Interviewed by Jeanne Hartman
Velina
Hasu Houston, prolific writer and one of the most widely produced Asian American
playwrights, is receiving the Rainbow Award on March 24th
from the Los Angeles Women’s Theatre Festival at The Electric Lodge in Venice,
California.
The other ladies who will be honored that same
evening are Suzanna Guzman (Maverick Award), Charmaine Jefferson (Integrity
Award) and Joan Benedict Steiger (Eternity Award).
For more information about this Gala evening
and other Festival performances go to
http://www.lawft.com.
Ms. Houston has
written many pieces concerning the female Asian immigrant experience of
integrating into American life and society, as well as broader themes. She
creates and provokes her audiences to learn and experience the
challenges of the non-Asian American woman as well.
Ms. Houston invites the audience to see how
both cultures deal with similar universal challenges.
Ms. Houston repeatedly finds new ways to
demonstrate the diversities, while allowing you to go into the mind of each
fascinating female character.
The playwright wrote in her notes, for one of her
many published plays, “Absolute truth, however, is an illusion.”
These words evidence her ability to look at
many sides of what people call truth, or their version of truth.
When asked about receiving the Rainbow Award Ms.
Houston replied, “I am honored to receive this award and to have this
recognition from the Los Angeles Women’s Theatre festival.
As a transnational, multiethnic, and
multicultural individual, the worlds of my plays often reflect the diversity of
my background.
In my plays, often East meets West both in
form and substance.
I am grateful that the consciousness of
theatre art in the United States evolves to embrace voices that move beyond the
“kitchen sink” drama and beyond characters that reflect a narrow mainstream of
United States society.
The United States is a nation full of diverse
cultures and cultural expressions that we are learning to accept into United
States theatre art and not to label as different or foreign.
Recognizing that theatre art’s form and
substance do not have to be conventional to be accessible or truly American is
an important part to expanding the voice of such theatre art.”
Beside her busy writing schedule, Ms. Houston also is
Professor of Theatre, Director of Dramatic Writing, Associate Dean of Faculty
and Resident Playwright at the School of Theatre of USC.
To the young
playwrights that she teaches at USC, Ms. Houston offers this advice, “There are
so many pieces of wisdom and heart that one can pass on to emerging playwrights,
and perhaps
just as many such things that one cannot pass on, that young artists must learn
for themselves in the process of maturing their craft and coming to terms with
life’s adventures and lessons.
One thing I do like to tell them is that they
must write from passion.
If they do not feel a great deal of passion
for a character and a story, they should abandon that idea.
These things should not be forced, but driven
by the same intensity of desire that a protagonist has towards achieving her
objectives.
I also believe that young writers must stay
true to their individual style and voice.
Regardless of where they choose to study – in
a graduate program or elsewhere on their own, they should be willing to learn
and navigate constructive criticism with grace and precision, but they also must
maintain the integrity of their own voice.”
Ms. Houston shared that at the age of five, she knew
she wanted to write.
Even though her mother told her that Japanese
immigrants cannot yearn to be artists, she did not let her mother’s advice deter
her.
She penned her first play at age eleven and
continued to write plays through her teenage years.
She shared about her first experience of hearing her
play being performed, “The first time I saw one of my plays being performed
before an audience, I felt nervous and uncertain.
I felt that audience members might decry the
unusual humanity, geographies, and cultural landscapes of my work or find them
controversial because they often included the collision / coalescence of East
and West.
I also felt hope – the hope that in some small
way audience members would walk out feeling just a tiny bit differently than
they had when they entered.”
Ms. Houston’s new play,
Bliss,
will be part of a USC Fisher Gallery exhibition, “Posing Beauty: African
American Images from the 1890s to the Present,” October 2011.
She is also working on a newly commissioned
project with the Los Angeles Opera based on the biblical mythology of Jonah and
the whale.
In 2012, Ms.
Houston’s play,
Tea, will have
its 25th
anniversary production at East West Players in Los Angeles in the fall of 2012
and in Japan there will be a staging of a special presentation of her play
Calligraphy.
Despite such a busy schedule, Ms. Houston still
manages to find time for herself,
“I like to read poetry.
Often, I like to moon-gaze
and every spring I like to celebrate
o-hanami
(cherry blossom viewing) at Balboa Park.
I like to walk my son’s dog, Kenta, a Shiba
Ken.
Occasionally, I get a massage.
I love to cook; it’s therapeutic.”
With such a vast
knowledge and experience both as a busy playwright and professor of theatre the
last words go to Ms. Houston
“I believe that theatre art is a site in which culture transforms.
By culture, I am referring to the
idiosyncrasies, language, food, customs, and phenotypes that define a
population.
Historically, national boundaries helped to
determine these definitions, but, with the advent of global perspectives,
boundaries have begun to dissolve and the nature of identity is becoming
dynamic.
The cultural geographies of my plays are sites
where new ideas are fomented and cultivated.
Traditional notions of nationalism, culture,
family, and race transform from the myopic to the global / glocal; the American
environment is no longer solely American and the Asian environment is no longer
solely Asian.
Culture evolves in transnational worlds that
represent the past, present, and future.
I extend this culturally transformational
element in my plays that adapt Greek myths into contemporary drama.”
Contributing writer JEANNE HARTMAN, the Actors
Detective, coaches
professional actors in
Her book, The Right Questions for Actors,
is written in an inter-active book style that supports actors. Veteran actors
call it their “new Bible” when it comes to preparing for auditions.
It is available at her website and on Amazon.
Her studies at the