Making a Scene

Making a Scene

Hardcover
3.01

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Beschreibung

From Influential And Iconic Star Constance Wu, A Powerful And Poignant Memoir-in-essays Full Of Funny And Intimate Observations That Will Resonate With Readers Everywhere. Growing Up In The Friendly Suburbs Of Richmond, Virginia, Constance Wu Thought That Girls Were Supposed To Be Reserved, Graceful, And Polite. Everyone Around Her Praised Ladylike Behaviour While Seeming To Disapprove Of The Louder, Rougher Girls - The Kind Of Girls Who Made Scenes. And While She Spent Most Of Her Childhood Suppressing Her Bold, Emotional Nature, Constance Found An Early Outlet In Local Community Theatre. The Stage Was The One Place Where Big Feelings Were Okay - Were Good, Even. As She Continued To Reconcile Her Personality With The Expectations Of Daily Life, Acting Became More Than A Hobby. It Was Her Refuge, Her Touchstone, And Eventually Her Vocation. She Went To New York To Study Classical Theatre And Pursue An Acting Career While Waiting Tables, Dating, Despairing, And Embracing City Life. In 2015, She Was Cast In The Ground-breaking Tv Sitcom Fresh Off The Boat, A Touching, Funny Story About An Asian American Family In The '90s. Another Historic Role Followed When She Starred In The Smash Hit Film Crazy Rich Asians, Which Featured An Entirely Asian Cast. These Two Pivotal Moments In Hollywood History Opened Up A New Chapter For Constance, Who Continues To Explore The Complexities Of Asian American Representation. Through Raw, Hilarious, And Relatable Stories, Constance Fearlessly Shares Her Experiences Of Growing Up In Suburban Virginia, Scraping By As A Struggling Actress, Falling In Love Again And Again, Confronting Her Identity And Influence, And Navigating The Pressures And Pleasures Of Existing In Today's World.
Haupt-Genre
N/A
Sub-Genre
N/A
Format
Hardcover
Seitenzahl
336
Preis
19.59 €

Beiträge

1
Alle
3

2.5/5 There are two essays/chapters that were really really good. Especially the later one where Wu talks about her experience on Fresh Off The Boat, the harassment by a producer and the aftermath was so good with a punch or an exclamation point of an ending. I was so ready to end this book. Imagine my surprise when I still got one and a half hours left in the audiobook. The stories that followed were all over the place and it took all of me to finish that. The structure in general was also something I struggled with because there was none? Past, present, a few stories from childhood, then we are at college, then young adulthood and childhood again... I couldn't see the connection of the chapters. The narration of the audiobook by Constance Wu was very good though!

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