"Forbidden City West" is a Yangtze Repertory Theatre of America production presented by Theater For The New City of a new musical, Off Broadway at Theater For The New City, 155 First Avenue (bet. 9 & 10 St), NYC. It is directed by Joanna Chan, Yangtze Artistic Director. Previews begin June 14 and the opening is Wednesday, June 18, at 7:30pm. The new musical (in English with Chinese subtitles) has a score by Gregory Frederick with book and lyrics by Joanna Chan. The choreographer is David ChienHui Shen. The set design is by Martin Andrew Orlowicz; with costumes by Xu HouJian; lighting by Kathleen Dobbins; vocal coach is Richard Malone and the musical arranger is Tom Berger. It stars Debbie Wong (Hong Kong/Canada) and Ji Wang (HeNan, China) as the young and elder Jadin with: Richard Anthony, DeShen Cao, Kyle Cheng, Rachel Filsoof, Ron Flores, Daneile Gonzalez, Aki Goto, Carl Hsu, Gloria Lai, Ashley Liang, Rachel Lin, Sean Lin, Satomi Makida, Ruri Saito, Annie Qian, HaoWen Wang, and Alan Lei Zhou. Subject to change
"Forbidden City West" is an original musical on 100 years of Chinese-American Experience through the life and times of legendary entertainer Jadin Wong. In 1940, she was featured in Life Magazine as the exotic star of the night club, The Forbidden City, in San Francisco. And into her 90's, she still headed her own talent agency for Asian performing artists in upper Manhattan. Married to the Broadway producer, Eddie Dowling, in the 1960s, Wong was dubbed 'the most photographed Chinese girl in the U.S.', her black and white photos with such Hollywood luminaries as Welles, Crosby, Powell, Hope, etc. graced numerous pages. Wong helped to create and popularize the 'dragon lady' image of the Chinese female in a long, tight gown, slits thigh high, and chopsticks in her hair--an image that became a fixation in the public imagination in the West. Wong's colorful life includes: jumping off a small military plane over the Black Forest, being found and brought to safety a few hours later, then going on stage to entertain two thousand American G.I.s in Austria; running away from home at age 14 to take dancing lessons; creating the 'dragon lady' image with the aid of her English dance teacher; and trying to restart her career as a stand-up comic. The fiesty young woman proved to be a peerless survivor, outlasting three husbands and braving the male-orientated Chinese community that condemned and ignored her, continuing to dispense advice today to scores of young Asian actors who are gradually gaining visibility. The musical is intercut with the dramantic changes in China as well as some of the reflections and dreams of living here in the US.Videos