org

PLEASE NOTE: SummerStage shows take place outdoors and take place RAIN OR SHINE. Shows are only cancelled in the event of what event organizers consider to be dangerous winds or lightning. Schedule of events and performers is subject to change. The following cannot be brought into the Central Park venue: glass bottles, cans, coolers, folding chairs, bikes, rollerblades, skateboards, beach umbrellas, video cameras, selfie sticks, professional camera gear, tripods or pets. SummerStage is not responsible for prohibited items left outside the venue. Bags subject to search. Alcoholic beverages are forbidden in NYC Parks. The distribution and sale of unauthorized promotional materials is banned. Beer and wine are on sale at the Central Park venue for onsite consumption only. Smoking is prohibited in all NYC parks.

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

The Wiz articles:
Broadwayworld.com: Photo Flash: Phylicia Rashad, Andre De Shields & More Original Cast Members from THE WIZ Reunite in Central Park!
André De Shields, Phylicia Rashad, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ebony Jo-Ann, Inaya Day, Reji Woods and More set for THE WIZ is 40: A Celebration in Dance and Music at SummerStage in Central Park on 8/12; Marcus Garvey Park on 8/13, 8/14
THE WIZ: A Celebration in Dance and Music featuring André De Shields, Phylicia Rashad, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ebony Jo-Ann, Inaya Day and more at SummerStage in Central Park on 8/12; Marcus Garvey Park on 8/13, 8/14
Kenny Leon Helmed ‘The Wiz’ Set as NBC’s Next Live Musical to air on Dec. 3; Broadway Revival Slated for 2016-17
THE WIZ Turns 40- Photos from Original Broadway Production and BC/EFA Gypsy of The Year Celebration Featuring André De Shields, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ken Page, Charl Brown, Carly Hughes, Christina Sajous, Alton Fitzgerald White, Lillias White and More
Photos: André De Shields, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Ken Page, Charl Brown, Carly Hughes, Alton Fitzgerald White, Lillias White in 40th Anniversary of The WIZ Tribute at BC/EFA’s GYPSY OF THE YEAR; Competition Breaks Records With Over $5 Million as Hugh Jackman’s THE RIVER Brings in Top Donation
Geoffrey Holder, Artist, Actor, Dancer, Choreographer, Two-Time Tony Award-winning Director and Costume Designer for The Wiz, Dies at 84; Son Pens Intimate Account of Last Days

Other articles about André De Shields:
André De Shields in CONFESSIONS OF A P.I.M.P., Black Stars of the Great White Way anniversary concert at NBTF and Broadway-Bound GOTTA DANCE 
Multimedia: CONFESSIONS OF A P.I.M.P. Opening Night with André De Shields; #Ignition Festival Continues through July 19
Video: André De Shields sings Smile in CONFESSIONS OF A P.I.M.P. in Victory Gardens’ 2015 IGNITION Festival of New Plays
Video: André De Shields sings Street Corner Symphony and Mary Mack in CONFESSIONS OF A P.I.M.P. in Victory Gardens’ 2015 IGNITION Festival of New Plays
Photo and Video Preview: Two-time Tony nominee André De Shields Kicks Off Victory Gardens’ 2015 Ignition Festival of New Plays with CONFESSIONS OF A P.I.M.P
Two-time Tony nominee André De Shields, GREY’S ANATOMY star Sandra Oh, Kimberly Lawson, Donica Lynn, Tony Mhoon, Doug Peck, Robert Reddrick, Anjali Bhimani and More set for 2015 IGNITION Festival of New Plays at Victory Gardens Theater, July 16-19
Two-Time Tony nominee André De Shields, Tony Winner Lillias White, ORANGE IS THE NEW BLACK’s Lori Tan Chinn, Stephanie Powers, Georgia Engel & More Will Lead Broadway-Bound Musical GOTTA DANCE in Chicago
tcgcircle.org THE GRAND ILLUSION by ANDRÉ DE SHIELDS in FOX FELLOWSHIPS
Click here for more articles on André De Shields.

Other Articles
AsAmNews.com: Future Looks Bright for Asian American Cinema
#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
AsAmNews.com: A Chat with Broadway’s New King of Siam, Jose Llana
AsAmNews.com: Award-winning Filmmaker Jennifer Phang’s Sci-Fi Film ‘Advantageous’ Available on Netflix and iTunes
AsAmNews.com: Lunch with Tony Winner Lea Salonga and George Takei, Stars of ALLEGIANCE
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com


Lia Chang Photos and Video: THE KING AND I’s Jose Llana, Ruthie Ann Miles and Betsy Morgan sing in 106.7 LITE FM’s Broadway in Bryant Park

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A great turnout for Broadway in Bryant Park in New York on August 13, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

A great turnout for Broadway in Bryant Park in New York on August 13, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Free concerts in city parks and alternative spaces are among New York’s ultimate summer pleasures. It’s even better when you know someone that is performing.

The King and I's Jose Llana, Betsy Morgan and Ruthie Ann Miles attend 106.7 LITE FM's Broadway in Bryant Park in New York on August 13, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

The King and I’s Jose Llana, Betsy Morgan and Ruthie Ann Miles attend 106.7 LITE FM’s Broadway in Bryant Park in New York on August 13, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Yesterday was a glorious afternoon for me and many others as Jose Llana, Tony award-winner Ruthie Ann Miles and Betsy Morgan from the Tony award-winning revival of Lincoln Center’s The King and I, took center stage at the 15th annual lunchtime theatre summer series, ‘106.7 LITE FM’s Broadway in Bryant Park.’ The 2015 program has presented the best of Broadway, FREE to the public, on six consecutive Thursdays at 12:30 p.m. ET on the Bryant Park Stage.

Llana and Miles last starred together as Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos in the long-running hit musical Here Lies Love by David Byrne and Fat Boy Slim at the Public Theater.

Jose Llana from the cast of The King and I performs at 106.7 LITE FM's Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Jose Llana from the cast of The King and I performs at 106.7 LITE FM’s Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Llana, who is currently playing a limited engagement as The King of Siam through Sunday, September 27, sang “A Puzzlement”.

Jose Llana from the cast of The King and I performs at 106.7 LITE FM's Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Jose Llana from the cast of The King and I performs at 106.7 LITE FM’s Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

After his turn as The King, Llana is headed to the recording studio to lay down tracks for his new CD, which will feature a lineup of songs that he performed in his sold-out Lincoln Center American Songbook Concert last March. He is also planning more concert dates in the late fall and winter to promote the album.

A Chat with Broadway’s New King of Siam, Jose Llana

Jose Llana from the cast of The King and I performs at 106.7 LITE FM's Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Jose Llana from the cast of The King and I performs at 106.7 LITE FM’s Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Ruthie Ann Miles, who garnered a Best Featured Actress in a Musical Tony Award for her role as Lady Thiang, sang “Something Wonderful”.

Tony winner Ruthie Ann Miles from the cast of The King and I performs at 106.7 LITE FM's Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Tony winner Ruthie Ann Miles from the cast of The King and I performs at 106.7 LITE FM’s Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

She had her adorable daughter, Abigail and her mother, Esther in tow.

Tony winner Ruthie Ann Miles, her daughter, Abigail and her mother, Esther attend 106.7 LITE FM's Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Tony winner Ruthie Ann Miles, her daughter, Abigail and her mother, Esther attend 106.7 LITE FM’s Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

AsAmNews.com:Asian American Wins Tony Award 

And Betsy Morgan sang “Hello, Young Lovers”.

Betsy Morgan from the cast of The King and I performs at 106.7 LITE FM's Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Betsy Morgan from the cast of The King and I performs at 106.7 LITE FM’s Broadway In Bryant Park on August 13, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

The line-up also included performances from the casts of Daddy Long Legs, Once Upon a Mattress, Dames at Sea, Spring Awakening and Hand to God.

The King and I's Jose Llana and family members attend 106.7 LITE FM's Broadway in Bryant Park in New York on August 13, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

The King and I’s Jose Llana and family members attend 106.7 LITE FM’s Broadway in Bryant Park in New York on August 13, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Hosted by LITE FM’s on-air personalities, the annual presentation of open-air, On- and Off- Broadway lunch hour performances in Bryant Park is presented by NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, Aruba Tourism Authority and SheaMoisture.

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

Other Articles
AsAmNews.com: The King and I’s Jose Llana, Ruthie Ann Miles and Betsy Morgan Perform Concert in the Park
Broadwayworld.com: Photo Flash: First Look at THE REPORT as Part of FringeNYC
Broadwayworld.com: Photo Flash: Phylicia Rashad, Andre De Shields & More Original Cast Members from THE WIZ Reunite in Central Park!
AsAmNews.com: China: Through the Looking Glass Extended by The Met until Labor Day
AsAmNews.com: Arthur Dong’s Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 wins American Book Award
AsAmNews.com: Four Playwrights to Explore the Intersections of Orange County Diversity Through SCR’s CrossRoads
AsAmNews.com: Future Looks Bright for Asian American Cinema
#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
AsAmNews.com: A Chat with Broadway’s New King of Siam, Jose Llana
AsAmNews.com: Award-winning Filmmaker Jennifer Phang’s Sci-Fi Film ‘Advantageous’ Available on Netflix and iTunes
AsAmNews.com: Lunch with Tony Winner Lea Salonga and George Takei, Stars of ALLEGIANCE
AsAmNews.com: Tony Award winning playwright David Henry Hwang Warns Graduates to Resist Nostalgia
AsAmNews.com:Former Astronaut Leroy Chiao honored with Leadership Award at China Institute’s Blue Cloud Gala 
AsAmNews.com: AAPI Heritage Month: My Grandmother’s Detention on Angel Island 
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com


Photos: In Rehearsal with director Alan Muraoka and the cast of THE REPORT starring Michael Countryman; set for world premiere in New York International Fringe Festival

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Alan Muraoka. Photo by Lia Chang

Alan Muraoka. Photo by Lia Chang

Alan Muraoka is at the helm of a haunting new world premiere drama, THE REPORT, which opens in the New York International Fringe Festival on August 15th at the Lynn Redgrave Theater @Culture Project located at 45 Bleecker Street for a total of five performances through August 28th.

MICHAEL COUNTRYMAN (center) and the cast of THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

MICHAEL COUNTRYMAN (center) and the cast of THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

Based on the novel by Jessica Francis Kane, THE REPORT is adapted by Martin Casella, whose THE IRISH CURSE earned the Outstanding Playwriting Award in the 2005 FringeNYC and went on to a highly acclaimed Off-Broadway run.

Alan Muraoka and Darren Lee discuss the choreography for a scene in rehearsal for THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

Alan Muraoka and Darren Lee discuss the choreography for a scene in rehearsal for THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

Director Muraoka’s credits include FALSETTOLAND (NAATCO), KARAOKE STORIES and a sixteen year stint on “Sesame Street”. The production features specialty movement and choreography by Darren Lee.

Alan Muraoka and Michael Countryman in rehearsal for THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

Alan Muraoka and Michael Countryman in rehearsal for THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

THE REPORT examines the true, unknown story of the British government’s cover-up of the largest civilian disaster of World War II. On March 3, 1943, 173 people died in London’s Bethnal Green tube station, which served as a bomb shelter during air raids. But not a single bomb was dropped that fateful night. The cause of this tragedy was kept secret for almost 30 years, until a young BBC journalist making a documentary began to uncover what actually took place. As the truth is revealed, we discover how trauma, fear and the paranoia of war impact our very humanity, and how the specter of a single public calamity resonates throughout multiple generations.

Darren Lee, Alan Muraoka in tech with the cast and crew for THE REPORT at the Lynn Redgrave Theater. Photo by Lia Chang

Darren Lee, Alan Muraoka in tech with the cast and crew for THE REPORT at the Lynn Redgrave Theater. Photo by Lia Chang

Michael Countryman in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

Michael Countryman in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

THE REPORT features Michael Countryman (“Boardwalk Empire,” “The Sopranos,” A FEW GOOD MEN, LAUGHTER ON THE 23rd FLOOR, THE COMMON PURSUIT, YOU CAN COUNT ON ME) along with a company of British, Welsh, Canadian and American actors including Philippa Dawson, Denny Desmarias, Clemmie Evans, Natalie Frost, Jenny Green, Louis Lavoie, James Physick, Sophie Sorensen, Jonathan Stephens, Zoë Watkins, David Wells and Stuart Williams.

STUART WILLIAMS and MICHAEL COUNTRYMAN in THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

STUART WILLIAMS and MICHAEL COUNTRYMAN in THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

STUART WILLIAMS, SOPHIE SORENSEN and MICHAEL COUNTRYMAN in THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

STUART WILLIAMS, SOPHIE SORENSEN and MICHAEL COUNTRYMAN in THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

LOUIS LAVOIE, JAMES PHYSICK, ZOE WATKINS and STUART WILLIAMS in THE REPORT Photo by Lia Chang

LOUIS LAVOIE, JAMES PHYSICK, ZOE WATKINS and STUART WILLIAMS in THE REPORT Photo by Lia Chang

ZOE WATKINS and PHILIPPA DAWSON in THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

ZOE WATKINS and PHILIPPA DAWSON in THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

MICHAEL COUNTRYMAN and SOPHIE SORENSEN in THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

MICHAEL COUNTRYMAN and SOPHIE SORENSEN in THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

Martin Casella’s recent theater credits, in addition to the Off-Broadway and worldwide productions of THE IRISH CURSE, include the award-winning DIRECTIONS FOR RESTORING THE APPARENTLY DEAD and SCITUATE. He is the screenwriter of TOM’S DAD starring Will Ferrell and directed by Lasse Hallstrom, and THE LAND OF SOMETIMES, an animated British feature film.

Costume designer Brian Hemesath and director Alan Muraoka in rehearsal for THE REPORT at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at the Culture Project. Photo by Lia Chang

Costume designer Brian Hemesath and director Alan Muraoka in rehearsal for THE REPORT at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at the Culture Project. Photo by Lia Chang

Scenic design for THE REPORT is by Lauren Helpern, with costume design by Brian Hemesath, lighting design by Michael O’Connor and sound design by Chris Sassano.

Packing to load out after tech on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Packing to load out after tech on August 12, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

The performance schedule is Saturday August 15 at 3:15 pm, Tuesday August 18 at 9:45 pm, Monday August 24 at 4:30 pm, Thursday August 27 at 4:15 pm and Friday August 28 at 9:00 pm at Venue 13: Lynn Redgrave Theater @Culture Project located at 45 Bleecker Street.

THE REPORT is being presented by Barry Goralnick, Sarahbeth Grossman, Craig Zehms in association with Cutting Hedge Productions. For information & tickets visit www.FringeNYC.org. For more information about THE REPORT, please visit www.TheReportThePlay.com.

Kung Fu director playwright, director Leigh Silverman and assistant director Alan Muraoka at The Pershing Square Signature Center on February 11, 2014. Photo by Lia Chang

Kung Fu director playwright, director Leigh Silverman and assistant director Alan Muraoka at The Pershing Square Signature Center on February 11, 2014. Photo by Lia Chang

ALAN MURAOKA (Director) – New York credits include: David Henry Hwang’s Kung Fu (Signature Theatre-Assistant Director to Leigh Silverman), Ann Harada: American Songbook (Lincoln Center), Awesomer & Awesomer!!! (Triad Theatre), The King and I (Harbor Lights Theatre Company), Telly Leung: Playlist and What Makes a Man? (54 Below), Who Loves Ya’ Baby? (Laurie Beechman Theatre), Grand Hotel (NYU/Cap 21), Falsettoland (NAATCO), John Tartaglia AD-LIBerty (Joe’s Pub) Karaoke Stories (IMUA Theater Company), Christmas Eve With Christmas Eve 1,2, & 3 (BC/EFA Benefits at the Midtown Theatre) Empty Handed (Musicals Tonight) and cabarets for Tony-nominated actress Stephanie D’Abruzzo and Ann Harada.

Director Alan Muraoka gives Ann Harada notes in dress rehearsal for her Lincoln Center American Songbook debut in February 2014. Photo by Lia Chang

Director Alan Muraoka gives Ann Harada notes in dress rehearsal for her Lincoln Center American Songbook debut in February 2014. Photo by Lia Chang

Regionally: At the Lyric Theatre in Oklahoma City, he has directed The King and IXanaduDisney’s High School Musical and Disney’s High School Musical 2. Other regional credits include Disney’s High School Musical (MUNY, Casa Mañana), Urinetown (Trinity University), and Associate Director for Up In The Air (Kennedy Center). Television: Alan has directed for “Sesame Street” and for the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade on NBC.

Harbor Lights Theater Company’s Production of The King and I, directed by Alan Muraoka (November 2012). Photo by Lia Chang

Harbor Lights Theater Company’s Production of The King and I, directed by Alan Muraoka (November 2012). Photo by Lia Chang

Mr. Muraoka is a member of the SSDC and an alumni of the Lincoln Center Director’s Lab. Current projects in development include a musical version of Steven Kluger’s The Last Days Of Summer, an original song cycle of composer Jason Loffredo called Turning The Page. As an actor, Mr. Muraoka has been a cast member of the Emmy-winning television series “Sesame Street” for the past 16 years, where he plays Alan, the proprietor of Hooper’s Store. Mr. Muraoka is a graduate of UCLA, where he received the Carol Burnett Musical Comedy Award for performance. He was also the 2004 recipient of the APEX Inspiration Award and the FCC’s 2007 Role Model of the Year Award opportunity. www.alanmuraoka.net

Alan Muraoka and the cast of Sesame Street in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York on November 27, 2014. Photo by Lia Chang

Alan Muraoka and the cast of Sesame Street in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York on November 27, 2014. Photo by Lia Chang

Alan Muraoka Celebrates A Sweet Sixteen Years on Sesame Street

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

Other Articles
AsAmNews.com: The King and I’s Jose Llana, Ruthie Ann Miles and Betsy Morgan Perform Concert in the Park
Broadwayworld.com: Photo Flash: First Look at THE REPORT as Part of FringeNYC
Broadwayworld.com: Photo Flash: Phylicia Rashad, Andre De Shields & More Original Cast Members from THE WIZ Reunite in Central Park!
AsAmNews.com: China: Through the Looking Glass Extended by The Met until Labor Day
AsAmNews.com: Arthur Dong’s Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 wins American Book Award
AsAmNews.com: Four Playwrights to Explore the Intersections of Orange County Diversity Through SCR’s CrossRoads
AsAmNews.com: Future Looks Bright for Asian American Cinema
#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
AsAmNews.com: A Chat with Broadway’s New King of Siam, Jose Llana
AsAmNews.com: Award-winning Filmmaker Jennifer Phang’s Sci-Fi Film ‘Advantageous’ Available on Netflix and iTunes
AsAmNews.com: Lunch with Tony Winner Lea Salonga and George Takei, Stars of ALLEGIANCE
AsAmNews.com: Tony Award winning playwright David Henry Hwang Warns Graduates to Resist Nostalgia
AsAmNews.com:Former Astronaut Leroy Chiao honored with Leadership Award at China Institute’s Blue Cloud Gala 
AsAmNews.com: AAPI Heritage Month: My Grandmother’s Detention on Angel Island 
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com


The Film Lab: Unfinished Works Screenplay Readings of The Opposite of a Fairy Tale by Jennifer Betit Yen, and The Plains by Alice Cox, Workshop & Casting on August 18

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Jennifer Betit Yen. Photo by Lia Chang

Jennifer Betit Yen. Photo by Lia Chang

On Tuesday, August 18th, Film Lab presents the reading of two exciting new screenplays, moderated by guest moderator, journalist and actor Erin Quill, in Film Lab’s signature “Unfinished Works” program on 7pm EST at AAARI-CUNY, 25 W. 43 Street in Manhattan.  Check in begins at 6:30pm.

(1) ‘The Opposite of a Fairy Tale,’ by Jennifer Betit Yen (with special contributions from  Aaron Woolfolk) a brand new AAFL TV production about elder abuse, sponsored by a generous grant from the Asian Women’s Giving Circle and the Ms. Foundation. Read more about the film here. The cast features Carmen Ruby FloydKaren Tsen LeeDi QuonLes MauHansel TanPhil NeeErin QuillKristi TomookaHazel Anne Raymundo, Zachary Siegel, James CiccarelleNicky TorchiaHayden WallDaphne MacyDaniel AbseLil RheeIsabella RussoJeremy Kuykendall and Enrico Rodriguez.

(2) ‘The Plains’ by Alice Cox, in which marginalized teenaged boys, an Asian girl who vies to be popular, and a pastor’s defiant daughter, challenge the community of a small Texas town.

The readings will be followed by a constructive workshopping of both pieces that allow the audience to become a part of the writer’s creative process.

The evening will be live streamed for guests around the world and you are welcome to tweet your feedback to the writers and actors @asamfilmlab #UnfinishedWorks using either #OppositeFairyTale or #ThePlains so we know which work you’re referring to.

If you are an actor, you are encouraged to bring a couple of headshots and resumes to give to the writers.  AAFL TV is casting for their piece.

To guarantee a seat, please donate what you can (as little as a dollar) with all proceeds going to diversity here.  You are also welcome to simply show up on the day of, although your seat is not guaranteed.  All donors will automatically receive a raffle ticket for prizes including bottles of wine and more, being raffled off on Aug. 18.   For more information, check out www.film-lab.org and www.Facebook.com/AsAmFilmLab and www.Facebook.com/AAFLTV.

For more on the Unfinished Works program:  http://www.asianamericanfilmlab.com/about/

The 72 Hour Shootout Launch party at The Korea Society in New York on June 4, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

The 72 Hour Shootout Launch party at The Korea Society in New York on June 4, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

About the Asian American Film Lab
The Film Lab is a non-profit 501(c)(3) that promotes ethnic and gender diversity through outreach, education and production. The Film Lab provides free or low cost programming ranging from screenwriting workshops to panels to seminars to screenings. The Film Lab produces the television series “Film Lab Presents” and a wide variety of online content on AAFL TV. The Film Lab management team consists of Jennifer Betit Yen (President and Board Member, founder of AAFL TV Production Arm), Huseina Sulaimanee (Treasurer and Volunteer), Daryl King (Secretary and Board Member), Cecilia Mejia (Unfinished Works), Youn Jung Kim (2015 72 Hour Shootout Coordinator), Nick Sakai (Industry Spotlight), along with a dedicated Board, interns and event volunteers. Board members include James Kyson, Ed Wong and Aaron Woolfolk, among others.

www.asianamericanfilmlab.com

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine.

Other Articles
FebOne Blog: THE VERSATILE LIA CHANG
AsAmNews.com: Sesame Street’s Alan Muraoka Directs New Off Broadway Drama THE REPORT
AsAmNews.com: The King and I’s Jose Llana, Ruthie Ann Miles and Betsy Morgan Perform Concert in the Park
Broadwayworld.com: Photo Flash: First Look at THE REPORT as Part of FringeNYC
Broadwayworld.com: Photo Flash: Phylicia Rashad, Andre De Shields & More Original Cast Members from THE WIZ Reunite in Central Park!
AsAmNews.com: China: Through the Looking Glass Extended by The Met until Labor Day
AsAmNews.com: Arthur Dong’s Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 wins American Book Award
AsAmNews.com: Four Playwrights to Explore the Intersections of Orange County Diversity Through SCR’s CrossRoads
AsAmNews.com: Future Looks Bright for Asian American Cinema
#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
AsAmNews.com: A Chat with Broadway’s New King of Siam, Jose Llana
AsAmNews.com: Award-winning Filmmaker Jennifer Phang’s Sci-Fi Film ‘Advantageous’ Available on Netflix and iTunes
AsAmNews.com: Lunch with Tony Winner Lea Salonga and George Takei, Stars of ALLEGIANCE
AsAmNews.com: Tony Award winning playwright David Henry Hwang Warns Graduates to Resist Nostalgia
AsAmNews.com:Former Astronaut Leroy Chiao honored with Leadership Award at China Institute’s Blue Cloud Gala 
AsAmNews.com: AAPI Heritage Month: My Grandmother’s Detention on Angel Island 
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com



Ti-Hua Chang receives The 2015 AAJA Lifetime Achievement Award

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Ti-Hua Chang speaks after accepting the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award at the Annual Awards Gala at the National Convention at the Hyatt Regency Embarcadero in San Francisco on August 15, 2015. (Photo courtesy of Elaine Huie Chang/Facebook

Ti-Hua Chang speaks after accepting the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award at the Annual Awards Gala at the National Convention at the Hyatt Regency Embarcadero in San Francisco on August 15, 2015. (Photo courtesy of Elaine Huie Chang/Facebook

Congratulations to multiple award-winning journalist Ti-Hua Chang, a freelance correspondent for CBS News, who was honored with The 2015 AAJA Lifetime Achievement Award at the AAJA Annual Scholarship & Awards Gala at the National Convention in San Francisco on August 15th at the Hyatt Regency Embarcadero.

Ti-Hua Chang and his wife Elaine Huie Chang after accepting the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award at the Annual Awards Gala at the National Convention at the Hyatt Regency Embarcadero in San Francisco on August 15, 2015. (Photo courtesy of Elaine Huie Chang/Facebook

Ti-Hua Chang and his wife Elaine Huie Chang after accepting the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award at the Annual Awards Gala at the National Convention at the Hyatt Regency Embarcadero in San Francisco on August 15, 2015. (Photo courtesy of Elaine Huie Chang/Facebook

Very active in Asian American community affairs, Chang was both a national and local New York Board member of the Asian American Journalists Association and has been a beloved and invaluable mentor to many. Chang was joined at the dinner by his wife, Elaine Huie Chang and their two children, Tyler, age 11 and Evangelina, age 9.

Ti-Hua Chang with his wife Elaine Huie Chang and their two children, Evangelina, age 9 and Tyler, age 11 after accepting the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award at the Annual Awards Gala at the National Convention at the Hyatt Regency Embarcadero in San Francisco on August 15, 2015. (Photo courtesy of Elaine Huie Chang/Facebook

Ti-Hua Chang with his wife Elaine Huie Chang and their two children, Evangelina, age 9 and Tyler, age 11 after accepting the 2015 Lifetime Achievement Award at the Annual Awards Gala at the National Convention at the Hyatt Regency Embarcadero in San Francisco on August 15, 2015. (Photo courtesy of Elaine Huie Chang/Facebook

The AAJA Lifetime Achievement Award is presented to an individual who has demonstrated courage and commitment to the principles of journalism over the course of a life’s work, as well as dedication to issues important to the Asian American and Pacific Islander community.

Chang was most recently a general assignment reporter for WNYW/Fox 5, and prior to that he worked for sister station WWOR/My9, where he served as a general assignment and investigative reporter since 2008. Chang has also worked at WCBS-TV where he served in the same capacity. On 9/11, he was the first reporter to inform the public on the number of casualties that day quoting Mayor Giuliani and city officials. Chang joined WNBC from WNYC-TV, where he was the host of his own talk show, New York Hotline. Before he began his on-air career, he was an investigative producer at ABC News.

Chang is the recipient of numerous awards. In 1996, he won the prestigious Peabody Award for a series of reports he filed on accused drug-dealing murders. In 2004, he won a New York Press Club award for his reports on a shooting at City Hall. He received an Edward R. Murrow Award in 2005 for a piece exposing police officers using a helicopter and high tech infrared equipment to spy on police citizens. Chang is especially proud of discovering the four witnesses to the 1963 murder of Medgar Evers, which let to the reopening of that famous case.

Chang has also won five Emmys; the Philadelphia, Denver and Detroit Press Association awards; and the Associated Press and United Press International awards. Very active in Asian American community affairs, Chang was both a national and local New York Board member of the Asian American Journalists Association. Chang also has been published in a number of magazines, including the Sunday New York Times and The Detroit News.

A graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, Chang was named by Columbia in 2004 as one of the 10 most influential Columbia alumni in New York City, where he resides with his family.

Fox 5 News NY (WNYW-TV) reporter Ti-Hua Chang Receives AAJA National Journalism Award for story which explores Asian American Poverty in New York

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine and FebOne1960.com Blog.

Other Articles
FebOne Blog: THE VERSATILE LIA CHANG
AsAmNews.com: Sesame Street’s Alan Muraoka Directs New Off Broadway Drama THE REPORT
AsAmNews.com: The King and I’s Jose Llana, Ruthie Ann Miles and Betsy Morgan Perform Concert in the Park
Broadwayworld.com: Photo Flash: First Look at THE REPORT as Part of FringeNYC
Broadwayworld.com: Photo Flash: Phylicia Rashad, Andre De Shields & More Original Cast Members from THE WIZ Reunite in Central Park!
AsAmNews.com: China: Through the Looking Glass Extended by The Met until Labor Day
AsAmNews.com: Arthur Dong’s Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 wins American Book Award
AsAmNews.com: Four Playwrights to Explore the Intersections of Orange County Diversity Through SCR’s CrossRoads
AsAmNews.com: Future Looks Bright for Asian American Cinema
#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
AsAmNews.com: A Chat with Broadway’s New King of Siam, Jose Llana
AsAmNews.com: Award-winning Filmmaker Jennifer Phang’s Sci-Fi Film ‘Advantageous’ Available on Netflix and iTunes
AsAmNews.com: Lunch with Tony Winner Lea Salonga and George Takei, Stars of ALLEGIANCE
AsAmNews.com: Tony Award winning playwright David Henry Hwang Warns Graduates to Resist Nostalgia
AsAmNews.com:Former Astronaut Leroy Chiao honored with Leadership Award at China Institute’s Blue Cloud Gala 
AsAmNews.com: AAPI Heritage Month: My Grandmother’s Detention on Angel Island 
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com


Record Breaking “China: Through the Looking Glass” at Met Museum Closes Monday, September 7

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Gallery View Anna Wintour Costume Center, Imperial China. Designs from Laurence Xu, a “Dragon Robe” dress, 2011, Yellow silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metal thread, Courtesy of Victoria and Albert Museum, London. Given by Laurence Xu; John Galliano for the House of Dior, (French, founded 1947) Dress, autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture Yellow silk damask embroidered with polychrome silk and gold metallic thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture, on display with a Semiformal Robe for the Qianlong Emperor (1736-95) and a Formal Robe for the Tongzhi Emperor, 1862-1874 Silk and metallic thread, Rogers Fund, 1945 (45.37), in the Metropolitan Museum's Costume Institute exhibition "China: Through the Looking Glass." Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Anna Wintour Costume Center, Imperial China.
Designs from Laurence Xu, a “Dragon Robe” dress, 2011, Yellow silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metal thread, Courtesy of Victoria and Albert Museum, London. Given by Laurence Xu; John Galliano for the House of Dior, (French, founded 1947) Dress, autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture Yellow silk damask embroidered with polychrome silk and gold metallic thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture, on display with a Semiformal Robe for the Qianlong Emperor (1736-95) and a Formal Robe for the Tongzhi Emperor, 1862-1874 Silk and metallic thread, Rogers Fund, 1945
(45.37), in the Metropolitan Museum’s Costume Institute exhibition “China: Through the Looking Glass.” Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Anna Wintour Costume Center, Imperial China. Ralph Lauren (American, born 1939), Ensemble, autumn/winter 2011–12 Jacket of red silk shantung and black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and gold metallic thread; shirt of white cotton broadcloth; pants of black and white pinstriped wool-synthetic twill, Courtesy of Ralph Lauren Collection; Chinese Theatrical costume Made during the Reign of the Qianlong Emperor, 1736-95, Red silk satin brocaded with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of the Palace Museum, Beijing. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Anna Wintour Costume Center, Imperial China.
Ralph Lauren (American, born 1939), Ensemble, autumn/winter 2011–12
Jacket of red silk shantung and black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and gold metallic thread; shirt of white cotton broadcloth; pants of black and white pinstriped wool-synthetic twill, Courtesy of Ralph Lauren Collection;
Chinese Theatrical costume Made during the Reign of the Qianlong Emperor, 1736-95, Red silk satin brocaded with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of the Palace Museum, Beijing. Photo by Lia Chang

China: Through the Looking Glass, the spring 2015 Costume Institute exhibition at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, closes on Labor Day, Monday, September 7.

The popular exhibition, organized by The Costume Institute in collaboration with the Department of Asian Art, opened to the public on May 7, and was extended from its original closing date of August 16 by three weeks. On Saturday, August 15, it surpassed the record-breaking Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty (2011), to become The Costume Institute’s best attended exhibition ever. By Sunday, August 16, it had more than 670,000 visitors. The McQueen exhibition had a total of 661,509 visitors.

Encompassing approximately 30,000 square feet in 16 separate galleries in the Museum’s Chinese and Egyptian Galleries and Anna Wintour Costume Center, it is The Costume Institute’s largest special exhibition ever, and also one of the Museum’s largest. With gallery space three times the size of a typical Costume Institute major spring show, China has accommodated large numbers of visitors without lines.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture Coat of gold lamé matelassé and black fox fur; trousers of black silk velvet, Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé–Yves Saint Laurent, Paris; Chinese Ritual Wine Container (Hu) Eastern Zhou dynasty, Spring and Autumn period (770–476 B.C.), early 5th century B.C. Bronze inlaid with copper, Rogers Fund, 1999 (1999.46a,b). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008),
Ensemble, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture
Coat of gold lamé matelassé and black fox fur; trousers of black silk velvet, Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé–Yves Saint Laurent, Paris;
Chinese Ritual Wine Container (Hu) Eastern Zhou dynasty, Spring and Autumn period (770–476 B.C.), early 5th century B.C.
Bronze inlaid with copper,
Rogers Fund, 1999
(1999.46a,b). Photo by Lia Chang

“This exhibition is one of the most ambitious ever mounted by the Met, and I want as many people as possible to be able see it,” said Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of the Met. “It is a show that represents an extraordinary collaboration across the Museum, resulting in a fantastic exploration of China’s impact on creativity over centuries.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952), Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1997-haute couture Dress of red-purple and gold silk brocade; jumpsuit of gray silk crêpe de chine and gray cockerel feathers, Purchase, Friends of the Costume Institute Gifts, 2013, (2013.564a,b); Chinese Female Dancer, Western Han dynasty (206 B.C.–A.D. 9), 2nd century B.C., Earthenware with pigment, Charlotte C. and John C. Weber Collection, Gift of Charlotte C. and John C. Weber, 1992 (1992.165.19). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952), Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1997-haute couture Dress of red-purple and gold silk brocade; jumpsuit of gray silk crêpe de chine and gray cockerel feathers, Purchase, Friends of the Costume Institute Gifts, 2013, (2013.564a,b);
Chinese Female Dancer, Western Han dynasty (206 B.C.–A.D. 9), 2nd century B.C., Earthenware with pigment, Charlotte C. and John C. Weber Collection, Gift of Charlotte C. and John C. Weber, 1992
(1992.165.19). Photo by Lia Chang

The exhibition explores the impact of Chinese aesthetics on Western fashion and how China has fueled the fashionable imagination for centuries. High fashion is juxtaposed with Chinese costumes, paintings, porcelains, and other art, including films, to reveal enchanting reflections of Chinese imagery. The exhibition, which was originally set to close on August 16, is curated by Andrew Bolton. Wong Kar Wai is artistic director and Nathan Crowley served as production designer.

Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010), Philip Treacy (British, born Ireland, 1967), “Chinese Garden” headdress, spring/summer 2005, Carved cork, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Alfred Z. Solomon–Janet A. Sloane Endowment Fund, 2007 (2007.307). Photo by Lia Chang

Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010), Philip Treacy (British, born Ireland, 1967), “Chinese Garden” headdress, spring/summer 2005,
Carved cork, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Alfred Z. Solomon–Janet A. Sloane Endowment Fund, 2007 (2007.307). Photo by Lia Chang

Below are excerpts from Wong Kar-Wai’s speech.

Filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai attends the 'China: Through the Looking Glass' press preview at the Temple of Dendur at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 4, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Filmmaker Wong Kar-Wai attends the ‘China: Through the Looking Glass’ press preview at the Temple of Dendur at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 4, 2015 in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

“Putting together this show has been a truly remarkable journey for myself and everyone involved. Our creative team was comprised of experts across various disciplines including fine arts, fashion and cinema.Together we hope to offer you a collective perspective that is both compelling and provocative.

One of the most fascinating parts of this journey for myself was having the opportunity to revisit the Western perspective of the East through the lens of early Hollywood. Whether it was Fred Astaire playing a fan dancing Chinese man or Anna May Wong in one of her signature Dragon Lady roles, it is safe to say that most of the depictions were far from authentic.

Unlike their filmmaking contemporaries, the fashion designers and tastemakers of that period take those distortions as their inspiration and went on to create a Western aesthetic with new layers of meanings that was uniquely their own.

 

Anna May Wong in “Limehouse Blues,”1934.

Anna May Wong in “Limehouse Blues,”1934.

In this exhibition, we did not shy away from these images because they are historical fact in their own reality. Instead, we look for the areas of commonality and appreciate the beauty that abounds.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Travis Banton (American, 1894–1958) Evening dress, 1934, worn by Anna May Wong, Black silk charmeuse embroidered with gold and silver sequins, Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Anna May Wong, 1956; Film Still of Anna May Wong in “Limehouse Blues,”1934, courtesy of Paramount Pictures, Archive Photos, and Getty Images. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Travis Banton (American, 1894–1958) Evening dress, 1934, worn by Anna May Wong, Black silk charmeuse embroidered with gold and silver sequins, Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of Anna May Wong, 1956; Film Still of Anna May Wong in “Limehouse Blues,”1934, courtesy of Paramount Pictures, Archive Photos, and Getty Images. Photo by Lia Chang

With China: Through the Looking Glass, we have tried our best to encapsulate over a century of cultural interplay between the East and West that has equally inspired and informed. It is a celebration of fashion, cinema and creative liberty. It is an important time in the human history for cross cultural dialogue and I’m proud and delighted to contribute to the conversation.”

 

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936-2008) Evening ensemble, spring/summer 1980 Jacket of black silk gazar embroidered with gold metallic thread, gold beads, and silver sequins; skirt of black silk satin with gold lamé, Gift of Diana Vreeland, 1984 (1984.607.28a-c). Photo by Lia Chang “Anna May Wong in Picadilly,” 1929 Film still courtesy of the Kobal Collection

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936-2008)
Evening ensemble, spring/summer 1980
Jacket of black silk gazar embroidered with gold metallic thread, gold beads, and silver sequins; skirt of black silk satin with gold lamé, Gift of Diana Vreeland, 1984
(1984.607.28a-c). Photo by Lia Chang
“Anna May Wong in Picadilly,” 1929 Film still courtesy of the Kobal Collection

In Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There (1871), the heroine enters an imaginary, alternative universe by climbing through a mirror in her house. In this world, a reflected version of her home, everything is topsy-turvy and back-to-front. Like Alice’s make-believe world, the China mirrored in the fashions in this exhibition is wrapped in invention and imagination.

 

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008) Jacket, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture Black and red silk ciré Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé - –Yves Saint Laurent, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008)
Jacket, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture
Black and red silk ciré
Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé – –Yves Saint Laurent, Paris.
Photo by Lia Chang

“From the earliest period of European contact with China in the 16th century, the West has been enchanted with enigmatic objects and imagery from the East, providing inspiration for fashion designers from Paul Poiret to Yves Saint Laurent, whose fashions are infused at every turn with romance, nostalgia, and make­ believe,” said Andrew Bolton, Curator in The Costume Institute. “Through the looking glass of fashion, designers conjoin disparate stylistic references into a fantastic pastiche of Chinese aesthetic and cultural traditions.”

Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Dress, 1920s Black silk chiffon embroidered with polychrome plastic beads Courtesy of Didier Ludot; Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Verreries Brosse (French, founded 1892), “Joy” perfume presentation, 1931, Flacon of green glass and red bakelite; box of gold paper Courtesy of Christie Mayer Lefkowith; Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Verreries Brosse (French, founded 1892), “1000” perfume presentation, 1972, Flacon of black glass, red bakelite, and gold metal; box of gold paper Courtesy of Christie Mayer Lefkowith; Chinese Snuff bottle with stopper, 18th-19th century Smoky quartz rock crystal, red coral, gilt metal, Gift of Heber R. Bishop, 1902 (02.18.937a,b). Photo by Lia Chang

Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Dress, 1920s Black silk chiffon embroidered with polychrome plastic beads Courtesy of Didier Ludot; Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Verreries Brosse (French, founded 1892), “Joy” perfume presentation, 1931, Flacon of green glass and red bakelite; box of gold paper Courtesy of Christie Mayer Lefkowith; Jean Patou (French, 1887–1936), Verreries Brosse (French, founded 1892), “1000” perfume presentation, 1972, Flacon of black glass, red bakelite, and gold metal; box of gold paper Courtesy of Christie Mayer Lefkowith; Chinese Snuff bottle with stopper, 18th-19th century Smoky quartz rock crystal, red coral, gilt metal, Gift of Heber R. Bishop, 1902 (02.18.937a,b).
Photo by Lia Chang

Designers featured in China: Through the Looking Glass include Cristobal Balenciaga, Bulgari, Sarah Burton for Alexander McQueen, Callot Soeurs, Cartier, Roberto Cavalli, Coco Chanel, Christian Dior, Tom Ford for Yves Saint Laurent, John Galliano for Christian Dior, Jean Paul Gaultier, Valentino Garavani, Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pierpaolo Picciolo for Valentino, Craig Green, Guo Pei, Marc Jacobs for Louis Vuitton, Charles James, Mary Katrantzou, Karl Lagerfeld for Chanel, Jeanne Lanvin, Ralph Lauren, Judith Leiber, Christian Louboutin, Ma Ke, Mainbocher, Martin Margiela, Alexander McQueen, Alexander McQueen for Givenchy, Edward Molyneux, Kate and Laura Mulleavy, Dries van Noten, Jean Patou, Paul Poiret, Yves Saint Laurent, Paul Smith, Vivienne Tam, Isabel Toledo, Giambattista Valli, Vivienne Westwood, Jason Wu, and Laurence Xu.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 2003 haute couture, Jacket of polychrome printed silk velvet with yellow, blue, and green silk organdy; skirt of white and blue-printed silk georgette, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture; Anne Allen (British, born 1749/50–1808 (?)), After Jean Pillement (French, 1728-1808), Chinoiserie from Nouvelle Suite de Cahiers Arabesques Chinois, 1790-1799 Etching à la poupée, Rogers Fund, 1921 (21.91.20); a British pair of mirror, ca. 1760, carved and gilt linden wood, glass Purchase, Morris Loeb Bequest, 1955 (55.43.1, .2). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries
House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 2003 haute couture, Jacket of polychrome printed silk velvet with yellow, blue, and green silk organdy; skirt of white and blue-printed silk georgette,
Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture; Anne Allen (British, born 1749/50–1808 (?)), After Jean Pillement (French, 1728-1808), Chinoiserie from Nouvelle Suite de Cahiers Arabesques Chinois, 1790-1799 Etching à la poupée, Rogers Fund, 1921 (21.91.20); a British pair of mirror, ca. 1760, carved and gilt linden wood, glass Purchase, Morris Loeb Bequest, 1955 (55.43.1, .2). Photo by Lia Chang

The Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Gallery
Emperor to Citizen
There are a series of “mirrored reflections” through time and space, focusing on the Qing dynasty of Imperial China (1644-1911); the Republic of China, especially Shanghai in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s; and the People’s Republic of China (1949-present) in The Anna Wintour Costume Center’s Lizzie and Jonathan Tisch Gallery. These reflections, as well as others in the exhibition, have been illustrated with scenes from films by such groundbreaking Chinese directors as Zhang Yimou, Chen Kaige, Ang Lee, and Wong Kar-Wai, artistic director of the exhibition. Several of the galleries also feature original compositions by internationally acclaimed musician Wu Tong.

“China: Through The Looking Glass,” on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, includes film clips from The Last Emperor and the robe, center, worn by China’s last emperor, Pu Yi, when he was 4 years old. Photo by Lia Chang

Upon entering the Costume Institute galleries, there’s a video tunnel showing Bertolucci’s The Last Emperor, a broad and sweeping journey of Chinese history, and at the end of the tunnel is a festival robe worn by the last emperor, Pu Yi, when he was four years old.

Semi-formal Robe for the Xuantong Emperor, 1909-1911 Yellow silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metallic thread Courtesy of The Palace Museum, Beijing. Photo by Lia Chang

Semi-formal Robe for the Xuantong Emperor, 1909-1911
Yellow silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metallic thread Courtesy of The Palace Museum, Beijing. Photo by Lia Chang

Western designers have been inspired by China’s long and rich history, with the Manchu robe, the modern qipao, and the Zhongshan suit (after Sun Yat-sen, but more commonly known in the West as the Mao suit, after Mao Zedong), serving as a kind of shorthand for China and the shifting social and political identities of its peoples, and also as sartorial symbols that allow Western designers to contemplate the idea of a radically different society from their own.

Yves Saint Laurent (French, founded 1961) Tom Ford (American, born 1961) Evening dress, autumn/winter 2004–5 Red silk satin embroidered with polychrome plastic sequins; gray fox fur Gift of Yves Saint Laurent, 2005 (2005.325.1). Photo by Lia Chang

Yves Saint Laurent (French, founded 1961)
Tom Ford (American, born 1961)
Evening dress, autumn/winter 2004–5
Red silk satin embroidered with polychrome plastic sequins; gray fox fur Gift of Yves Saint Laurent, 2005
(2005.325.1). Photo by Lia Chang

Manchu Robe
In terms of the Manchu robe, Western designers usually focus their creative impulses toward the formal (official) and semiformal (festive) costumes of the imperial court in all of their imagistic splendor and richness. Bats, clouds, ocean waves, mountain peaks, and in particular, dragons are presented as meditations on the spectacle of imperial authority. Most of the robes in this gallery—several of which belong to the Palace Museum in Beijing—were worn by Chinese emperors, a fact indicated by the twelve imperial symbols woven into or embroidered onto their designs to highlight the rulers’ virtues and abilities: sun with three-legged bird; moon with a ”jade hare” grinding medicine; constellation of three stars, which, like the sun and moon, signify enlightenment; mountains to signify grace and stability; axe to signify determination; Fu symbol (two bow-shaped signs) to signify collaboration; pair of ascending and descending dragons to signify adaptability; pheasant to symbolize literary elegance; pair of sacrificial vessels painted with a tiger and a long-tailed monkey to signify courage and wisdom; waterweed to signify flexibility; flame to signify righteousness; and grain to signify fertility and prosperity.

Dries Van Noten (Belgian, born 1958) Ensemble, autumn/winter 2012–13. Jacket of black wool-silk hammered satin printed with polychrome dragon motifs; trousers of black wool twill. Courtesy of Dries Van Noten Archive Photo by Lia Chang

Dries Van Noten (Belgian, born 1958) Ensemble, autumn/winter 2012–13. Jacket of black wool-silk hammered satin printed with polychrome dragon motifs; trousers of black wool twill. Courtesy of Dries Van Noten Archive
Photo by Lia Chang

 

In a surrealist act of displacement, the British milliner Stephen Jones, commissioned by the museum to create the headpieces in the exhibition, has relocated these symbols, whose placement on the imperial costumes of the emperor was governed by strict rules, to the head, where they appear as three-dimensional sculptural forms.

Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel (French, 1883–1971), Evening jacket, ca. 1930, Reconfigured Chinese robe of blue silk gauze embroidered with polychrome silk and metal thread, Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of the Smithsonian Institution, 1984, (2009.300.8101). Photo by Lia Chang

Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel (French, 1883–1971), Evening jacket, ca. 1930, Reconfigured Chinese robe of blue silk gauze embroidered with polychrome silk and metal thread, Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of the Smithsonian Institution, 1984, (2009.300.8101). Photo by Lia Chang

The Carl and Iris Barrel Apfel Gallery
Traditional and haute couture qipaos as interpreted by Western designers are on display in The Carl and Iris Barrel Apfel Gallery along with film clips from Wong Kar Wai’s The Hand from Eros, 2004 and In the Mood for Love, 2000; The Goddess, a 1934 film directed by Wu Yonggang; Lust, Caution, 2007 directed by Ang Lee; The World of Suzie Wong, 1960 directed by Richard Quine. 

Nancy Quan and William Holden in The World of Suzie Wong, 1960 Directed by Richard Quine (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Paramount Pictures)

Nancy Quan and William Holden in The World of Suzie Wong, 1960 Directed by Richard Quine (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Paramount Pictures)

Maggie Cheung in Wong Kar Wai's In the Mood for Love, 2000 (Block 2 Pictures, Courtesy of Block 2 Pictures Inc., © 2000 Block 2 Pictures Inc.) All rights reserved

Maggie Cheung in Wong Kar Wai’s In the Mood for Love, 2000 (Block 2 Pictures, Courtesy of Block 2 Pictures Inc., © 2000 Block 2 Pictures Inc.) All rights reserved

Joan Chen and Tang Wei (center) in Lust, Caution, 2007 directed by Ang Lee (Focus Features, Courtesy of EDKO FILMS LIMITED)

Joan Chen and Tang Wei (center) in Lust, Caution, 2007 directed by Ang Lee (Focus Features, Courtesy of EDKO FILMS LIMITED)

In the period between the two world wars, film actresses in Shanghai, known as the Hollywood of the East, were in the vanguard of fashion. Through their images on screen as well as in lifestyle magazines, they led new trends in the modern qipao. In the 1930s, the most eminent actress was Hu Die (Butterfly Wu), whose qipaos are on view.

Chen Jiazhen (Chinese)
“Miss Hu Die,” 1934, from Portrait Albums of Chinese Actresses, series 1, no. 3, 1930s Ink on paper,
 Courtesy of Private lender

Chen Jiazhen (Chinese)
“Miss Hu Die,” 1934, from Portrait Albums of Chinese Actresses, series 1, no. 3, 1930s Ink on paper,
 Courtesy of Private lender

Chu Hongsheng (Chinese, born 1918), Cheongsams, 1930s, Worn by Hu Die (Butterfly Wu, Chinese, 1908-1989) Cream silk lace, Courtesy of Collection Hanart 1918, Shanghai. Photo by Lia Chang

Chu Hongsheng (Chinese, born 1918), Cheongsams, 1930s, Worn by Hu Die (Butterfly Wu, Chinese, 1908-1989) Cream silk lace, Courtesy of Collection Hanart 1918, Shanghai. Photo by Lia Chang

Elected the Queen of Cinema after a nationwide poll by the Star Daily newspaper in 1933, she won favor with her on-screen depictions of virtuous women and her off-screen persona of ladylike sophistication. In the West, Hu Die became an embodiment of Chinese femininity. Her photograph appeared in a 1929 issue of American Vogue as the example of modern “Chinese elegance.”

“China: Through The Looking Glass,” on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in The Carl and Iris Barrel Apfel Gallery features traditional and haute couture qipaos with film clips from Wong Kar Wai’s “In the Mood for Love.” Photo by Lia Chang

Over time, the silhouette of the qipao evolved, quoting Western, specifically Parisian and Hollywood, aesthetics. Its columnar, body-skimming silhouette of the 1920s, a narrower expression of the flapper’s chemise, became a contour-cleaving fit in the 1930s, similar to the haut monde’s and screen sirens’ glamorous bias-cut gowns.

Chinese Cheongsams, 1920s and 1930s. Courtesy of Hong Kong Museum of History. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese Cheongsams, 1920s and 1930s. Courtesy of Hong Kong Museum of History. Photo by Lia Chang

From the 1920s to the 1940s, the modern qipao was considered a form of national dress in China. An aristocratic version was promoted during this period by images of Oei Hui- Ian, the third wife of the Chinese diplomat and politician Vi Kuiyuin Wellington Koo, and Soong Mei-ling, the wife of Chiang Kai-shek, a military and political leader and eventual president of the Republic of China.

Qipaos worn by Oei Hui- Ian, the third wife of the Chinese diplomat and politician Vi Kuiyuin Wellington Koo, and Soong Mei-ling, the wife of Chiang Kai-shek, a military and political leader and eventual president of the Republic of China. Photo by Lia Chang

Qipaos worn by Oei Hui- Ian, the third wife of the Chinese diplomat and politician Vi Kuiyuin Wellington Koo, and Soong Mei-ling, the wife of Chiang Kai-shek, a military and political leader and eventual president of the Republic of China. Photo by Lia Chang

While the qipao became the signature style of both women, who were known in the West for their sophistication, Oei Hui-Ian was also a couture client and would often mix her qipaos with jackets by Chanel and Schiaparelli. A 1943 issue of American Vogue features a Horst photograph of Oei Hui-Ian wearing the version on view here, which is embroidered with the traditional motif of one hundred children. The article in the same issue describes her as “a Chinese citizen of the world, an international beauty.”

Modern day qipao designs by Jean Paul Gaultier and John Galliano for the House of Dior on display in 'China: Through The Looking Glass' at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

Modern day qipao designs by Jean Paul Gaultier and John Galliano for the House of Dior on display in ‘China: Through The Looking Glass’ at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Photo by Lia Chang

The modern qipao is a favorite of Western designers, not only because of its allure and glamour but also because of its mutability and malleability, and it can be rendered in any print, fabric, or texture, conveying whatever desires and associations they stimulate in the minds of designers.

Jean Paul Gaultier (French, born 1952), Evening dress, autumn/winter 2001–2 haute couture Black lacquered silk satin and nude silk tulle embroidered with black synthetic thread Courtesy of Jean Paul Gaultier. Photo by Lia Chang

Jean Paul Gaultier (French, born 1952), Evening dress, autumn/winter 2001–2 haute couture Black lacquered silk satin and nude silk tulle embroidered with black synthetic thread Courtesy of Jean Paul Gaultier. Photo by Lia Chang

Egyptian Art Landing 
In the Egyptian Art Landing, film clips of Chung Kuo: Cina (1972) directed by Michelangelo Antonioni, In the Heat of the Sun (1994) directed by Jiang Wen, and The Red Detachment of Women (1970) directed by Fu Jie and Pan Wenzhan play on the screens above the garments on display. The Zhongshan suit, or Mao suit as it is more commonly known in the West, remains a powerful sartorial signifier of China, despite the fact that it began disappearing from the wardrobes of most Chinese men and women, aside from government officials, in the early 1990s. For many Western designers, the appeal of the Mao suit rests in its principled practicality and functionalism.

Chinese Ensemble, 1983, Jacket and pants of blue polyester twill, Courtesy of Claire E. and Norma J. Taylor; Chinese Ensemble, 1980s, worn by Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950-1990), Gray cotton twill, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950–1990) “New York, New York, 1979,” From the East Meets West series, 1979–89 Silver gelatin print, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Vivienne Westwood (British, born 1941) Ensemble, spring/summer 2012, Gray cotton poplin, Courtesy of Vivienne Westwood. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese Ensemble, 1983, Jacket and pants of blue polyester twill, Courtesy of Claire E. and Norma J. Taylor; Chinese Ensemble, 1980s, worn by Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950-1990), Gray cotton twill, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950–1990) “New York, New York, 1979,” From the East Meets West series, 1979–89 Silver gelatin print, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Vivienne Westwood (British, born 1941) Ensemble, spring/summer 2012, Gray cotton poplin, Courtesy of Vivienne Westwood. Photo by Lia Chang

Its uniformity implies an idealism and utopianism reflected in its seemingly liberating obfuscation of class and gender distinctions. During the late 1960s, a time of international political and cultural upheaval, the Mao suit in the West became a symbol of an anti- capitalist proletariat. In Europe, it was embraced enthusiastically by the left-leaning intelligentsia specifically for a countercultural and antiestablishment effect.

Chinese Ensemble, 1980s, worn by Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950-1990), Gray cotton twill, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950–1990) “New York, New York, 1979,” From the East Meets West series, 1979–89 Silver gelatin print, Courtesy of Muna Tseng. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese Ensemble, 1980s, worn by Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950-1990), Gray cotton twill, Courtesy of Muna Tseng; Tseng Kwong Chi (American, born Hong Kong, 1950–1990) “New York, New York, 1979,” From the East Meets West series, 1979–89 Silver gelatin print, Courtesy of Muna Tseng. Photo by Lia Chang

For Tseng Kwong Chi, who was born in Hong Kong and active in the East Village in the 1980s, the Mao suit was a vehicle to explore Western stereotypes of China. From his self- portrait series East Meets West (also known as the Expeditionary Series, 1979-90), he masqueraded as a visiting Chinese dignitary wearing mirrored sunglasses and a Mao suit, and stood in front of various cultural and architectural landmarks and natural landscapes. Exploiting the fact that people treated him differently based on his dress, the artist used his adopted persona, which he described as an “ambiguous ambassador,” to illustrate the West’s naïveté and ignorance of the East. The catalyst for East Meets West was President Richard M. Nixon’s trip to China in 1972, an event that the artist defined as “a real exchange [that] was supposed to take place between the East and West. However, the relations remained official and superficial.

Chinese Red Guard uniform, 1966–76, Suit of green cotton twill; armband of printed red synthetic satin, Courtesy of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, Sydney, Australia; Purchased 1998; Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou), “Mao Portrait Dress,” spring/summer 1995 Polychrome printed nylon mesh; Courtesy of Vivienne Tam; Andy Warhol (American, 1928-1987) “Mao,” 1973, Acrylic and silkscreen on canvas, Gift of Halston, 1983 (1983.606.1); Vivienne Tam “Mao Suit,” spring/summer 1995, White and black polyester jacquard, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam; House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 1999 Jacket of green silk shantung with red silk satin piping and gold metallic frogging; skirt of pleated green silk jacquard, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese Red Guard uniform, 1966–76, Suit of green cotton twill; armband of printed red synthetic satin, Courtesy of the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, Sydney, Australia; Purchased 1998; Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou), “Mao Portrait Dress,” spring/summer 1995 Polychrome printed nylon mesh; Courtesy of Vivienne Tam; Andy Warhol (American, 1928-1987) “Mao,” 1973, Acrylic and silkscreen on canvas, Gift of Halston, 1983 (1983.606.1); Vivienne Tam “Mao Suit,” spring/summer 1995, White and black polyester jacquard, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam; House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 1999 Jacket of green silk shantung with red silk satin piping and gold metallic frogging; skirt of pleated green silk jacquard, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

The art of the Cultural Revolution (1966-76) profoundly influenced the American and European avant-garde. Andy Warhol created his first screen-printed paintings of Mao Zedong in 1973, immediately following President Richard M. Nixon’s visit to China in 1972, and over time made nearly two thousand portraits in various sizes and styles. Both model and multiple, Warhol’s Mao is undeniably of the masses, like the original 1964 portrait that was reproduced in the millions as the frontispiece to the Little Red Book.

Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou) “Mao Suit,” spring/summer 1995, White and black polyester jacquard, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam, Unidentified artist (Chinese, active 1960s) Chin Shilin (Chinese, born 1930) “Chairman Mao,” 1964, Gelatin silver print, Twentieth-Century Photography Fund, 2011 (2011.368). Photo by Lia Chang

Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou) “Mao Suit,” spring/summer 1995, White and black polyester jacquard, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam, Unidentified artist (Chinese, active 1960s) Chin Shilin (Chinese, born 1930) “Chairman Mao,” 1964, Gelatin silver print, Twentieth-Century Photography Fund, 2011 (2011.368). Photo by Lia Chang

In his Chairman Mao series (1989), Zhang Hongtu, who grew up during the Cultural Revolution, extended a Warholian sensibility to his own mode of Political Pop, lending a satirical eye to the 1964 portrait. For her spring/ summer 1995 collection, designer Vivienne Tam, who was born in Guangzhou, collaborated with Zhang to create a dress printed with images from the Chairman Mao series. The same collection also included a silk jacquard suit of the 1964 portrait.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Photo by Lia Chang

In China: Through the Looking Glass, the Astor Forecourt gallery has been devoted to Chinese-American actress Anna May Wong. Haute Couture designs by Yves Saint Laurent, Ralph Lauren, Paul Smith and John Galliano for the House of Dior inspired by Ms. Wong, are displayed alongside a Travis Banton gown she wore in Limehouse Blues(1934). Ms. Wong can be seen in a montage of rare film clips edited by Wong Kar-Wai, vintage film stills and photographs by Edward Sheriff Curtis and Nickolas Muray.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt, Anna May Wong Evening dress, John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960) for House of Dior (French, founded 1947), autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture; Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang; Anna May Wong, 1925 Photograph by Edward Sheriff Curtis (American, 1868-1952)

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt, Anna May Wong Evening dress, John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960) for House of Dior (French, founded 1947), autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture; Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang; Anna May Wong, 1925 Photograph by Edward Sheriff Curtis (American, 1868-1952)

In terms of shaping Western fantasies of China, no figure has had a greater impact on fashion than Ms. Wong. Born in Los Angeles in 1905 as Huang Liushuang (”yellow willow frost”), she was fated to play opposing stereotypes of the Enigmatic Oriental, namely the docile, obedient, submissive Lotus Flower and the wily, predatory, calculating Dragon Lady.

Anna May Wong in The Toll of the Sea, 1922 directed by Chester M. Franklin (Metro Pictures Corporation, UCLA Film & Television Archive)

Anna May Wong in The Toll of the Sea, 1922 directed by Chester M. Franklin (Metro Pictures Corporation, UCLA Film & Television Archive)

Anna May Wong in Daughter of the Dragon, 1931 directed by Lloyd Corrigan (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC).

Anna May Wong in Daughter of the Dragon, 1931 directed by Lloyd Corrigan (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC).

Marlene Dietrich and Anna May Wong in Shanghai Express, 1932 directed by Josef von Sternberg (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC).

Marlene Dietrich and Anna May Wong in Shanghai Express, 1932 directed by Josef von Sternberg (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC).

Film clips featuring Chinese-American actress Anna May Wong include Daughter of the Dragon, 1931 Directed by Lloyd Corrigan (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC); Limehouse Blues (1934) directed by Alexander Hall (Paramount Pictures UCLA Film & Television Archive); Piccadilly (1929) directed by E. A. Dupont (British International Pictures, Courtesy of Milestone Film & Video and British Film Institute); Shanghai Express, (1932) directed by Josef von Sternberg (Paramount Pictures, Courtesy of Universal Studios Licensing LLC); and The Toll of the Sea (1922) directed by Chester M. Franklin (Metro Pictures Corporation, UCLA Film & Television Archive) run on overhead screens in The Astor Forecourt.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Ralph Lauren (American, born 1939), Evening dress, autumn/winter 2011–12 Black synthetic double georgette and net embroidered with black silk thread and beads Courtesy of Ralph Lauren Collection. Photo by Lia Chang; Film still of Anna May Wong in “Daughter of the Dragon,” 1931, courtesy of Paramount/The Kobal Collection.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. Ralph Lauren (American, born 1939), Evening dress, autumn/winter 2011–12
Black synthetic double georgette and net embroidered with black silk thread and beads Courtesy of Ralph Lauren Collection. Photo by Lia Chang; Film still of Anna May Wong in “Daughter of the Dragon,” 1931, courtesy of Paramount/The Kobal Collection.

Limited by race and social norms in America and constrained by one- dimensional caricatures in Hollywood, she moved to Europe, where the artistic avant-garde embraced her as a symbol of modernity. The artists Marianne Brandt and Edward Steichen found a muse in Anna May Wong, as did the theorist Walter Benjamin, who in a 1928 essay describes her in a richly evocative manner: “May Wong the name sounds colorfully margined, packed like marrow-bone yet light like tiny sticks that unfold to become a moon-filled, fragranceless blossom in a cup of tea,” Benjamin, like the designers in this gallery, enwraps Anna May Wong in Western allusions and associations, In so doing, he unearths latent empathies between the two cultures, which the fashions on display here extend through their creative liberties.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. House of Dior (French, founded 1947) John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960) Dress, autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture Pink silk jacquard and black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang. Anna May Wong, 1931 Photograph by Nickolas Muray (American, born Hungary, 1892-1965), courtesy of Paramount/The Kobal Collection. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Astor Forecourt. House of Dior (French, founded 1947)
John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960)
Dress, autumn/winter 1998–99 haute couture
Pink silk jacquard and black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang.
Anna May Wong, 1931
Photograph by Nickolas Muray (American, born Hungary, 1892-1965), courtesy of Paramount/The Kobal Collection. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery- Astor Garden
The exhibition’s subtitle “Through the Looking Glass” translates into Chinese as “Moon in the Water,” that alludes to Buddhism. In the Met’s Astor Chinese Garden Court, a moon was projected onto the ceiling and reflected in what appears to be a shallow pool. Dresses by John Galliano and Martin Margiela—which appear like apparitions on the water—were inspired by Beijing opera.

“Through the Looking Glass” translates into Chinese as “Moon in the Water.” In the Met’s Astor Chinese Garden Court, a moon was projected onto the ceiling and reflected in what appears to be a shallow pool. Dresses by John Galliano and Martin Margiela—which appear like apparitions on the water—were inspired by Beijing opera. Photo by Lia Chang

“Through the Looking Glass” translates into Chinese as “Moon in the Water.” In the Met’s Astor Chinese Garden Court, a moon was projected onto the ceiling and reflected in what appears to be a shallow pool. Dresses by John Galliano and Martin Margiela—which appear like apparitions on the water—were inspired by Beijing opera. Photo by Lia Chang

Like “Flower in the Mirror,” it suggests something that cannot be grasped, and has both positive and negative connotations. When used to describe a beautiful object, “moon in the water” can refer to a quality of perfection that is either so elusive and mysterious that the item becomes transcendent or so illusory and deceptive that it becomes untrustworthy.

Chinese Theatrical Robe for the Role of a Guard, 18th century, Silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metallic-thread with silk appliqué Rogers Fund, 1929 (30.76.33). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View of The Astor Court- Chinese Theatrical Robe for the Role of a Guard, 18th century, Silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk and metallic-thread with silk appliqué Rogers Fund, 1929 (30.76.33). Photo by Lia Chang

The metaphor often expresses romantic longing, as the eleventh-century poet Huang Tingjian wrote: “Like picking a blossom in a mirror/Or grabbing at the moon in water/I stare at you but cannot get near you.” It also conveys unrequited love, as in the song “Hope Betrayed” in Cao Xueqin’s mid-eighteenth-century novel Dream of the Red Chamber: “In vain were all her sighs and tears/In vain were all his anxious fears:/As moonlight mirrored in the water/Or flowers reflected in a glass.”

Gallery View of The Astor Court- House of Dior (French, founded 1947)John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960)Ensemble, spring/summer 2003 haute coutureCoat of pink silk jacquard embroidered with green and blue silk and gold metallic thread; dress of pink silk organza, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View of The Astor Court- House of Dior (French, founded 1947)John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960)Ensemble, spring/summer 2003 haute coutureCoat of pink silk jacquard embroidered with green and blue silk and gold metallic thread; dress of pink silk organza, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

Two other garments by Maison Martin Margiela are recycled opera costumes from the 1930s that have been repurposed as haute couture, an extraordinarily East-meets-West display of technical virtuosity.

Two other garments by Maison Martin Margiela are recycled opera costumes from the 1930s that have been repurposed as haute couture, an extraordinarily East-meets-West display of technical virtuosity. Photo by Lia Chang

Two other garments by Maison Martin Margiela are recycled opera costumes from the 1930s that have been repurposed as haute couture, an extraordinarily East-meets-West display of technical virtuosity. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View of The Astor Court- Maison Martin Margiela (French, founded 1988),Smoking coat, autumn/winter 2013-14 Artisanal Black silk satin and black wool suiting embroidered with polychrome sequins and crystal bugle beads, Courtesy of Maison Martin Margiela. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View of The Astor Court- Maison Martin Margiela (French, founded 1988),Smoking coat, autumn/winter 2013-14 Artisanal Black silk satin and black wool suiting embroidered with polychrome sequins and crystal bugle beads, Courtesy of Maison Martin Margiela. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery Ming Furniture Room
Film clips of Raise the Red Lantern (1991) directed by Zhang Yimou, Farewell My Concubine (1993) directed by Chen Kaige, Mei Lanfang’s Stage Art (1955) and Two Stage Sisters (1964) directed by Xie Jin serve as a vivid backdrop to the designs on display in the Ming Furniture Room.

Ming Furniture Room Gallery View-Evening dresses, Valentino SpA (Italian, founded 1959), “Shanghai” collection 2013; Courtesy of Valentino SpA. Photo by Lia Chang

Ming Furniture Room Gallery View-Evening dresses, Valentino SpA (Italian, founded 1959), “Shanghai” collection 2013; Courtesy of Valentino SpA. Photo by Lia Chang

Ming Furniture Room Gallery View-Evening dresses, Valentino SpA (Italian, founded 1959), “Shanghai” collection 2013; Courtesy of Valentino SpA. Photo by Lia Chang

Ming Furniture Room Gallery View-Evening dresses, Valentino SpA (Italian, founded 1959), “Shanghai” collection 2013; Courtesy of Valentino SpA. Photo by Lia Chang

In Chinese culture, the color red, which traditionally corresponds to the element of fire, symbolizes good fortune and happiness. After the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, red also came to represent the communist revolution. In the West, the color is so strongly associated with China that it has come to stand in for the nation and its peoples. When Valentino presented its Manifesto collection in Shanghai in 2013, the creative directors Maria Grazia Chiuri and Pierpaolo Piccioli dedicated it to “the many shades of red.” In choosing the color as the theme, they were also referencing the history of Valentino, as red has long been a signature color of the house. As early as the 1960s, its founder, Valentino Garavani, employed it throughout his collection, especially in his lavish evening designs. In this gallery are several gowns from the Manifesto collection, which epitomize the atelier’s exquisite lacework and meticulous and magnificent embroideries.

Gallery: Export Silk
Ever since the silk trade between China and the Roman Empire blossomed in the late first and early second centuries, Western fashion’s appetite for Chinese silk textiles has been insatiable. This craving intensified in the sixteenth century, when sea trade expanded the availability of Chinese luxury goods, giving rise in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to a lasting taste for chinoiserie.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Export Silk- Chinese Shawl, early 20 century, White silk crepe embroidered with polychrome silk floral motifs, Gift of Mrs. Maxime L. Hermanos, 1968 (C.I.68.64.1) and two evening dresses by Cristóbal Balenciaga (Spanish, 1895–1972), 1962 White silk dupioni embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of Hamish Bowles; 1960 White silk satin embroidered with crystals and polychrome silk and metal thread, Courtesy of Cristóbal Balenciaga Museoa, Getaria, Spain. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Export Silk. Chinese Shawl, early 20 century, White silk crepe embroidered with polychrome silk floral motifs, Gift of Mrs. Maxime L. Hermanos, 1968 (C.I.68.64.1) and two evening dresses by Cristóbal Balenciaga (Spanish, 1895–1972), 1962 White silk dupioni embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of Hamish Bowles; 1960 White silk satin embroidered with crystals and polychrome silk and metal thread, Courtesy of Cristóbal Balenciaga Museoa, Getaria, Spain. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese export silks, like export wallpapers, have sometimes been subsumed into the history of the applied arts in the West.  Yet despite their Western-inspired decoration, they remain part of the history of the material culture of China, particularly the port city of Canton (now Guangzhou). The relationship between producer and consumer, however, is complicated by the transmission of design elements between East and West. Like the sinuous motifs on the painted silks and wallpapers in these galleries, Chinese export art reveals multiple meanderings of influence from the earliest period of European contact with China, leading to the accumulation of layers and layers of stylistic translations and mistranslations.

American Robe à la Polonaise, 1780-85 Yellow silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs. Gift of heirs of Emily Kearny Rodgers Cowenhoven, 1970 (1970.87a,b); French Robe à la Polonaise, ca. 1780, White silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs Purchase, Mr. and Mrs. Alan S. Davis Gift, 1976 (1976.146a, b). Photo by Lia Chang

American Robe à la Polonaise, 1780-85
Yellow silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs. Gift of heirs of Emily Kearny Rodgers Cowenhoven, 1970 (1970.87a,b); French
Robe à la Polonaise, ca. 1780, White silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs Purchase, Mr. and Mrs. Alan S. Davis Gift, 1976 (1976.146a, b). Photo by Lia Chang

Cristobal Balenciaga (Spanish, 1895–1972) Ensemble, 1955–56 White silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs Courtesy of The Henry Ford, Dearborn, Michigan. Photo by Lia Chang

Cristobal Balenciaga (Spanish, 1895–1972)
Ensemble, 1955–56
White silk taffeta hand-painted with polychrome floral motifs Courtesy of The Henry Ford, Dearborn, Michigan. Photo by Lia Chang

Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010) Dress, autumn/winter 2006–7 Cream and polychrome silk brocade Courtesy of Alexander McQueen. Photo by Lia Chang

Alexander McQueen (British, 1969–2010) Dress, autumn/winter 2006–7
Cream and polychrome silk brocade Courtesy of Alexander McQueen. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery – Calligraphy
Western fashion’s abiding interest in Chinese aesthetics embraces the graphic language of calligraphy, which in China is considered the highest form of artistic expression. Designers are typically inspired by calligraphy for its decorative possibilities rather than its linguistic significance. Chinese characters serve as the textile patterns on the dresses by Christian Dior and Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel in this gallery.

(L-R) Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel (French, 1883–1971) Dress, ca. 1956 White silk surah printed with black Chinese character motifs Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of H. Gregory Thomas, 1959 (2009.300.261a–c); Christian Dior (French, 1905–1957) “Quiproquo” cocktail dress, 1951 White silk shantung printed with black Chinese character motifs Gift of Mrs. Byron C. Foy, 1953 (C.I.53.40.38a–d). Zhang Xu (ca. 675–759); Letter about a Stomachache 19th-century rubbing of a 10th-century stone carving Ink on paper Seymour and Rogers Funds, 1977 (1977.375.31a). Photo by Lia Chang

(L-R) Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel (French, 1883–1971) Dress, ca. 1956 White silk surah printed with black Chinese character motifs Brooklyn Museum Costume Collection at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of the Brooklyn Museum, 2009; Gift of H. Gregory Thomas, 1959 (2009.300.261a–c); Christian Dior (French, 1905–1957) “Quiproquo” cocktail dress, 1951 White silk shantung printed with black Chinese character motifs Gift of Mrs. Byron C. Foy, 1953 (C.I.53.40.38a–d). Zhang Xu (ca. 675–759); Letter about a Stomachache 19th-century rubbing of a 10th-century stone carving Ink on paper Seymour and Rogers Funds, 1977 (1977.375.31a). Photo by Lia Chang

Because this language is seen as “exotic” or “foreign,” it can be read as purely allusive decoration. Dior and Chanel were likely unaware of the semantic value of the words on their dresses, which in the case of Dior has resulted in a surprising and humorous juxtaposition. The dress is adorned with characters from an eighth- century letter by Zhang Xu in which the author complains about a painful stomachache. Language that constitutes communication, it would seem, is also capable of conveying miscommunication. Here, the letter is presented as a rubbing, as are the other calligraphic examples in the surrounding cases. Before photography, rubbings were the key technology for transmitting calligraphy across generations. Some of the greatest treasures of Chinese calligraphy, including the Letter on a Stomachache that inspired Dior, survive only through such impressions.

Frances Young Tang Gallery – Blue and White Porcelain 
The story of blue-and-white porcelain encapsulates centuries of cultural exchange between East and West. Developed in Jingdezhen during the Yuan dynasty (1271– 1368), blue-and-white porcelain was exported to Europe as early as the sixteenth century.

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain. Chinese Vase with plum blossoms, 19th century, Porcelain with underglaze blue and white decoration, Gift of Mrs. Donald V. Lowe (63.173); Chinese Covered Jar with Decoration of Blossoming Plum and Cracked Ice, late 17th-early 18th century, Porcelain painted in underglaze blue, Purchase by subscription, 1879 (79.2.265a, b); Chinese Dish, Yongzheng period (1723 – 1735), Blue-ground porcelain with reserve decoration and relief, Purchase by subscription, 1879 (79.2.129) Chinese Vase with Decoration of Blossoming Plum, Kangxi period (1662–1722) Porcelain painted in underglaze blue, H.O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929 (29.100.304). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain. Chinese Vase with plum blossoms, 19th century, Porcelain with underglaze blue and white decoration, Gift of Mrs. Donald V. Lowe (63.173); Chinese Covered Jar with Decoration of Blossoming Plum and Cracked Ice, late 17th-early 18th century, Porcelain painted in underglaze blue, Purchase by subscription, 1879 (79.2.265a, b); Chinese Dish, Yongzheng period (1723 – 1735), Blue-ground porcelain with reserve decoration and relief, Purchase by subscription, 1879 (79.2.129) Chinese Vase with Decoration of Blossoming Plum, Kangxi period (1662–1722) Porcelain painted in underglaze blue, H.O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929 (29.100.304). Photo by Lia Chang

As its popularity increased in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, in tandem with a growing taste for chinoiserie, potters in the Netherlands (Delft), Germany (Meissen), and England (Worcester) began to produce their own imitations.

Evening dress, Roberto Cavalli (Italian, born 1940), autumn/winter 2005–6; Courtesy of Roberto Cavalli. Photo by Lia Chang

Evening dress, Roberto Cavalli (Italian, born 1940), autumn/winter 2005–6; Courtesy of Roberto Cavalli. Photo by Lia Chang

One of the most familiar examples is the Willow pattern, which usually depicts a landscape centered on a willow tree flanked by a large pagoda and a small bridge with three figures carrying various accoutrements. Made famous by the English potter Thomas Minton, founder of Thomas Minton & Sons in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, it was eventually mass- produced in Europe using the transfer-printing process.

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain. (L-R) House of CHANEL (French, founded 1913),Karl Lagerfeld (French, born Hamburg, 1938), House of Lesage (French, founded 1922), Evening dress, spring/summer 1984 haute couture, White silk organza, tulle, and taffeta embroidered with blue, white, and crystal beads Courtesy of Collection CHANEL, Paris; Guo Pei (Chinese, born 1967), Evening gown, spring/summer 2010 haute couture, Blue and white silk satin embroidered with crystals and blue and white silk thread, Courtesy of Guo Pei. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain.
(L-R) House of CHANEL (French, founded 1913),Karl Lagerfeld (French, born Hamburg, 1938), House of Lesage (French, founded 1922), Evening dress, spring/summer 1984 haute couture, White silk organza, tulle, and taffeta embroidered with blue, white, and crystal beads Courtesy of Collection CHANEL, Paris; Guo Pei (Chinese, born 1967), Evening gown, spring/summer 2010 haute couture, Blue and white silk satin embroidered with crystals and blue and white silk thread, Courtesy of Guo Pei. Photo by Lia Chang

With the popularity of Willow-pattern porcelain, Chinese craftsmen began to produce their own hand-painted versions for export. Thus a design that came to be seen as typically Chinese was actually the product of various cultural exchanges between East and West.

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain. (L-R) Valentino Garavani (Italian, born 1932), Evening gown, autumn/winter 1968–69, haute couture White and blue-printed silk satin, Courtesy of Valentino S.p.A.; Valentino S.p.A. (Italian, founded 1959) Dress, autumn/winter 2013, White and blue-printed silk organza, Gift of Valentino S.p.A., 2015 (2015.491.1); Giambattista Valli (Italian, born 1966), Coat, autumn/winter 2013 haute couture, White and blue-printed silk faille, embroidered with navy, blue, and white silk thread, clear synthetic sequins, crystals, and appliqué of blue and white silk organza, Courtesy of Giambattista Valli; Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture, House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Evening gown, spring/summer 2009 haute couture, White silk organza and lace, and white silk satin embroidered with blue silk thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture; House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 2005 haute couture, Coat of white silk jacquard embroidered with blue and white silk thread; dress of white silk organza embroidered with crystals, gold and green silk, and silver metallic thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery view, Chinese Galleries, Frances Young Tang Gallery, Blue and White Porcelain. (L-R) Valentino Garavani (Italian, born 1932), Evening gown, autumn/winter 1968–69, haute couture White and blue-printed silk satin, Courtesy of Valentino S.p.A.; Valentino S.p.A. (Italian, founded 1959) Dress, autumn/winter 2013, White and blue-printed silk organza, Gift of Valentino S.p.A., 2015 (2015.491.1); Giambattista Valli (Italian, born 1966), Coat, autumn/winter 2013 haute couture, White and blue-printed silk faille, embroidered with navy, blue, and white silk thread, clear synthetic sequins, crystals, and appliqué of blue and white silk organza, Courtesy of Giambattista Valli; Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture, House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960),
Evening gown, spring/summer 2009 haute couture, White silk organza and lace, and white silk satin embroidered with blue silk thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture; House of Dior (French, founded 1947), John Galliano (British, born Gibraltar, 1960), Ensemble, spring/summer 2005 haute couture, Coat of white silk jacquard embroidered with blue and white silk thread; dress of white silk organza embroidered with crystals, gold and green silk, and silver metallic thread, Courtesy of Christian Dior Couture. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery – Perfume
Part of the power of perfume lies in its synesthetic possibilities, and the idea of China, confected from Western imagination, affords the perfumer a multiplicity of olfactory opportunities charged with the seductive mysteries of the East. Paul Poiret, famous for his fashions a la chinoise, was the first designer to produce a perfume fueled by the romance of China. Called Nuit de Chine, it was created in 1913 by Maurice Schaller and presented in a flacon inspired by Chinese snuff bottles designed by Georges Lepape, In the early 1920s, Poiret, excited by his dreams of Cathay, crafted several other perfumes, including orient and Sakya Mouni, both packaged in bottles inspired by Chinese seals.

Perfume bottles on display in

Perfume bottles on display in “China: Through the Looking Glass” at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Photo by Lia Chang

The 1910s and 1920s saw an influx of China-inflected perfumes, partly stimulated by the well- publicized archaeological excavations of the Mogao Caves in Dunhuang, Like Nuit de Chine, many were presented in flacons fashioned after Chinese snuff bottles, including Jean Patou’s Joy, Roger & Gallet’s Le Jade, and Henriette Gabilla’s Pa-Ri-Ki-Ri, named after a musical revue starring Mistinguett and Maurice Chevalier.

Chinese Shoe, 1800–1943, Red silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Gift of Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, 1943 (C.I.43.90.60a, b). One of the more unusual flacons was created by the Callot Soeurs for the perfume La Fille du Roi de Chine. Shaped after a ''lotus shoe'' for a bound foot, it explicitly associated perfume, in Western eyes, with the exotic practice of foot-binding. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinese Shoe, 1800–1943,
Red silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Gift of Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss, 1943 (C.I.43.90.60a, b).
One of the more unusual flacons was created by the Callot Soeurs for the perfume La Fille du Roi de Chine. Shaped after a ”lotus shoe” for a bound foot, it explicitly associated perfume, in Western eyes, with the exotic practice of foot-binding. Photo by Lia Chang

One of the more unusual flacons was created by the Callot Soeurs for the perfume La Fille du Roi de Chine. Shaped after a ”lotus shoe” for a bound foot, it explicitly associated perfume, in Western eyes, with the exotic practice of foot-binding.

(ALCOVE)

Paul Poiret (French, 1879–1944), “Steppe” coat, 1912 Black wool embroidered with blue, white, and gray silk thread; gray fox fur Catharine Breyer Van Bomel Foundation Fund, 2005 (2005.209) Paul Poiret (French, 1879–1944) “Mademoiselle” dress, 1923, Black and red wool crepe with polychrome striped wool twill Catharine Breyer Van Bomel Foundation Fund, 2005 (2005.210) Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann (French, 1879-1933) “Chinoise” dressing table, ca. 1927, Lacquered wood, silver plated bronze, and mirror Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Chow, 1986 (1986.399.3a,b) Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann (French, 1879-1933), “Retombante” stool, ca. 1916-18, Lacquered beech wood, silvered bronze, and modern upholstery, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Chow, 1986 (1986.399.4). Photo by Lia Chang

Paul Poiret (French, 1879–1944), “Steppe” coat, 1912
Black wool embroidered with blue, white, and gray silk thread; gray fox fur Catharine Breyer Van Bomel Foundation Fund, 2005 (2005.209)
Paul Poiret (French, 1879–1944) “Mademoiselle” dress, 1923, Black and red wool crepe with polychrome striped wool twill Catharine Breyer Van Bomel Foundation Fund, 2005 (2005.210)
Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann (French, 1879-1933) “Chinoise” dressing table, ca. 1927, Lacquered wood, silver plated bronze, and mirror Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Chow, 1986 (1986.399.3a,b)
Émile-Jacques Ruhlmann (French, 1879-1933), “Retombante” stool, ca. 1916-18, Lacquered beech wood, silvered bronze, and modern upholstery, Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Chow, 1986 (1986.399.4). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery – Saint Laurent & Opium 
To this day, fashion’s most flamboyant expression of chinoiserie is Yves Saint Laurent’s extravagant fall/winter 1977 haute-couture collection. In a dazzling mélange of Chinese decorative elements, Saint Laurent reimagined Western ideas of Genghis Khan and his Mongol warriors and the imperial splendor of the Qing court under Dowager Empress Cixi (1835–1908). Of the collection, Saint Laurent commented, “I returned to an age of elegance and wealth. In many ways I returned to my own past.”

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008), Jacket, 1977 Black silk ciré embroidered with gold, black and white silk, and gold sequins Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé –Yves Saint Laurent, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008), Jacket, 1977
Black silk ciré embroidered with gold, black and white silk, and gold sequins Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé –Yves Saint Laurent, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

His designs merge authentic and imaginary elements of Chinese costume into a polyglot bazaar of postmodern amalgamation. Scallop patterns, pagoda shoulders, and frog and tassel closures are combined with conical hats and jade and cinnabar jewelry to convey a sumptuous, seductive impression of Chinese style as luxurious and glamorous as Paul Poiret’s fantasies five decades earlier.

Japan, Edo period (1615–1868), Inrō (Portable Tiered Medicine Container) with Phoenix and Paulownia, first half 19th century, Four cases; lacquered wood with gold and silver hiramaki-e and gold foil application on red lacquer ground, H. O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929 (29.100.839): Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008) “Opium” perfume bottle, 1977, Plastic and silk cord, Courtesy of Dominique Deroche. Photo by Lia Chang

Japan, Edo period (1615–1868), Inrō (Portable Tiered Medicine Container) with Phoenix and Paulownia, first half 19th century, Four cases; lacquered wood with gold and silver hiramaki-e and gold foil application on red lacquer ground, H. O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929 (29.100.839): Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008) “Opium” perfume bottle, 1977, Plastic and silk cord, Courtesy of Dominique Deroche. Photo by Lia Chang

The collection coincided with the launch of Saint Laurent’s fragrance Opium, a name controversial even in the hedonistic 1970s because of its perceived endorsement of drug use; trivialization of the mid-nineteenth-century Opium Wars between China and Britain; and objectification of women through its highly sexualized advertisement photographed by Helmut Newton and featuring Jerry Hall. Setting the tone for the so-called power scents of the 1980s, the perfume is composed of myrrh, amber, jasmine, mandarin, and bergamot notes.

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture, Polychrome printed black silk damask, Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé - Yves Saint Laurent, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Yves Saint Laurent (French, 1936–2008), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1977–78 haute couture, Polychrome printed black silk damask,
Courtesy of Fondation Pierre Bergé – Yves Saint Laurent, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Film Clips Edited by Wong Kar-Wai: Broken Blossoms, 1919, Directed by D. W. Griffith, (D.W. Griffith Productions, Courtesy of Kino Lorber); Flowers of Shanghai, 1998 Directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien (3H Productions and Shochiku Company, Courtesy of Shochiku Company) © 1998 Shochiku Co., Ltd.; Once Upon a Time in America, 1984 Directed by Sergio Leone (Courtesy of Warner Bros. Entertainment); The Grandmaster, 2013 Directed by Wong Kar Wai (Block 2 Pictures, Courtesy of Block 2 Pictures Inc.) © 2013 Block 2 Pictures Inc. All rights reserved.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie-Yves Saint Laurent (French, founded 1961), Tom Ford (American, born 1961), Ensemble, autumn/winter 2004–5, Jacket of purple-red quilted silk satin; skirt of red silk satin Ensemble, autumn/winter 2004–5, Jacket of blue-green quilted silk satin; skirt of green silk crepe with green silk satin and tulle, Courtesy of Tom Ford Archive. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie-Yves Saint Laurent (French, founded 1961), Tom Ford (American, born 1961),
Ensemble, autumn/winter 2004–5, Jacket of purple-red quilted silk satin; skirt of red silk satin
Ensemble, autumn/winter 2004–5, Jacket of blue-green quilted silk satin; skirt of green silk crepe with green silk satin and tulle, Courtesy of Tom Ford Archive. Photo by Lia Chang

Chinoiserie 
The idea of China reflected in the haute couture and avant-garde ready-to-wear fashions in this gallery is a fictional, fabulous invention, offering an alternate reality with a dreamlike, almost hallucinatory, illogic. This fanciful imagery, which combines Eastern and Western stylistic elements into an incredible pastiche, belongs to the tradition of chinoiserie (from the French chinois, meaning Chinese), a style that emerged in the late seventeenth century and reached its pinnacle in the mid-eighteenth century. China was a land outside the reach of most travelers in the latter century (and, for many others, still an imaginary land called “Cathay”), and chinoiserie presented a vision of the East as a place of mystery and romance.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie- Valentino Garavani (Italian, born 1932), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1990-91 haute couture, Jacket and skirt of beige silk satin and organza, embroidered with brown and gold silk yarn and metal thread, red-orange, gold, bronze, and silver plastic sequins, beads, and crystals, Courtesy of Valentino S.p.A.; Chinese Screen with Birthday Celebration for General Guo Ziyi, 1777, Carved red lacquer, Gift of Mrs. Henry-George J. McNeary, 1971 (1971.74a-h). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie- Valentino Garavani (Italian, born 1932), Ensemble, autumn/winter 1990-91 haute couture, Jacket and skirt of beige silk satin and organza, embroidered with brown and gold silk yarn and metal thread, red-orange, gold, bronze, and silver plastic sequins, beads, and crystals, Courtesy of Valentino S.p.A.; Chinese Screen with Birthday Celebration for General Guo Ziyi, 1777, Carved red lacquer, Gift of Mrs. Henry-George J. McNeary, 1971 (1971.74a-h). Photo by Lia Chang

Stylistically, its main characteristics include Chinese figures, pagodas with sweeping roofs, and picturesque landscapes with elaborate pavilions, exotic birds, and flowering plants. Sometimes these motifs were copied directly from objects, especially lacquerware, but more often they originated in the designer’s imagination. Chinoiserie’s prescribed and restricted vocabulary directly produces its aesthetic power.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie- House of Chanel (French, founded 1913), Karl Lagerfeld (French, born Hamburg, 1938), House of Lesage (French, founded 1922), Dress, autumn/winter 1996–97 Red silk organza embroidered with red, gold, and silver plastic sequins, and gold beads, Courtesy of Hamish Bowles; Evening dress, autumn/winter 1996–97 haute couture Red silk organza embroidered with red, gold, and silver plastic sequins, and gold beads Courtesy of Collection CHANEL, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Douglas Dillon Galleries, Chinoiserie- House of Chanel (French, founded 1913), Karl Lagerfeld (French, born Hamburg, 1938), House of Lesage (French, founded 1922), Dress, autumn/winter 1996–97
Red silk organza embroidered with red, gold, and silver plastic sequins, and gold beads, Courtesy of Hamish Bowles; Evening dress, autumn/winter 1996–97 haute couture Red silk organza embroidered with red, gold, and silver plastic sequins, and gold beads Courtesy of Collection CHANEL, Paris. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery- Ancient China

China’s varied and vibrant artistic traditions have served as sources of continuous invention and reinvention for Western fashion. Works of art from the seventeenth century onward resonate most strongly with designers. As this gallery and the adjacent gallery  reveal, however, designers have also found inspiration in earlier forms, including Neolithic pottery, Shang-dynasty bronzes, Tang-dynasty mirrors, Han-dynasty tomb figurines and architectural models, early Buddhist sculpture and iconography, and ancient Chinese literature, including wuxfa.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China Dress, House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952), autumn/winter 1997-98 haute couture; Courtesy of Givenchy. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China Dress, House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952), autumn/winter 1997-98 haute couture; Courtesy of Givenchy. Photo by Lia Chang

These cross-cultural comparisons, as with others in the show, have an appeal that rests on their clarity and legibility that is, on one’s ability to decode the motifs and stylistic references. The comparisons demonstrate how the creative process is inherently transformative, a phenomenon seen here in works of art that boldly reduce a complex matrix of meanings into graphic signs that say ‘China’ not as literal copies but as explicit allusions to a prototype.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou) “Kuan Yin” dress, spring/summer 1997 Polychrome printed nylon mesh, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Vivienne Tam (American, born Guangzhou) “Kuan Yin” dress, spring/summer 1997 Polychrome printed nylon mesh, Courtesy of Vivienne Tam. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Jeanne Lanvin (French, 1867–1946), Robe de Style, spring/summer 1924, Black silk taffeta embroidered with green silk and silver metallic thread, and synthetic pearl, silver, black, and gold beads and paillettes; silver lamé and ivory silk tulle embroidered with metallic silver thread, Gift of Mrs. Albert Spalding, 1962 (C.I.62.58.1); Chinese Mirror, Tang Dynasty (618 – 907), 8th century Silver, Gift of Ernest Erickson Foundation, 1985 (1985.214.22). Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- Jeanne Lanvin (French, 1867–1946), Robe de Style, spring/summer 1924, Black silk taffeta embroidered with green silk and silver metallic thread, and synthetic pearl, silver, black, and gold beads and paillettes; silver lamé and ivory silk tulle embroidered with metallic silver thread,
Gift of Mrs. Albert Spalding, 1962 (C.I.62.58.1); Chinese
Mirror, Tang Dynasty (618 – 907), 8th century Silver, Gift of Ernest Erickson Foundation, 1985 (1985.214.22). Photo by Lia Chang

The Small Buddha Gallery – Guo Pei
Like their Western counterparts, Chinese designers frequently find inspiration in the aesthetic and cultural traditions of the East. Paradoxically, they often gravitate toward the same motifs and imagery. While it is important to distinguish between internal and external views of the East, such affinities support, at least in fashion, a unified language of shared signs. The small Buddha gallery is devoted to this single gown by the Chinese designer Guo Pei, in which Buddhist iconography provides the primary source of inspiration.

Guo Pei (Chinese, born 1967), Evening gown, spring/summer 2007 haute couture, Gold lamé embroidered with gold and silver silk, metal, and sequins Courtesy of Guo Pei. Photo by Lia Chang

Guo Pei (Chinese, born 1967), Evening gown, spring/summer 2007 haute couture, Gold lamé embroidered with gold and silver silk, metal, and sequins Courtesy of Guo Pei. Photo by Lia Chang

The bodice is shaped like a lotus flower, which is one of the eight Buddhist symbols and represents spiritual purity and enlightenment. The motif is also embroidered onto the skirt. In an act of Occidentalism, the shape of the skirt, which has no archetypes in Eastern dress traditions, is based on the inflated crinoline silhouette that emerged as modish apparel in the West in the 1850s. As with the Western designers in this exhibition, Guo Pei does not practice an exoticism of replication but rather one of assimilation, combining Eastern and Western elements into a common cultural language.

Gallery – Wuxia
For many Western designers, some of the most compelling fantasies of China are in wuxia, a literary genre that is more than 2000 years old and scenes from Zhang Yimou’s House of Flying Daggers (2004) and A Touch of Zen (1971) play in this final gallery.

China: Through The Looking Glass Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Wuxia Ensemble, Jean Paul Gaultier (French, born 1952), autumn/winter 2001-2; Courtesy of Jean Paul Gaultier. Photo by Lia Chang

China: Through The Looking Glass
Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Wuxia Ensemble, Jean Paul Gaultier (French, born 1952), autumn/winter 2001-2; Courtesy of Jean Paul Gaultier. Photo by Lia Chang

Wuxia, which roughly translates as “martial hero,” relates the adventures of wandering swordsmen whose martial- arts skills are so highly developed that they can internalize their qi (life force) and unleash such superhuman powers as “thunder palms,” “shout weapons,” and “weightless leaps.” The stories often take place in an underworld calledjiang hu (rivers and lakes), in which martial artists cohabit with monks, bandits, and burglars. The heroes are governed by xia, a strict code of chivalry, whose common attributes include justice, honesty, benevolence, and a disregard for wealth and desire. Such traits have led many wuxia novels to be read as expositions on Buddhism, an association played out in this gallery, which displays some of the museum’s earliest examples of Chinese Buddhist art.

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952) Alexander McQueen (British, 1969-2010) Chopine, autumn/winter 1997 haute couture Black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of Alexander McQueen. Photo by Lia Chang

Gallery View Chinese Galleries, Charlotte C. Weber Galleries, Ancient China- House of Givenchy (French, founded 1952)
Alexander McQueen (British, 1969-2010)
Chopine, autumn/winter 1997 haute couture
Black silk satin embroidered with polychrome silk thread, Courtesy of Alexander McQueen. Photo by Lia Chang

Related Content and Programs
A publication by Andrew Bolton accompanies the exhibition, produced by The Metropolitan Museum of Art and distributed by Yale University Press, and is on sale. The exhibition are featured on the Museum’s website, www.metmuseum.org/ChinaLookingGlass, as well as on FacebookInstagram, and Twitter using #ChinaLookingGlass#MetGala, and #AsianArt100.

The exhibition is featured on the Museum’s website, www.metmuseum.org/ChinaLookingGlass, as well as on Facebook,Instagram, and Twitter using #ChinaLookingGlass and #AsianArt100.  It is also on Weibo using @大都会博物馆MET_中国艺术

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Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine and FebOne1960.com Blog.

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AsAmNews.com: China: Through the Looking Glass Extended by The Met until Labor Day
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AsAmNews.com: Four Playwrights to Explore the Intersections of Orange County Diversity Through SCR’s CrossRoads
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#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
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Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
AsAmNews.com: A Chat with Broadway’s New King of Siam, Jose Llana
AsAmNews.com: Award-winning Filmmaker Jennifer Phang’s Sci-Fi Film ‘Advantageous’ Available on Netflix and iTunes
AsAmNews.com: Lunch with Tony Winner Lea Salonga and George Takei, Stars of ALLEGIANCE
AsAmNews.com: Tony Award winning playwright David Henry Hwang Warns Graduates to Resist Nostalgia
AsAmNews.com:Former Astronaut Leroy Chiao honored with Leadership Award at China Institute’s Blue Cloud Gala 
AsAmNews.com: AAPI Heritage Month: My Grandmother’s Detention on Angel Island 
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com


Eric Ting is the New Artistic Director of California Shakespeare Theater

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Eric Ting

Eric Ting

Congratulations to Eric Ting who has been appointed as the new Artistic Director of the California Shakespeare Theater.

Ting will make periodic visits to the Theater between now and November 1, 2015, when he assumes his official duties as Cal Shakes Artistic Director. He will be joined in early 2016 by his wife Meiyin Wang—currently Co-Director of the Under the Radar Festival and the Devised Theater Initiative at the Public Theater as well as Curator of the Park Avenue Armory Artist- In-Residence program in New York City—and their new daughter, Frankie.

The announcement, by Cal Shakes Board President Jean Simpson and Search Committee Chair Kate Stechschulte, caps an extensive seven-month nationwide search. Ting will serve as the fifth artistic director in the company’s history, succeeding outgoing Artistic Director Jonathan Moscone, who completed his 16-year tenure with the opening of The Mystery of Irma Vep.

President Jean Simpson commented, “The board is delighted to be welcoming Eric Ting to Cal Shakes. We met some extraordinary candidates during this search process, but ultimately Eric rose to the top. With his extensive directing credits at some of the top theaters in the country, his decade of institutional leadership experience as the Associate Artistic Director of Long Wharf Theatre, his collaborative spirit, and his demonstrated vision and passion for arts education and community engagement, he is well-poised to take the creative helm of this wonderful institution.”

“I am profoundly honored to join this remarkable organization whose mission and programming both on and off its stage so thoroughly embody what I believe a theater can and must be today,” Eric Ting remarked. “I’m inspired by the fearless scope of vision of my predecessor, Jonathan Moscone; and humbled by the collective commitment, faith, and trust given me by Jean, Kate, and the entre Cal Shakes Board. I can’t imagine a more passionate and devoted partner than Susie Falk; nor a more dynamic community of staff, artists, and audience to call my home; nor a more splendid cultural and civic landscape than the Bay Area; and that stage, that glorious backdrop, those hills, that sky, the stars! I’m eager to see what the future holds for Cal Shakes, and so very excited to be a part of it.”

Francis Jue, Eric Ting and Jo Mei in rehearsal for The World of Extreme Happiness at Manhattan Theatre Club in New York on January 27, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Francis Jue, Eric Ting and Jo Mei in rehearsal for The World of Extreme Happiness at Manhattan Theatre Club in New York on January 27, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

“Participating in this search process has been a rich and rewarding experience,” added Managing Director Susie Falk. “The search committee, working with consultant Greg Kandel of Management Consultants for the Arts, had the opportunity to engage artists, staff, community partners, patrons, and donors in conversations about the future of Cal Shakes, and to find the right individual to lead us into our next chapter. I’m thrilled that Eric has been selected as my partner, and look forward to working closely with him in the years to come.”

Playwright Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig and director Eric Ting. Photo by Lia Chang

Playwright Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig and director
Eric Ting. Photo by Lia Chang

Obie Award-winning director Eric Ting has been called “a magician” by New Yorker magazine and “perhaps one of the most gifted young directors in our midst” (Hartford Courant). Deeply committed throughout his career to the development of new and diverse voices for the theater, Mr. Ting has directed new works (many of them world premieres) by Sam Hunter, Adit Kapil, Kimber Lee, Jackie Sibblies Drury, Branden Jacobs-Jenkins, Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig, Laura Jacqmin, Kenneth Lin, Kristofer Diaz, Anna Deavere Smith, and others.

Branden Jacobs-Jenkins and Eric Ting. Photo by Lia Chang

Branden Jacobs-Jenkins and Eric Ting. Photo by Lia Chang

Beyond his advocacy for new plays, Ting has also been recognized for his co-adaptation of Hemingway’s Old Man & the Sea and his controversial interpretation of Shakespeare’s Macbeth set during the Vietnam War. Mr. Ting has directed productions at Manhattan Theatre Club, Soho Rep, the Public Theater, Goodman Theatre, Victory Gardens, Williamstown Theatre Festival, A.R.T., Hartford Stage, BAM Next Wave, and the Alliance Theatre; as well as internationally, including Singapore, France, Canada, Romania, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Bali. No stranger to the Bay Area, his work has been seen at Shakespeare Santa Cruz (Shipwrecked! An Entertainment…), and through workshops and readings at A.C.T., Berkeley Rep, Marin Theatre Company, and the Bay Area Playwrights Festival.

Telly Leung, Jennifer Lim and director Eric Ting in rehearsal for The World of Extreme Happiness at Manhattan Theatre Club in New York on January 27, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Telly Leung, Jennifer Lim and director Eric Ting in rehearsal for The World of Extreme Happiness at Manhattan Theatre Club in New York on January 27, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

During his eleven seasons at Long Wharf Theatre, eight as Associate Artistic Director, Mr. Ting was most notably a driving force in several innovative community and audience engagement initiatives that vigorously pursued the potential of art as a tool for social change. He has been a teaching artist for the National Theater Institute at the Eugene O’Neill Theater Center and the Perry-Mansfeld Performing Arts School and Camp; led playwriting workshops for survivors of domestic violence; and developed afer-school programs for underprivileged children in his home state of West Virginia.

Opening night with The World of Extreme Happiness - actor James Saito, playwright Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig, cast members Sue Jin Song, Telly Leung, Jennifer Lim, Francis Jue, and actress Jo Mei, sound designer Mikhail Fiksel, and director Eric Ting. Photo by Lia Chang

Opening night with The World of Extreme Happiness – actor James Saito, playwright Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig, cast members Sue Jin Song, Telly Leung, Jennifer Lim, Francis Jue, and actress Jo Mei, sound designer Mikhail Fiksel, and director Eric Ting. Photo by Lia Chang

Mr. Ting is a founding member of the artists’ collective Intelligent Beasts. He is a multiple-grant recipient, including a TCG New Generations Future Leaders fellowship, a Jerome & Roslyn Milstein Meyer Career Development Prize, and (with Meiyin Wang) a 2012 MAP Fund Award for the development of Motherland/ Foreign Relations (We All Here Why You Never Call?). He was recognized on the occasion of American Theatre magazine’s 25th Anniversary as one of 25 forward-thinking artists. Additionally, he has served on numerous grant and fellowship panels including the Doris Duke Charitable Trust, the Jerome and McKnight Foundations, the NEA, TCG, PONY and the Alpert Awards.

For more information on Cal Shakes, go to www.calshakes.org.

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine and FebOne1960.com Blog.

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Photos: MTC Run of World Premiere of The World of Extreme Happiness by Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig, starring Jennifer Lim, Francis Jue, Telly Leung, Jo Mei, James Saito and Sue Jin Song; opens Feb. 24
Rehearsal Photos: Jennifer Lim, Francis Jue, Telly Leung, Jo Mei, James Saito and Sue Jin Song in MTC Run of World Premiere of The World of Extreme Happiness by Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig, February 3 – March 29
Jennifer Lim, Ruy Iskandar, Francis Jue, Jodi Long, Jo Mei and Donald Li Set for Goodman Theatre’s World Premiere Co-production with Manhattan Theatre Club of The World of Extreme Happiness by Frances Ya-Chu Cowhig, Opens September 22

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Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
AsAmNews.com: A Chat with Broadway’s New King of Siam, Jose Llana
AsAmNews.com: Award-winning Filmmaker Jennifer Phang’s Sci-Fi Film ‘Advantageous’ Available on Netflix and iTunes
AsAmNews.com: Lunch with Tony Winner Lea Salonga and George Takei, Stars of ALLEGIANCE
AsAmNews.com: Tony Award winning playwright David Henry Hwang Warns Graduates to Resist Nostalgia
AsAmNews.com:Former Astronaut Leroy Chiao honored with Leadership Award at China Institute’s Blue Cloud Gala 
AsAmNews.com: AAPI Heritage Month: My Grandmother’s Detention on Angel Island 
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com


George Takei Hunts for Allegiance’s Leading Lady in the second installment of his Trek to Broadway

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George Takei has boldly gone where few men have gone before (the farthest reaches of space and social media, to name just a few), but his quest to bring life to the Broadway-bound Allegiance – a semi-autobiographical musical about the time his family spent in a Japanese-American internment camp during World War II – might be his most daring, personal trek yet.

Lea Salonga in Allegiance. Photo courtesy of Allegiance

Lea Salonga in Allegiance. Photo courtesy of Allegiance

Allegiance stars George Takei and Lea Salonga at The Strand Bistro in New York on June 25, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Allegiance stars George Takei and Lea Salonga at The Strand Bistro in New York on June 25, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

In an exclusive clip from the web series Trek to Broadway, Takei and his fellow producers have the show, they’ve finally landed a theater and now all Allegiance’s team needs is a leading lady.

ALLEGIANCE’s Trek to Broadway chronicles the creative team’s journey from the page to the Great White Way – and, as fans will quickly discover, mounting a new production is as unpredictable as visiting another galaxy.

Who’d have thought that mounting Allegiance would be just as dramatic as the musical itself?

Broadway’s Allegiance, a new musical inspired by Takei’s true-life story, opens on November 8, 2015 at the Longacre Theatre (220 West 48th Street).  Previews begin October 6.

Fans can watch the series on George Takei’s official Facebook Page

As previously announced, Allegiance has a book by Marc Acito with music and lyrics by Jay Kuo. Helming the production is Olivier Award nominee Stafford Arima (London’s Ragtime, Off-Broadway’s BareCarrieAltar Boyz).

AllegianceStar Trek‘s George Takei will make his Broadway debut as Sam Kimura/Ojii San; with Lea Salonga as Kei Kimura; Telly Leung as Sammy Kimura; and features Katie Rose Clarke as Hannah Campbell, Michael K. Lee as Frankie Suzuki, Christopheren Nomura as Tatsuo Kimura and Greg Watanabe as Mike Masaoka.The ensemble includes Aaron J. Albano, Belinda Allyn, Marcus Choi, Janelle Dote, Dan Horn, Owen Johnston, Darren Lee, Kevin Munhall, Manna Nichols, Autumn Ogawa, Rumi Oyama, Momoko Sugai, Sam Tanabe,  Elena Wang, Scott Watanabe and Scott Wise.

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine and FebOne1960.com Blog.

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George Takei Set for Broadway Debut in ALLEGIANCE in October 
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George Takei, Lea Salonga, Telly Leung and Paolo Montalban star in the World Premiere of Allegiance – A New American Musical at The Old Globe, September 7 – October 21, 2012

Other Articles
FebOne Blog: THE VERSATILE LIA CHANG
AsAmNews.com: Longtime Asian American Reporter in New York Wins Lifetime Achievement Award
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AsAmNews.com: The King and I’s Jose Llana, Ruthie Ann Miles and Betsy Morgan Perform Concert in the Park
Broadwayworld.com: Photo Flash: First Look at THE REPORT as Part of FringeNYC
Broadwayworld.com: Photo Flash: Phylicia Rashad, Andre De Shields & More Original Cast Members from THE WIZ Reunite in Central Park!
AsAmNews.com: China: Through the Looking Glass Extended by The Met until Labor Day
AsAmNews.com: Arthur Dong’s Forbidden City, USA: Chinese American Nightclubs, 1936-1970 wins American Book Award
AsAmNews.com: Four Playwrights to Explore the Intersections of Orange County Diversity Through SCR’s CrossRoads
AsAmNews.com: Future Looks Bright for Asian American Cinema
#AAIFF2015: Top Ten Winning Films of the Film Lab’s 11th Annual 72 Hour Shootout Filmmaking Competition- Awards and Wrap Party
Partying at the Closing Night Screening of Wong Fu Productions’ EVERYTHING BEFORE US; AAIFF 2015 Award Winners Announced
AsAmNews.com: Asian American Tweeters Get Special Shout-out in Playbill
Playbill.com: Retweet! BroadwayGirlNYC’s Picks For Most Useful Theatre Women on Social Media
AsAmNews.com:Playing Hide And Seek With Actress Lia Chang
BIG TROUBLE IN LITTLE CHINA Cast Reunion featured in BLACK BELT MAGAZINE August/September 2015
Drumhead Magazine: Living Colour Drummer Will Calhoun, Photos by Lia Chang 
AsAmNews.com: A Chat with Broadway’s New King of Siam, Jose Llana
AsAmNews.com: Award-winning Filmmaker Jennifer Phang’s Sci-Fi Film ‘Advantageous’ Available on Netflix and iTunes
AsAmNews.com: Lunch with Tony Winner Lea Salonga and George Takei, Stars of ALLEGIANCE
AsAmNews.com: Tony Award winning playwright David Henry Hwang Warns Graduates to Resist Nostalgia
AsAmNews.com:Former Astronaut Leroy Chiao honored with Leadership Award at China Institute’s Blue Cloud Gala 
AsAmNews.com: AAPI Heritage Month: My Grandmother’s Detention on Angel Island 
Crafting a Career

Click here  for the Lia Chang Articles Archive and here for the Lia Chang Photography Website.
All text, graphics, articles & photographs: © 2000-2015 Lia Chang Multimedia. All rights reserved. All materials contained on this site are protected by United States copyright law and may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, displayed, published or broadcast without the prior written permission of Lia Chang. You may not alter or remove any trademark, copyright or other notice from copies of the content. For permission, please contact Lia at liachangpr@gmail.com


Alan Muraoka talks navigating The Fringe Festival at the helm of Martin Casella’s critically-acclaimed THE REPORT

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The Report's director Alan Muraoka, playwright Martin Casella, star Michael Countryman and author Jessica Francis Kane after a Q & A at the Sheen Center in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

The Report’s director Alan Muraoka, playwright Martin Casella, star Michael Countryman and author Jessica Francis Kane after a Q & A at the Sheen Center in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Award-winning playwright Martin Casella’s compelling new drama The Report, adapted from the novel by Jessica Francis Kane, and directed by Alan Muraoka, has been receiving rave reviews since its world premiere on August 15th at the Lynn Redgrave Theater @ Culture Project during the New York International Fringe Festival.

Michael Countryman (center) and the cast of THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

Michael Countryman (center) and the cast of THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

The Report is being presented by Barry Goralnick, Sarahbeth Grossman, Craig Zehms in association with Cutting Hedge Productions.

Michael Countryman in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

Michael Countryman in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

Broadway veteran Michael Countryman (“Boardwalk Empire,” “The Sopranos,” A Few Good Men, Laughter on the 23rd Floor, The Common Pursuit, You Can Count on Me) leads a marvelous ensemble of British, Welsh, Canadian and American actors including Philippa Dawson, Denny Desmarias, Natalie Frost, Jenny Green, Louis Lavoie, James Physick, Sophie Sorensen, Jonathan Stephens, Zoë Watkins, David Wells and Stuart Williams.

Philippa Dawson, Louis Lavoie, Sophie Sorensen, Denny Desmarais, Jenny Green, Zoe Watkins, Stuart Williams in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

Philippa Dawson, Louis Lavoie, Sophie Sorensen, Denny Desmarais, Jenny Green, Zoe Watkins, Stuart Williams in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

The Report examines the true, unknown story of the British government’s cover-up of the largest civilian disaster of World War II. On March 3, 1943, 173 people died in London’s Bethnal Green tube station, which served as a bomb shelter during air raids. But not a single bomb was dropped that fateful night. The cause of this tragedy was kept secret for almost 30 years, until a young BBC journalist making a documentary began to uncover what actually took place. As the truth is revealed, we discover how trauma, fear and the paranoia of war impact our very humanity, and how the specter of a single public calamity resonates throughout multiple generations.

What the critics are saying:

Stuart Williams and Michael Countryman in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

Stuart Williams and Michael Countryman in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

“A more scrupulous approach to history is offered in The Report. The story itself is gripping, and the script hops ably between 1943 and 1973…the actors, among them the Broadway veteran Michael Countryman, are excellent.” – Alexis Soloski, New York Times

Stuart Williams, Sophie Sorensen and Michael Countryman in THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

Stuart Williams, Sophie Sorensen and Michael Countryman in THE REPORT. Photo by Lia Chang

4 STARS! “Gripping. The outstanding (Michael) Countryman plays Dunne as both a young investigator brought in to speak to witnesses and an old man looking back on his legacy. The play’s powerful depiction of wartime panic, guilt and ethical confusion offers a fascinating look into a forgotten corner of England’s wartime experience.” —Dana Varinsky, Time Out

The cast of The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

The cast of The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

“The play is as challenging as it is worthwhile, sure to haunt you for days as you try to unfold the conflicting accounts and motives of the characters involved. Director Alan Muraoka marshals the 12-person ensemble through a barrage of overlapping scenes jumping across time and space. With the help of Darren Lee’s hyper-specific choreography and Lauren Halpern’s utilitarian set, Muraoka thrillingly succeeds in not only keeping everything straight, but adding the little details that one would expect from a particularly good mystery novel. Brian Hemesath’s handsome costumes give us a sense not only of the period, but the individual personalities at play. The Report tells the story of the messy relationship between truth and reconciliation, two concepts that don’t necessarily go hand in hand.” – Zachary Stewart, TheaterMania

Denny Desmarais, Philippa Dawson and James Physick in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

Denny Desmarais, Philippa Dawson and James Physick in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

“This is a show not to miss and a producers dream … a play that could win the Pulitzer Prize and possibly the Tony. Martin Casella’s script is heartbreaking and powerful. From the first moment we are drawn in. Michael Countryman performance is a layered well thought out masterpiece. Director Alan Muraoka, draws us in and keeps the suspense. The scenic design by Lauren Helpern, costume design by Brian Hemesath, lighting design by Michael O’Connor, sound design by Chris Sassano, specialty movement by Darren Lee and incidental music by Paul Rudolph are all first rate and add to the over all feeling. – Suzanna Bowling, Times Square Chronicles

Sophie Sorensen, Stuart Williams, Michael Countryman and the company of The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

Sophie Sorensen, Stuart Williams, Michael Countryman and the company of The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

NY Post Pick! “the rare Fringe show to sport a big-ish cast and an ambitious subject, as Martin Casella — switching genres after his comically endearing “The Irish Curse” — revisits a catastrophe that killed 173 people in the London tube during WWII.” – Elisabeth Vincentelli, New York Post

David Wells, Jonathan Stephens and James Physick in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

David Wells, Jonathan Stephens and James Physick in The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

“…this play is all about shades of gray. The nuanced writing by Martin Casella, based on the novel by Jessica Francis Kane, is strong. Alan Muraoka provides smart and inventive direction and lead actor Michael Countryman is mesmerizing. It’s a serious, superb production that will likely go on to a commercial run. If you’d enjoy an exceptionally well done dramatic play, take a break from the cake and ice cream of most Fringe shows and partake of this steak dinner. – Hy on the Fringe

Denny Desmarais, Louis Lavoie and Natalie Frost in Martin Casella's The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

Denny Desmarais, Louis Lavoie and Natalie Frost in Martin Casella’s The Report. Photo by Lia Chang

One of the Festivals hottest shows.  Not to be missed! – Playbill

Soldout house for The Report at the Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Soldout house for The Report at the Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

“One of the shows leading the pack in ticket sales. Saw The Report w/ Michael Countryman at Fringe Saturday. It is a moving and complex play that succeeds both as melodrama and thoughtful serious play. Excellent production by any standard. Should sell out quickly. – Talkinbroadway.com/All That Chat

Curtain Call of the opening performance of The Report at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Curtain Call of the opening performance of The Report at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

I caught up with director Alan Muraoka at the opening night party at The Crooked Knife in New York to talk about The Report, what it is like to navigate The Fringe Festival, his collaborations with Darren Lee, his seventeen season stint on “Sesame Street” and what’s next on his docket.

Alan Muraoka. Photo by Lia Chang

Alan Muraoka. Photo by Lia Chang

Lia: What is your relationship with producer Sarahbeth Grossman and playwright Martin Casella?
Alan: 
Sarahbeth Grossman and I have known each other since my freshman year at UCLA. We were both Theatre Arts majors who did a lot of Musical Theatre as well. We have acted together, choreographed Once Upon A Mattress at UCLA together, and even did running crew together. She is one of my oldest friends, and I am so proud of the work she is doing as a producer. The fact that she has a hit with An American In Paris brings me so much joy. Martin and I met through Sarahbeth, and we have been friends for at least a decade. I have seen every show that Martin has written, and am so proud that we are all finally in the same room together creating a new show. It’s a thrill.

Carolyn Quinn, Martin Casella, Lisa McGahey Veglahn, Sarahbeth Grossman, Jon Radulovic and Herb Perry at the opening night party of The Report at The Crooked Knife in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Carolyn Quinn, Martin Casella, Lisa McGahey Veglahn, Sarahbeth Grossman, Jon Radulovic and Herb Perry at the opening night party of The Report at The Crooked Knife in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Lia: How did The Report come your way?
Alan: The playwright, Martin Casella, and I, have been looking for a project to collaborate on for some time. When the opportunity for a stage reading of The Report arose last summer, he immediately asked me if I was interested and available. I read the script and was immediately enthralled. We teamed up with members of Cutting Hedge (one of the producers of our Fringe production) and performed a staged reading in August of 2014. We knew that we needed to move forward with the project, and this Fringe production is the fruits of our labor.

Playwright Martin Casella, director Alan Muraoka and choreographer Darren Lee at the opening night party of The Report at The Crooked Knife in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Playwright Martin Casella, director Alan Muraoka and choreographer Darren Lee at the opening night party of The Report at The Crooked Knife in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Lia: How has the experience differed from other projects you’ve directed?
Alan: I come from directing musicals and comedies, which proved to be very beneficial for The Report. As I was doing my pre-production work on this, I realized that one of the crucial moments in the show was the representation of the accident that killed 173 people. It happened on an underground entrance stairwell, and that there was no way to represent the horror of that accident in a realist way on a flat stage. So I began to conceive more unconventional ways to make that happen, which led me to the realization that I could use unconventional movement to help tell the story and convey the emotions that were integral to the story. That is when I asked choreographer Darren Lee to come on board to create “emotional movement.” He came with some amazing ideas, and it enhances the show in such visceral ways. And when the movement became a reality, I also realized that original music was needed to help augment the movement and the mood of the overall piece. That is when I brought my musical coordinator from “Sesame Street”, Paul Rudolph, on board to compose original music for the show. There are themes of both literal and emotional suffocation in the piece, and so we used ideas of air compression and wind as a jumping off point for the music. There’s also a very effective, mournful sound he achieved by striking artillery shells with a mallet which was perfect, since one of the theories of what caused the accident in Bethnal Green was that there was bombs that went off that night.

The cast, creative team and producers of The Report after the opening performance of The Report at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

The cast, creative team and producers of The Report after the opening performance of The Report at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Lia: What have been the challenges of navigating a show at The Fringe Festival?
Alan: Ah, Fringe. Where do I begin? Doing Fringe is like being back in college and you have no budget and limited resources and time. You only had 2 1/2 weeks to mount a brand new show, and you only get 4 hours of tech in the theatre for lighting, sound and spacing. You have to wait on the street with your props and costumes, and then you have 15 minutes once you are in the theatre to set up your show and 15 minutes after the show to strike everything and move it back onto the street. The very first time we ran thru the show with full lights and sound was our opening performance. The cast had never gotten to do the whole show in the theatre until that very first performance.

Preshow for the opening performance of Martin Casella's The Report at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at the Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photos by Lia Chang

Preshow for the opening performance of Martin Casella’s The Report at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at the Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photos by Lia Chang

But even with all of those challenges, I’m very proud of the work we created. I could not be more proud of my cast for hanging in there. Especially Michael Countryman, who is a veteran of several Broadway shows and countless tv and motion picture appearances.

Michael Countryman and director Alan Muraoka at the opening night party of The Report at The Crooked Knife in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Michael Countryman and director Alan Muraoka at the opening night party of The Report at The Crooked Knife in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Lia: What other projects have you and Darren worked on together?
Alan: Darren and I have collaborated on several projects together regionally (Once On This Island (Olney Theatre), Disney’s High School Musical (Lyric Theatre of Oklahoma, Casa Manana)), and he’ll be choreographing this years BC/EFA benefit of Christmas Eve With Christmas Eve starring Ann Harada. What is wonderful about our relationship is that we throw ideas off of each other, protect each other, and aren’t afraid to tell each other what is bad as well as what is good. I trust him and rely on him.

Darren Lee, Ann Harada and Alan Muraoka after the opening performance of The Report at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Darren Lee, Ann Harada and Alan Muraoka after the opening performance of The Report at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Lia: What has it been like to work on “Sesame Street” for so many years?
Alan: I actually just wrapped my 17th season of the show, and it is still the best job I could ever have asked for. The writers on the show understand me and my unique qualities, and so are able to create scripts that are tailor-made for my comedic skills, my singing ability, and my heart. I have worked with some of my comedic and theatrical idols (Tina Fey, Jimmy Fallon, Lin Manuel Miranda), and we have weathered waning budgets and more competition from Nickelodeon and Disney. But the quality of our show speaks for itself, and I am so proud to be a part of the legacy that Jim Henson created 45 years ago. As you have heard by now, we are now in a partnership with HBO, which has created some controversy given that we have always been a part of PBS. But PBS has not been able to help support our show financially, and we were on the verge of collapse. So the fact that we now have a second life on HBO I consider a god send. I’m hopeful for the future for the first time in many years. Long live “Sesame Street”!

Alan Muraoka and his colleagues from "Sesame Street" after the opening performance of The Report at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Alan Muraoka and his colleagues from “Sesame Street” after the opening performance of The Report at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at Culture Project in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Lia: What experiences as an actor have you brought to your career as a director?
Alan: What I am proud of is that I know how to talk to actors and how to create a work environment that is safe and productive. Because I know their process, I’m able to talk to them in a way that is emotionally informative. Feedback from my actors has always been positive, and I try to protect them as much as possible. I have worked with wonderful directors, and I have worked with tyrants and egomaniacs. I try to take the lessons from the good directors and bring that into my rehearsal room.

Darren Lee, Alan Muraoka in tech with the cast and crew for THE REPORT at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at the Culture Project. Photo by Lia Chang

Darren Lee, Alan Muraoka in tech with the cast and crew for THE REPORT at The Lynn Redgrave Theater at the Culture Project. Photo by Lia Chang

Lia: What has been your favorite project to date as an actor or director?
Alan: As a director, The Report is my second World Premiere, so I am extremely fond of this show. If I had to choose a second, it would be either my production of Falsettoland for NAATCO, or Once On This Island that I directed last year at the Olney Theatre in MD. Both had the heart that I always try to find in any show that I direct. As an actor, I’m gonna say of course my work at “Sesame Street”. To be able to educate children and make them laugh is one of the greatest plusses of my life.

Alan Muraoka and Stuart Williams during the Q & A at the Sheen Center in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Alan Muraoka and Stuart Williams during the Q & A at the Sheen Center in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Lia: What do you hope audiences will take away from The Report?
Alan: There is such a parallel to the story and subsequent cover up of the disaster at Bethnal Green and all of the tragedies that are a part of our daily lives. The book of The Report was written in the aftermath of 9/11 and the agonizing 2 years it took for the commission to render its findings. There is a quote from Reservation Road that says, “When hope is lost, blame is the only true religion.” When any tragedy happens, especially today with technology that allows us to view events almost as they occur, the idea of getting and demanding immediate answers seems even more prevalent. This play resonates with me because I am still haunted by many tragedies of my personal history: The interment of my family during WWII, the loss of friends during the AIDS crisis, being in NYC during 9/11. I think it will speak to anyone who sees it, because although the tragedy of Bethnal Green happened in 1943, the parallels to present day are obvious and frightening.

Michael Countryman and Sophie Sorensen in THE REPORT Photo by Lia Chang

Michael Countryman and Sophie Sorensen in THE REPORT Photo by Lia Chang

Lia: Do you know anything about the future life of The Report?
Alan: I do not. We are inviting tons of folks who might be able to help us advance the show to its next level, but it’s always a crap shoot given the economics of theatre. I think this is a fantastic regional theatre show, so I’m trying to invite Artistic Directors that I have worked with to see if there might be a future production to be had. But I feel like there is a life for this show, and I hope that the right person walks into the Lynn Redgrave Theater in the next 2 weeks.

Jenny Green, Jonathan Stephens, Michael Countryman, Sophie Sorensen, Martin Casella and Zoe Watkins during the Q & A at the Sheen Center in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Jenny Green, Jonathan Stephens, Michael Countryman, Sophie Sorensen, Martin Casella and Zoe Watkins during the Q & A at the Sheen Center in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Lia: What others projects do you have on your plate?
Alan: Next up for me is actually producing an “Inside The Actor’s Studio”-ish evening with the human cast of “Sesame Street” called, “Humans of Sesame Street”. It will involve many of the human cast of the show to tell their unique stories of how they arrived at the most famous street in the world, memories of their favorite episodes and star interactions, and how they have evolved and changed in the 45 years of filming the most beloved children’s show in the world. We will use photos, video, and live performances of iconic music to create an evening of nostalgia for guests of all ages. And given Sonia Manzano’s announcement of her retirement from the show, as well as our partnership with HBO, that it is a great time to do this.

Alan Muraoka and the cast of Sesame Street in the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York on November 27, 2014. Photo by Lia Chang

Alan Muraoka and the cast of Sesame Street in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in New York on November 27, 2014. Photo by Lia Chang

I also will be directing a concert in October with stars from Wicked, produced by Telly Leung, and then Ann Harada’s Christmas Eve With Christmas Eve, which is a BC/EFA benefit that will be at the Cutting Room on Monday, December 14th. We will have a bevy of Broadway leading men to do iconic scenes from Broadway shows with Christmas Eve (Harada), and it is a hilarious evening. It is our 5th installment of the show, and it sells out every year. Then it’s back to filming Season 46-47 of “Sesame Street”. Whew! I’m exhausted just talking about it.

The limited run is for five performances and the remaining shows are Monday August 24 at 4:30 pm, Thursday August 27 at 4:15 pm and Friday August 28 at 9:00 pm at Venue 13: Lynn Redgrave Theater @Culture Project located at 45 Bleecker Street.

he Report cast and producer Craig Zehms (far right) at the opening night party at The Crooked Knife in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

The Report cast and producer Craig Zehms (far right) at the opening night party at The Crooked Knife in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

Playwright Martin Casella is the recipient of the Outstanding Playwrighting Award in the 2005 FringeNYC for The Irish Curse, which has enjoyed successful Off-Broadway and worldwide productions. Other recent theater credits include the award-winning Directions for Restoring the Apparently Dead and Scituate. He is the screenwriter of Tom’s Dad starring Will Ferrell and directed by Lasse Hallstrom, and The Land of Sometimes, an animated British feature film.

The prosecco was flowing at the opening night party of The Report at The Crooked Knife in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang Playwright Martin Casella. Photo by Lia Chang Playwright Martin Casella during the Q & A at the Sheen Center in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang Jessica Francis Kane, author of the novel, The Report. Photo by Lia Chang Novelist Jessica Francis Kane during the Q & A at the Sheen Center in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang Novelist Jessica Francis Kane during the Q & A at the Sheen Center in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Lia Chang

For information & tickets visit www.FringeNYC.org. For more information about THE REPORT, please visit www.TheReportThePlay.com.

Times Square Chronicles: Fringe Festival: Calling All Producers The Report is the Play to See

StageBuddy.com: FringeNYC Review: The Report

AsAmNews.com: Sesame Street’s Alan Muraoka Directs New Off Broadway Drama THE REPORT

Alan Muraoka Celebrates A Sweet Sixteen Years on Sesame Street

Darren Lee, Lia Chang and Alan Muraoka at the opening night party of The Report at The Crooked Knife in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Herb Perry

Darren Lee, Lia Chang and Alan Muraoka at the opening night party of The Report at The Crooked Knife in New York on August 15, 2015. Photo by Herb Perry

Lia Chang

Lia Chang

Lia Chang is an award-winning filmmaker, a Best Actress nominee, a photographer, and an award-winning multi-platform journalist. Lia has appeared in the films Wolf, New Jack City, A Kiss Before Dying, King of New York, Big Trouble in Little China, The Last Dragon, Taxman and Hide and Seek. She is profiled in Jade Magazine and FebOne1960.com Blog.

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