2840 Mariposa,
San Francisco, California 94110

WHO: NOHspace Presents: Chan Park and Kathy Foley

WHAT: Fox Hunts and Freedom Fighters: Korean and Western Women in Seoul 1894-1920

WHERE: NOHspace 2840 Mariposa Street, San Francisco 94110

WHEN: Monday September 14 and Tuesday September 15, 2009 at 8pm

TIX: $20 General / $15 Students/Seniors
Reservations (415) 621-7978
Advance tickets available at www.theatreofyugen.org

INFO: (415) 621-7978 www.theatreofyugen.org

NOHspace Presents is a series produced by Theatre of Yugen that showcases emerging and established experimental and Asian-based performers, as well as visiting artists from Japan.
About The Work
Korean pansori story singing, porcelain dolls and powerful acting bring to life tales of remarkable women: martyred Queens and Victorian women who defied gender to help change their world, and a straight-laced missionary trying to curb her radical student as she called for national independence at the first Korean school for girls. Cross-cultural encounters fuse Korean and American arts in this new work from the renowned pansori singer Chan Park and puppeteer-director Kathy Foley.

Noted Englishwoman geographer Isabella Bird came to Seoul as Korean Queen Min struggled with Japanese and Western colonialism as the "hermit kingdom" was forced to open to Western trade and missions. The women's friendship grew even as a plot for the assassination of the queen, “Operation Foxhunt,” was being hatched. The history of early Korean-Western exchange is seen in the lives of two women who redefined what it meant to be female.

Exploratory encounters deepened in the early twentieth century. American missionary Jean Walters taught the fiery Yu Kwan Sun, a female revolutionary who lived to oust the Japanese. While the mission lady saw her school, Ehwa, as a site to "uplift Korean womanhood, Yu Kwan Sun saw it as the site to organize and agitate for change. Korea's “new woman” sparked the flame that was the 1919 Independence Movement. Christian hymns and the noted pansori of h, intertwine to tell of a young girl whose self-liberation far outstripped her teacher's.

About the Artists
Chan Park performs extensively in the US and around the world. Her unique blending of Korean singing-storytelling (pansori) and her western training in theatre have made her renown. She frequently performs all over the the country and has collaborated with companies in Hawaii, Alaska, California, and Central Asia to create new works. She teaches at Ohio State University.

Kathy Foley regularly performs puppetry, mask, and dance work in the Sundanese style of West Java. She is a director (Ramayana, Nicolas Nickleby), actress, and author (Farewell to Manzanar, based on the life of Jean Houston). She is a professor of theatre arts at UCSC. The pair first worked together as graduate students at the University of Hawaii and bring their voices together to animate the words and actions of women whose lives intertwined on the cusp of modernity.

Official Website: http://www.nohspace.org

Added by edwardschocker on September 14, 2009

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