“PANG SPA” and “TWO STOP” by David Johann Kim

We’re excited to announce that our friend and playwright David Johann Kim will be presenting two of his works, PANG SPA and TWO STOP, both set to take the stage in Los Angeles, California.

Both plays showcase characters of mixed Korean heritage, and a special Hapa Night is scheduled for Friday, May 17th to celebrate this diversity.

Hapa Night Info:

Celebrate Hapa Day with a play! Join EST/LA and Chalk Rep for the world premieres of TWO STOP and PANG SPA by David Johann Kim on Friday, May 17th. Enjoy a pre-show happy hour and activities starting at 7pm followed by either play at 8pm. All for $20! Tickets and more information at ChalkRep.com for PANG SPA or estlosangeles.org for TWO STOP.

There is also an AAPI Day scheduled for Sunday, May 26th and those interested that special event can use the code 2SPA for $25 tickets.

Additional details about the two plays are provided below:

PANG SPA
by David Johann Kim
directed by Reena Dutt
Featuring Ben Carroll, Christopher Callen, Hahn Cho, Edward Hong, Jasmine Kimiko, and Dian Kobayashi
May 16-June 9, 2024
Opening Night – May 19th
Atwater Village Theatre, 3269 Casitas Avenue, LA, CA 90039

Daniel Pang returns home to LA’s Koreatown stepping into an unexpected life. Twenty years after the LA Riots, the family business is gone, his brother is gone, and his parents are disappearing with dementia. As Daniel juggles his parents’ care and idiosyncratic neighbors a flinty young army vet arrives on a mission forcing him to confront his past. PANG SPA is a Los Angeles, K-town dramedy celebrating family, memory and identity through a journey of healing.

TWO STOP
by David Johann Kim
directed by Tracey A. Leigh
May 2-June 9, 2024
Opening Night – May 4th
Atwater Village Theatre, 3269 Casitas Avenue, LA, CA 90039

On the verge of the ’92 LA Riots. A Korean market. A murder scene. A store owner and a neighborhood teenaged girl face off. When her wild card mother arrives, secrets from the past explode in this tiny store. History and histories go head to head as LA starts to burn.

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Interview with John Beam (7/24/2023)

HalfKorean.com Interview: John Beam

John Beam

As the current Athletics Director and Head Football Coach at Laney College in Oakland, California, Coach John Beam’s remarkable coaching journey has featured a career spanning over 42 years and counting.

Coach Beam’s impact on the football landscape is nothing short of extraordinary. From his early coaching days at Serra High (San Diego, CA) in the late 1970s to his tenure at Skyline High (Oakland, CA) from 1982 to 2004, he has consistently demonstrated a passion for nurturing talent and shaping young lives. However, it is his time at Laney College that has truly solidified his legendary status.

In 2018, Coach Beam orchestrated an unforgettable season, leading his team to a State Championship victory and earning the distinction of coaching the nation’s top-ranked team. As a testament to his coaching prowess, he was honored as the California Community College Football Coach of the Year. What sets Coach Beam apart is his unique distinction as the only coach in California history to receive both high school and junior college state coach of the year accolades.

The 2019 Laney football season was captured in the 2020 season of the hit Netflix documentary series, Last Chance U.

We had the privilege of sitting down with Coach Beam to delve into his remarkable personal background and unparalleled professional career.

Direct Link Here

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Orchestration (오케스트레이션) by Saundra Henderson Windom

We wanted to share a book we just learned about earlier this year that was published in 2021 by author Saundra Henderson Windom (née Chang Bang Sun) titled Orchestration (오케스트레이션).

The war cost her everything, a mother, a father, and a country. Four-year-old Bang Sun found tied to a tree, is riddled with disease, malnutrition, and bears the scars of a tragic life. Facing a future of nothing but pain, loss, and hopelessness, we follow the story of a mixed-race African-American child of the Korean War. When Korea begins purging itself of its unwanted casualties, babies of war, her abandonment leads to two orphanages and eventually to adoption in America – where Bang sun must now become an American – a Black American.

Fiercely resilient and embodying her birth country’s hope as expressed in the song Arirang, Bang Sun, who becomes Saundra Henderson, must learn to navigate a new language, a new culture, and a new family. Through it all, she holds resolutely to the imperfect memory from her five years in her homeland and tenaciously to that of the “Boy” who saved her life. A powerful memoir of strength, grace, resilience, courage, and kindness, you’ll find yourself immersed in the beautiful and inspiring recollection of the child called Bang Sun.

Book available on from Publisher website Wordeee and Amazon in hardcover and Kindle

Author Bio: Saundra Henderson Windom is a celebrated and decorated educator who retired as principal of Alonzo A. Crim Open Campus High School in Atlanta, Georgia. Known by her Korean name, Chang, Bang Sun to her family but friends affectionately call her Sandy. Her administrative staff adds yet another moniker as they jokingly call her “Forrest Gump” because of her vast life experiences and stories. An orphan of the Korean War, she was one of the first Korean “baby lift” adoptees to America when Korea began purging and exiling mix-race children of the war. Adopted into an African American family in Compton, California, in 1958, Saundra excelled academically, earning her undergraduate degree from Stanford and her Masters from the University of Southern California. From the dusty, barren roads of Korea to the orphanages that saved her life, Saundra’s will to survive is reinforced by her belief that her hope for something better than the circumstances of her birth ignited a spiritual force that would strategically orchestrate her life. Her success, she affirms, is because of God’s grace and mercy. Sandy, a devoted mother of three; also supports orphaned/needy children through her church’s partnerships with local and international missionary programs, including World Vision, the very organization whose mission saved her life.

For more info on the book and author, please visit the Orchestration The Book website and also follow the social media accounts: Facebook, Instagram, Twitter

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HAPA Day Proclamation in Los Angeles 5/19/2023

We wanted to share that our friends at HAPA Nation 1 helped create Los Angeles’s HAPA Day and the proclamation event will be in Los Angeles, California on Friday, May 19, 2023.

May 19, 2023 10 AM – 12 PM
Los Angeles City Council Chamber
200 North Spring Street
Los Angeles, CA 90012

Councilmember John S. Lee, Councilmember Nithya Raman, the Los Angeles City Council, and the 2023 Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month Committee officially announce May 19 as HAPA Day. The city of Los Angeles reflects the prevalence and modern evolution of HAPA Americans (Americans of partial Asian or Pacific Islander descent).

Further event details can be found here: HAPA Day Proclamation

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AmerAsian: My Journey to Becoming Whole as a Mixed Korean-American by Kimberly McAfee

We wanted to share a recently released book by author Kimberly McAfee titled AmerAsian: My Journey to Becoming Whole as a Mixed Korean-American.

AmerAsian, a chapbook-length poetry collection by Kimberly McAfee, takes the reader on a quest to find a balance and peace with being raised as an Asian-American. Follow the journey of a young girl trying to navigate her way through the minefields and misapprehensions of current society and blossoming into an empowered woman who appreciates her duality. McAfee is an avid lover of mythology, and many of the selections in this collection spotlight brilliant Korean folklore while maintaining relatability for all readers, regardless of their cultural background. Coupled with elegant imagery and flow, AmerAsian has a unique way of pulling you into its pages like a magnetic embrace, a perfect reflection of Kimberly herself.

Book available on Amazon in paperback and Kindle: Kimberly McAfee’s AmerAsian

Author Bio (from Amazon): Kimberly McAfee is a writer and poet residing in the US. She has authored/co-authored works in a variety of formats, such as websites, e-magazines, anthologies, and even a peer-reviewed scholarly journal. Ms. McAfee has just published the chapbook, “AmerAsian: My Journey to Becoming Whole as a Mixed Korean-American,” with Quillkeepers Press; she has also self-published three chapbooks. All are available on Amazon. You can find more of her poetry on her Instagram page @writerpoetkim. Be sure to follow for notifications on her upcoming books!

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