Han Ong
Encyclopedia
Playwright and novelist Han Ong (born 1968) is both a high-school dropout and one of the youngest recipients of a MacArthur Foundation
MacArthur Foundation
The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation is one of the largest private foundations in the United States. Based in Chicago but supporting non-profit organizations that work in 60 countries, MacArthur has awarded more than US$4 billion since its inception in 1978...

 "genius" grant. Born in the Philippines
Philippines
The Philippines , officially known as the Republic of the Philippines , is a country in Southeast Asia in the western Pacific Ocean. To its north across the Luzon Strait lies Taiwan. West across the South China Sea sits Vietnam...

, he moved to the United States
United States
The United States of America is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district...

 at 16. His works, which include the novels Fixer Chao
Fixer Chao
- Plot summary :William Paulinha is a gay, Filipino hustler living in New York City. One night, he meets Shem C, a failed Jewish writer, in a bar. They become fast friends and Shem tells William his life story. Once upon a time, Shem had been married to the daughter of an acclaimed Jewish novelist....

and The Disinherited, address such themes as outsiderness, cultural clash, and class conflict.

"I've written enough now to figure out I have a recurring tendency, which is that a lot of my characters are outsiders," Ong told a reporter after the debut of his second book, "It comes from being an outsider twice over—my queerness and my ethnicity. I think it's a gift, though. In life it may not be a gift, but in art it is."

Background

Han Ong was born on February 5, 1968, to Chinese parents in Manila, the Philippines. His family immigrated to the United States in 1984, and they settled in Koreatown in Los Angeles. He attended Grant High School, a predominately white school. Ong did not share a close relationship with his four siblings, and he struggled with a sense of alienation in his new homeland as well as with his experience with adolescence. He recalled, “Puberty plus a new country—both are tough enough on their own.” Thus, he found solace in books and television. A high school drama course sparked his interest in theater. He wrote his first play at age sixteen and was admitted to a young playwrights' lab at the Los Angeles Theater Center. He dropped out of high school at age eighteen because he did not feel that it was beneficial; however, he earned a GED later. Ong worked several odd jobs to support himself as he wrote, such as working in a trophy-manufacturing warehouse, until he was awarded a commission from the Mark Taper Forum and a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Career Accomplishments and Awards

In 1993 Ong was a winner of the Kesselring
Joseph Kesselring
Joseph Otto Kesselring was an American writer and playwright known best for his play Arsenic and Old Lace, written in 1939 and originally entitled "Bodies in Our Cellar." He was born in New York City to Henry and Frances Kesselring. His father's parents were immigrants from Germany. His mother was...

 Prize for best new American plays for "Swoony Planet".

In 1994, Ong moved to New York where he received critical acclaim for his plays. He was praised by Robert Brustein, the artistic director of the American Repertory Theater and one of the most esteemed figures of the American stage. In 1997, at age twenty-nine, Ong was one of twenty-three winners of the prestigious MacArthur Fellowships; his grant was $200,000. Ong said in an interview with the Washington Post's Lonnae O’Neal Parker, “I hope this MacArthur Fellowship demonstrates the importance of self-determination and the hunger for improvement for people of [my generation]. I didn’t take being a [high-school] dropout as a measure of my intelligence or as a harbinger of my future.”

Ong’s works have been performed at venues such as the Highways Performance Space and Gallery and the Berkeley Repertory Theater in California; Joseph Papp Public Theater in New York; Portland Stage Company in Maine; Boston’s American Repertory Theater; and at the Almeida Theater in London. Ong collaborated with fellow Filipino American writer Jessica Hagedorn in 1993 to write a performance piece entitled "Airport Music" for the Los Angeles Festival.

Ong is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship for Fiction and the TCG/NEA Playwriting Award. "Fixer Chao" was named a Los Angeles Times Best Book of the Year and was nominated for a Stephen Crane First Fiction Award. "The Disinherited" was nominated for a LAMBDA Book Award.

Although the MacArthur Foundation’s Genius Grant finished in 2002, Ong continues to write despite his lamentation that he is “a little poorer now." He has recently focused his efforts solely on novels and hopes to revisit the Philippines after more than twenty years of separation from his homeland.

Ong is a recipient of the 2010/2011 Berlin Prize Fellowship from the American Academy in Berlin
American Academy in Berlin
The American Academy in Berlin is a research and cultural institution in Berlin whose stated mission is to foster a greater understanding and dialogue between the people of the United States and the people of Germany.The American Academy was founded in September 1994 by a group of prominent...

.

Major Themes

Ong’s works are often set in urban, multicultural settings. His plays can be divided into two groups: those exploring the issues related to immigration (a search for roots, clashes of culture, identity crisis, American Dream) and those that examine the lives of non-stereotypical Asian Americans. His work portrays the darker side of Asian American life. The characters are typically depressed and hopeless. They are alienated from society and lack mutual communication, respect, and warmth in their family lives. This sense of alienation and outsiderness draws upon the memories of his adolescence. Ong characterizes his work as having “a point of view of somebody with their noses pressed against the glass looking in. It’s like a jewel: you turn a different facet to the light.” Ong writes from an American perspective, but his Filipino descent is “the more concrete thing I can actually fall back on in terms of nostalgia, of identification.”

Criticisms

David Henry Hwang considers Ong as a “younger, or ‘Third Wave’ Asian/Pacific playwright” who refuses to focus mainly on racial issues. The American Repertory Theater’s Robert Brustein has compared Ong to Shakespeare because he is “the most exciting new talent to evolve in years” without much formal education. Writing in the New Yorker on the occasion of the world premiere production of "The L.A. Plays" at the American Repertory Theater, critic John Lahr said of Ong: "blessed with a singular theatrical voice, he's at the beginning of what is already an exciting career." Of that play's subsequent London production at the Almeida Theater, critic Michael Billington of the Guardian wrote that Ong "has a remarkable gift for distilled dialogue and for pinning down the fragmentation, solitude and despair of the city of dreams." San Jose Mercury News theater critic Judith Green praises Ong’s "Bachelor Rat" for his “deft way with words: an ability to layer poetry on reality and an unusual appreciation of irony.” However, Green criticizes the depth of "Airport Music" because it is “mostly about anger, which is a good servant but a bad master.” The Boston Globe's Kevin Kelly echoes these sentiments and has questioned Ong’s abilities and effectiveness. He refers to Ong as a “quick-scene dramatist” who has “brute observation, poetic sensibility, sharp characterization and cinematic skill.” Kelly attacks Ong’s performance as an actor (he assayed the lead in the American Repertory Theater production of "The L.A. Plays") and characterizes him as “a fussy, low-level actor who uses too many gestures and too often settles for moony passivity.” It should also be pointed out that Ong has been a performance artist whose solo shows "Symposium in Manila" and "Cornerstore Geography" have drawn praise in various cities (L.A., San Francisco, New York) where they have been performed.

Sources

  • Hong, Terry. “Genius Han Ong: The Outsider American.” The Bloomsbury Review 25:1, 2005.
  • Liu, Miles Xian. Asian American Playwrights: A Bio-Bibliographical Critical Sourcebook. Westport: Greenwood Press, 2002.
  • “What is a Fixer Chao?” Yale University. 4 Nov. 2009. http://www.yale.edu/ism/srmcon/presenter-Ong01.html

External links

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