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BD Wong Pacific Overtures

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arts&eatertainmeat .------------- ----~------ ---------------------------- B,D, Wong was thrilled by Pacific Overtures when he was a kid, Now he's in the lead By Michael Giltz urely it's fate that B.D.</p><p> Wong would star in the first Broad­ way revival of Stephen Sond­ heim's Pacific Overtures.</p><p> After all, it's the show that con­ vinced the Tony-winning Wong that he could be an actor in the first place. "It came through San Francisco right after it closed on Broadway," says Wong during a break from rehearsals for the show, which opens on December 2. "I chased [the star) Mako down the street after the performance and got his auto­ graph on my Playbill and kept it forever." Wong is also busy editing Social Grace, the first film he has directed.</p><p> Somewhere in between, he films episodes of Law & Order: Special Vic­ tims Unit and, of course, cares for his 4-year-old son.</p><p> All of this activity he THE ADVOCATE I 64 I DECEMBER 7, 2004 traces to seeing Pacific Overtures that first time.</p><p> The 42-year-old Wong struggles to ex­ plain exactly what that moment meant: "It meant that if I wanted to be an actor-which I did; I was extremely pas­ sionate about school plays-and I was cursed-and you know I use the word with tongue in cheek-in my body and in my race, I was not going to be banished to a life of playing horrible, menial, em­ barrassing, and demeaning roles.</p><p> I was energized with a sense of hope." Wong-who shot to fame and won every award in sight with his legendary Broadway turn as a gender-bending spy in M.</p><p> Butterfly-says the most ex­ citing part of this show is getting to work with Sondheim.</p><p> He explains pas­ sionately why having the show helmed by a Japanese director, Amon Miyamo­ to, lets Pacific Overtures resonate in ways it never did before. "It's similar to the idea that gay actors give gay roles more resonance.</p><p> A brilliant nongay actor can be brilliant in a gay part.</p><p> And yet there's something that often hap­ pens when a gay actor plays a gay role that is extremely powerful.</p><p> The pain is true.</p><p> The joy is true.</p><p> And any gay per­ son can identify it immediately." Wong is loath to discuss his private life other than to say that he and his long­ time partner Richie (who have apparent­ ly broken up and reportedly no longer live together) love and respect each other and are taking their son together on interviews for kindergarten.</p><p> But Wong doesn't hesitate to say that coming out in The Advocate in June 2003 was a powerful, positive experience. "I've come to the point very recent­ ly-in the last five years, definitely--of fully understanding that who I am is a great thing," he says. "I don't mean I'm better than anyone else, but I used to really bemoan my gayness and my Asian-ness.</p><p> They were intertwined in­ extricably.</p><p> I could not separate what bothered me more about myself, what gave me more pain." How did it change? "The core of that is parenthood," says Wong. "The father­ hood led to coming out, and coming out led to feeling extremely liberated.</p><p> The coming-out released me from shame, and releasing myself from shame helped me to ... see, I don't know.</p><p> To see me through [my son's) eyes? I don't know.</p><p> It's just very positive." •