Announcing our 2021-2022 Season!

Following the opening of Ma-Yi Studios, a digital streaming center and live capture studio, Ma-Yi Theater Company is pleased to announce its 2021–2022 season which includes a return to in-person  events as well as four digital premieres. The season, running September 2, 2021 – March 31, 2022, illustrates how theatrical innovation and powerful storytelling can thrive as the industry finds a safe way back to in-person events.

The season opens on September 2 with the digital premiere of Decolonization: Living the Questions. Created by Mia Katigbak, this short video features a group of theatre artists answering the question, “What is your experience with colonialization?” Participants include Charles Browning, Peter Jay Fernandez, Peter Kim, Deepa Purohit, Aya Ogawa, Clint Ramos, Jon Norman Schneider, and Isuri Wijesundara.

From October 7 – December 31, 2021, composers and performers Matt Park and Paul Lieber premiere Singing in the Apocalypse Now, a time-jumping, fevered online song-cycle that ties the current pandemic to historical traumas experienced by Park’s Korean American family.

Building on the critically-acclaimed success of “Sophocles in Staten Island,” Obie-winner and Ma-Yi affiliated artist Ron Domingo, along with his charming family, move beyond the Greeks to embrace the social protest theater of American playwright Clifford Odets in Odets in Staten Island, running October 1 – March 31, 2022.

In partnership with ALL ARTS, Ma-Yi will premiere The First Twenty: The Flowering of Asian American Theater on November 9. Created by Ralph B. Peña, this 30-minute documentary showcases the evolution of the Asian American playwright over the last 20 years, taking a close look at the shift in how Asian American plays are broadly perceived, as well as the widening scope of subjects tackled by Asian American writers that move far beyond identity politics. Interviewees include David Henry Hwang, Young Jean Lee, Mike Lew, Rehana Lew Mirza, Lauren Yee and Chay Yew.

In February 2022, Ma-Yi returns to in-person events by remounting Lloyd Suh’s critically-acclaimed play, The Chinese Lady. Directed by Ralph B. Peña and presented by The Public Theater, The Chinese Lady is inspired by the true story of 16-year-old Afong Moy, the first Chinese woman to step foot in America.

“When the pandemic forced the cancellation of two-thirds of our 30th anniversary season, Ma-Yi quickly pivoted to digital theater by opening Ma-Yi Studios, a digital streaming center and live capture studio,” says Ralph B. Peña, Ma-Yi’s Producing Artistic Director. “The goal of Ma-Yi Studios was to keep artists employed by returning the power of creation and dissemination back into their hands. As we look towards our 2021-2022 season, we’re thrilled to partner with The Public Theater on the return of Lloyd Suh’s critically-acclaimed play, The Chinese Lady, while also presenting a series of digital premieres that continue to expand the possibilities of storytelling.”

Since its founding in 1989, Ma-Yi Theater Company has distinguished itself as one of the country’s leading incubators of new work shaping the national discourse about what it means to be Asian American today. Additional information on Ma-Yi’s 2021-2022 season can be found below. Please visit www.ma-yitheatre.org and www.ma-yistudios.com for more information.

MA-YI THEATER COMPANY’S 2021–2022 SEASON

Decolonization: Living the Questions

Created by Mia Katigbak
With Charles Browning, Peter Jay Fernandez, Peter Kim, Deepa Purohit, Aya Ogawa, Clint Ramos, Jon Norman Schneider, and Isuri Wijesundara
September 2 – December 31, 2021
Streaming on Ma-Yi Studios
What does colonialism mean to you? Have you experienced it? How do we talk about it? How do we live with it? What is to be done? Mia Katigbak, Actor-Manager and Co-Founder of NAATCO, preoccupied with a project on colonialism, responded to Ma-Yi Artistic Director Ralph B. Peña’s offer to commission a short video by posing a question to fellow theatre artists: what is your experience with colonialization? The prompt led Katigbak to contemplate the necessity of keeping the questions alive. The resulting discussion and event is Decolonization: Living the Questions.

Singing in the Apocalypse Now

Written and Performed by Matt Park and Paul Lieber
October 7 – December 31, 2021
A time-jumping, fevered song-cycle by composers and performers Matt Park and Paul Lieber that ties the current pandemic to historical traumas experienced by Park’s Korean American family.

Odets in Staten Island

Written by Michi Barall and Sung Rno
Directed by Jack Tamburri
November 3 – March 31, 2022
Streaming on Ma-Yi Studios
Building on the critically-acclaimed success of “Sophocles in Staten Island,” Obie-winner and Ma-Yi affiliated artist Ron Domingo, along with his charming family, move beyond the Greeks to embrace the social protest theater of American playwright Clifford Odets. This time, the homeschooled teenage kids are studying the U.S. Labor Market using the plays of Clifford Odets as the take-off points. The results are both eye-opening and hilarious, as the family comes to grips with its place on the labor pecking order.

The First Twenty: The Flowering of Asian American Theater

Created by Ralph B. Peña
Premieres Tuesday, November 9 at 8 p.m. on ALL ARTS
This 30-minute documentary film showcases the evolution of the Asian American playwright over the last 20 years, taking a close look at the shift in how Asian American plays are broadly perceived, as well as the widening scope of subjects tackled by Asian American writers that move far beyond identity politics. Interviewees include theater luminaries: David Henry Hwang, Young Jean Lee, Mike Lew, Rehana Lew Mirza, Qui Nguyen, Lloyd Suh, Lauren Yee, and Chay Yew.

The First Twenty is an exciting new content initiative from ALL ARTS, the Emmy-winning arts and culture hub, uncovering the ways that the first two decades of the 21st century have impacted American art, culture and the collective consciousness. The initiative provides artists across multiple disciplines the opportunity to share their lived experiences, including how the creation and consumption of art has changed.  The First Twenty: 20 Years of Asian American Playwriting is one of three specials premiering this fall, along with The First Twenty: Afterwards and The First Twenty: Ma’s House.

The Chinese Lady

Written by Lloyd Suh
Directed by Ralph B. Peña
Produced by Ma-Yi Theater
Presented by The Public Theater
February 2022 – at the Public Theater
Inspired by the true story of the first Chinese woman to step foot in America, Lloyd Suh’s critically-acclaimed play, The Chinese Lady, is a tale of dark poetic whimsy and a unique portrait of the United States as seen through the eyes of a young Chinese girl. In 1834, 16-year-old Afong Moy sailed into New York Harbor and was immediately put on display for a paying public who were mesmerized by her exotic ways, and horrified by her tiny bound feet. As audiences follows Moy’s travels through America as a living exhibit for decades, The Chinese Lady reveals centuries of America’s shameful colonial history.

Wolf Play

Written by Hansol Jung
Directed by Dustin Wills
Presented by SoHo Rep. in association with Ma-Yi Theater Company
Begins February 2, 2022 – at SoHo Rep.
Originally scheduled during March 2020 and postponed due to the pandemic, Hansol Jung’s Wolf Play is a mischievous and affecting new play about the families we choose and un-choose.

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