stonefruit staged reading

My first full-length script is getting a staged reading!!!

I started writing šŸ’stonefruitšŸ’ in 2015 as a junior in college. It was a 5 page script at first. Then I expanded it to 28 pages. And then put it away for 5 and a half years….

Last year, I revisited it through @bindlestiff_sf’s full-length playwriting class, expanding it again and writing a first draft of 64 pages.

Now, in 2022, the play is 82 pages and ready for actors and a director to work with it so I can keep improving it. The staged reading will help me figure out what works and what needs more. Time to keep growing 🪓

The story of šŸ”²Teo and šŸ”³Carrie has stuck with me all these years. Maybe it’s because it comes from a real moment in my life when I was barely 20 years old, being on the brink of adulthood and navigating new and old relationships/friendships.

With this story, I strive to write the realities of growing up, family legacies, farm workers, immigrants, and migration.

I’m thankful to Bindlestiff and @velascoarts for uplifting my voice and for being a safe space for me as a woman of color, as a Filipina, as a Latina.

Come watch šŸ’stonefruitšŸ’ on May 1 and the other plays throughout the first week of Asian American & Pacific Islander Heritage Month! I’d love to hear what you think 😃 Link in bio for tickets (available for in-person and virtual livestream).

Also yes swipe for the videos I watched on YouTube for research

More MĆ”s Marami Arts = 2021 Mover & Shaker

More theatre, more inclusion, more community! @more.mas.marami is the 2021 Mover & Shaker and I couldn’t be more grateful for this amazing lil collective. 🌟

There’s something special, magical, and uplifting about live theatre and our hope is that everyone – no matter your background, experience level, socioeconomic status – can be part of it.

Stay watching us šŸ™‚ and support local theatre artists in your life šŸ‘‹šŸ½

āž”ļø moremasmarami.org for our e-newsletter, upcoming programs, and ways to donate šŸ‘€šŸ™‡šŸ½ā€ā™€ļø

When I have staged reading coming up…

ā€œIt feels like I could just keep turning and turning and turning and if I keep turning, toes to grass to hands to grass to toes… maybe when I get right side back up again, everything would be alright.ā€ šŸ¤øšŸ½ā€ā™€ļø this is one of my favorite lines from my latest play ā€œthe alebrije play.ā€ when are you happiest?

I watched a musical-in-development online the other week and I signed up for the newsletter updates and I wrote in my form that it can be lonely being a theatre artist whenever you’re outside the theatre space. I know this isn’t just for theatre artists, but all kinds of artists: you have to be your own PR person to sell your work, to get eyes on your art. if you don’t sell tickets, does anyone even care? do we just give it up to the Industry? … my answer is: first and foremost, I write for myself. and I care about me and I believe in my art. when I’m in rehearsal, i feel so alive and challenged and humbled and not-so-lonely.

anyway. if you’ve ever felt happiness, grief, loneliness… here’s a sunflower 🌻 and if you made it this far, thanks for reading and I invite you to watch Alebrije on saturday night. (link in bio). (yes this is me being my own PR and being authentic).

2021 Update

I’ve written 3 new scripts (with the help ofĀ @bindlestiff_sfĀ andĀ @more.mas.marami), cried a lot, owed taxes for the first time, performed spoken word in front of 200+ executives and electeds, been shocked, been devastated, been numb, been humbled, got a raise, played in the snow, found a $150 ice cream machine for $15, coordinated the 5th annual fly pinaysĀ @lead_filipino, got admitted into the ELLA programĀ @latinacoalition, started on the steering committee ofĀ @genartssv, had lots of trouble sleeping, ate ice cream…. and got vaccinated! Among other things. In a nut shell.

I debated about this post for like 3 weeks wondering what pic to share, what caption to write. It’s been so long since I’ve posted on IG and it’s transformed a lot as a digital space… but I’ll just be myself on this app! This is what I want to post!

Here’s to a fun, safe summer! 😊 (Lots of theatre stuff coming soon!) (Like it always is) (Bc that’s what I do!)

It is the end of week 4 of the Shelter In Place order in the Bay Area, California.

It’s been 34 days since I last went to an in-person art event.

31 days since I’ve been to my yoga studio.

27 days since I’ve been to my workplace.

26 days since I’ve eaten inside a restaurant.

14 days since I dropped off groceries to my grandma.

7 days since I went to Target for snacks. 

I’ve finished Stephen King’s On Writing, Kingdom on Netflix, Tiger King; started watching Terrace House: Aloha State and Phil of the Future on Disney+; played Animal Crossing: New Horizons with my brother, my friends from college, and my cousin; and ate a bunch of pretzel snacks. 

All the media I’ve consumed over the last month has been … refreshing and soothing, to be honest. Before mid-March, I was juggling a full-time job, part-time volunteer gig, and side-hustle starting a theatre company… It’s been a busy 6 months to say the least… An hour or two of escape from navigating our new reality sheltering in place is much needed (as often as every two hours if you ask me). 

As a creative, I haven’t been pressuring myself to create or write anything during this time. But that doesn’t mean that I don’t miss it or crave it. I find myself constantly tired from adjusting to work from home (WFH), reading the latest news, thinking about the impacts of this pandemic, and trying to keep myself together. It’s mentally, emotionally, and physically exhausting.

I know that reading and writing awakens and energizes me, but it also takes a lot of energy to pick up the book or the pen (especially when the TV remote seems to be always closer). Week by week, I’ve been able to read a couple more pages or write down some thoughts and it’s been nice getting those little bursts of energy. 

In the last few years, I’ve tried not to be too hard on myself when it takes me weeks or months to finish a script or reading a book. Ever since I graduated from college, it’s been difficult for me to find a real reliable routine for my creativity. I tend to write in 2 to 3 week bursts, then I won’t touch the keyboard for a month or more. I imagine it’s the same for a lot of people, but balancing work life, self-care, and personal relationships has proven to be easier said than done. 

Anyway, since the SIP order, I haven’t guilted myself into thinking ā€œI better be writing my masterpiece right now!ā€ (To be honest, the guilt and pressure has more to do with my dayjob, but that’s another story). If this ā€œextra timeā€ works for you, that’s great. But it doesn’t work for everyone in that way. I personally get a lot of my inspiration and drive from attending events at galleries, theaters, and community centers; meeting artists and hearing their stories. As I mentioned at the top, it’s been 34 days since I’ve been to an in-person art event. 

34 days since I’ve shared space with community members to watch a film at Cinequest (before they postponed the second half of the festival).

I’ve been fortunate to be able to connect with artists online through Zoom, Facebook, and Instagram. Been able to see their writing projects or photography. Their creativity and originality during this strange time in our history has energized me.

But it’s definitely not the same.

As we head into Week Five, I hope to find myself reading and writing just a little bit more and set myself up for success. I’ll be connecting with some friends in an intimate poetry circle/workshop setting, attending a playwriting class via Zoom from my favorite Fil-Am theatre, and starting a potential blog project with a community partner. I realize I may be getting a lil busy with all this and maybe that’s what I need again.