“Soft Power” was inspired by playwright and librettist David Henry Hwang’s experience of being stabbed near his Brooklyn home in 2015. His assailant was never apprehended, and some believe the incident was an anti-Asian hate crime. “All the Asian Americans I know, we’re very conscious of feeling a more hostile environment,” Hwang (above) says of the recent rise in anti-Asian violence. “It started last spring. You would just get a different vibe from people. I got yelled at in a doctor’s office. I was having a regular checkup, and someone in the waiting room yelled, ‘Have you been to China?’” Hwang is hopeful that the success of filmmakers like Jon M. Chu, Lulu Wang, Chloé Zhao and Lee Isaac Chung is a sign that Hollywood finally has “the willingness to look at Asian American stories as not only marginalized stories but as stories that have universal appeal.”
In “Soft Power,” a Chinese business man has a fever dream in which he becomes friends with Hillary Clinton after he is stabbed in the United States. The show was written before the 2016 election and had to be reworked after Donald Trump won the White House. It’s been reworked some more now that Joe Biden is in office. The show opened at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles almost three years ago followed by runs in San Francisco and on off-Broadway at the Public Theater. Directed by Leigh Silverman, the show was nominated for 11 Drama Desk Awards and was a finalist for the Pulitzer. It will hopefully have a Broadway run when theaters reopen.
The show goes into Grammy night as a nominees for best original cast album. “We’re very excited,” Hwang says. “For a musical with an original story and the premiere of a new score, that’s particularly satisfying.”
Hwang is chair of the American Theater Wing, the organization responsible for the Tonys. A date and the format for the next Tonys have not been announced. “We are we are still trying to figure that out,” he says. “I think that all I can say right now because it’s obviously been incredibly challenging to figure out how to honor the shows that opened to the fall of 2019 so are continuing to work on how to present a 2020 Tonys.”
At the onset of the pandemic, Hwang was been working on a revival of “Aida.” “We were right in the middle of the workshop with Schele Williams directing when Broadway shut down,” he says. “We have a new version of the book. Schele as great concepts and we’re just looking to get to a place where we can get in a room together again and continue to work.”
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Got a couple of exclusives for ya! Congrats to Lauren Howes for being named the new executive director of the Canadian LGBTQ film fest Inside Out. Howes, who identifies as nonbinary, was the exec director of the Canadian Filmmakers Distribution Centre for the past 14 years. “I am so honored to be joining the fabulous team at Inside Out,” Howes says. “I am excited to bring my passion for supporting our diverse communities of audiences and artists to my role as the new executive director. There are so many successes of my predecessor to build upon with an eye to expanding industry engagement, educational development, and community outreach. What a joy it will be to support queer voices in bringing their creative talents to screen, and leverage the Inside Out brand in creative new ways for these ever changing, ever challenging times we are bearing witness to. I am so looking forward to working with the stellar team and board of directors as we continue to grow the festival, and especially when we’re able to gather again in cinemas and celebrate in-person.” … Marcus Lemonis, businessman and host of CNBC’s “The Profit,” has invested in Lydia Tenaglia and Chris Collins’ production company Zero Point Zero. ZPZ was founded in 2003; its content, including “Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown,” “United Shades of America” and “My Next Guest Needs No Introduction With David Letterman,” has earned 50 Primetime Emmy nominations and 15 wins.
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Robin Wright didn’t plan to star in her feature directorial debut, “Land,” about a woman who moves to a remote cabin after suffering a great tragedy. “We got financed, and we had this slim window in which we had to cast it and get up on that mountain and start prepping because we had to get four seasons in 29 days. … The producers were like, ‘We don’t have a choice to wait to see if we get a response. Robin, I think you’re gonna have to just be in it.’” Demián Bichir, who co-stars as a stranger who befriends her character, says the drama helped him heal from a “very heavy personal journey.” “Just being up there in those beautiful mountains — oh my God. Nature has that power,” Bichir says. Listen to my interviews with Wright and Bichir on this week’s “Just for PvNew” podcast.
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A third season of “Bonding” hasn’t been greenlit yet, but Brendan Scannell, who stars in Netflix’s BDSM dark comedy as Peter, tells me he’d like Meryl Streep to guest star. “Bonding” creator Rightor Doyle is “very good friends with [Streep’s daughter] Mamie Gummer,” Scannell says, “so let’s get Mamie and let’s get Meryl. Why not?”
The series, which revolves around dominatrix-in-training Tiff (Zoe Levin), also looks at her assistant and best friend Peter’s struggle to make it as a stand-up comedian. “My survival job was always being an assistant to actors,” says Scannell, 30, who starred in the 2018 television adaptation of “Heathers.” “So I worked for a bunch of different actors. I was working for Kate Beckinsale when I booked ‘Heathers’ and so my last day job was like driving Kate around Brentwood basically.” His work with Beckinsale carried over to “Bonding” after watching her slide into her leather suits for the “Underworld” franchise. “I learned that in order to get into those bodysuits, they do require a lot of lube. So that’s what I learned shooting ‘Bonding’ is how cold lube is when it’s covering your body. And then you’re like encased in leather. You are literally like covered in K-Y Jelly.”
Fan attention has been interesting, to say the least. “I’ve gotten some interesting feet pics in my DMs,” Scannell says. “There are some really beautiful feet and not so beautiful feet from around the world. I do see them, so if anyone’s reading this, keep firing away. If I don’t respond it doesn’t mean you’re not heard.”
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I love when good things happen to good people.Gugu Mbatha-Raw has been appointed a global Goodwill Ambassador for UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency. The British actor, who will next be seen in “Loki” on Disney Plus, has been working with the organization since 2018. She has appeared in PSAs and has visited with Burundian and Congolese refugees in Rwanda. She has also spoken at events in Venice, Los Angeles and London. “I’m so thankful to have the opportunityto work in support of refugees and help amplify their voices,” Mbatha-Raw said in a statement. “I am alwaysamazed by their courage and strength in the face of such seemingly insurmountable odds, and it’s a real honor to play a part in sharing their stories. The COVID crisis has made us all aware of the fragility of the lives we build and the importance of doing all we can to support those who have had to leave the place they call home.”
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The D’Amelios are taking over the world. And we’re not just talking TikTok stars Charli, 16, and Dixie, 19. The teens’ parents, Marc and Heidi, launched their own pod- cast, “Marc & Heidi: The Other D’Amelios,” on Feb. 23 with Ramble, a division of Entercom’s Podcast Network’s Cadence13. “We’ve been focused on promoting Dixie and Charli and all the things they’re doing for so long. Now we get to talk about us,” Heidi said in a trailer for the podcast. The four D’Amelios have a combined social footprint of 300 million followers. Still to come? A family reality show, set to premiere on Hulu later this year.