AT: I’m glad that that question stuck with you. I am a pretty goal oriented person, so I do think it’s important to sit down and think about what you want for your life so things aren’t just happening to you arbitrarily. There are few things you can control in this crazy industry, but I want to live my life trying to do as many things as I can.
“An idea feels real to me |
Angela Tucker at the NAACP Awards
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Ancient Toddler the Clown performing at the Boodissy Show, April 2016
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HY: I think my Asian identity and my upbringing in Korea are increasingly becoming a bigger part of my work. When I started acting, I used to be hesitant to bring that part of myself into the work. I thought I had to be the least amount of Korean to blend in and "make it" as an actor. But thanks to my brilliant acting teacher and filmmaker Deborah Kampmeier, who encouraged me to speak out in my native tongue during scene work, I no longer limit myself in that way. (I was born in Korea and mostly raised in Korea, even though I ping-ponged back and forth between the US and Seoul a lot.)
“When I started…I thought I had to be the least amount of Korean to blend in and 'make it' as an actor.” |
Yes, I get angry easily, but I’m not angry all the time. :) I recently had a non-fury Korean inspiration moment. I don’t listen to new K-pop songs, but I listen to old school K-pop from the 80s and 90s. As I walked out my door to get to work one afternoon, I randomly put on one of my favorite oldies - a Gwang-suk Kim song - and man, music seeps so deep in the bones. Hearing that song just got me crumbling down. I was weeping uncontrollably at the bus stop in Crown Heights. And it’s not like it triggered anything traumatic, or it’s not like I’m going through a break-up or anything. It was a song that I grew up listening to in my parents’ car, and I’d ask them to rewind it on the cassette tape because I loved it so much. Hearing the lyrics and the melody of that song for the first time in several years just hit me hard. I’m sure there was a bit of homesickness, even though I consider New York my home. My entire family lives in Korea now. So yeah, after crying for a good 20 minutes on the bus, I got an idea to write a scene that is related to this song into one of the new scripts I’m working on. |
“I love creating work that is a big fuck-you to South Korea’s homogenized culture, which…has such a narrow and oppressed perspective on beauty.” |
AT: I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how lucky I am to be a woman of color. I love having such a rich culture to draw from and, because we are so underrepresented, every time I make something, I am bringing a light to us in a way that hasn’t been done before. I love that my work tends to be inherently political because I come from a group so underrepresented. It gives me a drive that helps me.
“Because we are so underrepresented, every time I make something, I am bringing a light to us in a way that hasn’t been done before.” |
Hye Yun and Angela
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New Orleans is also a place that has so rarely been shown in movies, other than a backdrop. I am excited to tell stories here. I was inspired to write Paper Chase with my friend and New Orleans native Lauren Domino. We wanted to tell a story that is specific to who we were as black women but we also wanted to tell a story that could only take place here in New Orleans. We are in development right now but moving quickly. I am getting nervous actually but I’m excited. Black Folk Don’t is coming back in September. I feel really excited about that and there’s more to come.
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“The goal is for everyone to stop seeing diverse work as homework” |
AT: My biggest fear as a human … wow, that’s a big one. I’ll be honest and say probably my biggest fear is dying young. My parents and brother all died at relatively young ages and death looms large for me.
In a strange way, it’s a blessing because I truly understand how short life is and that it can end at any moment. I think I understand that in a way that many people don’t because they haven’t experienced that much death at my age. However, it can bring a dark cloud that I fight to shed. I have a life coach who is amazing. She and I are working on some personal goals I have for myself and I have had to look at this fear of death a bit more in the eye. One day she asked me what would actually happen if I died like tomorrow? |
Angela with family
“Stop thinking about thoughts that consume you in this life and do the things you want to do.” |
“I want to be a show runner who makes funny and raw stories with people of color and queer folks smack in the center. I want to be the Asian Shonda Rhimes.” |
HY: When I made my first short film before making HEY YUN, I was so shocked at the endless costs that went into trying to get the work seen. The submission fees to film festivals were overwhelming, and even after you get selected, you have to design and print postcards, posters and drop several hundred bucks? Say WHAAAAT? Now I know that you can reach out to festivals and ask for a waiver and stuff, but back then I was just flabbergasted and angry that my already poor wallet had to suffer so much, just to show my work to people. When my first short film did the festival circuit, I was seriously suggesting my producing partner, that we should write our film title, our names and info on a sheet of paper towel. We’ll color it nicely. It’ll be cheaper and original. : ) |