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Judy Lei

Follow the Yellow Brick Road

  • FILM
    • The World's Greatest
    • Forever Maybe
  • SOLO SHOW
    • The World's Greatest
    • 28: Still Fucked Up
  • Blog
  • Gallery
  • Testimonials
  • Tickets
  • About
  • Resumé
  • Contact

Endings

Why hello there, welcome. There’s so much I wanna say, but I only have three words to sum up what’s been going on in the world for the past four months: what. the. fuckkkkkk. If I was standing on top of a mountain, that is exactly what I’ll be screaming; but alas, I’m at home, sitting on a couch I held off on buying for four months after we moved in … and right before the Coronavirus hit. If I would’ve waited another month to buy it, I’ll still probably be sitting on patio chairs inside my living room. That’s where life was … or maybe still is.

So what’s been going on since last October? I made a film. Well, sort of. We weren’t done shooting and was supposed to shoot more scenes at the end of April, but guess what else happened? Coronavirus. Okay, I’ll stop talking about the ‘Rona, since people read enough about it on the daily—or if you’ve been avoiding the news altogether, I am giving you a virtual hug, because, no physical contact is allowed.

A lot, a lot has happened since last October. The cast was finalized and the shooting team was assembled in November, and we started shooting in December. Even before shooting, it was a lot of work. A LOT OF WORK. (Okay, please take a shot for every time I said/say a lot. You’re welcome). A few people joined the crew, dropped out, a few other people joined, and then dropped out. It was a lot of work trying to assemble the team just to shoot the film. I was under a tremendous amount of pressure since the cast has already been set—I reminded myself that they’re flying in on x-date(s), so you better get your shit together. The clock was ticking. At the very last minute, one person said yes, and another said yes, and another one, and bam, we got a team. That was the most amount of stress I’ve experienced, and we didn’t even begin shooting yet. Ha!

That was the psychological hiccup before we filmed. In terms of physical, I spent Thanksgiving week swinging by B&H and Adorama for their Black Friday deals. I had a set list of things to buy, because renting the equipment would’ve been maybe $200 cheaper than buying the gear itself… so why not own the equipment, because who knows, someday I might make another film, right? So I bought lights, lighting equipment, gels, bouncers, hard drives, and a case to carry it all. It was $$$$$.

Now the fun part begins. I lugged around 30+lbs of equipment from B&H to Adorama just to save money on cab fare. I had to save every penny for the shoot itself—can’t be wasting money like that. It’s only about a mile walk, and cabbing would’ve taken about the same amount of time, right? I was dead wrong. I struggled hard and had to stop every two blocks just to catch my breath. It was cold too. By the time I walked into Adorama, I was in tears. Nobody knew what was going on, but the security guard asked the manager to let me put stuff behind the counter, so that I can pick up some used equipment I purchased online. The manager, a kind Jewish man, told me about a water cooler on the other side of the wall/entrance. I quickly walked over like a thirsty puppy to drink two cups before I walked to the pick-up area. After I was done picking up/paying, I walked back to the front to pick up the stuff I bought at B&H. The manager said he already taped a handle on one of the boxes I was carrying to make it easier for me to carry. He then offered me a piece of strawberry candy and asked me why I looked so disheveled. I started crying again. He asked what I’m going to do next, and I told him I’ll most likely call a car home because it’s too much. “It’s a lot,” I said, trying to contain my tears. He didn’t press further and helped carry bags of stuff I bought from B&H out the door. Mind you, he’s a manager at Adorama. He didn’t go back into the shop until he saw me click confirm on an Uber. It was evening, primetime, meaning very expensive, so I tried to book a “shared” ride to save money, and pretty much every car I booked canceled on me—most likely because of where I’m going to, deep-ass Brooklyn. I finally bit the dust and booked an Uber X, and that guy, that Uber X guy, did not cancel on me because the ride costed ~$68… it was a lot of money. Sigh.

I think I lost 5lbs, just from that trip alone. Now imagine loading this kind of stuff for half the shoot. I was ripped, finally skinny, and to my disbelief, looked like a normal, average weight person on-camera. We shot for 11 days (nine days full speed, two days for pick-ups). Everything happened so fast. Wake up at 6AM, wash hair, bring equipment downstairs, throw it into the cab, get to Chinatown, shoot for 9 hours (8 if you leave out meal-time), take the train home, shower, take a few bites of food, figure out call sheet, call actors to rehearse (if needed), then sleep around midnight/1AM, and then wake up again to do it the next day. Sounds exhausting and a lot? Nope. I fuckin’ loved every minute of it. I didn’t want it to end.

After all that work, I am now going through some stuff with post-production that I can’t talk about publicly. It’s a lot. A lot of emotional labor that went into it that probably will never be compensated for. I probably lost five years of my life during post-production because of stress and anxiety. I constantly feel something gnawing at my stomach and it hurts. I think it’s stress. I seriously feel so hopeless. Should I give up on this project? Or should I push onwards? These are the questions I think about everyday during quarantine. There are days where I just want to give up completely (most days), and then there are some days where I think of a great way to save the project (some days). Today, July 22, 2020, is finally one of those days where I channeled this stress into a HIIT work-out. As sweat dripped down my face and chest during cool down, I thought of saving the film by switching it into a a more comedic tone. This thought gave me a new sense of hope, and I honestly have not felt this way for a really, really long time. I am going to work on this thought further and reimagine the whole film. (Btw, Ashley C., if you’re reading this, thanks for your encouragement today. Let’s keep kicking ass in this business).

A lot of things have ended since the start of the pandemic mid-March (not BLM bc folks are still fighting everyday). A lot of businesses I love have since closed, permanently. The Barrow Group Theatre Company and the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre both closed their doors about one-ish, two months into the pandemic. Both were my artistic homes, so it really hit me hard. TBG’s announcement hit me extra hard. They mentioned how they’ll find a new space, but this is uncertain, as times are extra uncertain now. For me, I just can’t imagine not ever walking into 3A again. This made me cry, a lot.

Some things that also ended during this pandemic: my desire to keep working on the film (of which subsided), my addiction to one-cup-a-day-coffee, some relationships I’ve built right before the pandemic, and my uncle’s life. I thought about writing a reflection about each one of these things when it happened, but I chose not to because it takes time to process. I want to think, feel, and make sure I make sense of how each of these affected my growth as a person before writing about it. I’ve learned that life is too short, there will be endings, and it’s best to meet people where they are. It’s okay to let go of a lot of things. That, I think, is my greatest strength.

I’m beginning to see life as it is and I’m learning to love life again—even though it’s been very hard through its ups-and-downs. I don’t know what will happen for the foreseeable future, but I know it will be… a lot.

I hope you’re drunk now, so you’ll forget everything you just read. ;)

tags: life lessons, life, film, dreams
categories: Blog
Wednesday 07.22.20
Posted by Judy Lei
 

Working it Out

This blog thing has become a yearly thing. I am coming to terms with this and not gonna force myself to write. I may or may not write more in the coming year... who knows? I wanted to write earlier this year, but I held back because I never wanna write when I am not completely done reflecting on what happened. I find myself taking a much longer time processing things these days—especially my emotions. So here goes.

Over the past year, a lot has changed. One thing that changed the most was my age. I turned 30. Am I still fucked up? Maybe. Am I working through it? Hell to the fuckin yeah.

They say 30 is the best decade of your life. For me, it started out as the rockiest and hardest time I’ve ever had because this year was the year I decided to take my dreams a giant leap forward—I decided to finally get up on my ass and make that feature film I dreamed of making since I started this journey in 2012.

I got a major kick in the ass when I attended the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival this year—a festival I’ve gone to every year since 2013 (except 2015). I saw three female filmmakers front-and-center in the Opening, Centerpiece, and Closing Night film slots. Can we take and sit with this moment for a little bit? Holy fuck. One filmmaker said it took 15 years (!!!) for her to make the film. Another filmmaker took a script and made it over the summer and her whole village of friends joined her in the Philippines to make it. Damn—that’s the real friendship test. That said filmmaker also said she and her lead actor spent the last LAAPFF telling everyone they saw at the festival that they’re making a film. She said that it forced them to make it.

I sat in the audience in awe and was inspired as fuck. I kept imagining myself making the solo show into a feature film with a team of friends (just like them) and then a year-ish later showing it in front of an audience—I imagined myself as these filmmakers and I thought over and over again: there’s nothing to lose in telling a story you want to tell. It was the last day of the festival and I started telling people that I’m in the process of making a feature film. Last few hours...  on the dance floor, I was telling people this. LOL!  Maybe it was pure excitement, but mostly it was because of some good old gin and tonic. 

I flew back to NYC right after the festival in mid-May and started looking up crowdfunding  options. This shit is feeling real. Then I looked up Kickstarter and the amount of information you need to even launch the campaign. It gave me a headache, so I let it rest for two days. Then I clicked into it again to see what’s up/what I had to do. Then I got to work. I assembled a team: a Director who have seen the show in nyc in 2015 and really wanted to work together, a DP I’ve worked with before, and a few of my close friends as Producers. Boom, easy... so I thought.

If anybody out there reading have done a Kickstarter before, you know how difficult that shit is. It’s not the work that’s daunting, it’s asking everyone you know to support you (especially when you have to hit a certain goal in a short amount of time). I was mind-fucked every single day, and out of 30 days, maybe there was two days I didn’t cry lol... but seriously, I didn’t know how to feel anymore after people I thought would support me, didn’t. My team was like fuck Kickstarter and give up now—this was one week after the Kickstarter launched. Oh yeah I cried during that Skype call. I felt like there were rocks on my shoulders and there were more rocks being thrown my way. I cried and caved during the phone meeting and said maybe we can figure out some other way. Then I spent the rest of the afternoon/evening/night thinking about what Kickstarter symbolized (resilience/persistence) and I was like fuck this shit, we ain’t givin up!!!!!! And then wrote a long ass email letting the team know that we can’t give up! And after a lot of tears, the last day was really scary and a lot of joy because we made it!!!!! A lot of my friends up’d their pledge and we were able to cross the finish line, with a few hours to spare (to those who did, thank you 🙏🏼). It was a crazy, surreal moment. Shirley and Jo was there with me during the countdown, I’ll never forget that (thank you).

Finishing Kickstarter was just the beginning. Setting up the NY State LLC, forming an Operating Agreement, and publishing was the light work (and fuckin expensive). The hardest part was writing. I started re-writing the script based off of the money we raised (no more 15 locations and a gazillion actors). I went through many, many drafts (13 or so). I probably didn’t land a good one until my director left the project in mid-August. Then about a month later, after I decided to direct, the DP left the project. I was left in a bind. But I didn’t cry this time. I cried enough and my whole perspective in life changed. What I learned the most through this whole process is: people will not support you, not believe in you, and leave you, but the only thing you can control is how you react. I was definitely not prepared in the beginning, so I cried a lot, but after so much of it, I told myself that you can only look/move forward. Yes you can, and yes you will. (Ok, why am I crying now on the train... again!) I aged emotionally at least 10 years + my age, will tell you that much.

I am currently in Pre-Production now. It’s been another long process. I cried again during this process— out of sadness, frustration, and now, finally, happiness. Thrilled to announce that Leonard Wu, Curtis Lum, Cindy Wu, Wai Ching Ho, and Joe Auyeung (voice) will be joining the cast. I’m still searching for my mother. The rest of the cast will be announced via our Kickstarter in a week or so. I feel so thankful for all of them for coming on board and I cannot wait to play with them (if you guys are reading this, I love you like a fat kid love cake).

Doing all this work, seeing friends, watching films, and working out has been my way of de-stressing. Amongst those three things, I spend the most time at the gym. I started going to the gym 3x a week regularly since August 19, 2018. Let’s say I didn’t start reeeeeally working out until Thanksgiving of 2018. Since then, I have never felt more in tune with my body. I love HIIT, Yoga, Pilates, and (sometimes) Barre (this shit is painful!!!!!). I also fell in love with lifting weights about four months ago. I don’t even care if I have a six pack, as long as I feel like my life isn’t falling apart, it’s all good.

I’d say one year ago around this time, I had major anxiety issues/depression because of something that happened in 2016. I talked about it during my second solo show 28: Still Fucked Up, and it was a lot emotionally revisiting the events I eventually tell in the show. I think sharing that story definitely helped me cope with it, but what really helped was working out, getting stronger physically and emotionally.

It hasn’t always been easy, and it takes a lot of work to get out of my head. But for now, I’m learning how to look at things differently—in a more positive way. I always give off positive energy to hide from what I’m really going through. I’m slowly learning to work through it so that the emotions of happiness I’m putting out into the world is actually how I’m really feeling inside.

All this is to say, I’m working on it. I’m just getting started and I’m really excited to share what’s to come. <3

tags: film, reflection, acting, solo show
categories: Health, Journey, Acting, Blog
Friday 10.25.19
Posted by Judy Lei
 

CAAMFest 2016

Abe Ferrer from LAAPFF, Haisong and I from AAIFF, and Masashi Niwano from CAAMFest. I love these people. &lt;3

Abe Ferrer from LAAPFF, Haisong and I from AAIFF, and Masashi Niwano from CAAMFest. I love these people. <3

First off, welcome to my new website. It took a lot of time to consider switching from Wordpress to SquareSpace. Alas, I did. It is awesome.

I just got back to NYC from CAAMFest around Monday, March 14~ midnight. Ok, now's the real deal: it's hard for me to admit, but CAAMFest saved me in a lot of ways. Before the trip, I kept thinking back on 2014--the first time I was at CAAMFest--about how in awe I was at their production, at their community, and at their mass of folks who came out to attend the festival. In 2014, I attended the festival with Rémy Martin to work with them to follow through on a sponsorship deal. In 2016, I'm thrilled to say that I'm with the Asian American International Film Festival in NYC. I felt like a little girl squealing on the inside being there because there were so many people who are an important part of the Asian Pacific American community, whether in the arts, politics, or plain ol' community organizing.

Haisong and I in front of the Castro Theatre -- CAAMFest's Opening Night venue.

Haisong and I in front of the Castro Theatre -- CAAMFest's Opening Night venue.

Haisong, the Program Manager for AAIFF, and I saw TYRUS, CAAMFest 2016's Opening Night Presentation. It was such a beautiful and touching film about Tyrus Wong, a painter and all around artist (he worked on Bambi but never got credited). He grew up at a time where not a lot of Asian Americans pursued the arts. He did it anyway because painting was something he loves to do. The crazy thing is: he's more than a hundred years old, and he was alive and there at the theatre! He's definitely an inspiration to all the artists out there because he said "I'm not that talented, but I work hard." Props to that!

CAAMFest'16 schedule

Alright, I think now is a good time for me to make a confession. Aside from attending Opening Night, MASTER OF NONE Panel, Festival Social Club, Filmmakers' Brunch, Digital Media Panel, and FAST&FURIOUS TOKYO DRIFT, I completely wrote down the wrong date for the Programmers Meetup. That meeting was key, in that festival folks from SF, LA, Philly, Boston, and San Diego talked about programming and how we can all work together in whatever capacity. I was such a dweeb in that I wrote down the date as Sunday, March 13 at 2:30-3:30pm, but in actuality, it was on Saturday, March 12. That move was a total fail move. Til this day I feel guilty. Because I had so much to ask and so much to soak in. I guess I'll get notes from one of those guys. 

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One of the highlights of CAAMFest was attending the MASTER OF NONE panel with Kelvin Yu and Alan Yang. I'm a huge fan of the show, so when news got out that the panel went to rush, and that there's no more industry tickets, I was like nooooo. I died a little on the inside. But luckily, I got in. (Thanks, Kelvin!) Just watching the PARENTS episode again and hearing them talk about their journey into acting/writing was pretty inspiring. Kelvin talked about how he held stereotypical roles and then one day realized the leading man can never be him, so he went into writing. Damn, that was real. Alan talked about his childhood, friendship with Aziz Ansari, shows he worked on over the years, and finally taking two years to craft and execute MASTER OF NONE. All their anecdotes remind me: making art and putting it out is a long and hard process / telling great stories = key.
One little crazy thing on this day: I bumped into Dari from Smith! OMG. Small freakin' world. She lives in SF now. She saw a film at CAAMFest and they announced the party at Slate. She came. We screamed cuz we haven't seen each other in such a long time. (Great seeing you Dari <3 :D)

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Aside from CAAMFest, I took time to explore the Mission, the Castro, and revisit Chinatown. I saw Candy and Carmen from Smith, and Sabrina and Paul from UC PPIA. I haven't seen these people in almost two years, and I had a ball catching up with them. Not to mention, we had some great food and conversations. Mainly being almost going into our late twenties, where we're at in our careers right now, and how scary the future may seem.

So in the beginning of this blog post, I said CAAMFest saved me in many ways. I want to take time to write everything out. Before the trip, I had this weight on my shoulders. I don't know what it is, but I was stressed, anxious, and borderline feeling quite empty. What does doing work for Asian CineVision and writing that solo show really mean? I was lost. Really lost. Am I still at the same place I was in 2014? I kept thinking how I'm ever going to make a living doing both of these things I love. How can I explain it to my family and friends, and even if I explain it, will they understand? Everybody around my age, say 26 or 27 or 28, are finally settling into their jobs, traveling the world, or even getting married or at least boo'd up. I feel like I'm trailing so far behind in life. But then CAAMFest reminded me of something: it is the journey that matters. Art is a marathon, not a sprint. Art takes time. Life takes time. Time is now. Live in the present. Take it one day at a time. Ask for help. Stop worrying. Breathe. 

After this trip, I found a new sense of peace within me. The type of peace that allows me to know that everything is going to be okay. Everything, will be okay.

tags: CAAMFest, 2016, Asian American, film, art, cinema, community
categories: Acting, Blog, Community, Home
Saturday 03.19.16
Posted by Judy Lei
 

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