QSaltLake Magazine - Issue 336 - June 2022

Page 50

50 | QSALTLAKE MAGAZINE | ARTS

Qsaltlake.com |

Issue 336 |

JUNE. 2022

Based on a true story – ish BY MELISSA LEILANI LARSON

I’ve come

to realize audiences enjoy finding out that the play they’ve just seen is based on a true story. I don’t think I can count the number of times people have come up to me after one of my plays and asked, “Is this play about you?” I always reply with a firm “No.” When it comes to my new piece Mestiza, or Mixed, premiering at Plan-B Theatre, people will ask the same question. So pardon me while I modify my answer slightly: AUDIENCE: Is this play about you? MEL: …ish.

Q doku Level: Easy

6

1 5 8 3 5 1 9 1 9 4 2 6 2 1 8 5 7 8 5 6 8 9 2 4 6 1 5 8 3 2 7 9 2 9

2

5

8 7 1 9 5 3 6

7 3 8 4 5 8 2 8 4 7 1 8 9 2 4 4 1 7 8 9

When I first started writing plays, I made a conscious choice to not write about myself. I didn’t think I was interesting enough. I didn’t trust myself to write contemporary dialogue. And to be completely honest, I didn’t think I could find an actor who could be me. I identify as a mixed-race Filipina American. My mother came to the U.S. in the 1970s. I was born in Hawai’i, and Each Sudoku puzzle has a unique solution which can be my family lived reached logically without guessing. Enter digits 1 through there until the 9 into the blank spaces. Every row must contain one of each digit, as must each column and each 3x3 square. Qdoku summer before I is actually five separate, but connected, Sudoku puzzles. turned thirteen. I was a skinny, 8 9 6 2 4 awkward girl 6 5 4 3 9 with straight, 1 thick hair and 2 5 1 a dark brown complexion. In 4 3 5 6 1 Hawai’i, I was 2 7 5 just one brown 6 2 7 kid in a crowd 7 1 5 8 2 of Asians and 9 5 1 Pacific Islanders. 9 6 3 2 I was just one of many kids 4 1 2 whose heritage 8 7 5 4 was mixed. It 1 9 was never a 2 4 7 9 8 2 1 subject of con1 1 7 9 4 tention or even 6 of discussion. 4 I never ques8 4 9 5 7 tioned my moth2 4 1 3 er’s heritage 6 9 5 4 3 or my parents’ 8 9 marriage. My 9 parents belonged

together, and I belonged to them. My mom is still our family’s reigning Scrabble champ, switching effortlessly between Tagalog and English. One night’s dinner would be spaghetti; the next night, tortang talong (an eggplant and ground pork omelet). My maternal grandmother taught me to make perfect rice without a measuring cup; my paternal grandmother taught me to make grilled cheese sandwiches. All of this was normal and beautiful. It was home. Moving to Utah was a serious culture shock: Brown-ness was no longer the majority, and eighth grade was like getting dropped into the deep end of awkwardness and loneliness. I listened to different music. I wore weird clothes. Did I belong here? Did I have a choice? Sometime in middle school is when I became completely obsessed with movies and the idea of someday making movies. I watched so many movies that I started to notice things about them that I didn’t love. I didn’t see people like me on screen; I didn’t see families that looked like mine. When I did see Asian families on screen, they were rarely Filipino or mixed. Never both. This play is the first ever produced in this state with roles written for and filled by a majority Filipinx cast. It is purposefully about a mixed-race family. Here I am, a meh playwright and screenwriter in her 40s who has finally figured out how to see myself on stage. I have to swallow my fear and put myself in the nooks and crannies, slipping like seawater in the spaces between words. This play is about a queer woman embracing her identity in the wake of her father’s unexpected departure. It’s running during Pride Month; it overlaps with Philippine Independence Day and Juneteenth; it closes on Father’s Day. We did not go into the project with any of that planned. Is it coincidental? Possibly. But it’s also poetic and appropriate. Mestiza, or Mixed tells the story of a mixed-race Filipina filmmaker struggling to see herself in the world. Well, when you say it like that— OK, then. Maybe this play is about me. Q Melissa Leilani Larson’s plays THE POST OFFICE, THE EDIBLE COMPLEX, and PILOT PROGRAM previously premiered at Plan-B Theatre. Her latest, MESTIZA, OR MIXED, premieres in-person June 9–19 (streaming June 15–19). Tickets, details, and COVID-19 protocols at planbtheatre.org


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

The tale of a potted petunia

5min
page 58

More than Moana

9min
pages 54, 56

Art exhibit shows mom's love for her gay and the LGBTQ community

3min
page 52

Based on a true story - ish

4min
page 50

QSaltLake Magazine - Issue 336 - June 2022

3min
page 49

LOCAL/REGIONAL PRIDES

1min
page 43

PRIDE GUIDE

15min
pages 32, 34, 36-37, 40-41

QSALTLAKE MAGAZINE'S 19TH ANNUAL GUIDE TO UTAH PRIDE

4min
page 31

PRIDE WEEK EVENTS

1min
page 30

Kristen Ries Community Sevice Award winners over the years

1min
page 26

Community service award winner: Arlyn Bradshaw

2min
page 26

Communiyu service award winner: Suzanne Stott

2min
page 26

The history of Utah Pride from the 1970s to 2010

10min
pages 22-24

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey

4min
page 21

Celebrating every part of me

4min
page 20

Qmmunity

3min
page 16

Police name suspect in Moab lesbian couple's murder

2min
page 14

Salt Lake students protest law banning trans-female athletes in schools

3min
page 14

Utah Sen. Mike Lee demands parental warning for TV shows with LGBTQ characters and themes

4min
page 12

Idaho 'Patriot' group to go 'head-to-head' against Coeur d'Alene Pride

5min
page 10

The top national and world news since last issue you should know

8min
pages 8-9

Today's Prides are a different kind of riot.

4min
page 4
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.