99 Histories
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| 99 Histories | |
|---|---|
Los Angeles promotional poster | |
| Written by | Julia Cho |
| Date premiered | April 23, 2002 |
| Place premiered | Cherry Lane Theatre, New York City |
| Original language | English |
| Subject | Trauma, motherhood, memory and loss |
| Genre | Memory play |
99 Histories is a play by Julia Cho. Originally premiering Off-Broadway at the Cherry Lane Theatre on April 23, 2002. Directed by Maria Mileaf, the production featured Elaina Erika Davis, Joel de la Fuente, Ann Hu, Mia Katigbak, Daniel Pettie, and Mia Tagano.[1]
The play had it's regional premiere at Theater Mu in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Directed by Cecilie D. Keenan, the production featured Maria Cheng, Cindy Koy, Tae-Jung Kwan, Sean Logan, Jeany Park, and Sara Ochs.[2] 99 Histories was a finalist for the 2002 Susan Smith Blackburn Prize,[3] and was subsequently published/licensed by Dramatists Play Service.[4]
- Eunice: A 29-year-old former musical prodigy (cello/violin) who is pregnant, unmarried, and struggling with mental illness and memory gaps.
- Sah-Jin: Eunice's mother, a Korean immigrant who loves her daughter but struggles to understand her, often dealing with her own secrets.
- Joe/Daniel Merritt: Characters often played by the same actor, representing Eunice's ex-boyfriend/child's father and an American missionary from Sah-Jin's past.
- Young Woman/Girl: Characters representing figures from the women's pasts, including memories of Korea and childhood.
- Paul: A young doctor considered a suitable potential mate for Eunice by her mother.
Plot
99 Histories follows Eunice Kim, a Korean-American woman and former cello prodigy her returns to her childhood home in Los Angeles after an unplanned pregnancy. Struggling with a history of mental illness and the collapse of her once-promising music career, Eunice seeks refuge while attempting to repair her strained relationship either her mother, Sah-Jin. As Eunice reconnects with her past, the play unfolds through a nonlinear structure that blends present-day interactions with memories, dreams, and imagined histories. These episodes reveal fragments of her upbringing, including the lingering trauma of her father's violent murder during a robbery attempt at the family's convenience store.
Meanwhile, Sah-Jin, who harbors her own secrets and unresolved traumas, participates in the reconstructing of Eunice's memories, often reshaping or reinterpreting the past. Together, mother and daughter confront painful experiences and cultural dislocations tied to their immigrant identity, as well as the Korean concept of Jeong, an enduring emotional bond that binds them despite conflict. As the boundaries between memory and imagination blur, Eunice is questions of identity and belonging. The play culminates in an open-ended resolution, suggesting the possibility of reconciliations while leaving the futuree of Eunice and Sah-Jin relationship uncertain.
Development
99 Histories had developmental readings and workshops with Center Theatre Group (2001),[5] The Sundance Institute (2001),[6] New York Theatre Workshop (2002),[7] and South Coast Repertory's Pacific Playwrights Festival (2002).[8]
The play was later selected for the Cherry Lane Theatre's Mentor Project, with Tony Award-winning playwright David Henry Hwang serving as Cho's mentor.[9]
Production history
Cherry Lane Theatre
99 Histories had it's World Premiere at the Cherry Lane Theatre, as part of the 2002 Mentor Project, running Off-Broadway from April 2 through May 25. Directed by Maria Mileaf, the production featured Elaina Erika Davis, Joel de la Fuente, Ann Hu, Mia Katigbak, Daniel Pettie, and Mia Tagano. The creative team included Nathan Heverin (sets), Soonwha Choi (costumes), Nicole Pearce (lighting), Matthew T. Lebe (sound), and Faye Armon-Troncoso (props).[10]
Theater Mu
99 Histories had it's regional premiere at Theater Mu in Saint Paul, Minnesota, running from April 9 through 25, 2004. Directed by Cecilie D. Keenan, the production featured Maria Cheng, Cindy Koy, Tae-Jung Kwan, Sean Logan, Jeany Park, and Sara Ochs. The creative team included Rick Paul (sets), Malia Burkhart (costumes), Mike Grogan (lighting), Dixie Treichel (sound), and Roxanne Skarphal (props).[11]