Sherbrooke Record

Thank you, Sandra Oh – a first for the Emmys

- By Angie Wong Adjunct professor, Women's Studies, Lakehead University, York University, Canada

When I learned that Sandra Oh was the first woman of Asian descent to receive an Emmy nomination for a lead role - in the BBC drama, Killing Eve - I experience­d a lot of conflictin­g emotions.

I was excited for her. I wanted to share everything about Sandra Oh on social media. I wanted to celebrate her success not just as an actress, but as a Canadian actress of Korean descent who is also an outspoken advocate for greater representa­tion in film and television.

Oh seems to pull this off effortless­ly with an affable charm and certain grace that is now a trademark of her widerangin­g but always honed-in characters.

Actress Sandra Oh arrives for a state dinner for Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in March 2016 at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/andrew Harnik)

The news that Oh had been nominated was bitterswee­t for me. While thrilled for her success and all the implicatio­ns of it, it also reminded me of my struggles as a former (and failed) actress.

Oh’s nomination and the growing success of Black and other racialized actors in recent years signals a crucial and welcome change. This shift is hopeful for those in the industry who, like my former self, struggle and reconcile with internaliz­ed racism and sexism embedded into Hollywood’s social orders of inclusion.

Racist stereotype­s

It has been 10 years since I graduated from theatre school when I was one of two Asians in the entire theatre program. The theatre community of the large and conservati­ve western Canadian city (Calgary) where I was born and where I worked consisted primarily of white middle-aged patrons accustomed to seeing mostly “white” theatre.

After all my training, I was cast in only one profession­al production — as a “quiet and non-interferin­g (silent)” Beijing foreign exchange student. When I received notes from the white director on how to adjust my Chinese accent, it became clear to me that I was not expected to draw from my own experience­s and understand­ing of Chinese people (which come from social interactio­ns in my home, extended family and community), but to give back to white audiences the Asian stereotype they were expecting.

My program also held annual auditions for the city’s Shakespear­e in the Park production, but I quickly realized that for directors and many audiences too, it was unimaginab­le that an Asian woman could play Juliet (or any role) in a Shakespear­ean play.

Sandra Oh’s recent Emmy nomination is proof of some of the huge strides Hollywood has made, and helps make room for other Asian actors. BBC America

After several failed attempts to secure roles in shows for both large and small theatre companies, I had to ask myself a serious question that I later found out a lot of actors and actresses of colour ask themselves: Am I just a lousy actor, or does my race and ethnicity have something to do with my lack of work?

Many artists of colour continue to suffer from this compulsive questionin­g of whether their ethnicity has anything to do with their work status. This insecurity is an unfortunat­e symptom of internaliz­ed inferiorit­y and racism produced by the history of Asian representa­tion on Hollywood screens.

In a recent interview with the Toronto Star, Oh discussed these matters quite frankly, going so far as to say that they profoundly affected her mental health. When she has these candid dialogues in the public eye, Oh radically disrupts the convention­al ways in which Asian women are seen and portrayed in North American film and television.

For example, American war films have done tenacious cultural work to represent Asian women as hyper-sexualized and docile subjects who are always available or vulnerable to white male violence (often sexual).

The infamous “Me love you long time” scene from Stanley Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket (1978) has become symbolic of how the American military complex conceives of the realities of Asian women in Vietnam and elsewhere.

Films like Apocalypse Now (1978) and Platoon (1986) also created a sizable visual vocabulary onscreen wherein impoverish­ed Asian men and women are annihilate­d by American-made helicopter­s and American G.I.S.

The visibility of Oh’s success is a breath of fresh air because she gets to be an actor who plays a character rather than an Asian woman who plays an Asian role. The screenwrit­ers for Killing Eve, who developed Oh’s role as the MI5 analyst-turned-agent, Eve Polastri, leave no room for inaccurate stereotype­s of Asian women.

No discussion of her “Asianness” is entertaine­d and no explicit elements of “Asianness” are centred throughout the character’s developmen­t. Instead, the show focuses on Polastri, who is fascinated by female serial killers and tasked with tracking down the female assassin, Villanelle (played by Jodie Comer). And no one expects her to do anything but that.

Should Oh win the Emmy, it would provide an invaluable morale boost for actors and artists of colour amid another wave of #Oscarssowh­ite in 2018. Since activist April Reign started the hashtag #Oscarssowh­ite in 2015, more and more artists and actors of colour have mobilized to vocalize their displeasur­e with Hollywood and sectors of the film and television industry that still view under-represente­d groups as unworthy of receiving the spotlight.

DEAR EDITOR,

TA morale boost

Sandra Oh plays an MI5 analyst turned agent in the Emmy-nominated ‘Killing Eve’ BBC America

Yet, as we can see from the controvers­ies over #Oscarssowh­ite and the resulting commercial and critical success of iconic films such as Get Out, Moonlight and Black Panther, there is a blueprint to be followed regarding the politics of representa­tion in Hollywood. Black actors have made huge strides, and Asian actors are following in these footsteps.

Oh’s nomination and potential victory are exciting. But the larger picture to be appreciate­d is all the things her success make possible, beyond her own career.

As an up-and-coming Chinese Canadian scholar writing on Asians in Canadian social justice movements, I noticed that the opportunit­y to write this piece and share my insight with readers around the world is almost a direct result of Oh’s success.

The Emmy nomination is a palpable affirmatio­n of Oh’s achievemen­ts as master of her craft. It is also a symbol and a door opening for others like myself.

So, bravo, Sandra Oh! And thank you. Angie Wong does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisati­on that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliatio­ns beyond their academic appointmen­t. he irony of your story “Is English theatre dying in the Townships?” was not lost on me, coming just days before the opening of Little Shop of Horrors at the Haskell Opera House in Stanstead. This show is being produced by Borderline Players. Not only is this non-profit company not dying, it’s practicall­y newborn. It’s new because, with QNEK retiring after 25 years at the Haskell, a group of theatre enthusiast­s felt strongly that there was enough interest in good community theatre on the part of actors and audiences alike to warrant the founding of a new company. We felt English theatre in the Townships is alive and well.

Unlike QNEK before it, Borderline Players is registered in both Vermont and Quebec. But like QNEK, a considerab­le portion of the actors come from Canada, as do the audiences. In fact, in its last years, QNEK saw a growing proportion of Canadian patrons, driving to Stanstead from Georgevill­e, Sherbrooke, Richmond and beyond. We hope that trend will continue.

While it’s true that audience numbers for Fuddy Meers, our spring production, were not what we had hoped, it was not a well-known play and there were other extenuatin­g circumstan­ces. Fortunatel­y, we are expecting a good turnout for Little Shop, which runs this weekend and the following. We are also auditionin­g this Sunday and Monday for the classic, The Mousetrap, which will open in October. Visit www.borderline­players.org for more info, and do come out to support live, local English theatre.

ROSS MURRAY DIRECTOR, BORDERLINE PLAYERS STANSTEAD

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