Review for TIDE WAITS by Theatre Scenes

“Tide Waits For No Man: Episode Grace is exciting theatre, pushing the boundaries and redefining what Asian, and Aotearoa New Zealand theatre, can be.”

Photos: John Rata

Photos: John Rata

Thanks Theatre Scenes for the review of Tide Waits For No Man, our Fringe show and second season in collaboration with SPOOKY ANTICS. Chronicling the journey of a Chinese Kiwi woman through shadow, movement and puppetry, this non-dialogue show premiered in Wellington at BATS last year and performed to much success in the Auckland Fringe.

“A beautiful and meditative piece of work, the cast compellingly compose and perform a series of striking images to tell Grace’s story.”  

- Rand T. Hazou

Check out the rest of the review here!

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“The play offers a series of meditations on Chinese patriarchal gender constructions in a physical and non-verbal performance that incorporates shadow, puppetry and movement. This performance is part of a wave of Chinese Kiwi theatre sweeping Auckland stages over the last few years generated in part by the impressive talents behind Proudly Asian Theatre (PAT), a company dedicated to producing, empowering and enabling theatre and film by Asian talent in New Zealand.”



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“This confident production elides the primacy of logocentrism and the written word. Instead of words we have images, and instead of challenging white orientalist notions of Chinese femininity, we have a production that interrogates traditional Chinese gender constructions stemming from Tu-Bryant’s own Taiwanese heritage. Instead of focusing on white inscriptions of ‘the other’, the production uses the metaphor of Chinese calligraphy to  interrogate the imprints of cultural traditions and the processes of cultural transmissions that continue to mark subsequent generations.

Tide Waits For No Man: Episode Grace is exciting theatre, pushing the boundaries and redefining what Asian, and Aotearoa New Zealand theatre, can be.”












Tide Waits For No Man - in Auckland and on the radio

Asian women speak up about patriarchy in non-dialogue show

Image: Janna Tay

Image: Janna Tay

” … it’s literally just a big Asian wāhine collaboration, and it’s been so delicious and good.”
Marianne Infante

” … it’s not just a theatre show—it’s non-dialogue, it’s movement and puppetry and shadow puppetry with music throughout the whole thing.”
Chye-Ling Huang

“And I really believe in truth, so when people die, whether or not they live their lives really well or did really bad things, sometimes people can be glorified when they die, and I want the full picture of a human being, not just all their good things.”
Nikita Tu-Bryant


Tide Waits For No Man, PAT’s collar with Spooky Antics, is on at the Auckland Fringe this week. Check out these interviews with the three women who perform in the show, and director Nikita Tu-Bryant!

Image: Janna Tay

Image: Janna Tay

PAT round up - 2018!

Meri Kirihimete everyone! 

Thank you to all our Asian creatives that have performed, participated and shared their time with PAT this year for Fresh Off the Page. There were a whopping 71 creative practitioners involved this year and we are thrilled to have met more talented directors, writers and actors.

We've had our biggest year yet, presenting two original works and one from Singaporean pals The Finger Players 十指帮; Roots by Oliver Chong 🍚(winner of Best Design at Auckland Fringe), Orientation by Chye-Ling Huang 🐍(winner of the Hackman cup for most original play) and Tide Waits For No Man by Nikita 雅涵 Tu-Bryant 🌊, our first Wellington production (coming to Auckland Fringe in Feb).

A massive heart-felt THANK YOU to our supporters and funders - Equity New ZealandAlbert-Eden Local BoardCreative New ZealandUnitec Department of Performing & Screen Arts NZ Film Commissionand the beauties at Basement Theatre

Thank you to our awesome audiences for this year - we look forward to meeting more of you in 2019! 

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Chye-Ling Huang one to watch - Asia Media Centre

New Zealanders with Asian heritage making waves

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Lynda Chanwai Earle summarises Kiwi-Asian’s to watch after the meteoric rise of Crazy Rich Asians in the US, naming PAT co-founder Chye-Ling Huang and PAT chat interviewees Yoson An and Xana Tang as some of them. Read more below or follow the link here!

30 AUGUST 2018

Like a Bollywood classic, Crazy Rich Asians opened across the globe to dizzying anticipation. It became a soaring box office hit in the first week of release.

The film may have generated hype in the US for its impact on Asian-American representation in Hollywood, but reviews ran a little chillier in Singapore, the primary setting for the story, likely because of the prevalence of American-Asian casting.

Crazy Rich Asians is a ground-breaking retelling of the ‘Cinderella/Pride and Prejudice’ story, only with much more product placement. The film turns the tables on racial representation, with non-Asians playing only the most minor roles. Not since 1993’s The Joy Luck Club has there been such an Asian-centric story coming out of Hollywood. 

So what of New Zealand’s treatment of its own prodigious Asian talent? How are high-profile Asian actors faring? According to directors such as Roseanne Liang, the issue of lack of representation on screen is all too familiar, and the reason why talent often heads offshore.

Here are some New Zealanders with Asian heritage who are making waves internationally.

Augusta Xu-Holland

Augusta Xu-Holland was born in Auckland in 1991 to a Chinese father and Pākehā mother. 

Beijing-based Xu-Holland broke into the China-Hollywood film-making industry as a foreign actor working in China. Most recent roles include Catherine Standish in the 2016 film On Wings of Eagles opposite Joseph Fiennes (Eric Liddell) and in The Last Race opposite Zach Ireland, where she found her dual ethnicity an advantage.

She has been cast as Pudding in the upcoming film Meta Area, Chanyang Yin in Special Mission, and Eva Li in Eight Hundred.

Xana Tang

Twenty years after Disney’s animated classic, Xana Tang has been cast as Mulan’s sister in director Niki Caro’s highly anticipated live-action remake.

Tang is a New Zealand-born Chinese-Vietnamese actor. She studied Communications at AUT and speaks fluent Cantonese and Mandarin.

At 16, Tang made waves as Spit in Michael Bennett’s award-winning feature film Matariki. She was the lead in the television comedy Hounds, which won best TV comedy series at the 2012 New Zealand Film and Television Awards.

She’s had notable screen roles in Power RangersThe Almighty Johnsons and Cherry, and a major supporting role in the TV drama Filthy Rich.

Tang was cast in the highly-anticipated Australian comedy series The Letdown, her major Australian screen debut.

Michelle Ang

Michelle Ang is a film and TV actress currently based in New York City. She was born in Christchurch to Malaysian-Chinese parents, and did a double degree in law and chemistry at the Victoria University of Wellington.

Ang first made her name in New Zealand’s teen hit series Tribe and Xena: Warrior Princess. She is known for her work on the long-running Australian TV series Neighbours, where she was nominated for a Logie, and for her role in New Zealand’s Outrageous Fortune.

Ang won Best Actress (Feature) at the 2011 New Zealand Film and Television Awards for My Wedding and Other Secrets directed by Roseanne Liang.

Her international film work has screened across the globe, and she has won awards including those at Berlin and Sundance.

In 2016, Ang was nominated for an Emmy for her work on Fear the Walking Dead: Flight 462.

She has appeared in The Beaver directed by Jodie Foster, Big Momma’s HouseLike Father Like Son, and was the lead in the 2012 MTV scripted series Underemployed by Emmy-nominated writer Craig Wright.

She starred as the mother of Tui in the first season of the mini-television BBC series Top of the Lake directed by Oscar-winner Jane Campion.

Yoson An

China-born Yoson An immigrated to New Zealand at a young age. He worked in theatre, most notably with Proudly Asian Theatre, before breaking into the New Zealand screen industry in 2012 in the short film Death Note, followed by roles in Director Roseanne Liang’s hit webseries Flat3.

His first major feature role was in the local cult classic Ghost Bride, followed by roles in international films The MegMortal Engines, and Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon 2.

Highlights in television include the HBO Asian miniseries Grace, and in 2017 he played the series lead Charlie in the new SBS crime-thriller Dead Lucky, opposite Rachel Griffiths.

It was announced this year that An would play the love interest in the big-budget Hollywood remake of Mulan directed by Nicki Caro.


JJ Fong

JJ Fong’s roles include Alice Lee in the New Zealand television show Go Girls, and Betty in Step Dave. In 2016, Fong was cast in the role of Filipino-New Zealander and cosmetic surgical nurse Ruby Florez on Shortland Street.

Fong co-owns the production company Flat3 with friends Roseanne Liang, Prelina Lau and Ally Xue, and is known for her role as Jessica in the web series Flat3Friday Night Bites and K-Road Stories.

Fong is currently in Hollywood following up roles in film, so watch this space.


Chye-Ling Huang

Chye-Ling Huang is a Chinese-Pākehā director, actor and writer. She co-founded the theatre company Proudly Asian Theatre (PAT) with Filipino-Kiwi actor James Roque in 2013.

Huang has produced and acted in PAT produced Black Tree Bridge and recently won Playmarket’s ‘Asian Ink’ for her ground-breaking new play Orientation, which challenges the desexualisation of Asian men.

Huang also directed Asian Men Talk About Sex, a Loading Docs short documentary which featured Yoson An.

Her play Call of the Sparrows (The Herald Theatre, 2016) was part of the Auckland Diversity Project Fund. Huang will direct Like Sex, by award-winning Chinese-New Zealander Nathan Joe at The Basement this year.

Credits include The Mooncake and The Kumara (Auckland Art’s Festival and tour), Call of The Sparrows (Herald Theatre), Find Me a Māori BrideThe Last Man on Earth is Trapped in a Supermarket (Q Theatre) *

The Asian Actors/Practitioners Hui

In October this year, the New Zealand Film Commission will be holding a hui focused on Asian actors and practitioners in the New Zealand film industry – similar to the event they held 18 months ago for their engagement with Māori communities.

Raymond Suen, the Commission’s Asia Outreach Executive, says the prospect for Asian talent is looking very positive.

“It’s fantastic to have such visible representation [on screen]. It’s important just to have visibility, it shows that the diversity policy is working.”

Suen sees the cultural intelligence quota exponentially rising with Asian-New Zealanders bringing their knowledge to the global film industry.

“They have an existing understanding of Kiwi culture. Having hands-on experience is valuable and often overlooked.”

– Asia Media Centre

Tickets are LIVE for Tide Waits For No Man - Auckland Fringe!

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Tide Waits For No Man comes to the Auckland Fringe Festival this Feb

After a stellar debut season at BATS in Wellington, Nikita Tu-Bryant’s transformative puppetry, physical theatre and shadow play theatre show comes to the Basement this summer in collaboration with SPOOKY ANTICS and Proudly Asian Theatre.

Telling the story of one woman’s quest to reconcile cultural patriarchy in her grandfathers passing, this show is non verbal and is suitable for hearing impaired and non English speakers.

Get your tickets here!

Tide Waits For No Man

Feb 19th - 23rd

Basement Theatre, 6.30pm

Starring and director by Nikita Tu-Bryant,

with Marianne Infante and Chye-Ling Huang

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“Tide Waits for No Man: Episode Grace stands out for its inventive use of different forms of dance and movement, shadow puppets and three-dimensional puppets in combination...it’s a triumph of this production that the different modes are woven together so seamlessly and skilfully." - Theatreview