Familiar to some TV viewers, Annette Shun Wah is OzAsia Festival's new artistic director.
Camera IconFamiliar to some TV viewers, Annette Shun Wah is OzAsia Festival's new artistic director. Credit: AAP

Festival fostering Asian-Australian acts

Tony MagnussonAAP

When Annette Shun Wah signed up as OzAsia Festival's new artistic director, she was looking forward to the travel opportunities that would ensue from curating the Adelaide Festival Centre's marquee spring event.

"Finally, a job where I had to travel internationally, and to Asia," says the actor, writer, broadcaster and producer by Zoom from her home on Sydney's lower north shore.

"The whole point of the festival is to foster cultural engagement between Australia and Asia, so you have to be able to go there and see what people are thinking, making and talking about."

That was March 2020 and she had three months to lock in that year's program.

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"That was pretty stressful. But then lockdown happened, and it became obvious that I wasn't going to be able to travel."

As the COVID-19 pandemic worsened, the festival team pivoted to digital, reformulating OzAsia 2020 as a fortnight of online talks, panel discussions and performances. Hosted by Shun Wah and live-streamed from Her Majesty's Theatre in Adelaide, OzAsia Talks Live was the opening event for the online series, which attracted more than 170,000 views.

OzAsia Festival 2021 showcases the work of 300 artists across 30 ticketed and free events from October 21 to November 7. The program, released on Tuesday, spans theatre, music, dance, comedy, film, visual art and literature.

There's a comedy special, a Filipino street party, a mini film festival exploring Hong Kong auteur Wong Kar Wai, and - new to OzAsia - a writing and ideas program, In Other Words.

Notable among the festival's 11 world premieres is The Demon, written by award-winning author Michael Mohammed Ahmad (The Boys, The Lebs) and billed as a "neo-noir investigation into the history of white Australia".

"It's set in modern-day Sydney, where a couple of cops are on the trail of a suspected killer," Shun Wah explains.

"She leads them to Burrangong in NSW, site of the anti-Chinese Lambing Flat riots of 1860-61. She thinks there is a demon there who is at the root of the problems we face today and who needs to be appeased."

Melding live theatre with choreography and special effects, the show promises to be tense, immersive and action-packed.

"There's everything from kung-fu and high-wire acts through to drama and great music. It's very provocative and there's humour in it too," Shun Wah says.

Speaking of kung-fu, another world premiere is Action Star, a punchy one-woman show performed by martial arts supremo Maria Tran.

"Maria comes from western Sydney and is the daughter of Vietnamese boat people," Shun Wah says.

"She's also Australia's biggest action star - she's won awards in LA and across Asia - but no one knows who she is in Australia and she struggles to get gigs here."

Indonesian-Australian contemporary artist Jumaadi will share with audiences his quirky and idiosyncratic world view in the global premiere of Perahu-Perahu, a contemporary take on wayang kulit, or Indonesian shadow puppetry.

Meaning 'boats', Perahu-Perahu explores sea travel between Indonesia and Australia over hundreds of years, encompassing themes of trade and migration as well as human trafficking and disease.

Co-directed by Jumaadi and musical director Michael Toisuta, the piece is performed onstage by two shadow makers who have at their disposal 300 hand-cut shapes and two overhead projectors, all to the accompaniment of an ensemble of musicians.

Also onstage, Jumaadi 'conducts' the performance and lends his shadow makers an extra pair of hands when required.

Meanwhile, the way to hearts and minds is through the stomach. That could be the principle underpinning Double Delicious, a theatre piece that sees five "storyteller-cooks" each recount a personal story informed by a cherished dish before sharing said dish with the audience.

"Everyone will be seated at round tables of 10, Covid allowing, because round tables are very popular in Asian cultures," says Shun Wah. "It's about coming together in equal measure and enjoying the food."

"At the end of each story, the dish will appear in front of you, and you complete your experience by eating it."

The much-loved Moon Lantern Parade has been reimagined as a COVID-safe, self-guided Moon Lantern Trail on the opening weekend, running from Thursday, October 21 to Sunday, October 24.

"Moon Lantern has always been at the heart of the festival, but instead of the lanterns coming to us, we go to the lanterns," Shun Wah says.

"There will be storytelling, pop-up performances, workshops, and sound and light installations. You can go at a time that suits you and at your own pace. It will be a more intimate experience."

A fourth-generation Chinese-Australian, Shun Wah was born in Cairns and grew up on a chook farm north of Brisbane.

She rose to prominence on SBS TV in the 1980s and '90s, presenting shows such as The Noise and Eat Carpet.

"I started in radio and I loved radio because of the anonymity, but I came to TV because of a few racist incidents," she recalls.

"I thought, maybe by being an Asian face on TV, doing a reasonably competent job, it might change some people's ideas about what Asian people are."

"But once I ended up on national TV, I found myself becoming the poster child for representation, which I hadn't set out to be."

In 1996 she appeared in Clara Law's feature film Floating Life, about an elderly Chinese couple who leave Hong Kong to go and live with one of their children in Australia.

Since 2013 Shun Wah has been executive producer of Contemporary Asian Australian Performance, the company behind several OzAsia shows including Double Delicious, The Demon and Perahu-Perahu.

Now she is artistic director.

"The company develops and produces its own work, mostly multi-disciplinary, intercultural theatre," Shun Wah says.

"We also build capacity within the Asian-Australian performance community to have sector-wide impact on greater representation and more opportunity and professional development for artists of Asian background."

"It's important that our cultural landscape reflects who we are, and it still doesn't."