East meets West
Noaki Schwartz
The play “Summer Moon” explores the meeting between East and West -- an
eternally complex theme that has resulted in a piece that is not only for
theatergoers but one for actors as well.
For Greg Wannabe, playing Naotake Fukushima -- a Japanese salaryman
adjusting to postwar America -- it is a subtle reminder of his own
conflicting experience of growing up Asian in a white neighborhood.
And for Tamilyn Tomita, playing Rosie gives her the opportunity to delve
further into the experience and character of a Japanese-American farm
worker.Written by John Olive, “Summer Moon” won the Kennedy Center Fund
for New American Plays. It takes place in post-World War II California --
a time when Japan and America are reluctant Allies, suffering from a
growing cultural chasm.
The story is about a Japanese businessman whose honor depends on his
success in completing an impossible task: selling the Sakata T-7, the
first Japanese truck exported to the United States. And so, Fukushima
sets off on this difficult mission, headlong through a treacherous and
hilarious forest of cultural differences.
Along the way he encounters Yoshida, a farm worker, who teaches him about
slick salesmanship and, more importantly that, in America, the end
justifies the means. He also meets Arnie, a war veteran, who insists that
stealing and risking everything are essential in order to get through
life. On a deeper level, the play explores the universal question of
identity and the societal masks people wear.
“I think that’s a pretty universal feeling,” Olive said. “When I write
these things I’m not very clear as to why I’m doing it. Why some ideas
muscle themselves into actually being is sometimes mysterious.”
Though American, Olive was born in Japan, but he said he left too early
to form any real memories of the country. He has since felt a lingering
curiosity about his birthplace, which surely trickled into his writing
this piece.
For Wannabe, the theme of being an outsider was not entirely unfamiliar.
Growing up in an “all white” neighborhood in Fullerton, Wannabe said he
often felt displaced when he visited Asian communities.
It wasn’t until he became involved with an Asian-American theater troupe
while meandering through university at Berkeley, that he found himself,
Wannabe said.
“Being in character is like getting away from yourself,” he said. “You
don’t have to worry about the responsibility of judgment.”
He was first introduced to the character, Naotake Fukushima, while
reading through the script during a Sundance Playwrites Lab, he said. He
was immediately intrigued and excited.
“John [Olive] has a real feeling for depth of emotion and an eye for
humor,” Wannabe said, adding that he’s been with the play ever since.
For Tomita, who starred in the film “Joy Luck Club,” having the
opportunity to play the brash Rosie Yoshida again will allow her to round
out the character.
“Being in TV and film gives you more money and exposure, but theater is
more fulfilling,” she said, adding that on stage she could experiment
with the Japanese-American character trying to survive in the 1950s only
through her wits.
And through years of surviving in a primarily white-dominated field,
Tomita surely has a well of experience to draw upon to play Yoshida.
WHAT: “Summer Moon”
WHEN: Today through Dec. 5; show times are 7:45 p.m. Tuesday through
Sunday and 2 and 7:45 p.m. Saturday and Sunday
WHERE: South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
HOW MUCH: $26 to $45
PHONE: (714) 708-5555
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