Calgary Herald

Suzy Nakamura hits career milestone

Dr. Ken co-star thrilled ethnicity in show is more than window dressing

- LYNN ELBER

As a child, Suzy Nakamura recalls, she was content to quietly observe and leave the talking to others.

These days, the actress and comedian is making noise as a smart, self-possessed sitcom wife on ABC’s Dr. Ken.

It’s a career milestone for Nakamura, co-starring on a successful series after being part of some 20 pilots and a few short-lived series — which, she says cheerfully, brought her variety as well as paycheques.

“I haven’t gotten bored,” she said. “And I’m very proud of that (the tally). It’s difficult to get a pilot every year.”

If she’s finally in a durable show, she’s glad it’s Dr. Ken. The comedy about an Asian-American family does more than use ethnicity as window dressing, Nakamura said. Characters she played often were “my face with some white person’s story,” she said. “What we need is to have the stories be more diverse.”

This Friday’s Halloween-themed episode of Dr. Ken, starring and produced by physician-turnedacto­r Ken Jeong (The Hangover), exemplifie­s just that, she said.

“We’re doing a Korean ghost story and (the producers) researched the crap out of it” to make it authentic, she said, down to the look and contents of a Korean peasant hut. “It’s not the money or the time given. It’s the respect to someone else’s story.”

In the story, Nakamura’s character frets that son Dave (Albert Tsai) is leaving childhood behind because he appears blase about Halloween. Ken’s father, D.K., (Dana Lee) comes to the rescue with a tale about Korean gwishins, oftenfears­ome spirits that linger in the world, with the ghosts portrayed by the Park family and friends.

Watching the actress hold her own as psychiatri­st Allison opposite the high-energy Jeong’s Ken, or chatting during an interview, it’s hard to picture the child who was so soft-spoken in a grade-school production of HMS Pinafore that the teacher told her she needed to scream to be heard.

Nakamura embraced dancing and then gave comedy a try. On an impulse, the Chicago native applied to The Second City improv company and was accepted to start with its touring company.

That meant the end of studies at Columbia College Chicago and joining a sphere that included Second City performers Stephen Colbert, Steve Carell and Tina Fey.

“It was bananas,” Nakamura said, recalling everyone involved as “just normal, kind of weird, doughy losers like me” and the “nicest, funniest people” she’d ever met. After almost five years there, Nakamura headed for Los Angeles.

She has accumulate­d more than 100 credits, including recurring roles on The West Wing and Curb Your Enthusiasm and guest parts on Veep, How I Met Your Mother, Castle and Grey’s Anatomy.

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