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“Evolution” Exposes Subtle Racial Aggression—at Ferocious Lotus

“Evolution” Exposes Subtle Racial Aggression—at Ferocious Lotus

September 23, 2022 Amy Deng

Millennial Notes

Asian American Playwrights Highlight Diverse Stories

by Amy Deng

“Evolution: A Festival of Original Short Plays” co-produced by Ferocious Lotus and TheatreFirst, celebrates Asian Americans’ diverse lives in America. This festival touches on race, ancestry, and family tradition. The playwrights, directors, and actors spotlight significant struggles that Asian Americans face, daily.

In “Where Are We Going?” playwright Cindy Cesca Yoshiyama cleverly showcases a bachelorette (Mithra (Lee) Vankipuram) and her two friends, as they embark on a rogue gondola ride in Venice, Italy. Their journey turns into a self-discovery. As the bachelorette tries to disappear into her fantasy one last time, her friends call her out as delusional.

Karla Acosta, Mithra (Lee) Vankipuram, Karen Offereins, & Alan Coyne in “Where Are We Going?”

The three women engage in intense, intimate conversation, which calls our attention to the micro-aggressions that Asian American women face every day. No matter how well they perform academically and professionally, they are stereotyped by race and origin. In high school, I also felt that no matter who I was, I would always be the “China Girl” in the majority white suburban town near Chicago.

The friends (Karla Acosta and Karen Offereins) clench their fists tightly as they try to prevent the bachelorette from apologizing to her Italian ex-boyfriend (Alan Coyne): “Don’t give up the power!” they scream. They leave us wondering just how often Asian women submit to stereotypes and get taken advantage of.

We were brought up as reconcilers, but sometimes the Western world pressures us into wielding power. We shouldn’t need to harden up to feel seen.

Karla Acosta, Mithra (Lee) Vankipuram, & Karen Offereins in “Where Are We Going?”

As Jinnie, Offereins casts a melancholy gaze into the water, connecting with her ancestors through the voices in her head. In “Written in Water,” I resonate with her struggle between personal aspiration and family expectation.

While Jinnie is thinking about having children to please her parents, Sanjay (Mithra (Lee) Vankipuram) is seeking her friend’s support for a gender transition. In Jinnie’s eyes, we see generations of Mongolians. Offereins perfectly embodies Jinnie’s struggle to reconcile the clash of American hyper-individuality and Asian humility. Jinnie feels like she must honor her ancestors’ “line of love and sacrifice” that makes her comfortable life in America possible.

Should she pay it forward by sacrificing what she wants to achieve in her marriage? Playwright Lisa Kang leaves it up to us.

Karen Offereins, Mithra (Lee) Vankipuram, & Karla Acosta in” The Floater”

The mainstream American media fails to present Asian Americans’ struggles because we are not considered a true minority in America. We are model minorities who often achieve a higher socioeconomic status which masks the underlying difficulties we face.

All these characters face subtle discrimination and minor aggressions, making their stories truer than what we see on TV and in movies. “Evolution” helps us realize that these women’s struggles are real too.

Come this weekend to celebrate Ferocious Lotus and an array of funny and thought-provoking Asian American experiences!

Mithra (Lee) Vankipuram & Karen Offereins in “Interventions”

“Evolution: Festival of Original Short Plays” –written by Geetha Reddy, Leon Goertzen, Cindy Cesca Yoshiyama, Sango Tajima, Lisa Kang, and Greg Lam; directed by Ogie Zulueta, Rinabeth Apostol, and May Liang; co-produced by Ferocious Lotus & TheatreFirst, at Live Oak Theater, Berkeley. Info: FerociousLotus.org – to September 25, 2022.

Scenic design by Randy Wong-Westbrooke, costume design by Mari Carson, lighting/projection design by Spenser Matubang, and sound design by Michael Kelly.

Cast: Mithra (Lee) Vankipuram, Alan Coyne, Karla Acosta, and Karen Offereins.

Banner photo: Mithra (Lee) Vankipuram, Karla Acosta, and Karen Offereins in “The Floater”


comedy, Millennial Notes, Plays
#Asian American, Capitalism, Civil Rights, Colonialism, comedy, exploitation, Family, feminism, friendship, Immigrants, Imperialism, justice, love, marriage, patriarchy, power, race, racism, Romance, Satire, sex, social class, trans, Wealth, wit, women, Women's Rights, workers

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