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Los Angeles Times
02-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Los Angeles Times
Time travel, ghosts and the end of the world: Inside Keiko Green's surreal stage plays
'Is there a change in text that needs to happen?' asks Keiko Green, binder and pencil in hand. Rehearsals are underway for her new play 'You Are Cordially Invited to the End of the World!' — particularly, the surreal moment in which Joel de la Fuente's Greg, a father diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, meets Rafael Goldstein's plastic green army man, who represents the military industrial complex and arranges the meeting at the behest of their mutual friend, Greta Thunberg. It's a complicated scene, acknowledges Green, who takes a seat at the prop table with director Zi Alikhan and the actors. She asks them about the characters' motivations and their personal thoughts about the dialogue while scribbling in her script, incorporating their insights and addressing their uncertainties. She then suggests new lines to the actors who, after reading through them, share their feelings about the tweaks. This process — revelation, revision, run-through — repeats a few times until, finally, they all nod in satisfaction. 'I like to use actors because I trust them and I love them so much,' the Georgia-born, North Hollywood-based playwright later tells The Times. 'I like to try things in the room, see what's working for them and really lean into those things. And maybe because I've been an actor, we speak the same language and can build these characters together.' Throughout the theater world, such collaborative, on-the-fly rewrites are as unique as Green's plays themselves. 'Exotic Deadly: Or the MSG Play' — which has played San Diego, San Francisco and, later this year, Seattle — centers on a time-traveling high schooler saving the world from the ingredient pervasive to Asian cuisine. 'Empty Ride,' which debuted at the Old Globe earlier this year, follows a daughter who returns to Japan to drive her father's taxi cab — and its supernatural passengers. And 'You Are Cordially Invited to the End of the World!,' which begins performances on Saturday at South Coast Repertory, is an ambitious exploration of grief, climate change and individual significance, whether one is still on Earth or otherwise. Ahead of the play's world-premiere run — also starring River Gallo, Sharon Omi, Alysia Reiner and Anna LaMadrid — Green tells The Times about writing coming-of-age stage comedies for fast-talking actors, diverse audiences and, yes, children — but not for theaters' boards of directors. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity. What inspired this play? My mother-in-law passed away right before the pandemic started. Everyone was really well-meaning, but the lockdown was a hard time for everybody, of course. It felt like my husband and I were in our own little ball of grief, in a way — physically, we were away from everybody, and also emotionally, people were just overwhelmed by a larger global grief. I asked my husband, 'Do you feel like your grief was stolen from you, in a way?' and he said, 'No. It feels really right that the world stopped when my mom died.' That sentence was so clear and so moving, and I started thinking about theatricalizing the idea that one person can literally be your whole world. It became a play about significance: What does it mean to live a significant life? Can we make actions that are significant? Can we remember people and make them significant? 'End of the World!' debuted at last year's Pacific Playwrights Festival. What did you learn about it from that reading, and since then by workshopping it all over the country? Theaters have been nervous about this play. People think that people don't want to watch a play about dying or climate change, because both are depressing, so it was mostly a challenge to myself: Can I write a play about those things, but still make myself laugh while writing it? It has some big swings, and I didn't know how it was going to land with people, but the response [at PPF] was overwhelmingly positive. People of all ages waited to talk to us afterward, some saying they connected with it because they had recently lost someone, but also, some saying, 'I was diagnosed with a terminal illness, and it's the first time I've seen a play about me that doesn't feel like my life is already over.' That element was really cool. I've been lucky to have tested it with so many audiences over the past year — after PPF, we've been to Texas, Connecticut, Pasadena, Oregon and New York City — and now we've come back to South Coast Rep, with three actors who've done the workshops. I think it's that audiences don't know what they want to see until it's in front of them, and the moment we just give them what they think they want, we're not doing our jobs anymore. The time is now to program things that get people saying, 'Whoa, I've never seen anything like this before, and I had no idea I needed it in my life until now.' Your recent plays have supernatural elements, time travel and interactions with other dimensions. Has your taste always been so fantastical and surreal? I think so. I'd definitely say that, before the pandemic, I wrote what I thought theaters wanted: small cast, one location, one set, really accessible themes — you know, things that a theater's board could really get behind. I was in my first year of grad school when COVID hit, and I was like, I'm just gonna write what feels right to me. I wrote a total of nine plays in grad school, and the first one was 'Exotic Deadly: Or the MSG Play,' with a million characters and sometimes changing locations three times on one page. It's since done well — it got me into the O'Neill [National Playwrights Conference], got me my first TV writing gig, premiered at the Old Globe and is going into its third production this fall. That's validating — like, it's actually good to just write what you're interested in, it does pay off to create the art you want to see. You were a regional theater actor in Seattle for seven years. What pushed your pivot to writing? As an actor, I always loved building the world of the play together with the director and writer and all the designers, and then once the play opened and they all left, I'd get so sad. I thought every actor also felt that way, and then I found out that most actors really love it when the director leaves and they're on their own. That's what made me first think, maybe I'm a playwright. I've always loved new work, so I tried to do lots of workshops of new plays. I remember I was an actor reading stage directions for a 'Cambodian Rock Band' workshop, and one day Lauren Yee brought in a draft with giant holes and [a note that read,] 'There is some sort of fight here,' and then it'd just move on to the next scene. And then, another day, she came back with 40 new pages. I didn't know you were allowed to do that! It was helpful to see how playwrights at the top of their game worked, which playwrights don't usually get to see of other playwrights. How has your experience acting informed your playwriting? Some theatermakers love actors who are like blank canvases, who can be whatever you want them to be. I remember, at [New York University], I learned about auditioning for soap operas — how to do your hair and makeup, what neckline you should wear — and it felt like a factory, dulling everyone's sparkle and ridding people of anything that made them special. I feel like a lot of times, these training programs do that, and that's why people out of school have so much trouble working at first, because they just have to find themselves again. I prefer to be with actors who bring their personality and perspective, who aren't afraid to be silly and also think fast and talk fast. I think because I love actors so much, I want to give them juicy parts that really showcase their talents, whether that's with emotionally charged scenes so they can use those muscles, or by giving them a track with a bajillion characters so they can show off a humongous range. Even ensemble roles in my plays — those actors are never relaxing, they're always doing quick changes or just turning into someone new. You've written for Hulu's 'Interior Chinatown' and Apple TV+'s upcoming 'Margo's Got Money Troubles.' How has your TV writing impacted your theatermaking? The 'Interior Chinatown' writers room in particular was almost all Asian American writers, and they kept me real honest. Sometimes in the theater we [Asian American playwrights] had to be simplistic about how we tackle racial identity because we were fighting for a voice, but it felt like the only way you could get produced was to write identity plays or victimizing, trauma plays. In that TV room, if I said something that felt like it would get a bunch of snaps in the theater, a writer would then say to me, 'I think we can do better than that.' And I was like, 'Oh, right, we have to do better, because we're leading the charge.' It's since influenced me on how I encounter Asian or Asian American characters in my own plays, and it's the coolest thing to get to decide whether to incorporate identity into a play because of the play, not because I'm necessarily checking a box. Among your many upcoming projects is 'Be Like Water,' a children's play about Bruce Lee that'll debut at Seattle Children's Theatre. What do you prioritize when creating a Theatre for Young Audiences production versus your other work? I don't come from an art family. My dad was a nuclear engineer and my mom worked as a translator and interpreter, and English is her second language. They don't necessarily understand art. So I don't enjoy theater that feels like it's just for other artists, feels exclusionary or, in the worst case, just makes people feel stupid. And the truth is, theater is not dying, but it is slowing down; every performance is someone's first play and an opportunity to either make them a theater lover or to push them away forever. That's even more important with TYA shows. This play isn't even about the most physically exciting time in his life; it's about when he was first moved to the U.S. and was discovering his philosophy of dealing with obstacles and learning that there's a way through them versus battering at them. So I want to give them an idea of who this main character is — because they don't necessarily know Bruce Lee by name — talk to them at their level, make it fun and theatrical, and speak to them as people who are figuring out who they are. And I love writing for people who are figuring out who they are, because that's all of us.

Los Angeles Times
19-03-2025
- Entertainment
- Los Angeles Times
Warner Bros. killed a Looney Tunes movie starring John Cena. Now it's back from the dead
Just like in a Looney Tunes' cartoon, a bruised and battered Wile E. Coyote may soon limp back to fight another day. A year and a half after David Zaslav-run Warner Bros. Discovery shelved the movie 'Coyote vs. Acme,' the studio is in talks to sell the film to North Hollywood-based film finance and distribution company Ketchup Entertainment. The firm could pay nearly $50 million for the rights if the two sides can hammer out a deal, according to a knowledgeable person who was not authorized to comment. Warner Bros. Discovery scrapped the movie during the fall of 2023 amid Zaslav's purge of entertainment content amid his company's race to cut costs and tidy its balance sheet following Discovery's $42-billion takeover of Warner Bros. and the HBO and Turner channels. The acquisition left Warner Bros. Discovery heavily in debt. But Warner Bros.' decision to cut 'Coyote vs. Acme,' an animated feature greenlighted by a prior management team, was immediately met with howls in Hollywood because of Wile E. Coyote's iconic stature and because the film starring Will Forte and John Cena, featuring a blend of animation and live-action, had been finished and screened for test audiences. Several producers who saw the film voiced support in a social media campaign soon after the news of its apparent demise. To quell the jeers, Warner Bros. reversed its decision to shove the movie off a cliff. Instead, it agreed to allow the director, Dave Green, to shop the title around to other distributors in the hopes of finding a buyer. Ketchup Entertainment's Gareth West was not immediately available for comment on Wednesday. Hollywood industry site Deadline first reported the advanced talks to sell the rights. 'Coyote vs. Acme' is based on classic Looney Tunes characters and a New Yorker humor article, 'Coyote v. Acme' by Ian Frazier. Written by Samy Burch, the film follows the travails of the desert denizen who is tired of being slammed with Acme products as he tries to outsmart the Roadrunner. Coyote finally decides to hire a lawyer to take the Acme Corp. to court for product liability, such as faulty rocket skates and defective aerial bombs. Forte plays his lawyer. If a deal is clinched, it would pave the way for the film to be released in theaters as early as next year. Last year, Ketchup acquired rights to another abandoned Warner Bros. project with Porky Pig called 'The Day the Earth Blew Up: A Looney Tunes Movie.' It was released widely last week and generated $3.2 million in ticket sales, according to Comscore. The initial outrage over the film's shelving reached the halls of Congress. Rep. Joaquin Castro (D-Texas) had asked the Biden administration to investigate Warner Bros. Discovery's decision to deep-six completed films for favorable tax implications. In addition to 'Coyote vs. Acme,' Warner Bros. killed off 'Batgirl' and 'Scoob! Holiday Haunt.' Back in 2023, Green pledged his continued support for the project and its crew. 'For three years, I was lucky enough to make a movie about Wile E. Coyote, the most persistent, passionate, and resilient character of all time,' Green said in a 2023 statement. 'I was surrounded by a brilliant team, who poured their souls into this project for years,' Green said back then, sounding a hopeful note. 'I am beyond proud of the final product ... but in the spirit of Wile E. Coyote, resilience and persistence win the day.'
Yahoo
10-02-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Television Academy to raise AI with lawmakers: 'We want to focus on its ethical use'
The Television Academy has long existed to celebrate industry excellence, handing out Emmy Awards each fall. But the North Hollywood-based group has been branching out. Dramatic shifts in television platforms, production and technology — including the rapid adoption of artificial intelligence — have spurred the nonprofit organization to boost its role advocating for its diverse membership by taking a deeper look at public policy that affects the industry. Television Academy Chairman Cris Abrego and Chief Executive Maury McIntyre have traveled to Washington this week to meet with lawmakers to discuss potential legislation on AI. The trip marks the academy leadership's first major foray into lobbying. Writers, actors and other artisans are concerned about the use of AI, fearing cost-conscious companies will turn to automated computer programs to wipe out jobs. The 2023 labor strikes stretched for months as the Writers Guild of America and the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists pushed studio chiefs to add artist protections. "Television is being impacted," McIntyre said in an interview. The issue comes as the Television Academy is trying to broaden its mission to better serve its nearly 30,000 members, not just the lucky few who take home the trophy of a winged woman lifting an atom. The statuette was designed in the early years of the Space Age, more than 70 years ago when television was the upstart medium roiling the Hollywood studio establishment. Abrego, a veteran reality show producer who has led the academy for the last year, and McIntyre are scheduled to meet with California Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla, recently elected Rep. Laura Friedman (D-Glendale) and Texas Democratic Rep. Joaquin Castro . They also plan to visit staff members of Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.), Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) and California Republican Rep. Jay Obernolte. The interview was edited for length and clarity: Media companies, trade groups and unions already lobby in Washington. What is the goal of your trip? McIntyre: We represent all aspects of television. There are issues that affect our members that we can approach in a completely nonpartisan way. AI [is] impacting our members significantly, and they need a voice because they are not being represented right now. We are absolutely focusing on issues that impact all of our members and representing them in a nonpolitical way. Read more: How a kid from El Monte became one of Hollywood's few Latino executives How is the academy approaching AI and the challenges presented by it? Abrego: This industry has long embraced technology. We want to be at the table to figure out how to best bring AI into our industry as a tool that helps us create more content. And we want to be mindful to protect people's individuals rights so they [can] create their art. McIntyre: We absolutely understand AI is a tool and as a tool that's going to be used, and we support its use. We are not going to Washington to try to say if there's any concern about using AI. We want to focus on its ethical use, specifically around copyright and artist protections. We are clearly an academy of storytellers and content creators and we want to make sure that those stories and content are being protected. Read more: Worried about AI? How California lawmakers plan to tackle the technology's risks in 2024 What is your benchmark for success for this trip? Abrego: We want to make an impact so [lawmakers] know the academy can bring added value to their process of writing legislation. We sit in a unique position of hearing from our members — stunt people to visual effects to makeup artists and directors. We're not a union or a production company, but we want to create value for our membership, and we're part of the global economy. Read more: For Hollywood crews, the mantra was 'Survive till '25.' So now what? Is the academy also advocating for measures to try preserve L.A.'s production economy? Abrego: One hundred percent. A majority of our membership resides here in California, and it's crucial that production comes back. This is a massive effort, but one begins on the state level. McIntyre: We've come out strongly in support of the expansion of the tax incentive that Gov. Newsom announced in his budget. We would be open to a conversation about a federal tax incentive to keep productions in the U.S. Productions are not just leaving California, they are leaving the U.S. So anything we can do to incentivize productions to stay domestic would be huge. Sign up for our Wide Shot newsletter to get the latest entertainment business news, analysis and insights. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.


Los Angeles Times
10-02-2025
- Entertainment
- Los Angeles Times
Television Academy to raise AI with lawmakers: ‘We want to focus on its ethical use'
The Television Academy has long existed to celebrate industry excellence, handing out Emmy Awards each fall. But the North Hollywood-based group has been branching out. Dramatic shifts in television platforms, production and technology — including the rapid adoption of artificial intelligence — have spurred the nonprofit organization to boost its role advocating for its diverse membership by taking a deeper look at public policy that affects the industry. Television Academy Chairman Cris Abrego and Chief Executive Maury McIntyre have traveled to Washington this week to meet with lawmakers to discuss potential legislation on AI. The trip marks the academy leadership's first major foray into lobbying. Writers, actors and other artisans are concerned about the use of AI, fearing cost-conscious companies will turn to automated computer programs to wipe out jobs. The 2023 labor strikes stretched for months as the Writers Guild of America and the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists pushed studio chiefs to add artist protections. 'Television is being impacted,' McIntyre said in an interview. The issue comes as the Television Academy is trying to broaden its mission to better serve its nearly 30,000 members, not just the lucky few who take home the trophy of a winged woman lifting an atom. The statuette was designed in the early years of the Space Age, more than 70 years ago when television was the upstart medium roiling the Hollywood studio establishment. Abrego, a veteran reality show producer who has led the academy for the last year, and McIntyre are scheduled to meet with California Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla, recently elected Rep. Laura Friedman (D-Glendale) and Texas Democratic Rep. Joaquin Castro . They also plan to visit staff members of Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.), Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) and California Republican Rep. Jay Obernolte. The interview was edited for length and clarity: Media companies, trade groups and unions already lobby in Washington. What is the goal of your trip? McIntyre: We represent all aspects of television. There are issues that affect our members that we can approach in a completely nonpartisan way. AI [is] impacting our members significantly, and they need a voice because they are not being represented right now. We are absolutely focusing on issues that impact all of our members and representing them in a nonpolitical way. How is the academy approaching AI and the challenges presented by it? Abrego: This industry has long embraced technology. We want to be at the table to figure out how to best bring AI into our industry as a tool that helps us create more content. And we want to be mindful to protect people's individuals rights so they [can] create their art. McIntyre: We absolutely understand AI is a tool and as a tool that's going to be used, and we support its use. We are not going to Washington to try to say if there's any concern about using AI. We want to focus on its ethical use, specifically around copyright and artist protections. We are clearly an academy of storytellers and content creators and we want to make sure that those stories and content are being protected. What is your benchmark for success for this trip? Abrego: We want to make an impact so [lawmakers] know the academy can bring added value to their process of writing legislation. We sit in a unique position of hearing from our members — stunt people to visual effects to makeup artists and directors. We're not a union or a production company, but we want to create value for our membership, and we're part of the global economy. Is the academy also advocating for measures to try preserve L.A.'s production economy? Abrego: One hundred percent. A majority of our membership resides here in California, and it's crucial that production comes back. This is a massive effort, but one begins on the state level. McIntyre: We've come out strongly in support of the expansion of the tax incentive that Gov. Newsom announced in his budget. We would be open to a conversation about a federal tax incentive to keep productions in the U.S. Productions are not just leaving California, they are leaving the U.S. So anything we can do to incentivize productions to stay domestic would be huge.