8 Asians

  • About us
  • Write for 8Asians
  • Podcast
  • Events
Hate Map: Tweets Negatively Referring to “Chink”Hate Map: Tweets Negatively Referring to “Chink”
Meet the 8Asians: LianneMeet the 8Asians: Lianne
An Asian Girl’s Definition of HerselfAn Asian Girl’s Definition of Herself
R.I.P. Lieutenant Sulu, in ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’R.I.P. Lieutenant Sulu, in ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’

Thoughts On Being An Asian Actress

By Guest Writer | Friday, July 20, 2012 | 3 Comments

By Chantria Tram

Having gone through theatre school as one of the very few Asians in the program (we all acknowledged each other in the hallways as if to say “Hey! You’re Asian too! Congrats!!”), and reading plays that were beautiful but not quite reflective of the Asian experience, it was quite refreshing to read the script for my latest project entitled, Model Minority.

You see, as an Asian woman, I’ve dealt with my fair share of unreasonably high expectations from my parents and community. I was expected (and trained, I can say) to be a proper “lady,” to speak quietly and politely, to learn how to cook and clean for my future husband, to pursue a career that was “normal” and “successful” and all this to hold up an unrealistic and inaccurate image of my family’s reputation. I think this is most true with first generation immigrants. I was so frustrated and fed up with this idea that I ended up producing a one-woman show that was ultimately a huge confession to my parents. The show was called Someone Between and chronicles the struggles of a daughter as she tries to reconcile the traditional values of her Khmer parents with her own emerging intercultural beliefs. The play touches on sex and racism, taboo subjects I would never have the courage to discuss with my parents in real life.

Then I was offered the lead role in Model Minority. I found the character, May Chen, fascinating. All she wants to do is be a good daughter, sister and girlfriend. She’s a nice girl who follows the rules. She’s had a plan for her life since forever and it has always been, as her friend Livia would say, “the straight path.” But beneath the surface, she’s deeply conflicted with the sense of wanting to be free, truly free of the obligations and expectations thrust upon her. I mean, who doesn’t? The one day she loses everything, the world as she knows it and her sense of self is taken away from her. When stripped of the expectations that have defined her throughout her entire life, she begins to find out what kind of person she really is… and that person is not exactly the proper “lady” my mom raised me to be.

In retrospect, I think this is why I connected with acting in the first place. I was searching for a way to break out. Like the character of May Chen, I wanted to be free. I used to be extremely shy and took up very little space, not wanting to impose or intrude on anyone. I can still feel myself reverting back to that tendency when I’m in a new setting. I have to push through that every time. Acting gives me permission to do everything that I am afraid of; taking creative risks, acting like a fool, making mistakes, letting go of control, risking judgement and criticism and most of all- revealing myself, to be open and vulnerable. This goes completely against my sense of “Asianness.” And I can’t lie, it’s pretty damn liberating.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Chantria Tram is an actress living in Toronto. Most recently, she played the lead role in the web series, “Model Minority” which can be watched at www.modelminorityshow.com or on YouTube.

Thanks for rating this! Now tell the world how you feel - Share this on Twitter and on Facebook.
(Nah, it's cool; just take me back.)
MOODTHINGY
How does this post make you feel?
  • Excited
  • Fascinated
  • Amused
  • Bored
  • Sad
  • Angry

Categories:

EntertainmentFamilyLifestylesMoviesObservations
Tweet

NOTE: 8Asians.com is a community, and we thank you for being a part of it. While we welcome and appreciate differences in opinion, if you're rude or you're promoting spam, we have a right to edit or delete your comment. Read our comment policy for more information.

If you see a comment that violates the 8Asians.com comment policy, you may flag the comment by mousing over the comment and clicking "FLAG."

Facebook Comments (Beta)

  • mybiasbeatsyourbias

    -off topic
    Yesturday for my macroeconomics I was looking up quotes from famous economist. Then I wanted to broaden my search and look for minorties in the U.S who are also economist. I found plenty of African-Americans both male and female. Focusing of Black business as well as American economy.
    But when I search for Asian-American, thinking I should get a good result. I found nothing but articles about overseas (China,Korea,Japan) and their economy. I asked myself “What, this can’t be right.”
    I can find every other stupid to serious political issue about Asian Americans in the U.S. Media stereotypes,domestic violence,population trend,custom and culture. Interracial dating, the model minority agrument. Even some political civil rights advocates (very few) but not economist?
    I feel some of the things I learn from Asian American culture doesn’t differ from my own. But when I try to find those achievments and how these well educated AAs are changing or impacting this nation. Especially on an economis level without being a household statistics. I found it very hard to discover.
    Just becoming fustrating and I feel like AAs are existing in this nation but not living here.

  • Whitman Lam

    Ok, so this May Chen is angry that her little brother is sleeping with a White woman … but she is in a relationship with a White man and thats totally cool ? Someone say hypocrisy?

  • APBrian17

    “Why are most Asian American films so bad? Is it because many of the stories linger on the Asian American identity crisis and develop an entire story line on a cultural identity thesis?”
    - Edward Hong from an 8Asian’s article called “Why Are Asian American Films Bad?”

    I support independent Asian American films, but many films that center around identity issues with regards to “Asianness” are boring. It feels like the same story over and over again. I was looking at the front page of the New York Asian American International Film Festival website and 3 of the 8 featured films have almost the same exact themes of “identity issues” as discussed above. One of the films is even titled “Model Minority” as well.

    I agree that these issues exist, but constantly seeing “Asianness” as confining and oppressive, something a character ultimately breaks away from in order to feel “liberated”, gets boring from time to time. I’m not concerned with always showing positive portrayals of our community. I just wish that some of these films could present conflict in the story without making the conflict as “being Asian”.

 
Google
Custom Search
Advertise on 8Asians
Recent Posts
  • R.I.P. Lieutenant Sulu, in ‘Star Trek Into Darkness’
  • Hate Map: Tweets Negatively Referring to “Chink”
  • I am South Indian, Hindu, Buddhist, American… But Am I Asian, Too?
  • Chef Ming Tsai & White House Executive Chef Cook Healthy for American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month
  • Meet the 8Asians: Nithin
  • Asian American Commercial Watch: Ace Hardware Neighbors
  • Lucy Liu, Hollywood Asian Stereotypes, and “Elementary” (my dear Watson)
Recent Comments
  • Tina Tsai: This explains why I learned the word "Chink" from a Chinese American on the East Coast...o_o – Hate Map: Tweets Negatively Referring to "Chink"
  • Tina Tsai: I do feel like they gave him captain's chair as a side prize, but I love articles like this because it pushes the need for... – R.I.P. Lieutenant Sulu, in 'Star Trek Into Darkness'
  • Don: I saw it last week and like the movie, but yes John Cho's Sulu gets less screen time than the last film. However he is... – R.I.P. Lieutenant Sulu, in 'Star Trek Into Darkness'
  • happyappa: He/she also: 1) blames the victims 2) believes "colorblindness" solves everything 3) thinks the only way a show can be diverse is if it has... – HBO's Girls Reminds Us That The Only Ones Who Matter Are White
  • zdrav: Are you saying that HBO is the white equivalent of BET? Don't you see how problematic that is? – HBO's Girls Reminds Us That The Only Ones Who Matter Are White

APA Events

  • Feb 21: (San Jose, CA) New Stories from the Edge of Asia: This/That
  • Apr 26: (New York, NY) Front Row: Chinese American Designers
  • May 2: (San Francisco, CA) underCurrents & the Quest for Space
  • Jun 1: (San Francisco, CA) Northern California Soy and Tofu Festival 2013
  • Jun 1: (San Francisco, CA) Asian American Bone Marrow Registry Registration Drive – 2013 Soy and Tofu Festival
  • Jun 6: (San Jose, CA) Questions from the Sky: New work from Hung Liu
  • Jun 15: (Los Angeles, CA) V3con 2013: V3 Digital Media Conference presented by AAJA-LA
  • Jun 19: (Aptos, CA) LYF Camp 2013: “Choose Your Own Adventure”
Add Your Event
www.8asians.com

Staff and Contributors

  • Editors
  • Jocelyn "Joz" Wang

    Editor-in-chief/CEO
  • Moye Ishimoto

    Editor-at-large
  • Contributors
  • John L.

    LATEST POST: Chef Ming Tsai & White House Executive Chef Cook Healthy for American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month
  • Tina Tsai

    LATEST POST: Lucy Liu, Hollywood Asian Stereotypes, and “Elementary” (my dear Watson)
  • Shako Liu

    LATEST POST: LAAPFF 2013: Mix-cultural Asians Find Their Roots
  • Koji Steven Sakai

    LATEST POST: Hate Map: Tweets Negatively Referring to “Chink”
  • akrypti

    LATEST POST: Meet the 8Asians: Nithin
  • Tim Chiu

    LATEST POST: Behind the Smoke and Mirrors of Chinese Superstition
  • Jeff S.

    LATEST POST: The “it’s ok” Campaign Counters Stigma of Mental Illness
View all Authors

Other Links

  • Get your very own 8Asians merchandise here!
Advertise | Contact Us | Twitter | Facebook | Tumblr | Privacy Policy