
FUNNY FILIPINO FLICK. Jo Koy arrives at the World Premiere of
Easter Sunday last month at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Los
Angeles. The film, directed by Jay Chandrasekhar, is set in the
heavily Filipino suburb of Daly City. (Photo by Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP) |
From The Asian Reporter, V32, #9 (September 5, 2022), pages 14 &
16.
Jo Koy’s Easter Sunday puts Filipinos front and
center
By Terry Tang
The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — For a comedy, Jo Koy’s new movie Easter Sunday had a
lot of waterworks.
The film was no ordinary job for the comedian and the rest of the cast.
The magnitude of being on a mostly Filipino set led to happy cry-fests, Koy
said. Emotions really hit when co-star Tia Carrere pointed out this was her
first time playing a Filipino character in her 40-year career.
"To be able to be right there in a scene with five other Filipino actors
and just doing a scene about a family ... She never saw that before," Koy,
51, told The Associated Press. "We all just kind of like teared up and just
celebrated together because it’s like ‘OK, this is going to be one of many
moments up here.’"
Koy, who is half Filipino and half white, made his feature film debut in
a movie largely inspired by the material from his Netflix stand-up specials.
DreamWorks/Universal is touting Easter Sunday, which opened last
month, as the first big studio movie with an all-Filipino ensemble. Koy
plays Joe Valencia, a comic and aspiring actor who goes home to the San
Francisco Bay Area for the titular holiday. He attempts to bond with his
teenage son while dealing with well-meaning but overbearing relatives. The
production comes at a time when Filipino-American food, history, and
advocacy are increasingly emerging into the zeitgeist.
"Finally our stories, our faces are front and center on the big screen,"
said Carrere, 55, and known for movies like Wayne’s World, True
Lies, and Lilo & Stitch. "I have to pinch myself that I’m still
here, still in the business and invited to the party."
Jimmy O. Yang (Crazy Rich Asians, Love Hard), who has a
cameo in Easter Sunday, also served as a producer. That meant
watching many, many audition tapes of actors of Filipino or Asian descent.
Yang was blown away by the talent. It made casting 10 roles that much
tougher. He thinks Hollywood claims that capable Asian actors are hard to
find are just lazy excuses.
"As an actor, I’m like all of these guys are so good. How did I ever get
a job?" Yang said. "Some of them I wanted to call them and be like ‘Hey,
man! Please keep going OK? We just couldn’t hire you for this job but please
keep going.’"
Easter Sunday, directed by Jay Chandrasekhar, is set in the heavily
Filipino suburb of Daly City where screenwriter Ken Cheng immigrated to as a
kid. He envisioned a mix of Ice Cube’s Friday and the holiday flick
It’s a Wonderful Life. A producer, too, Cheng wrote it in 2020 during
lockdown. He then turned to Steven Spielberg, whose Amblin Partners is
co-producing. Within a few hours the legendary director read it and gave his
approval, according to Cheng.
"From that day to the first day we started shooting was something like
five-and-a-half months. And that’s like insanely fast," Cheng said. "A lot
of that is how enthusiastic everyone was about building a movie around Jo."
Hollywood is populated with notable half-Filipino actors like Vanessa
Hudgens and Darren Criss. But Koy is the one leaning into his heritage in
his work. For example, he wanted a scene in Easter Sunday showing the
family packing customary balikbayan boxes. Filipinos, usually
first-generation immigrants, typically send boxes with American goods to
relatives in the Philippines. Mailing balikbayan boxes is practically its
own industry.
"There’s this responsibility that they put on their shoulders when they
make it to this country," Koy said. "I see that with a lot of Filipino
families and I wanted to show the world that’s how important this is to us."
Today, Filipinos make up over 4 million of the country’s 23 million-plus
Asian population, according to the U.S. Census. Only Chinese and Indians
number more. Filipino culture and history have been gaining more mainstream
visibility in recent years — mostly because of decades-long activism by
Filipinos.
This year, a 30-foot tall gateway arch was unveiled in Los Angeles’
Historic Filipinotown and a street in New York City’s Queens was co-named
Little Manila Avenue. A newly built Bay Area park was named for striking
Filipino-American farmworkers. For years, Filipino food has been hailed off
and on as the next culinary trend. It seems to be having a moment again in
the fine dining world. Chicago’s Kasama became the only Michelin-starred
Filipino restaurant in the country.
Easter Sunday arrived during "this really amazing moment in
Asian-American history and Filipino-American history, where political,
social, and economic capital has all come together," said Eric Pido, an
Asian-American studies professor at San Francisco State University with a
background in Filipina/o-American Studies. He predicts younger generations
will raise Filipinos’ profiles in the next few years.
"I think Filipino Americans are no longer shying away from sort of taking
a representational role in American politics, which will bring up all sorts
of interesting things about Filipino-American culture that lots of folks
just don’t think about," Pido said.
Last month, Koy and Cheng attended a screening of Easter Sunday in
Daly City. Among the people there was the director of Pixar’s Turning Red,
Domee Shi. Turning Red, about a Chinese-Canadian teenage girl and her
family, was a hit after its March release on Disney+. But a white film
reviewer called the animated feature exhausting and only relatable for Shi’s
Chinese family and friends. The review was later pulled over accusations of
racism.
The idea that stories that focus on Asian ethnicities and cultures are
too specific to be appealing is just outdated, Koy said.
"The relationship between a mother and son is the same no matter what
ethnicity," Koy said. "I hate ignorant people that don’t move forward …
There’s a lot of people that live in this country that need to be heard and
it’s time to hear it."
Terry Tang is a member of The Associated Press’ Race and Ethnicity team.
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