The Alliance Theatre is pleased to announce that Kendrick Smith has been chosen as the new Chair of its Board of Directors for a term of two years.  Following a 40-year career as a trial lawyer, Smith retired as a Business Litigation partner at Jones Day at the end of 2020.  An Atlanta native, Smith has served on the Alliance Theatre Board of Directors for eight years and has served on the Executive and Board Engagement Committees.

“Kendrick Smith leads with a steady hand, a litigator’s acuity, and a lifelong love of theatre,” said Managing Director Mike Schleifer. “His enthusiastic embrace of the Alliance Theatre’s mission inspires all of us lucky enough to work alongside him.  We’re honored he chose to serve in this capacity and look forward to this next chapter in the Alliance Theatre’s history.”

In his new role as Board Chair, Smith will lead the theatre through a transformational period, overseeing the opening of the Goizueta Stage for Youth and Families in 2026 and the completion of the Alliance’s Imagine Endowment campaign, which has raised $7.2 million of its $10 million goal in support of access and programming on the new stage. During his tenure, Smith will also support the continued growth of the Alliance’s nationally recognized new work and education programs under the artistic leadership of Tinashe Kajese-Bolden and Christopher Moses.

Smith succeeds Jocelyn Hunter, who served as Chair for three years, guiding the Alliance through the end of the COVID-19 pandemic and spearheading a national search to find the Alliance’s next artistic director after Susan V. Booth left the role in 2022.  That search resulted in the appointment of Kajese-Bolden and Moses as the theatre’s Jennings Hertz Artistic Directors.

“When we faced a leadership transition for the first time in over 20 years, Jocelyn made the immediate and selfless decision to serve an additional year as board chair to steady the ship,” said Jennings Hertz Artistic Directors, Tinashe Kajese-Bolden and Christopher Moses. “When we tentatively reopened to the public after the COVID-19 shutdown, Jocelyn helped craft a business plan that promised sustainability and hope.  When we embarked on our Imagine Campaign to make theatre a birthright for young people in Atlanta, Jocelyn was the first to contribute.  The Alliance will always be indebted to her exemplary leadership and unwavering commitment to this community, and we are grateful to Kendrick for taking the reins during this important moment for the theatre.”

In addition to Smith, the Board of Directors has elected the following members to serve in leadership positions:

  • Allison O’Kelly, Vice Chair – O’Kelly, the Founder and CEO of Corps Team, an executive search and staffing firm, joins the leadership team after serving on the board for five years. O’Kelly has served previously on the Executive, Nominating and Governance, Finance, and Board Engagement Committees.
  • Jennifer Boutte, Secretary – Boutte, Director of Parent Engagement at The Lovett School, has served on the Alliance Board for two years and has served on the Finance and Education Committees.

Jocelyn Hunter as Immediate Past Chair, and Glenn Weiss, Treasurer, complete the leadership team of the Board of Directors.

The Board of Directors also added seven new members.  They are:

  • Dr. Bridget Blake, Project Management Consultant, Principal Engineer, and First Lady of Georgia State University
  • Katie Fahs, Intern, Fellowships, and Volunteer Coordinator at CARE
  • Kristen Burke, Advisor at Egon Zehnder
  • Richard Valladares, Administrative Shareholder & Chair Business Litigation at Greenberg Traurig
  • Traci V. Bransford, Partner, Sports & Entertainment Industry Team Leader at Parker Poe
  • Bruce Cohen, President, Vision Properties, Inc.
  • Lisa Bigazzi Tilt, Founder & CEO at Full Tilt Consulting

Learn more about the Alliance Theatre Board of Directors.

Hahnji Jang – Costume Designer and Cultural Consultant for The Chinese Lady

Hahnji Jang – Costume Designer and Cultural Consultant for The Chinese Lady

 

One of my favorite aspects of costuming is the chance to give depth and meaning to a figure in history we know very little about but is significant to a community. For The Chinese Lady, I was excited to explore who “Afong Moy” could be since we know very little beyond her function of highlighting the use of Chinese merchandise for the Carney Brothers and later as an “act” for the Barnum Circus. Similarly, “Atung” was an even larger mystery to me than Afong Moy whose origin was better recorded in the advertisements for her “show.” After exhausting this documentation of Afong Moy and Atung, I decided to explore the character’s backstories further by questioning their path to this room. 

For Afong, we knew that she was one of many daughters sold by her parents to American merchants to demonstrate the new Chinese fine goods being sold in the USA. My question was always, why her? For a possible backstory I turned to one of my favorite resources, “Making Queer History” (MQH). MQH publishes articles about queer figures and events from around the globe, organizing them by country with the goal of highlighting the queer culture that existed pre-western colonization and continues to exist despite attempts to eradicate it in the pursuit of global capitalization. I read an article about the Golden Orchid Society, a society of women in China who rejected heterosexual arranged marriages in favor of entering into marriages with other women, which their families now had to accept due to the silk industry boom raising a woman’s potential earnings. I was drawn to this fact as the same silk granting independence to these women is the same silk that Afong is in America to demonstrate for the crowds that come to see her. This silk trade ultimately became so popular that today, almost a century later, we are able to use secondhand silk remnants available to create the Afong Moy costume. 
 
 The Golden Orchid Society wasn’t only for same gender marriage but also included women who “married themselves” in ceremonies, referred to as “self-combing women.” A middle part in the hair signified an unmarried status in this period, only to be combed back once married. This rare visible inclusion of the asexual/aromantic community also intrigued me as I wanted to ensure that Afong Moy was not sexualized as an Asian Woman and seemingly instead married to her purpose to expand the American understanding of the Chinese woman beyond stereotypes. 

 

1800s Cigarette Card From the NYPL Picture Collection

1800s Cigarette Card From the NYPL Picture Collection

 

In intensifying the contrast of the moment she is being the most objectified in the play, her costume reflects depictions of Chinese women from western cigarette cards. This look removes her autonomy as it covers her hands and features a large elaborate wig, hair ornaments, and makeup — weighing her down unlike the possibilities a “self-combing” woman could have. As one of our few appearance aspects we can alter by choice, hair is often deeply personal and full of cultural coding options. This carries into Atung’s costume design as well. 

As I researched how Atung could possibly have reached this room, I found historical notes of Yung Wing and other Chinese young men brought back by Christian missionaries to attend universities.  

 

Yung Wing Portrait from Yale University

Yung Wing Portrait from Yale University

 

Naturally I began to imagine Atung as one of these students, strengthening his passable English at an American University. I loved that the renderings available of Yung Wing featured longer hair, possibly hinting at a streak of rebellion (as hair often is holds for queer folks), with further subtle commentary against the traditionally enforced Chinese long braided queue, or maybe it was against Western standards and the missionaries who had cut his hair short. Either way it was one of two main ways I was able to understand and queer code Atung with the other being the symbol of the bitten peach.   

There is also a story in ancient Chinese literature, Han Feizi, centered on the peach – 餘桃啗君 (feeding emperor with the bitten peach). In the Zhou dynasty (771–256 BC), Mizi Xia was famous for his impeccable beauty and was the favourite same-sex courtesan of the state-ruler, Duke Ling of Wei. One day, when they wandered through the garden together, Xia picked a peach and took a small bite. As soon as he realized how particularly sweet the peach was, he handed the remainder of the bitten peach to the Duke. The behaviour could have been seen as a significant disrespect to the royal ruler. However, Ling of Wei took the bitten peach and instead praised Xia’s sincere love. The symbol of the bitten peach (餘桃) is still a coded phrase for romantic relationships between men in China. – Asian Arts and Culture Trust 

Inspired by this story I chose to highlight the bitten peach through a peach shaped pocketwatch. This time piece is a key way Atung interacts with the show and has become his own small subtle way of claiming both his Chinese culture and his queerness in front of the audiences that come to see Afong Moy. 

 

Sources
https://www.makingqueerhistory.com/articles/2016/12/20/the-golden-orchid
https://www.makingqueerhistory.com/articles/2016/12/20/the-bitten-peach-and-the-cut-sleeve
https://www.aact.community/experience/open-call-the-bitten-peach-decolonizing-queer-asians 


Performances of The Chinese Lady will take place on the Hertz Stage, September 18 – October 13, 2024.