Cedar Grove Productions

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Cedar Grove Productions
Type Entertainment
Genre Asian Pacific American media and theatre arts
Founded 1996
Founder Tim Toyama, co-founder
Chris Tashima, co-founder
Chris Donahue, co-founder
Headquarters Los Angeles, CA, Flag of the United States United States
Area served Worldwide
Divisions Motion pictures, television, theatre
Website www.cedargroveproductions.com

Cedar Grove Productions is an independent production company based in Los Angeles, CA., specializing in media and theatre arts representing the Asian Pacific American community. Media projects are educational, with Visual Communications (VC) serving as a non-profit fiscal sponsor.[1]

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[edit] Motion Picture Background

Company was founded 1996 by playwright Tim Toyama, actor/director Chris Tashima, producer Chris Donahue and actor/director Tom Donaldson, to bring the story of Holocaust rescuer Chiune “Sempo” Sugihara to the screen by adapting Toyama’s original one-act, Visas and Virtue, as a narrative short film. Visas and Virtue (1997) film won the Academy Award for Live Action Short Film at the 70th Academy Awards. [2] In tribute to that film's subject, the company takes its name from the literal translation of "Sugihara": sugi (Japanese: 杉) meaning cedar, and hara (Japanese: 原) meaning field or grove.[3] Company describes itself as, "... dedicated to developing and producing projects which boldly defy mainstream Hollywood by giving Asian Americans the close-up on screen, or the spotlight on stage."[4]

[edit] Television

In 2006, Cedar Grove Productions received an Emmy nomination from the NATAS San Francisco/Northern California Chapter, for the half-hour PBS television special, Day of Independence,[5] a fact-based story of a young Nisei (second-generation Japanese American) baseball player facing the tragic circumstances surrounding the internment of 110,000 Americans of Japanese Ancestry during World War II. Produced by Lisa Onodera, the program has been officially selected to over sixty film and video festivals across the country, and worldwide, having been shown in Japan, Korea, Indonesia, Chile, Italy and Canada, garnering twenty-five international awards.

[edit] Theatre

In 2006, Cedar Grove OnStage was formed, as a sister company focusing on live theatre. It joined a multicultural consortium called the "Cultural Roundtable" at THE NEW LATC. Cedar Grove OnStage develops, produces and presents new Asian American theatre works, with Cedar Grove Productions co-founders Toyama and Tashima serving as co-Artistic Directors. Productions will be presented at the LATC venues in downtown Los Angeles. Other performance groups belonging to the Cultural Roundtable include the Latino Theater Company, Playwrights' Arena, Robey Theatre Company, Culture Clash, and American Indian Dance Theatre/Project HOOP.[6]

Cedar Grove OnStage is developing Yuri and Malcolm X, by Toyama, about the life of Nisei Japanese American civil rights activist, Yuri Kochiyama, and her friendship with Malcolm X. They developed "Be Like Water," a play written by award-winning performance artist Dan Kwong, which will be produced by East West Players, in association with Cedar Grove OnStage, in September 2008.

[edit] Educational Efforts

In 2000, Cedar Grove Productions organized and presented “The AJA Circle: Artists of Japanese Ancestry,” a day-long seminar where Japanese and Japanese American theatre artists came together to share cultural experiences — of the Japanese American community's history in the U.S. and the artistic community of Asian Americans working in Hollywood. Moderated by playwright/producer Soji Kashiwagi and Tashima, panelists included Nisei playwrights Hiroshi Kashiwagi and Wakako Yamauchi, as well as noted actors George Takei, Tamlyn Tomita, Clyde Kusatsu, Amy Hill, Marcus Toji and Greg Watanabe.

[edit] Community Recognition

Community organizations have recognized Cedar Grove Productions for cultural and artistic contributions. Honors include the Biennium Award from the Japanese American Citizens League,[7] a Community Award given by the Japanese American Service Committee, of Chicago, a Special Recognition Award from the Japanese American Cultural & Community Center, a Visionary Award from East West Players,[8] and a Humanitarian Award received from The “1939” Club, a Holocaust Survivors’ organization.[9]

[edit] References

[edit] External links