Daily Archives: September 5, 2011

In the Shadow of Gold Mountain documentary

In the Shadow of Gold Mountain documentary

Filmmaker Karen Cho (a fifth-generation Canadian of mixed heritage) travels from Montreal to Vancouver to uncover stories from the last survivors of the Chinese Head Tax and Exclusion Act (much like the Chinese Exclusion Act in the US), a set of laws imposed to single out the Chinese as unwanted immigrants to Canada from 1885 to 1947. She discovered that half her family wasn’t welcome in the country they called home. While Canada encouraged and rewarded immigration from Europe, it imposed laws that singled out the Chinese as unwanted and unwelcome. Personal accounts of extraordinary Chinese Canadians who survived an era that threatened to eradicate their entire community are at the core of this documentary. Through a combination of history, poetry and raw emotion, this documentary sheds light on an era that shaped the identity of generations.

Here’s more Chinese Exclusion Act related videos: Chinatown Rising, Journey of a Paper Son, and Angel Island Profile: Tyrus Wong.

In the Shadow of Gold Mountain documentary

Maulik Pancholy Talks About His Cultural Heritage & Hollywood Diversity

Maulik Pancholy Talks About His Cultural Heritage & Hollywood Diversity

30 Rock actor Maulik Pancholy tells a group of students how, as an undergrad, he shied away from his cultural heritage. But all that changed when he moved to Los Angeles to become an actor. Overnight, the one thing he had spent four years distancing himself from—his South Asian identity—became “the only thing that people saw in [him].” This is a heartfelt and very funny clip that shows off the deeply perceptive side of one of Hollywood’s best young comic actors. Maulik Pancholy delivers the buzz of celebrity and the nourishment of good, honest conversation. He talks candidly about the peculiar arc of his career: from the early days playing broad stereotypes to his current success, working alongside Tina Fey and others. What is it like trying to break through while staying true to yourself and to your heritage?

Maulik Pancholy stars on 30 Rock and Weeds and has appeared on various shows, including Law and Order and the Sopranos. Occasionally, he also gives keynotes at universities. Using his own career, he shows audiences just how far Hollywood has come in embracing diverse characters and story lines. How much has changed since his early days, when he was asked, constantly, to “do the accent.” And what has caused this positive shift in the entertainment industry?

Maulik Pancholy Talks About His Cultural Heritage & Hollywood Diversity

More about Maulik Pancholy
Maulik Pancholy is a classically trained actor with an MFA from the Yale School of Drama. He has carved out a career that spans the stage, the small screen and the big screen. He invests whatever project he’s working on — from popcorn movies like Hitch to plays like Guantanamo: Honor Bound to Defend Freedom — with a dignified charm. He has a great sense, too, for the subtle physical aspects of comedy. These traits haven’t gone unnoticed: he has received a Screen Actors Guild award for 30 Rock, along with two additional SAG nominations, one each for 30 Rock and Weeds. He played the lead role in India Awakening, at the Samuel Beckett Theater, for which The New York Times praised his “charismatic…sexy and funny” performance. He also voices the character Baljeet on the top-rated Disney show, Phineas and Ferb. His other credits include guest spots on Law and Order: Criminal Intent and The Sopranos. On 30 Rock, he plays Jonathan, Alec Baldwin’s scene-stealing personal assistant.

A Different POV: Asian America & Latino in Cinema & New Media

A Different POV: Asian America & Latino in Cinema & New Media

From Hollywood to the Internet, Asian and Latino American communities continue to be shaped and reshaped by visual media. What does the future hold? The Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Program and the Smithsonian Latino Center host a conversation about the history, present and future of Asian and Latino America through cinema and new media.

Film scholar Dr. Charles Ramírez Berg (University of Texas at Austin) presented an illustrated history of ethnic stereotypes and the efforts of actors and playwrights to subvert and resist them. Internet scholar Dr. Lisa Nakamura (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) discussed the racial and ethnic assumptions embedded in the representations of race in digital media, particularly in gaming cultures. You can listen to Lisa Nakamura at the 45:22 mark.

The conversation wraps up with Q&A moderated by Dr. Konrad Ng, new media scholar and Director of the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Program.

A Different POV: Asian America & Latino in Cinema & New Media