Letters from Home Performance - Kalean Ung

Letters From Home is a multimedia solo performance that is a collaboration between Cambodian-American actress Kalean Ung, her father, celebrated Cambodian composer Chinary Ung, and director Marina McClure. The piece blends Kalean's research on the Cambodian genocide with Chinary's original music and Marina’s visionary direction to explore themes of family, sacrifice, and the hope inherent in immigration and the American dream.
Inspired by the moment Kalean’s father shared with her a trove of letters from family members in Cambodia suffering through the genocide perpetrated by the Khmer Rouge, this compelling story pays tribute to refugees, immigrants, and the traumas passed down within families. Supporting this central storyline is an exploration of female Shakespearean characters, as Kalean analyzes how the letters express universal archetypes of mother, wife, and daughter. This special production blurs the lines of performance and incantation with Kalean stepping in and out of classic roles to grapple with the women she encounters in her father's letters.
Letters From Home integrates music and striking visual design, using projection and costume to create a scenic installation. It tells an emotional and compelling story about a Cambodian-American woman and her exploration of her connection to her family, her legacy, and the country of her father.
Check out the Music Letters Home exhibition at the Orange County & Southeast Asian Archive until April 1.  Special hours on Feb. 13 until 7 p.m.

To register for this free performance, click here.

Co-Sponsored by Asian American Studies, Drama, the UCI Libraries, the UCI Shakespeare Center, the Humanities Center, the Center for Asian Studies, East Asian Studies, the Metropolitan Southeast Asia Workgroup, Asian American Pacific Islander Staff Association, and AAPI Womxn in Leadership.


 

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