Saymoukda Vongsay

Last updated
Saymoukda Vongsay
Born1981
Education University of Minnesota, Morris

Saymoukda Duangphouxay Vongsay is a Minnesota-based Lao American spoken word poet, playwright, and community activist. She was born in 1981 in a refugee camp in Nong Khai, Thailand. [1] [2] In 2020, she received a National Playwright Residency Program grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. [3]

Contents

Education

She received her B.A. in English from the University of Minnesota, Morris. [1] She received a Master in Liberal Studies focused on public policy and arts and cultural leadership from the University of Minnesota. [4] [5]

Poetry and writing

Vongsay's award-winning poem, “When Everything Was Everything,” is taught by language arts educators in the Saint Paul Public Schools’ curriculum. [6] She is the author of No Regrets, a chapbook collection of poetry and haikus published by Baby Rabbit Publishing in 2007. Her writings can be found in the Hmong Women Write Now! Anthology, Poetry City USA Vol. 4, Lao American Speculative Anthology, Lessons For Our Time, and The Asian American Literary Review. [7] Additional work has been published by Altra Magazine, Journal of Southeast Asian American Education and Advancement, St. Paul Almanac, Lao American Magazine, Hmong Today, and Bakka Literary Journal. [8]

In 2010, Vongsay was the recipient of the inaugural Alfred C. Carey Prize in Spoken Word Poetry. [1] She has received scholarships from the Loft Literary Center (MN/prose seminar), the Joyce Foundation/Alliance of Artist Communities (IL/arts administration), the Asian Economic Development Association (MN/advocacy), and the Southeast Asia Resource Action Center (DC/public policy). [4] She has lent her experience in literary arts, programming, and community engagement to organizations such as the Smithsonian Institution (DC), the Southeast Asian Resource and Action Center (DC), Legacies of War (DC), Mines Advisory Group, Lao Assistance Center of Minnesota, the MN Historical Society, Paj Ntaub Voice Literary Journal, and the Traditional Arts and Ethnology Centre in Luang Prabang, Laos. [4]

Vongsay has performed and taught creative writing workshops across the United States and internationally in Italy and Japan. In her decade of experience as a spoken word poet, she has grown tremendously by learning from and having shared the stage with Danny Solis, Laura Piece Kelley, Blitz the Ambassador, Doomtree, Bao Phi, David Mura, Kelly Tsai, Regie Cabico, Yellow Rage, Ed Bok Lee, and Stacey Ann Chin, among others. Other notable readings she has organized include Lao'd and Clear (2004) at the Loft Literary Center and Operation: Gynocracy (2010) [9] at the Black Dog Cafe.

She was a co-chair of the first Lao American Writers Summit in Minnesota in 2010 and actively supports the work of Lao women writers and artists to celebrate heritage, diversity and community development. She has also served as a regular contributor to MPR's weekly podcast The Interpreters. [10]

Theater, art, and film

Vongsay's plays have been presented by Mu Performing Arts, The Unit Collective, Minnesota Fringe Festival, The Playwrights' Center, and the Consortium of Asian American Theater Artists. [7] Vongsay wrote and performed Hmong-Lao Friendship Play / Lao-Hmong Friendship Play with May-Lee Yang in 2015. [7] [11] Vongsay's critically acclaimed play Kung Fu Zombies vs Cannibals was described as "a groundbreaking hip-hop martial arts epic" by Asian American Press and was named “Best Production of 2013” by L’etoile Magazine . [12] [13] Yellowtail Sashimi was part of the 2010 MN Fringe Festival. Vongsay is a 2011 Jerome Foundation/Mu Performing Arts' New Eyes Theater Fellow, has received a grant fellowship from the Minnesota State Arts Board's Folk and Traditional Arts to study traditional Lao storytelling, [7] and is a co-founding member of the Unit Collective of Emerging Playwrights of Color. [8] In 2012, she joined the board of directors for Intermedia Arts and the Asian Pacific Endowment Fund of the St. Paul Foundation. Vongsay was an Advisory Board member of the 2010 MPLS Asian Film Festival, which was presented by The Film Society/Minnesota Film Arts. [14]

She was a featured artist for the Sulu Series in Washington DC, Philadelphia, and New York, a three-city monthly showcase of emerging and established Asian American artists, founded by Taiyo Na.

Community engagement

Vongsay has worked as a programs coordinator and consultant on community-based projects, research analysis, grant writing, program planning and evaluation, and community assessment. [7] She has previously worked with the Anchorage Urban League of Young Professionals, lecturing and performing at local high schools and at the university level to urge voter registration and civic engagement, and she also served as liaison between local government and the Southeast Asian community regarding public policy in Alaska. [15]

Vongsay is Chair of the Twin Cities World Refugee Day festival planning committee, is a COMPAS and East Side Arts Council teaching artist, and serves on the board of directors for Intermedia Arts, Saint Paul Almanac, and Ananya Dance Theatre. [7] Vongsay has been recognized as a 2011 Change Maker by Intermedia Arts and the office of Governor Dayton for her work in the community and her contributions and leadership in the state's Lao arts movement. [6] [7] In 2011 she joined the Council on Asian Pacific Minnesotans as the Cultural Coordinator, where she oversaw funding from the 2008 Legacy Act to benefit Asian Pacific cultural initiatives in the state. [16]

Related Research Articles

Laotian Americans are Americans who trace their ancestry to Laos. Laotian Americans are included in the larger category of Asian Americans. The major immigrant generation were generally refugees who escaped Laos during the warfare and disruption of the 1970s, and entered refugee camps in Thailand across the Mekong River. They emigrated to the United States during the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hmong Americans</span> Americans of Hmong birth or descent

Hmong Americans are Americans of Hmong ancestry. Many Hmong Americans immigrated to the United States as refugees in the late 1970s. Over half of the Hmong population from Laos left the country, or attempted to leave, in 1975, at the culmination of the Laotian Civil War.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ka Vang</span>

Ka Vang is a Hmong-American writer in the United States. Vang was born on a CIA military base, Long Cheng, Laos, at the end of the Vietnam War, and immigrated to the United States in 1980. A fiction writer, poet, playwright, and former journalist, Vang has devoted much of her professional life to capturing Hmong folktales on paper. She is a recipient of the Archibald Bush Artist Fellowship and several other artistic and leadership awards. She is the author of the children's book, Shoua and the Northern Lights Dragon, a finalist for the 23rd Annual Midwest Book Awards in 2012.

Mai Neng Moua is a Hmong-American writer and a founder of the Paj Ntaub Voice, a Hmong literary magazine. She is also the editor of the first anthology of Hmong American writers, Bamboo Among the Oaks.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bryan Thao Worra</span> Laotian American writer

Bryan Thao Worra is a Laotian American writer. His books include On The Other Side Of The Eye, Touching Detonations, Winter Ink, Barrow and The Tuk Tuk Diaries: My Dinner With Cluster Bombs. He is the first Laotian American to receive a Fellowship in Literature from the United States government's National Endowment for the Arts. He received the Asian Pacific Leadership Award from the State Council on Asian Pacific Minnesotans for Leadership in the Arts in 2009. He received the Science Fiction Poetry Association Elgin Award for Book of the Year in 2014. He was selected as a Cultural Olympian representing Laos during the 2012 London Summer Olympics. He is the first Asian American president of the international Science Fiction and Fantasy Poetry Association, and the first Laotian American member of the professional Horror Writers Association.

May Lee-Yang, also known as May Lee, is a Hmong American playwright, poet, prose writer, performance artist and community activist in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States. She was born in Ban Vinai Refugee Camp in Thailand and moved to Minnesota as a child with her family. She is also the executive director of the non-profit organization Hmong Arts Connection.

Dia Cha is a notable Laotian American author and academic who has written books for both children and adults.

Bao Phi is a Vietnamese-American spoken word artist, writer and community activist living in Minnesota. Bao Phi's collection of poems, Sông I Sing, was published in 2011 and, Thousand Star Hotel, was published in 2017 by Coffee House Press. He has written three children’s books published by Capstone Press. First book, A Different Pond received multiple awards, including the Caldecott Award, Charlotte Zolotow Award, the Asian/Pacific American Awards for Literature for best picture book, the Minnesota Book Award for picture books.

Juliana Pegues is an American writer, performer and community activist living in Minnesota.

Sun Yung Shin is a Korean American poet, writer, consultant, and educator living in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Kao Kalia Yang is a Hmong American writer and author of The Latehomecomer: A Hmong Family Memoir from Coffee House Press and The Song Poet from Metropolitan Press. Her work has appeared in the Paj Ntaub Voice Hmong literary journal, "Waterstone~Review," and other publications. She is a contributing writer to On Being's Public Theology Reimagined blog. Additionally, Yang wrote the lyric documentary, The Place Where We Were Born. Yang currently resides in St. Paul, Minnesota.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rick Shiomi</span>

Rick Shiomi is an internationally recognized, award-winning Japanese Canadian playwright, stage director, artistic director and taiko artist, and a major player in the Asian American/Canadian theatre movement. He is best known for his groundbreaking play Yellow Fever, which earned him the Bay Area Theater Circle Critics Award and “Bernie” Award. Over the last couple decades, Shiomi has also become a notable artistic and stage director. He directed the world premiere of the play Caught by Christopher Chen for which he received the Philadelphia Barrymore Award Nomination for Outstanding Direction. He is currently the Co-Artistic Director of Full Circle Theater Company.

Malichansouk “Mali” Kouanchao is a Lao American visual artist, web and interactive designer based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She is the subject of a children’s book Mali Under the Night Sky. Her multidisciplinary works explore the relationship between art, transformation, and communal healing.

The Lao Veterans of America, Inc., describes itself as a non-profit, non-partisan, non-governmental, veterans organization that represents Lao- and Hmong-American veterans who served in the U.S. clandestine war in the Kingdom of Laos during the Vietnam War as well as their refugee families in the United States.

Chanida Phaengdara Potter is a Lao American writer, activist and community development strategist in the Lao American and Southeast Asian diaspora communities. She is well known for her work as the founding editor of the internationally acclaimed online publication, Little Laos on the Prairie where voice and visibility of the Lao diaspora experience are amplified. She is the executive director of The SEAD Project , an organization based in Minnesota and Laos aimed at empowering Southeast Asian diaspora communities by bridging the access gap to community, storytelling, languages, heritages and cross-cultural connections and knowledge-sharing through creative workshops and communication tools. She has worked in the nonprofit field on organizing, public affairs, community development, and human rights advocacy.

Chay Douangphouxay is a Lao-Khmer American artist and activist from Minneapolis. Douangphouxay is a spoken word artist known for covering topics such as race and gender. Through her art, she has sought to redefine the image of Asian-Americans.

Katie Ka Vang is a Hmong American performance artist, poet and playwright. She has created and written several performance pieces and plays. These include wtf, Hmong Bollywood, Meaning of Freedom; Use of Sharpening, Youth In Session, and Myth of Xee.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kaohly Her</span> American politician

Kaohly Her is a Hmong-American politician serving in the Minnesota House of Representatives since 2019. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), Her represents District 64A, which includes parts of Saint Paul in Ramsey County, Minnesota.

References

Notes
  1. 1 2 3 Xu, Wenying (2012). Historical Dictionary of Asian American Literature and Theater. Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. p. 278. ISBN   9780810855779.
  2. "Refugenius". Refugenius. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  3. "Two playwrights receive Mellon grants; Minnesota Book Awards' livestream ceremony". MinnPost. 2020-04-28. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
  4. 1 2 3 "Saymoukda Vongsay : Asian American Studies : U of M". aas.umn.edu. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  5. "Saymoukda Vongsay". Asian Arts Initiative. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
  6. 1 2 "Lao writer joins Intermedia Arts, Asian Pacific Endowment boards - Twin Cities Daily Planet". Twin Cities Daily Planet. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Catalyst Series: Hmong-Lao Friendship Play / Lao-Hmong Friendship Play". Intermedia Arts. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  8. 1 2 "Saymoukda Duangphouxay Vongsay". Intermedia Arts. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  9. "Operation Gynocracy". Asian American Press. 24 July 2010.
  10. Collins, Bob. "Podcasts and a PD for MPR News". NewsCut. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  11. Fornoff, Marcheta. "Art Hounds: Duluth artists and Hmong-Lao friendship". www.mprnews.org. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  12. "Saymoukda Vongsay debuts her first major play | Asian American Press". aapress.com. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  13. "Refugenius". Refugenius: Theater. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  14. "Saymoukda Vongsay". Official website. 1 December 2010.
  15. "SPEAKER BIO – www.laowriters.org". www.laowriters.org. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  16. "Hello world!". Council on Asian Pacific Minnesotans Blog. 10 January 2011.
Sources