Theatre Review: The Chinese Lady

Playwright Lloyd Suh looks back at history to analyze the American perception of Chinese immigration to the US in three different centuries, the 1800s, 1900s, and 2000s. Where are we now in 2025?

Afong Moy (Michelle Krusiec) came to the US to be exhibited in different cities as an exotic element, with the main purpose to advance the commercialization of Chinese goods in America. Since she didn’t speak any English, a Chinese man called Atung (Albert Park) was appointed her interpreter.

Moy’s job was to sit in a room surrounded by Chinese decor and eat with chopsticks, drink tea, walk around the room, and let the public take a closer look at her small feet, a curiosity that soon turned into fetishism. According to a New York Times article dated July 9, 1836, Moy’s feet measured 4 inches and an eighth in length, the same size of an infant. Adults could see the exhibition for 25 cents; children under 10 years, half price.

In Suh’s play, Moy sees her job as an ambassador of China to the US, hoping to bring both countries together in a romantic vision of cultural exchange and mutual understanding. Moy even gets to meet President Andrew Jackson. Despite the apparent good intentions of the parties involved, Suh examines human relationships through Moy’s history and the events that followed her questionable exhibition.

The presence of Chinese nationals and their descendants have been marked by periods of prosperity and instances of violence against their communities. Moy recounts the various acts of persecution that Chinese have endured in the US during the 1800s and 1900s, from Anti-Chinese riots to massacres, and outright discrimination in the form of draconian legislation.

Director Shinshin Yuder Tsai works with his actors to highlight the pain experienced by the Chinese community, but also their healing process and the integration into American society. By connecting the past and the present fluidly, Tsai interprets the play with a sense of urgency. Directing his actors to capture the hopes, yearnings, and disappointments of Moy and Atung, Tsai constructs the play to give voice to a latent desire of belonging, suppressed throughout the years, but always at the core of immigrant communities.

There are hard and soft feelings to learn from the past, but there is also a refreshing dose of comedy to lighten the mood. It’s an enjoyable play that rescues a figure that is not well-known, but who is a symbol of resilience and mystery.

Like Afong Moy in the play, the essence of The Chinese Lady is not just a history lesson. It’s also a projection into the past, the present, and the future; a projection where the main subjects are ourselves. How do we fit in the larger conversation of nativism and immigration?

The Chinese Lady

CHANCE THEATER
Cripe Stage at the Bette Aitken theater arts Center
5522 E La Palma Ave
Anaheim, CA 92807

Opening Night: Saturday, May 24 at 8 p.m.
Performances: May 24 – June 8, 2025
Friday 8 p.m., Saturday 3 p.m. and 8 p.m., Sunday 3 p.m.

Ticketschancetheater.com

Written by Lloyd Suh
Directed by Shinshin Yuder Tsai

Cast: Michelle Krusiec and Albert Park

Creative team includes: Christopher Scott Murillo as Scenic Designer, Grace Kim Costume Designer, Masako Tobaru as Lighting Designer, Bebe Herrera as Stage Manager, Natalia Duong as Dramaturg, Jerry Zou and Nico Pang as Assistant Directors, Shinshin Yuder Tsai as Casting Director, and Fae Crane as Casting Associate.

Executive Producers Gus & Mary Chabre; Sophie & Larry Cripe; Samuel & Tammy Tang. Associate Producer Myrna Hamid. Supporting Producer Bruce Goodrich. 2025 Executive Season producer, Bette & Wylie Aitken, and Associate Season producer, The Family of Mary Kay Fyda-Mar.

‘The Chinese Lady’, Interview with Director Shinshin Yuder Tsai

The Chinese Lady opens up tomorrow Saturday June 24 at Chance Theater in Anaheim, CA. Afong Moy was the first documented Chinese woman in America. With the idea of promoting Chinese goods, Moy was used as an exotic ornament in a campaign tour across the US. She faced stereotypes, racism, and the embarrassment of having some physicians examine her bare feet in public to satisfy people’s curiosity, all in the name of commerce.

Written by Lloyd Suh, The Chinese Lady will be playing May 24 – June 8, 2025 at Chance Theater.

Tickets: chancetheater.com

Below is an interview with Director Shinshin Yuder Tsai, who is also Chance Theater’s Producing Associate:

Q: How did you come across The Chinese Lady?
I first encountered it through the theatre community’s growing excitement about Lloyd Suh’s work. When I read the play, I was immediately struck by its lyricism, its quiet power, and the way it weaves history with poetry. I didn’t just read it—I felt it. It asked questions I didn’t know I was carrying, and it illuminated the experience of being both seen and unseen in ways that felt deeply personal.


Q: Chinese immigration has had its ups and downs in America, from the 1868 Burlingame-Seward Treaty to the Chinese Exclusion Act. How critical is it to present this play in today’s socio-political environment?
It’s absolutely critical. We’re in a time where conversations about immigration, race, and belonging are louder—and more urgent—than ever. The Chinese Lady gives us a chance to revisit the roots of those conversations through the story of someone who lived it first. It reminds us that the past isn’t just behind us—it’s living in our policies, our perceptions, and our people. The play holds up a mirror and gently asks: “What do we see now?”


Q: How did Afong Moy impact America’s perception of Chinese immigration and immigration in general?
Afong Moy was the first documented Chinese woman in America, and she arrived not as an immigrant seeking a new life, but as a kind of living exhibition. Her presence shaped how Americans viewed Chinese people—through a lens of curiosity, exoticism, and, often, misunderstanding. Though she had little control over the narrative, she became part of a cultural story that influenced immigration perceptions for generations. And even in silence, her existence challenged the notion that America was homogenous.


Q: How much do the new generation of Chinese Americans know about Afong Moy?
Honestly, very little—and that’s part of why this play matters so much. She’s not in our textbooks. She’s rarely in our public memory. Yet her story is foundational. Bringing her voice forward feels like reclaiming something that was lost, not just for Chinese Americans, but for anyone who’s ever wondered why certain people get remembered and others don’t.


Q: What do you think went through Afong Moy’s mind as she cruised the ocean coming to America?
I imagine a mix of wonder and fear. Hope, maybe. Excitement, certainly. But also the ache of leaving behind everything familiar—her language, her community, her sense of self. I think she must have been imagining a world of possibilities, not realizing she was about to become more symbol than person in the eyes of others. It’s that emotional contrast—the dream versus the reality—that makes her story so human.


Q: How do you prepare yourself for the job as a director?
I start with curiosity. I read the play again and again—not just for what’s on the page, but for what’s between the lines. I spend time researching the context, listening to music that evokes the world, and thinking deeply about the emotional journey. But mostly, I prepare by listening—to the playwright, to the actors, to the story itself. Directing isn’t about having all the answers—it’s about asking the right questions and creating space for others to bring their truth.


Q: What’s the most exciting part of being a director?
That electric moment when everything clicks—when the actors, design, and text suddenly align and you feel the story breathe. It’s magic. But I also love the surprises along the way: when a performer discovers something new, or a moment deepens in rehearsal. Being a director is like being a sculptor and a midwife at the same time—you shape the vision, but you’re also helping something be born.


Q: You can feel the good vibes at the Chance Theater every single time. How do you guys achieve this amazing environment?
It’s the people. The Chance is full of heart. There’s a genuine spirit of collaboration, kindness, and care here—not just for the work, but for each other. We don’t just make theater; we build community. That sense of joy and purpose finds its way into every rehearsal, every performance, and every lobby conversation. It’s not something we manufacture—it’s something we nurture.