LONG STORY SHORT
Director: Christine Choy
Writer: Jodi Long
Editor: Douglas Cheek
This film is playing in the LONG STORY SHORT program.
Long recounts memories of her parents’ stage lives through photographs, pictures, their special appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1950, and the performance of her personal monologues on growing up as the child of performers. She details her mother’s experience in Japanese internment camps during World War II and her resolve to transcend the injustices brought upon her; her mother’s decision to quit the industry in order to maintain the family and to raise Jodi; her father’s roles in various productions of the popular musical Flower Drum Song; the pressures of the industry that lead to her parents’ separation; and her parents’ influence on her own decision to follow in their footsteps.
Long narrates the story about her family’s struggles as not only Asian Americans but also as Asian American performers. She touches on what it means to perform racial identity and what it means to be an Asian American performer today as she follows in her father’s footsteps and decides to take a role in a new and updated musical adaptation of Flower Drum Song reinterpreted by award-winning playwright David Henry Hwang.
LONG STORY SHORT is more than just a portrait of an Asian American family, but also an insightful commentary on media, representation, and race.
Christine Choy and Jodi Long will be in attendance.
Website
www.longstoryshortdocumentary.comPrint Source
Wahini Dakini Productions
2571 Glen Green
Los Angeles, CA 90068
Tel 323.465.5007
Fax 323.465.5007








