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Episode: Actor/Comic Jimmy O. Yang Breaks Out Of The Background

Actor/Comic Jimmy O. Yang Breaks Out Of The Background

Author: NPR
Duration: 00:45:42

Episode Shownotes

In his new Hulu comedy series, Interior Chinatown, Jimmy O. Yang plays a waiter who inadvertently becomes central to a crime story. As an Asian American actor, he says he relates to the character's feeling of invisibility. Yang talks with Ann Marie Baldonado about auditioning for Silicon Valley, working alongside

his dad, and feeling like an outsider among other Asians in California. Also, film critic Justin Chang reviews the Indian movie All We Can Imagine as Light.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Summary

In this episode of Fresh Air, actor and comedian Jimmy O. Yang discusses his role in Hulu's Interior Chinatown and how it resonates with his experiences as an Asian American. He reflects on feelings of invisibility in the entertainment industry, shares personal anecdotes about his immigrant background, and explores how societal expectations led him to comedy. Yang emphasizes the importance of authenticity in representation while discussing his familial relationship with his father, who has also ventured into acting, and their shared experiences in the industry.

Go to PodExtra AI's episode page (Actor/Comic Jimmy O. Yang Breaks Out Of The Background) to play and view complete AI-processed content: summary, mindmap, topics, takeaways, transcript, keywords and highlights.

Full Transcript

00:00:00 Speaker_00
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00:00:18 Speaker_05
This is Fresh Air. I'm Tanya Mosley. Today our guest is actor and stand-up comic Jimmy O. Yang. He co-starred in the HBO show Silicon Valley and the film Crazy Rich Asians.

00:00:30 Speaker_05
Now he's the star of the new television show Interior Chinatown, based on the National Book Award-winning novel of the same name. He recently spoke to Fresh Air's Anne-Marie Baldonado.

00:00:42 Speaker_07
What if one of the background characters at the beginning of an episode of a show like Law & Order became the main character? That's the premise of the new show Interior Chinatown. Here's the beginning of the first episode.

00:00:56 Speaker_07
It's the back alley behind a Chinese restaurant. Two workers, played by Ronny Chieng and our guest Jimmy O. Yang, are talking while they're bringing bags of garbage to the dumpster.

00:01:09 Speaker_04
I'm not saying I want someone to die. So what are you saying? Well, I'm saying if someone's already dead, I would like to be the first one to find the body. That's weird, man. Okay, you know how in cop shows, there's usually a cold open? Cold open.

00:01:21 Speaker_04
The first scene before the main title. Right. Okay, so for a couple of minutes, you follow this random character who you've never met, who's not one of the leads. And part of you is thinking, why am I even watching this guy?

00:01:32 Speaker_04
Why are you watching this guy? You're watching because either he's about to get killed, or... Or? You seriously never seen a cop show? How is that even possible? Video games and weed. What was I saying? Somebody's about to find a dead body?

00:01:51 Speaker_04
Yes, that's the rule. The person in the first scene of a procedural is either a victim or a witness. Holy s***!

00:01:57 Speaker_02
Somebody threw away an entire Peking duck with the sauce and everything.

00:02:07 Speaker_04
You're d***, man. I'm the d***. You were the one who was hoping it was a dead person.

00:02:13 Speaker_07
Jimmy O. Yang's character, Willis Wu, then does witness a crime, and that launches him into the center of the story.

00:02:20 Speaker_07
The show takes place in an off-kilter version of Chinatown, both real place and the setting of a TV police procedural called Black and White.

00:02:30 Speaker_07
The show Interior Chinatown, like the book it's based on, is a funny, dramatic, fantastical take on the role Asian-Americans play in pop culture and in real life. And it's a perfect fit for Jimmy O. Yang.

00:02:44 Speaker_07
A lot of his comedy is about what it means to be Asian in America. He was born in Hong Kong. His family immigrated to Los Angeles when Jimmy was 13. He found comedy while still in college and started performing in clubs almost every night.

00:03:00 Speaker_07
His big acting break came in 2014 when he was cast in the HBO comedy Silicon Valley. Roles in the films Crazy Rich Asians and Patriots Day were to follow.

00:03:11 Speaker_07
He has numerous stand-up specials, and he wrote a book called How to American, An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents. Jimmy O. Yang, welcome to Fresh Air.

00:03:21 Speaker_04
Thank you so much, Anne-Marie. First of all, I'm a big fan. And second of all, I think you should introduce me at every single one of my shows from now on.

00:03:29 Speaker_07
OK. I'll be there.

00:03:30 Speaker_04
That was wonderful.

00:03:32 Speaker_07
I want to start by talking about your new show, Interior Chinatown. I read that when you heard about this project, you felt like you had to get the role of Willis. Why did you feel so strongly about this story?

00:03:44 Speaker_04
Well, first of all, when I first got the script, I knew that it was based on a book. I love reading books, but I get distracted very quickly, and I'm like, oh man, now I gotta read the script and the book. That's a lot of pages.

00:03:57 Speaker_04
But then I rifled through a book in like half a day. It was just so engaging, and I really felt like it spoke to me.

00:04:06 Speaker_04
as an Asian American, as an actor, as an artist, and I think just as an outsider, as someone who felt like I was always in the background of my life, and I always have to find a way to sneak in, and I'm like, man.

00:04:22 Speaker_04
It almost sounded like the book was like based on my, you know, climb and struggle in my career. From Willis, you know, being a background guy, which I was. From Willis having a big part, which I was. I was Chinese teenager number two.

00:04:37 Speaker_04
You know, I was person in line. And to Willis becoming the tech guy, which I was on Silicon Valley. So I just really connected to the role. And of course the book and the script were so well written by Charlie Yu. I felt really passionate about it.

00:04:53 Speaker_04
Rarely does a script or something land on my desk where I felt a personal connection with. And from then on, I was like, man, I gotta get this. I gotta do this.

00:05:03 Speaker_07
The book Interior Chinatown was written, like you said, by Charles Yu. He's a writer for TV shows as well as a novelist. And he wrote the book and adapted it for TV.

00:05:14 Speaker_07
Did you talk about his ideas for the book and also the show, like what he was trying to get across? What frustrations he wanted to address?

00:05:23 Speaker_04
For sure. Before meeting him, I actually listened to a lot of his interviews, talks of his book. And the man is very smart and a deep thinker.

00:05:36 Speaker_04
And then when I got the part, I started talking to him more and more of what his ambition is about the show and how the book would adapt to the show. Which is, first of all, very rare for a novelist to be the showrunner.

00:05:51 Speaker_04
But the show actually, I think, goes above and beyond the book. You know, the book has a lot of metaphors and surrealism that the show captures. But at the same time, within the show, it's so grounded in reality.

00:06:09 Speaker_04
with willis's parents you know he has a strained relationship with his father which a lot of us asians know especially uh... different generations who grew up in different countries uh... and him and his mother trying to get over the grief of his brother uh... and of course you know just

00:06:28 Speaker_04
the sheer will and want of someone who's been in the background like Willis Wu, and he wants to do more. He wants to be more and be something else. It's not just an Asian story.

00:06:41 Speaker_07
There are all these ways the show sets up Asian American stereotypes and then subverts them like one example is it's a small example but at one point you know Willis's character isn't able to enter the police station to work on a case and he tries and you just can't get in but then he gets this idea of pretending

00:06:59 Speaker_07
to be a delivery guy and that gets him in so he can start working on the case. And that keeps happening. He becomes all of these background characters, delivery guy, tech guy. And that's just one example.

00:07:11 Speaker_07
But can you talk about how the show plays with stereotypes like that and tries to invert them?

00:07:17 Speaker_04
Yeah, I think first of all, like that scene, it really made me smile when I think about it.

00:07:23 Speaker_04
It's almost like a old school physical comedy scene where Willis, me, I was trying to get into this door in the police precinct and I can't, like a Monty Python or something, like a sketch.

00:07:34 Speaker_04
So it made me laugh and I had a lot of fun doing it, but there's such a deeper meaning on, hey, you don't belong here, you know? And then he had to find a lot of ways to like sneak in, which in a way I kind of felt, like that in my career.

00:07:49 Speaker_04
I didn't go to Juilliard or NYU like a fancy acting school or something like that. I had to do open mics where I pay $5 for five minutes of stage time and then kind of snuck in by doing some commercials.

00:08:02 Speaker_04
Even Silicon Valley, which you mentioned, I snuck in on that. You know, I had a two line part as a tech guy, right? And then I had to be funny and subvert people's expectation in order to get a bigger part.

00:08:16 Speaker_04
And then, you know, in season two, I became a series regular. So in a way, I think that's very true to my own experience. And I think to the Asian American experience, where a lot of times we feel invisible and that invisibility has been internalized.

00:08:32 Speaker_04
That we don't think about it every day, but we just accepted it. And in a way that's even more dangerous.

00:08:39 Speaker_07
Right, it's like accepting that you're only good for the background.

00:08:43 Speaker_04
Yeah, in a way like or we're only good for this job or that job. You know, like the tagline of the show, the poster of the show is me getting kicked out of a window, you know, and which is a fun scene. I'm not gonna give too much away. But

00:08:58 Speaker_04
It's break out of your role. That's the tagline of the show and I thought it really is that. It's breaking out of the role that society expects you of. It's breaking out of a role that your family expects you of. And we all have that, Asian or not.

00:09:12 Speaker_04
My family expected me to be an engineer, a good student, definitely not a comedian and an actor. And society expects me to be the model minority. And then I have to prove to myself that this is possible.

00:09:29 Speaker_07
I read that to get into this character, you bought a beat up Toyota Corolla and drove it around town. Why did you decide to do that and what did you learn?

00:09:39 Speaker_04
Man, that was that was a very interesting experience I'm I wouldn't call myself a method actor, but I do find the process Of doing certain things for the character very interesting, right? So I was like, Willis has never left Chinatown.

00:09:59 Speaker_04
He's lived in an SRO all his life and he's struggled all his life. I've done that, you know, I have drove Uber, I have been a waiter in a restaurant, many things, but that was years ago. So I'm like, let me re-experience some of that, you know.

00:10:11 Speaker_04
And I bought a $1,500 Toyota Corolla on Craigslist. It barely worked. It was like a 1998. And on the paddle shifter, you know how you have like D, R, and like neutral for like reverse and drive? This doesn't have any letters on it.

00:10:28 Speaker_04
So you have to kind of guess what your shifter is. And in order to get into the driver's side, you have to crawl in from the passenger. Just the anxiety and the trouble you have to go through

00:10:40 Speaker_04
to get to work, to get from A to B, was very informative of someone who was struggling. But then, it was interesting. I showed up to work the first day on set. I'm the lead of the show. I'm number one on the call sheet, right?

00:10:53 Speaker_04
I felt pretty proud about that. I worked all my life to get there. And then when I got to the gate at Fox Studios, the gate guard was like, do you have your ID? And then I was like, I gave her my ID and my legal name's a little different.

00:11:07 Speaker_04
So I was like, oh, it's just check under Jimmy. while your name's not on there, pull over to the side, you have two minutes. Call whoever people you hear to see, if not, you gotta turn around. I was like, no, no, no, no, no, I'm the lead of the show.

00:11:20 Speaker_04
She was like, I don't know you, I don't care, just pull over. And I was treated so poorly. That really helped me get into character, you know? Because I kind of forgot about that, you know?

00:11:32 Speaker_04
And that's the struggle that Willis and many, many people has been through. And that will, you know, either crumble you or light a fire under your butt. And I think that's what it did for Willis, and that's what it did for me.

00:11:48 Speaker_07
I want to ask you about your childhood. You were born in Hong Kong, but your parents were from Shanghai. Can you talk about what that was like, what you remember about being a kid before you moved to the U.S.?

00:12:02 Speaker_04
There's so much nuance within Chinese culture. With Shanghainese parents, I grew up speaking Shanghainese to them. I still speak Shanghainese to them, which is a local dialect. In Hong Kong, it's its own place, especially when I was growing up.

00:12:18 Speaker_04
It spoke Cantonese, and Cantonese people love making fun of people speaking Cantonese with an accent, whether it's Shanghainese accent, Mandarin accent, whatever.

00:12:28 Speaker_04
So I grew up even in Hong Kong, like somewhat foreign, because my parents were from Shanghai. Like my dad would show up to school, pick me up, And they'll call him 上海佬, which in Cantonese means, you know, the Shanghai guy.

00:12:41 Speaker_04
You know, they're making fun of him as a foreigner, although he's also Chinese, of course. So there's cultural differences, even when I was born in Hong Kong.

00:12:49 Speaker_04
But I think it helped shape my, I don't know, maybe linguistic skills to have to learn Shanghainese at home, to have to learn Cantonese in school. and to have to learn Mandarin in between when I was watching like Chinese TV shows.

00:13:06 Speaker_04
Maybe that eased my transition when I moved here to America to learn English.

00:13:11 Speaker_07
Now your family, your parents, and you and your older brother, immigrated to the US when you were 13. Your grandparents, I think, and other relatives were already living in the LA area.

00:13:23 Speaker_07
What was it like when you first got there and your grandparents lived in Beverly Hills, which you thought would be way fancy? You thought it would be fancy.

00:13:31 Speaker_04
I think there's many sides of Beverly Hills. They lived in like a apartment in Beverly Hills. That wasn't very fancy at all. It was like one block away from not being Beverly Hills. And eventually my dad actually used that address.

00:13:49 Speaker_04
as a fake address to get me into Beverly Hills High School. So I think, I'm telling you this now, I think the statute of limitation is up. I don't think he'll go to jail.

00:13:56 Speaker_07
They won't revoke your deployment.

00:13:58 Speaker_04
My Beverly Hills certificate? I don't think so. But yeah, it was culture shock, because Hong Kong is a big metropolitan, very vertical city, much like New York. You can walk anywhere, there's life on the streets, there's subways.

00:14:15 Speaker_04
You don't need a car, whereas LA is the opposite. Everything is six lanes wide, everything is concrete, strip malls, you can't walk.

00:14:25 Speaker_07
I think sometimes when immigrants or people of color are growing up, they end up overcompensating, like in order to fit in, they become like uber quote unquote American or try to be extremely mainstream.

00:14:38 Speaker_07
I think that happens with immigrant kids, kids of immigrants. I know it happened with me at points when I was a kid. Did this happen to you like in the interest of belonging or assimilating?

00:14:51 Speaker_04
Absolutely. The one thing that I really loved was hip hop when I first came to this country. It was so foreign to me in a way, but I was like, wow, this is the most American thing ever. And in high school, I really got into hip hop. I got into rap.

00:15:05 Speaker_04
I started making beats. I thought that would make me, instead of the weird foreign kid, into the cool kind of hip hop kid. But of course, it's weird for me to try to rap. But I really dove into that. And then in college, I went to UC San Diego.

00:15:22 Speaker_04
It was a big Asian population, but there's also like a stoner surfer culture. So I remember I was like, I really got into like the stoner culture thinking that was mainstream America college kid that I want to get behind. And even now, I think

00:15:39 Speaker_04
inadvertently like Inadvertently, I can't even talk to it. Sorry English is my fourth language.

00:15:46 Speaker_07
No, we learned that. Yes, you're fourth or fifth.

00:15:50 Speaker_04
Inadvertently, I'm still doing that where I I am the commissioner of my fantasy football league. I watch every single NFL game. I love drinking a Coors Light on the weekend with my buddies or five or six, you know, just to be like really American.

00:16:06 Speaker_04
You know, I love very American things. Like I went to shop for like a Yeti cooler the other day and it made me felt like I fit in, man. Yes.

00:16:15 Speaker_07
What kind of TV and movies did you love as a kid?

00:16:20 Speaker_04
A lot of the American movies, growing up in the 90s, it was a lot of action movies. Jean-Claude Van Damme, Bloodsport. That was the go-to Hong Kong movie, because they shot part of that in Hong Kong. Still one of my favorites.

00:16:32 Speaker_04
And of course, the big movies like Forrest Gump. And my dad was kind of a cinephile, an American cinephile. I remember him watching Shawshank Redemption, and that had a lasting effect on me. But it's also a lot of local films.

00:16:45 Speaker_04
For me, it was the comedy of Stephen Chow, Zhou Xingqi. who later found a lot of international fame with Kung Fu Hustle, Shaolin Soccer. But I grew up watching him, and he had a deadpan kind of delivery, and it's just so, so funny.

00:17:04 Speaker_07
And then when you moved to the US, what kind of stuff were you watching?

00:17:08 Speaker_04
I think on TV, I really gravitated towards comedies at first. The Chappelle Show was a must-watch.

00:17:15 Speaker_04
You know, if you don't watch it Wednesday, you got nothing to talk about in high school on Thursday And I think through Chappelle, I got into stand-up comedy He's still like my favorite

00:17:27 Speaker_07
Now, when you were watching comedy when you were in high school, you didn't think, though, that you wanted to do it yet, did you? Absolutely not.

00:17:36 Speaker_04
I didn't even think that was a possibility. I just thought these are what these funny people do on TV. I will probably just go on to be an engineer, a doctor, something like that. You know, the roles that the society has assigned you. But I've always had

00:17:51 Speaker_04
an inkling, like an artistic drive to me. I remember when I was a kid, I would go to restaurants and with chopstick wrappers or disposable spoons, I would build little art pieces. It sounds really silly now.

00:18:06 Speaker_04
And then my mom would be like, you're messing up the table. Look at how messy your table is compared to everyone else. But then now looking back, I'm like, I'm trying to make something.

00:18:13 Speaker_04
I always want to create something, whether it's with chopstick wrappers or a pen drawing on my arm. And then when I went to college, I studied economics. Well, first I studied mechanical engineering.

00:18:26 Speaker_04
And then I switched to economics, which was much easier. I just wanted to graduate.

00:18:30 Speaker_07
I think your joke is that economics is the easiest major that you could do that's still acceptable for Asian parents.

00:18:37 Speaker_04
Yeah, that was still a piece of Asian parents. Yes, yeah, yeah, that was the joke in my first year, which is true. You know, I couldn't do like, I don't know, archeology. I don't know. I don't know what is like communications.

00:18:48 Speaker_04
I don't think my dad would like that. Economics, at least it sounded real, you know, not to disparage any communication majors out there. So I did economics, but I secretly had a minor in theater and music It never came to fruition.

00:19:02 Speaker_04
I think you need seven classes, but I took like six classes on each of those. And I remember those are the things I got A's at, and those were the things I did the best at, because I was passionate about it.

00:19:13 Speaker_04
And then later on, after I graduated, when I was trying to figure myself out, stand-up was just one of many things that I've tried, and it just spoke to me.

00:19:22 Speaker_04
You can literally create something out of thin air without anyone's permission, and I thought that was very liberating.

00:19:30 Speaker_07
Let's take a short break here, and then we'll talk some more. My guest is the actor and stand-up comic Jimmy O. Yang. His new TV show is Interior Chinatown, based on the award-winning novel of the same name. More after a break.

00:19:45 Speaker_07
I'm Anne-Marie Baldonado, and this is Fresh Air.

00:19:49 Speaker_03
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00:21:44 Speaker_07
This is Fresh Air. I'm Anne-Marie Baldonado, back with actor and stand-up comedian Jimmy O. Yang. He's the star of the new Hulu series, Interior Chinatown, based on the novel of the same name, which was awarded the National Book Award.

00:21:59 Speaker_07
The author of the book, Charles Yu, is a TV writer and adapted the book for the screen. It's about what happens when one of the background characters in a TV procedural becomes the main character.

00:22:10 Speaker_07
Jimmy O. Yang's films include Crazy Rich Asians and Patriot's Day. He co-starred in the critically acclaimed HBO comedy series Silicon Valley.

00:22:20 Speaker_07
He's had numerous stand-up specials and his memoir is called How to American, An Immigrant's Guide to Disappointing Your Parents. I'm gonna ask you about getting into stand-up comedy.

00:22:33 Speaker_07
In your book, you talk about how comedy clubs ended up being like a place where you felt like you belonged and you had community and people were like respectful of your jokes. Like they helped you work on your material and make your jokes better.

00:22:48 Speaker_04
Yeah, even open my comics and we still do that now. It's called giving each other tags. You know, if you have a,

00:22:56 Speaker_04
Tag after the punchline that makes the joke better or switching a couple lines together, you know I listen to my openers sometimes and they'll give me great ideas that I didn't think of and yeah it was just like a sense of community and the thing about stand-up there's no barrier of entry and you don't have to look a certain way, you know, there's no no certain look like a

00:23:18 Speaker_04
Of a stand-up comedian.

00:23:19 Speaker_04
It's it's everyone and almost it's like the weirder you are the more like a stand-up comedian you are so All the angst and insecurity of me not fitting in in this country It kind of got washed away on the stage of stand-up comedy because everybody was on equal footing and

00:23:40 Speaker_04
You know, it's not about who you are, how rich you are, how tall you are, what ethnicity you are, it's just how funny you are.

00:23:50 Speaker_07
When was the first time that your parents saw you do stand-up?

00:23:54 Speaker_04
And what did they say? I don't know. I think I invited my dad out to like when I finally got a showcase at the Laugh Factory. I don't think he came.

00:24:03 Speaker_04
And then it was later, way, way, way later when I was finally doing well and selling tickets in like San Francisco. And then I think my dad came and he loved it. Not just for me, but I was talking about him in my set.

00:24:18 Speaker_04
So like he was getting a lot of attention and people wanted to take pictures of him too. So I think he liked that.

00:24:24 Speaker_07
Well, it's interesting that originally you felt that you were disappointing your parents by becoming a comedian and an actor, but now your dad is an actor. I want to play a clip from one of your stand-up specials.

00:24:40 Speaker_07
It's the special Good Deal from 2020, and you're talking about your dad becoming an actor.

00:24:46 Speaker_04
My dad is also an actor, but he started acting after I did. Because he was like, it's so easy, you can't do it, I can. I'm like that, fine.

00:24:59 Speaker_04
If you think my life's so easy, why don't you go to some open call auditions and you understand how hard it is, how much rejection I face every day at my job. He was like, okay. And he went to all these auditions and he started booking everything.

00:25:14 Speaker_04
It's a true story. He got on this show in China, in mainland China, called Little Daddy, Xiao Ba Ba. Half a billion people watched that show. It's like the Big Bang Theory of China and Richard blew up. And he was like, this isn't easy, I don't know.

00:25:35 Speaker_04
My plane completely backfired. And my aunt in Shanghai, she watched the show, and she would call the house in LA, and she's like, congratulations, Richard. You're such a good actor. Did your son teach you how to act?

00:25:47 Speaker_04
And he's like, no, no, I'm a natural. Oh, that's very good. You and your son, same business, you know? You two are very funny. He's like, no, no, Jimmy is not funny. And I'm like, dad, that's bullshit, okay?

00:26:02 Speaker_04
You got one good role, good for you, I'm happy for you, but you're not a real actor yet. Real actors, we gotta cry, we gotta laugh. Do you even know how to cry in front of a camera? He was like, yes, I just think about how much you suck at ping pong.

00:26:17 Speaker_07
That's a clip from Jimmy O. Yang's stand-up special. So how did it actually happen that he became an actor?

00:26:23 Speaker_04
Exactly that. I think he has always wanted to be an artist. He always wanted to draw, to paint. He was a film buff and things like that. But to him, truly, it was impossible when he was growing up.

00:26:34 Speaker_04
So when he saw me able to do it, he was like, well, let me try it. And apparently there's a lack of older Asian guys in the talent pool. And he started booking a lot of stuff. And he is naturally very good and a very charismatic guy. So he's doing it.

00:26:50 Speaker_04
If you guys need an older Asian dad in your movies, call Richard O. Yang.

00:26:56 Speaker_07
So there's one time where you actually took a role from your father. It was for the show It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia. How did that happen?

00:27:04 Speaker_04
Wow. You're man. You did your research. I forgot about that. I did. We did have the same agent back then and they were looking for like a Chinese scientist that they imagined to be older. I was quite young and I looked quite young also at the time.

00:27:20 Speaker_04
So I think my dad got the audition first and it was a lot of pages. It was a pretty juicy guest star role. And I think he or my agent said, I don't know. I just don't know if he's ready for this. Why don't you try it?

00:27:34 Speaker_04
And then I tried it and I went in and I booked the job. But I was very afraid to call him and be like, hey, dad, sorry. You know, I finally told him he was like, oh, yeah, yeah, no, no, you were great at that. It was good. That was your job.

00:27:46 Speaker_04
So I was like, oh, that's nice.

00:27:49 Speaker_07
And then you did end up getting your dad a job years later when you were in the film Patriots Day.

00:27:58 Speaker_04
Yeah, that's how he got his SAG card. I think with everything I do, especially when it comes to language, Cantonese, Mandarin, I want it to be very authentic. But on Patriots Day, they hired someone to play my dad. It was just a simple FaceTime call.

00:28:13 Speaker_04
And this might sound, you know, weird to you guys, but like, I hope it makes sense. Like, the dad spoke Mandarin with a Cantonese accent. And that, to me, is very unrealistic.

00:28:25 Speaker_04
So I told Peter Berg, the director, I was like, hey, I'm sorry to bring this up, but this is kind of weird. Nobody will notice except Chinese speakers, but it's weird to me. And the story in Patriot's Day was based on real people.

00:28:38 Speaker_04
So it's like, no, no, we got to get this right. We're going to make it authentic. Why don't you sit in a couple auditions with me?" I'm like, okay, I can do that. Or you can just hire my dad, you know, he's great.

00:28:49 Speaker_04
He's acting in a few commercials and things like that. And he speaks perfect Mandarin. And he's like, done, done deal, boom. And then next day, my dad flew to Boston and he played my dad in Patriots Day. And that's how he got his SAG card.

00:29:03 Speaker_07
What is it like working with your dad? Have you also had conversations? I mean, now you're both actors. Do you talk about acting?

00:29:12 Speaker_04
We do and I keep telling him to take acting classes because he's naturally he's got great instincts.

00:29:17 Speaker_04
He's really charismatic But he's like I'm too old to learn whatever but I think there's a fear of him like he doesn't he he's afraid of failure Hmm, you know, so he doesn't want to go take a bunch of acting classes and then fail.

00:29:30 Speaker_04
That means he's not good So he just likes stuff that comes easy to him and he loves to accolade in a way I think he is

00:29:39 Speaker_04
Much more attention-seeking than me and he loves taking selfies and being on you know social media I had to make him put his Instagram on private.

00:29:48 Speaker_04
It was getting too wild But but he loves all that stuff and in a way at first I found it kind of like I'm like man like he's I kind of overstepping into my world that I created for myself, you know and Like, what is this nepo daddy business?

00:30:03 Speaker_04
I don't like it, you know?

00:30:05 Speaker_04
But now I'm like, if this is what's gonna make him happy, truly, if a little bit of fame and recognition makes him really happy, and he gets to be a part of my journey as well, and I get to be a part of his, that's really nice.

00:30:18 Speaker_04
How many people can say they can do that with their father? Like, I did a Toyota commercial with him, and we were out in the woods in Colorado,

00:30:27 Speaker_04
And even just the four-hour car ride there from the airport and stuff like that, we share so many father and son stories that usually we don't get to talk about. So I felt that was really nice. So I'm taking the good with the bad.

00:30:40 Speaker_04
I think everything else, if he wants to take a selfie with my co-stars or whatever, great. Let him do it. Who cares? He's not bothering anyone.

00:30:49 Speaker_04
But I think the father and son bond and that extra connection, you can't recreate that, and I'm grateful for that.

00:30:57 Speaker_07
What a gift you have that you're getting to forge this different kind of relationship with your Asian dad. How many of us would kill for that?

00:31:09 Speaker_04
I know. And I think to go back a little bit to interior Chinatown, there's an unspoken love between family, especially Asian family members. But we don't ever say I love you. Like there's a scene in the pilot you see like

00:31:21 Speaker_04
Willis has such a strained relationship with his father. You can tell there's a deep love, but there's also so much stubbornness and stuff, and the relationship has deteriorated.

00:31:31 Speaker_04
And I think at times in my life, I felt like we don't talk enough, and I can't get myself to talk about the sensitive stuff to my father, but now I feel like because we're doing this, I'm able to have more of an open conversation with him.

00:31:44 Speaker_04
And it's such a blessing that I think a lot of people would have missed that opportunity, you know, and myself included.

00:31:52 Speaker_07
Let's take a short break here and then we'll talk some more. My guest is the actor and stand-up comic Jimmy O. Yang. His new TV show is Interior Chinatown, based on the award-winning novel of the same name. More after a break. This is Fresh Air.

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00:33:07 Speaker_06
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00:33:19 Speaker_07
This is Fresh Air. I'm Anne-Marie Baldonado, back with stand-up comic and actor Jimmy O. Yang. You may know him from Silicon Valley and Crazy Rich Asians or from his stand-up specials.

00:33:31 Speaker_07
Now he stars in the new TV show Interior Chinatown, based on the award-winning novel of the same name. My judge wrote an introduction to your book, your memoir, How to American, and you are friends.

00:33:47 Speaker_07
Of course, he co-created Silicon Valley, which was the show that you co-started and was kind of your big acting break. And in the introduction, he says that when they cast you, he didn't know that you weren't exactly like your character.

00:34:05 Speaker_07
Can you describe your character and how you approached auditioning for that show?

00:34:10 Speaker_04
I think I mean it's a comedy show so so it has to be funny, but I think to me whenever The funniest happens whether it's on stage on the screen. It's when somebody said oh that seems so real You know, it has to be based on authenticity.

00:34:26 Speaker_04
So I just felt like I knew this guy, whether he's an amalgamation based on people I knew myself when I first came to this country or some of my uncles with that very specific Mandarin accent.

00:34:40 Speaker_04
I walked into an audition with like sock sandals and like, you know, really like I think a t-shirt with like chemical bonds on it. I just felt like I knew this guy.

00:34:49 Speaker_04
And then when I got the job and I showed up on set, one of the first discussions me and Mike had, once again, it was about authenticity. I was like, Mike, I want to do a Mandarin accent for this character. I feel like that'll make more sense.

00:35:01 Speaker_04
He should be from mainland China instead of Hong Kong. And he was like, I don't know the difference. Just do it both ways, and then we'll figure it out. And that's how I kind of landed in body of that character was

00:35:16 Speaker_04
based on my own observations of myself being an immigrant and also people that I've seen and I've been around, whether in Hong Kong or in China.

00:35:29 Speaker_07
I think when the show was just starting, there may have been some criticism that they got a lot of jokes out of your character having this fresh off the boatness. But I think that changed after your character developed over the course of the show.

00:35:42 Speaker_07
Can you talk about how it felt at the beginning and sort of what it became?

00:35:46 Speaker_04
In the beginning, I was just trying to get a job. Like I said, there's not a lot of jobs going around. And then, yeah, I did see some writers write about it. And a lot of it was Asian-American writers. And I don't know, it didn't feel good, right?

00:36:04 Speaker_04
But at the same time, I'm like, well, what am I supposed to do? You just want me to not work, I can just quit, and then you wouldn't even have me at all.

00:36:12 Speaker_04
But I remember approaching the role always from authenticity, from a realness, and not just making a caricature, but making a real human out of this person. And then as the season transformed,

00:36:27 Speaker_04
And and grew and his character grew he went from just being the foreign guy to being kind of Like the one that always got under this guy TJ Miller's character skin Who was such a bully, you know, so he's like the anti bully and then he himself becomes the bully which is I thought it was pretty cool and and it's it's not about the accent necessarily it was about

00:36:56 Speaker_04
him being more and more three-dimensional of a character.

00:37:02 Speaker_07
In your book, you write sort of about this topic that you've talked to Asian American actors who won't even audition for a role if it has an Asian accent because they think that it reinforces the stereotype of Asians being like a constant foreigner.

00:37:17 Speaker_07
But you disagree. Can you talk about what you mean?

00:37:21 Speaker_04
Yeah, I think I have a slightly different perspective than people that are born here in America because I get it It's very unfair to have that constant foreigner stereotype and it is something that we internalize But I live in a weird in-between where I was actually a foreigner.

00:37:38 Speaker_04
So how can I you know lie to myself and be like No, this person's lame because he was foreign. I was foreign, man, you know? And I remember when I first came to the country,

00:37:55 Speaker_04
Sure, I kind of expected, you know, white people, black people, Latinos, to kind of not accept me, you know, in a way.

00:38:02 Speaker_04
But it was kind of sad that, you know, even Koreans and Chinese people who were born here, ABCs, American-born Chinese, like, they didn't accept me because they didn't want to be associated with me because I made them look foreign too, because I was actually foreign.

00:38:20 Speaker_04
So that felt kind of sad. So in a way, I always have a soft spot. for immigrant foreign characters and outsiders, especially even an outsider within Asians. And I think it's a weird policy to say, oh, I don't play anybody with an accent.

00:38:40 Speaker_04
Now, okay, at this point in my career, I could choose to do certain things, not do certain things. based on artistically do I feel passionate about this or not.

00:38:51 Speaker_04
But any day of the week, if say the Danny Mann character from Patriot State come to my desk, I would love to do it. You know, the guy was awesome and he's amazing and he just happened to be an immigrant that had a thick accent.

00:39:05 Speaker_04
And I think doing those kind of roles are just as important, if not more at times.

00:39:11 Speaker_07
In the first episode of Interior Chinatown, there's a fight scene, a huge fight scene. And, you know, the trope of, you know, kung fu guy, that kind of character that Asians play in pop culture, that's also part of the show.

00:39:26 Speaker_07
But what was it like training to do those fight scenes, to be an action hero?

00:39:32 Speaker_04
It was interesting, because in the book and also in the script of the pilot, Willis is supposed to have trained in Kung Fu all his life, but he's not supposed to be very good. So how do you play that?

00:39:45 Speaker_04
I wasn't sure if the producer was gonna have me train in Kung Fu, but I'm like, guys, in order for me to look bad in Kung Fu, I have to be pretty good to at least understand the language of Kung Fu. It's like learning a new language, in a way, right?

00:39:58 Speaker_04
I've never done martial arts. in my life. So I had a trainer, Danny Ma, he was awesome. And I trained with him two, three times a week in Wing Chun, hitting the dummy, doing the basics, so at least I can look right in the form.

00:40:15 Speaker_04
And also martial arts is a language, it's a culture in itself. You want to get in that mentality. It's like driving the Toyota Corolla. I want to get into Willis's mentality, somebody who has trained in martial arts all his life.

00:40:27 Speaker_04
And then, I can still not be very good when it comes to the fight, you know? So that was how I was able to make it real.

00:40:35 Speaker_04
But it was also very interesting, growing up in Hong Kong, Kung Fu was so prevalent and such a thing that you see on TV and in real life, and of course being Asian American.

00:40:46 Speaker_04
You know, people almost expect you to know how to do Kung Fu and I don't know how to do any of it. So this kind of filled up a big void in my life and in my culture. Now, at least I can say I can hit a wooden dummy Wing Chun style and I'm pretty OK.

00:41:01 Speaker_04
Finally, finally, you know in middle school kids who used to like make fun of me when I first came to the country and they like Like, you know bully me and like talk trash whatever but I was I that's how I learned to defend myself a comedy I would talk back but one time this kid got to me and I don't know what what like got into me, right and

00:41:22 Speaker_04
I just full on did turn around, did a roundhouse kick to his stomach, jumped up, karate chopped him in the back of the neck. And this was me with no martial arts training and 13 years old. And I just watched enough martial arts films growing up.

00:41:35 Speaker_04
And then all his friends got so freaked out. And they're like, yo, don't mess with him. That's Bruce Lee, man. And I was like, hey, you know, if that's a stereotype, and that's a stereotype that's gonna save me from getting bullied, I'll take it.

00:41:48 Speaker_04
I will be Bruce Lee for you.

00:41:50 Speaker_07
Jimmy O. Yang, congrats on the TV show and thanks for joining us.

00:41:54 Speaker_04
Thank you so much. It's been a pleasure.

00:41:57 Speaker_05
Jimmy O. Yang, speaking with Fresh Air's Anne-Marie Baldonado. His new TV series, Interior Chinatown, premieres tomorrow on Hulu. Coming up, film critic Justin Chang reviews All We Imagine is Light. This is Fresh Air.

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00:43:19 Speaker_05
This is fresh air. Earlier this year, All We Imagine Is Light became the first Indian movie in three decades to compete at the Cannes Film Festival, where it won the grand prize.

00:43:31 Speaker_05
Our film critic Justin Chang says, it's a luminous and affecting story about the friendship between two Mumbai-based women. Here's Justin's review of All We Imagine Is Light.

00:43:43 Speaker_02
The gorgeously enveloping new drama, All We Imagine Is Light, opens on a warm, muggy evening in Mumbai.

00:43:51 Speaker_02
You feel immediately transported, caught up in the bustle and flow as young men stack crates on the sidewalk, older women sell food in open-air markets, and commuter trains rattle their way across a glimmering cityscape.

00:44:06 Speaker_02
Over this scene, we hear the voices of unidentified locals talking about how invigorating, but also how draining, life in the city can be.

00:44:16 Speaker_02
It can be especially overwhelming for the many who moved here from distant villages, leaving their families behind.

00:44:23 Speaker_02
The writer and director Payal Kapadia, who was born in Mumbai herself, made her first feature a few years ago with A Night of Knowing Nothing, a documentary that blended fiction and non-fiction elements.

00:44:38 Speaker_02
In a way, All We Imagine is Light, her first dramatic feature, also blurs the boundaries. Some of the stories we hear in that opening sequence were drawn from interviews with actual Mumbai residents.

00:44:51 Speaker_02
And Kapadia introduces us to her two leads so deftly and casually that it takes us a while to even realize that they are, in fact, the leads. One of them is a woman named Prabha, who works as a head nurse at a hospital.

00:45:06 Speaker_02
The other is a younger nurse at the hospital named Anu. Prabha and Anu are roommates and about as different as can be. Anu, played by Divya Prabha, is flirty, fun-loving, and a little impetuous.

00:45:21 Speaker_02
Prabha, played by Kani Kusruti, is quieter and more responsible. She's the one who does most of the cooking, and reluctantly agrees to cover the rent when Anu comes up short.

00:45:34 Speaker_02
Even so, there's a real sisterly warmth to Anu and Prabha's relationship, and the more they get to know each other, the more their similarities, as well as their differences, come into focus.

00:45:46 Speaker_02
Both Prabha and Anu came to Mumbai from the southern state of Kerala, and while they rarely see their families back home, both are still governed by strict expectations, especially of their romantic lives.

00:46:00 Speaker_02
Anu is dating a young man named Shiaz, and because he's Muslim and she isn't, she must keep their relationship a secret. Prabha, meanwhile, has a husband who moved to Germany some time ago for work.

00:46:13 Speaker_02
She's barely heard from him since, and fears that their marriage, which was arranged by their parents, is long over. All We Imagine Is Light, in other words, is about a lot of things.

00:46:26 Speaker_02
It's about the distances people travel to make ends meet, the difficulty of calling anywhere your home, and the way a populous city can feel like the loneliest place in the world.

00:46:37 Speaker_02
It's about how Mumbai looks and feels during the monsoon season, when the rain turns the city into a warm, shimmery blur.

00:46:45 Speaker_02
Crucially, too, it's about solidarity between women, as they extend to each other the empathy and understanding that society denies them.

00:46:54 Speaker_02
At a key turning point, Prabha and Anu support an older hospital colleague, Parvati, who's being forced out of her long-time apartment by greedy developers. Gender inequality is at least partly to blame.

00:47:09 Speaker_02
Parvati was widowed not long ago, and any property rights she has seem to have died along with her husband. Parvati decides to move back to her coastal home village, and Prabha and Anu come along to help.

00:47:24 Speaker_02
The effect on all we imagine as light is startling. It's a shock to suddenly find ourselves on a sunny beach, far from rainy, crowded Mumbai.

00:47:34 Speaker_02
It's enough to make Prabha and Anu wonder, do they belong in the rural villages where they grew up or in the city that has adopted them? And what does home even mean if they can't be with the men they love?

00:47:48 Speaker_02
Kapadia is too emotionally honest a storyteller to supply concrete answers to these questions. Instead, her filmmaking becomes ever more sensual, harrowing, and dreamlike as it ushers these women to a beautiful moment of recognition,

00:48:04 Speaker_02
of how much they care for and need each other. Society has placed no shortage of obstacles in their way, but friendship in this wonderful movie can be its own powerful act of resistance.

00:48:19 Speaker_05
Justin Chang is a film critic at The New Yorker. He reviewed All We Imagine is Light. Next time on Fresh Air, Selena Gomez joins me to talk about her role in the musical melodrama Amelia Perez.

00:48:35 Speaker_05
In it, she plays the wife of a brutal Mexican drug cartel leader who desires to live another life.

00:48:41 Speaker_05
Selena and I also talk about her musical career and her relationship with her co-stars Martin Short and Steve Martin in the Hulu series Only Murders in the Building. I hope you can join us.

00:48:56 Speaker_05
To keep up with what's on the show and get highlights of our interviews, follow us on Instagram at NPR Fresh Air. Fresh Air's executive producer is Danny Miller. Our senior producer today is Teresa Madden. Our technical director is Audrey Bentham.

00:49:11 Speaker_05
Our engineer is Adam Staniszewski. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Anne-Marie Baldonado, Sam Brigger, Lauren Krenzel, Monique Nazareth, Thea Chaloner, Susan Ngcundi, and Anna Baumann.

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