The East-West Quartet

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The East-West Quartet Page 10

by Ping Chong


  PING:This is a man breathing with another man.

  SHI-ZHENG (In Chinese):This is a man breathing with another man.

  PING:This is a man

  being a brother to another man

  breathing with another man

  sitting with this other man

  eating with this other man

  being with this other man

  one with this other man.

  (The montaged photograph is now clearly shown. It is:)

  PROJECTION: Walter Scott and Wong Kee eating together

  PING: 1908. Walter Scott and Wong Kee tried to have lunch together.

  No one would serve Wong Kee. Walter Scott and Wong Kee sat in the sun instead and ate together.

  PROJECTION: 21

  ALL: 21.

  (Ric and Shi-Zheng begin an abstract movement sequence. Each italicized phrase cues a movement reminiscent of its meaning.)

  PROJECTION: From a Chinese-English Phrasebook of 1875

  PING:He took it from me by violence. (Claws)

  He claimed my gold mine. (Soup)

  He cheated me out of my wages. (Kick step)

  ALETA: Was Coolie High a film about inner-city Chinese youth?

  PING: Can I sleep here tonight? (Peekaboo)

  ALETA: “Take me out to the ball game . . .”

  PING: An unmarried man is called a bachelor. (Woman thinking)

  ALETA: Nigger, kike, chink, wop, gook, spic!

  PING: The United States has many immigrants. (Steps)

  ALETA: And they’re all so happy.

  PING: More Tea? (Teapot)

  ALETA: They are all so pleased. (Please)

  PING: She is a good-for-nothing hussy. (I like him)

  ALETA: I like your shoes. Ferragamo?

  PING: The passage money is fifty dollars from Hong Kong to California. (Alligators)

  ALETA: “On a clear day you can see forever.”

  PING: No one can go to heaven without being a Christian. (Slaps)

  ALETA: Some people say no when they mean yes.

  PING: The Chinese immigration will soon be stopped. (Cloudhands)

  (Michael joins the movement sequence.)

  ALETA: Nancy Kwon, Anna Mae Wong, Joan Chen.

  PING: Can I have some food? (Zombie)

  ALETA: History will be written by the victors.

  PING: He assaulted me without provocation. (Windmill)

  ALETA: “Everybody was kung-fu fighting—huh!”

  PING: More tea, please. (Elbow panhandle)

  ALETA: “Those cats were fast as lightning—huh!”

  PING: He tries to extort money from me. (Crane)

  ALETA: Lung, the dragon smiles its wayward smile.

  PING: The men are striking for wages. (Minister)

  (Ric leaves the movement sequence. Michael and Shi-Zheng continue to move.)

  ALETA: The Vincent Chin murder case united the Chinese community in ways never seen before.

  PING: He was choked to death with a lasso by a robber. (Birds in hand)

  ALETA: Is there any gunpowder tea left?

  PING: I said, is there any gunpowder tea left?

  (Sound of multiple cannonball explosions.)

  PROJECTION: 22

  PING: 22.

  PROJECTION: Mrs. Chin

  ALETA:My husband serves in the American army

  we were happy to come to America

  my father say America hard

  my husband say America good

  and I think so, too.

  And lots of Chinese

  lots of Chinese

  my husband say all American good

  he get job in a factory

  we go to baseball game

  very American

  but they kick and curse at us.

  I ask my husband

  why they do this?

  Why they do this?

  (Sound of baseball being hit. A crowd roars.)

  RIC: I tell you folks, the Detroit Tigers are on a roll! Last night they pulverized the New York Yankees in a 12 to 0 victory. Johnson bashed out two homeruns that probably ended up somewhere in China!!! And you know what they say—if you dig a hole deep enough, you come out on the other side in China!!!

  CAST: Chow chow chow . . .

  PROJECTION: Photo of Ping’s fifth grade class

  (During Ping’s speech, the projection closes in on an Italian girl, the only one among the many Asian faces.)

  PING: New York City. 1957.

  I am in the fifth grade at P.S. 23 at the corner of Mulberry and Bayard Streets on the border of Chinatown and Little Italy. One day our teacher introduces a new student to our class. All twenty-three Chinese faces look up with jaws dropped to see a Sicilian country girl, her head dripping with sausage curls, dressed in an old-fashioned cotton print dress with white lace frills. Her name is Philomena—she is a vision from another planet. She can’t speak a word of English. We torment her for the rest of the year.

  ALETA: Whose history is this anyway?

  PROJECTION: 23

  PROJECTION: Accessories for Smoking Opium

  ALL: 23.

  (Music for the “Opium” song starts.)

  SHI-ZHENG AND MICHAELRIC AND ALETA

  (Singing): (Translating):

  Yen Tsiang Pipe or gong

  Ow The bowl

  Yen Hock Dripping needle

  Yen Hop The box

  Yen Dong The lamp

  Kiao Tsien Scissors for cutting

  Sui Dow Sponge for cleaning

  Dao The knife

  Yen Tar Har The table

  Yen Shee Hop Box for ashes

  Yen Shee The ashes

  Gee Yen The residue

  Yen Shee Gon The scraper

  Yee You

  Shee And

  Kwoi. Me.

  RIC (Mimes smoking an opium pipe):A friend took me there.

  Sixty Annamite boys lay smoking

  on two tiers of planks

  rows of lamps

  one boy was gripped in the heat of a convulsive nightmare.

  The smokers were as inert as vegetables

  You know . . . isn’t it kinda funny . . . you know . . .

  it’s the only vegetable substance

  that, you know . . . produces a vegetable-like state in the

  user, you know . . .

  A person under the influence

  does not talk . . . does not sing . . . does not laugh . . .

  does not quarrel . . .

  and is not prone to . . . what do they call it?

  . . . um . . . maudlin fellowship, you know . . .

  There is no sexual arousal.

  None, whatsoever.

  It is a passive experience.

  You feel no need to create masterpieces . . . you become

  one...

  The bliss of misery.

  Communication is useless . . . you know . . .

  It’d be like saying to paper Shakespeare soils

  or quenching the tears of silence broken by Bach.

  . . . something like that . . .

  I was able to cure myself in 1929. A necessary hell

  Je suis Jean Cocteau . . .

  (Sound of multiple cannonball explosions.)

  PROJECTION: 24

  PING: 24.

  West meets West.

  Macartney briefs his staff.

  Scene 8.

  MICHAEL: Lord George Macartney.

  ALETA: Ambassador Extraordinaire to the Celestial Empire of China . . .

  RIC: Former Governor General of British West Indies,

  SHI-ZHENG: former Governor General of all India,

  MICHAEL: Knight of . . .

  ALETA: Etcetera,

  SHI-ZHENG: etcetera,

  PING: etcetera . . .

  RIC: My lords—just a couple of reminders here okay . . . Our objectives on this urgent mission are as follows—

  MICHAEL: Open new ports for British trade in China.

  ALETA: Obtain the cession of a pi
ece of territory

  RIC: or an island,

  MICHAEL: as close as possible to the area of tea and silk production,

  ALETA: where British merchants can reside year-round,

  SHI-ZHENG: make lots and lots of money

  RIC: and in which British jurisdiction is exercised.

  PING: That means: if you crack open a Chinaman’s head, don’t worry about it.

  MICHAEL: Create new markets in China.

  ALETA: Establish a permanent embassy in Beijing.

  RIC: And last but not least establish an intelligence mission . . .

  MICHAEL: However, do not excite any suspicion—

  SHI-ZHENG: And don’t forget . . .

  RIC: spying is good and misinformation even better.

  MICHAEL: History is written by the victors, you know . . .

  CAST: Boom boom boom . . .

  PING: 25.

  East meets West.

  Liang meets Macartney.

  Scene 9.

  MICHAEL: The emperor, the one and only son of heaven,

  ALETA: father of his country,

  SHI-ZHENG: His Most Highness,

  RIC: the pivot of heaven earth and

  CAST: humanity,

  RIC: etcetera,

  ALETA: etcetera,

  PING: etcetera . . .

  MICHAEL: hereby decrees that the Chinese delegation,

  ALETA: the children and servants of the one and only son of heaven,

  SHI-ZHENG: father of his

  CAST: country—

  RIC: etcetera,

  MICHAEL: etcetera,

  PING: etcetera . . .

  MICHAEL: will lead your envoy and adjuncts to the foot of the throne on His Majesty’s eighty-third birthday. The procession will follow . . . as follows . . .

  PROJECTION: Will Macartney do the nine kowtows?

  PROJECTION: The Emperor has arrived but is waiting in the wings.

  (During the following Ric, Shi-Zheng and Aleta perform a very stylized, deep, formal kowtow.)

  You will wait for a sign . . . a sign from the emperor to present the gifts and tributes sent by King George III of England. You will then perform nine kowtows—that’s nine as in nuove, as in the whole nine yards, as in nine guys on a team. When these gestures of reverence have been noted and accepted, you will move slightly . . . an itty-bitty tiny bit forward and perform one more kowtow before returning quietly . . . as in “you coulda heard a pin drop,” as in “quiet as a mouse” to your assigned places. Smoking or chewing gum or fat is prohibited during the proceedings of protocol. His Most Highness, the one and only Son of Heaven, father of his country,

  PING: etcetera,

  MICHAEL: etcetera,

  PING: etcetera . . .

  MICHAEL: does not like the chewing of gum. In fact, chewing of any kind . . . any kind is forbidden.

  PROJECTION: 26

  PING: 26.

  East meets East.

  Palace gossip.

  Scene 10.

  RIC: Well, the British, they don’t kowtow, lowtow or bowwow for nobody.

  ALETA: That entourage is hardheaded and snotty . . . Ya know what they did? Tell’em . . .

  RIC: Ya know what they did? Listen to this . . .

  ALETA: Well, when the viceroy said that they must . . .

  RIC: Ya hear her—must—bowwow to the emperor

  ALETA: they went wild!

  RIC: Oh yeah! Smoke started fuming out their heads like clouds of...

  ALETA: beaucoup opium or like . . . aaah . . .

  RIC: . . . a North Korean nuclear plant . . .

  RIC AND ALETA: They went ape-shit chow mein!

  RIC: Well, Lordy Macartney

  ALETA: Lordy Macartney . . .

  RIC AND ALETA: . . . and his merry men

  RIC: went back to the little chalet the viceroy put them up in.

  ALETA: You mean that piece of swamp with a couple of decaying pavilions and some tents?

  RIC: First-class swamp, girlfriend!

  ALETA: Excuse me . . .

  RIC: Well, his oh so Lordy Lordy . . . came up with an alternate plan.

  ALETA: Business is business.

  RIC: Love, brotherhood and human rights get swept right under the carpet,

  RIC AND ALETA: once money rears its pretty little head!

  RIC: Forget human rights!

  ALETA: I already said that . . .

  RIC: Take no prisoners!

  ALETA: Uhuhmm . . .

  RIC: Money uber alles!

  ALETA: Right.

  RIC: So.

  ALETA: So . . . tell them the plan.

  RIC: I tell them the plan?

  ALETA: You tell them the plan. (To audience) He’ll tell you the plan.

  RIC: So the plan the British came up with was—now get this—so the plan the British came up with was—now get this—to hang a picture . . .

  ALETA: to hang a picture

  RIC: of King George III

  ALETA: of King George III

  RIC: behind the emperor

  ALETA: behind the emperor

  RIC: so that they would be bowing to their king

  ALETA: so that they would be bowing to their king

  RIC: and only look like they were kowtowing to his

  ALETA: toasty-mosty—

  RIC: the emperor,

  ALETA: etcetera, etcetera, etcetera . . .

  GUY (One of the musicians): Who?

  RIC: Hello!!! The emperor!

  GUY: Aaaaah.

  RIC: It all smacks of S&M, doesn’t it?

  GUY: Yeah, “sadness & madness.”

  ALETA: Stick to the music, Guy . . .

  RIC: That’s nothing. Just wait until the Americans get into the picture.

  ALETA: Have you seen that soap series, The Chinese Must Go?

  RIC: The one set out west?

  ALETA: Prospectors,

  RIC: gold miners . . .

  ALETA: opium freaks—

  RIC: Wait a minute . . . Am I supposed to sing something now? Guy, am I supposed to sing something now?

  GUY: Yep . . .

  PROJECTION: 27

  ALL: 27.

  (The following is sung to the tune of “Chopsticks.”)

  MICHAEL: Give me a roast duck

  RIC: some chicken

  MICHAEL: or maybe fresh carp

  RIC: snap snapper

  MICHAEL AND RIC: boiled down in a ginger sauce.

  MICHAEL: Give me some string beans

  RIC: some snowpeas with rice

  MICHAEL AND RIC:I’m gonna cook up a storm

  for my man tonight.

  He likee chicken and the fish

  but he don’t do pork

  no he won’t do pork.

  He likee string beans

  snow peas and rice

  but oh no, no pork

  he says:

  “Tastes like tree!”

  GUY: Like what?

  RIC: Like tree . . .

  GUY: Like tree?

  MICHAEL: Like tree.

  GUY: Like tree, like tree, like tree!

  CAST (Singing):Give me some margarine

  scones and some tea

  maybe some fish and chips

  deep fried in lots of lard

  give me a meat pie

  a peach pie

  a pudding

  gonna cook up a storm

  for my man tonight!

  He loves that British

  haute cuisine

  so he’ll eat this up

  yes, he’ll eat this up.

  He likes that bland

  and soggy food

  and he’ll eat it up

  ’cause it tastes like . . .

  Can’t eat the food they serve

  don’t get the customs they have

  or the language they speak

  so aggressively

  won’t give in, can’t give in

  shan’t give in, won’t give in

  can’t give in

  shan�
�t give in

  no olay!!

  They are the proudest

  stubbornest bunch

  and I will not budge

  no I will not budge.

  They are the high

  and mightiest bunch

  and I will not budge

  ’cause I am a Brit-Chinese.

  GUY: A what?

  ALETA AND RIC: A Brit

  SHI-ZHENG AND MICHAEL: Chinese

  CAST: Olay!

  (Sound of a train going by.)

  PING:Silent swans.

  Spreading their wings, flapping their wings . . .

  Whose history is this anyway?

  History is the story of men and women, not birds.

  Yes, please, more tea.

  Yes, please, more tea . . .

  PROJECTION: 28

  ALL: 28.

  PROJECTION: Mrs. Chin

  ALETA:Vincent grew up good.

  He have many friends.

  White, black, Chinese.

  He get job

  he buy car

  he gonna marry

  and take care of me after my man die.

  A good Chinese boy.

  A good American boy.

  He came home from work and said

  that he’s going out with friends. I say:

  “Vincent, why you do this?

  You marry tomorrow.”

  He say:

 

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