Naomi Iizuka (born April 22, 1965) is a Japanese-born American playwright. Iizuka's works often have a non-linear storyline and are influenced by her multicultural background.
Early life and education
Naomi Iizuka was born in Tokyo, April 22, 1965. Her mother is an American Latina attorney and her father is a Japanese banker. Iizuka grew up in Japan, Indonesia, the Netherlands and Washington, D.C.
Iizuka was commissioned to write Good Kids, as the first playwright to participate in the Big Ten Theatre Consortium's New Play Initiative, which was established to commission, produce and publicize a series of new plays by female playwrights, each of which will contain several significant roles for college-aged women.[2]
Commissioning
The Encyclopedia of Asian-American Literature cites Iizuka as 'One of the most commissioned playwrights in contemporary American theater.'[3] Iizuka approaches commissioning through prevalent social issues. She says the university is a particularly good pathway to develop her commissioned work because of the resources and diversity they can offer: 'I believe universities are the great untapped resource in American theatre. In terms of material resources: performance spaces, rehearsal rooms, shops and state-of-the-art equipment. Also, in terms of human resources and the communities you find within universities. If we want to develop artist-driven work that's keyed into the artist's process, that's not a one-size-fits-all process, universities can be a big part in solving that puzzle.'[4]
Iizuka was commissioned to write Good Kids by the Big Ten Theatre Consortium. The initiative is meant to support women playwrights and increase the number of roles for women on stage.[4] Iizuka says, 'I wanted to write a play that spoke to issues that were very important to university students right now. Having taught at a number of schools as a guest artist, and now teaching at University of California–San Diego, it seems like the issue of sexual assault—and more importantly, the attitudes and misconceptions that create a climate where sexual assault is prevalent—seemed timely.'[4] As part of the Big Ten initiative, universities are performing Good Kids to tackle the issue of sexual assault on campus. Good Kids is about a drunk high school girl who is raped by a group of football players after a high school party. The play focuses on the rumors and social aftermath. The natural question arises: who is to blame? 'I think the question that the play asks is how can this happen?" Iizuka says. 'If we take it as a starting point that college campuses are not filled with sociopathic predators: What is it that creates a situation where this happens?'[4] Through the process of creating Good Kids, Izuka collaborated with college students and solicited their input toward the issue of sexual assault and how campuses should prevent and respond to this crime. 'It's something that they very much want to talk about, and do something about,' she says. 'There's an enormous energy around the issue of sexual assault and what to do on campus. You don't solve a problem like sexual assault with anything other than a deep shift in attitude, and a deep shift in attitude happens conversation by conversation, in dorm rooms, parties and rehearsal halls.'[4]
Iizuka's background in classical literature inspires her 'fusing of classical styles and forms to modern and contemporary voices.' [3] Evident in her adaptation of HamletHamlet: Blood on the Brain (2006), Johns Hopkins University Press describes her work as reinforcing 'a sense that the play's archetypal quality could be adapted to fit a society lacking resonance with either ancient Scandinavia or Elizabethan London….non-academic spectators could accept that classics illuminate modern society.' [6] Set in Oakland in the 1980s, the play is about a young man who gets out of prison to find his father murdered and his uncle in charge of his mother's house. Through the History of Oakland, California, the play explores the theme of anger and violence in contemporary time, drawing strong parallels to Shakespeare's Hamlet.[7]
Iizuka's Polaroid Stories (1997) is a modern adaptation of the Greek myth of Eurydice and Orpheus. Iizuka collapses classical literature and contemporary everyday life by making Minneapolis street kids the main characters of the play instead of mythical gods.[3] The drug dealers, prostitutes, and homeless tell their stories, some real and some complete lies, which together create some sort of truth about the desolate, urban landscape that they find refuge in. Iizuka's work shows that no matter the time period, there is great power in storytelling.[8]
Iizuka contemplates what is real and what is authentic in her 2001 play 36 Views. The title refers to nineteenth-century Japanese artist Hokusai's Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji. Some of the 36 scenes are set in contemporary America while others are set in Japan several hundred years ago.[9] A New York Times critic notes, 'among Ms. Iizuka's well-demonstrated ideas is that human wishes persistently obscure the truth. All by ourselves we make it tougher to know what's what.' [9] The play is about the unexpected discovery of an 11th-century Japanese pillow book and the struggle to construct reality in the midst of the uncertainty surrounding the book's origin and authenticity. Darius Wheeler and his assistant John Bell come across revelations that conflict with their previous assumptions throughout the play and up to the very end where 'not even the context of the plot is what it seems to be.' [9]
Personal life
She has lived in Iowa and currently lives in Los Angeles, California.
Plays
Good Kids (2014)
The Last Firefly (2011)
Concerning Strange Devices from the Distant West (2010)
^ abcSeiwoong., Oh (2013). Encyclopedia of Asian-American literature (Second ed.). New York: Facts on File. pp. 122–123. ISBN9781438140582. OCLC882543312.
Berson, Misha. "Naomi Iizuka: Raising the Stakes." American Theatre, vol. 15, no. 7, Sept. 1998, pp. 56–57.
Chambers, Jonathan. "'Lost Souls in the Land of Plenty': Naomi Iizuka's Skin." New England Theatre Journal, vol. 13, 2002, pp. 53–75.
Chambers, Jonathan. "Staging the Dispossessed: Naomi Iizuka's Polaroid Stories." Theatre Symposium: A Journal of the Southeastern Theatre Conference, vol. 8, 2000, pp. 34–42.
Chun, Yon Hee. "[Authenticity of Art in Naomi Iizuka's 36 Views]." Journal of Modern British and American Drama, vol. 25, no. 1, Apr. 2012, pp. 55–85.
Iizuka, Naomi. "Iizuka's 36 Views" [interview with Cindy Yoon]. AsiaSociety.org.
Jackson-Schebetta, Lisa. "Worlds of More Than One: Pedagogies of Care and Naomi Iizuka's Good Kids." Theatre Topics, vol. 26, no. 3, Nov. 2016, pp. 295–306.
Miyagawa, Chiori. "Brave, Bold, and Poetic: The New Generation of Asian American Women Playwrights." In Women Playwrights of Diversity: A Bio-Bibliographical Sourcebook. by Janes T. Peterson and Suzanne Bennett. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1997.
Pipino, K. "The Odyssey on Stage: Naomi Iizuka and Derek Walcott." MAIA-Rivista Di Letterature Classiche, vol. 64, no. 3, 01 Sept. 2012, p. 570-574.