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Cedar Grove OnStage

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Cedar Grove OnStage
Formation2006
TypeTheatre group
PurposeAsian American theatre
Location
  • The LATC
    514 S. Spring St.
    Los Angeles, CA 90013
Notable members
Chris Tashima, Artistic Director
WebsiteCGO on MySpace

Cedar Grove OnStage is an Asian Pacific American theatre arts organization established in 2006, based in Los Angeles, co-founded by playwright Tim Toyama and actor/director Chris Tashima who serves as Artistic Director. It is a division of the entertainment company, Cedar Grove Productions and their focus is to develop, produce and present new and original Asian American theatre works.

Background

Media company

In 1996, the independent media company Cedar Grove Productions was formed to produce the short film, Visas and Virtue (1997). The story focused on Holocaust rescuer Chiune “Sempo” Sugihara and the film won the Academy Award for Live Action Short Film at the 70th Academy Awards.[1] The company takes its name from the literal translation of "Sugihara": sugi (Japanese: ) meaning cedar, and hara (Japanese: ) meaning field or grove.[2]

Theatre

Cedar Grove OnStage formed in 2006 when Cedar Grove Productions was invited to join the "Cultural Roundtable" at THE NEW LATC, a multicultural theatre arts consortium led by the Latino Theatre Company operating out of the Los Angeles Theatre Center facilities in downtown Los Angeles. The Latino Theatre Company formed the Cultural Roundtable to create culturally diverse programming for the City of Los Angeles. Performance groups belonging to the Cultural Roundtable include Cedar Grove OnStage, Culture Clash, Latino Theater Company, Playwrights' Arena, Robey Theatre Company, and American Indian Dance Theatre/Project HOOP.[3]

Production history

Mainstage production

Presentations

  • April 2007 – 18 Mighty Mountain Warriors in Threat Condition: YELLOW at THE NEW LATC
  • May 2008 – Cold Tofu in Edamame Nights at THE NEW LATC
  • November 2008 – Dan Kwong in Its Great 2B American at THE NEW LATC

References

  1. ^ 70th Oscars winners on IndieWire
  2. ^ "The Vision of Virtue". Archived from the original on 2011-05-25. Retrieved 2008-09-23.
  3. ^ "THE NEW LATC cancels series" by Lynne Heffley - 2/26/08 on Los Angeles Times online
  4. ^ Be Like Water Archived 2008-09-14 at the Wayback Machine on EWP site