Signature Stories Vol 8 | Page 8

I hope that what Kung Fu does is take Bruce, who’s a figure iconically, and try to make him as fully three-dimensional as Signature: David, a lot of your work has explored Asian American masculinity. How does Bruce continue that conversation? DHH: It’s challenging growing up as an Asian male in America because a lot of the images that we get tend to be kind of emasculating or denigrating, where most Asian characters are either sort of servants, nerds, or villains and you don’t see a lot of romances with Asian male heroes. Even Bruce, in his movies, really never ends up being a romantic lead. He creates the idea of an Asian male hero, which hadn’t really existed in American popular culture up until that point. In works like M. Butterfly I dealt with the kind of absence of masculinity, of what it means to be emasculated and the feminization of the Asian man. I feel like I’m finally old enough to take on what for Cole Horibe, Leigh Silverman, and Signature Founding Artistic Director James Houghton at the first rehearsal for Kung Fu, 2013. me is, in a way, a more challenging subject, which is how do you affirm Asian masculinity in a way that is kind of positive and not cheesy? I hope that what Kung Fu does is take Bruce, who’s a figure that a lot of people know iconically, and try to scenes that David has written and this kind of big, epic make him as fully three-dimensional as he certainly was in life. storytelling. And there’s been a really interesting dynamic between these larger dance numbers and this touching story about Bruce and his relationship to his father and his relationship to his wife and his son. Signature: What is it like to direct a “dance-ical” versus a musical? Signature: You can actually watch Bruce’s masculinity taking shape through his physical language in the play. How does that tie in? DHH: I think that what makes this a very theatrical approach to the subject of Asian masculinity is that the development of Bruce’s art becomes a physical LS: We’re kind of inventing the form to a certain extent. metaphor for trying to find a positive im- In musicals you’re looking to tell the important parts of age of an Asian male. In this play he’s the story through song. In Kung Fu, we’re looking to constantly trying to affirm his mas- have the movement serve that same function, which is culinity, first as a fighter and then in to connect us emotionally to the material. So in a musical, Hollywood. Hollywood becomes at the moment where someone falls in love we have problematic, because Hollywood this great song. And in Kung Fu, we have that story told doesn’t know what to do with through a dance piece or a martial arts piece. We use him as an Asian male hero. fighting and dancing and Chinese opera sort of inter- Then he gets to a point where changeably to help us tell our story. he has an injury and he’s completely emasculated Signature: Can you talk a bit about your team for this show? LS: We have a village of people on this show. I have three which then manifests people working with me on the movement side of things. itself in his getting I have an American choreographer, I have a fight director, well physically. and I have a Chinese opera person. And at all times we’re So the physical in a giant mind meld trying to figure out how to bring this aspect functions story to the stage in an exciting way. Then we also have metaphorically a composer who is working with us on the original music at many differ- that is used mostly for the sequences that take place in ent points in China and Hong Kong. 7 and has to find another the story. route to his affirmation