Elizabeth wong ahlers

Elizabeth Wong (author)

Fiction writer and retired official

For the American playwright and screenwriter, see Elizabeth Wong (playwright).

In this Hong Kong name, the surname is Wong (王) Chien. In accordance with Hong Kong custom, the Western-style name is Elizabeth Wong Chien and the Chinese-style name is Wong Chien Chi-lien.

Elizabeth "Libby" Wong Chien Chi-lienCBE ISO JP (Chinese: 黃錢其濂; néeChien) is a former civil servant and politician from Hong Kong, born in Shanghai, China.[1] Wong is an alumna of Diocesan Girls' Junior School and Diocesan Girls' School.[2]: 413  She holds New Zealand citizenship, and is currently residing in Sydney. She is now a popular fiction writer. Her novels in English and Chinese are Rainbow City and its sequel Flower Mountain.[3] Elizabeth's husband is third generation Chinese New Zealanders, Elizabeth settled in Australia some years ago.

Wong served in the Hong Kong Government as the Director of Social Welfare from March 1987 to February 1990, and Secretary for Health an

ELIZABETH WONG'S SHORT PROGRAM BIOGRAPHY AND PLAYSCRIPT LIST
ST. LOUIS - 2017 Taking a break from Kimchee & Chitlins rehearsals.
BEST DIRECTOR NOD FOR HER COMEDY DATING & MATING IN MODERN TIMES
In the men's room, in front of the urinals, with the entire Atlanta cast of DATING AND MATING IN MODERN TIMES. The playwright/director smack in the middle.

Elizabeth Wongholds an MFA from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts.

Her Off-Broadway award-winning playLetters To A Student Revolutionarywas the first play in the country to respond to the Tiananmen Square massacre, was originally produced by Artistic Director Tisa Chang of Pan Asian Repertory Theatre, directed by Ernest Abuba,www.panasianrep.org.

Kimchee & Chitlins, a comedy about race relations in America and media coverage of the Black boycott of Korean-owned stores in Brooklyn, was originally produced by Artistic Director Dennis Zacek at Victory Gardens Theatre in Chicago,www.victorygardens.org.

Her work is archived in the ELIZABETH WONG PAPERS

Elizabeth Wong (playwright)

Elizabeth Wong[1] is a contemporary American playwright, television writer, librettist, theatrical director,[2][3] college professor, social essayist,[4] and a writer of plays for young audiences. Her critically acclaimed plays include China Doll (An Imagined Life of an American Actress) is a fictional tale of the actress, Anna May Wong; and Letters to A Student Revolutionary, a story of two friends during the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. Wong has written for television on All American Girl, starring Margaret Cho. She is a visiting lecturer at the College of Creative Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara, where her papers are archived,[5] an adjunct professor at the University of Southern California, USC School of Theater,[6] and an associate professor at Boston Conservatory at Berklee. She holds a Master of Fine Arts degree from New York University Tisch School of the Arts, Dramatic Writing Program (1991) and a Bachelor of Arts degree in English and Broadcast Journa

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