You seem to do that in your movies tooâtie things up with a bow, give the audience a satisfying ending. Should we expect the same from Wicked?
Iâve thought a lot about what Wizard of Oz means. Itâs the American fairytale, to follow the yellow brick road. Thereâs someone whoâs going to give you your heartâs desire at the end of it, but you have to prove yourself. And yet nicely contained stories donât actually exist. Life just keeps going. In my work now, Iâm trying to almost dissect the idea of happy endings. Especially with Wicked, which is all about how uncomfortable change is for a place like Oz, which is all about being happy. Sometimes the anger that Elphaba bringsâthe frustration, the sadnessâis necessary for new things to grow. Expressing how others have hurt us and how we may have hurt others is the only way through. It felt very personal to everybody on set. Elphaba says the words, âSomething has changed within me. Something is not the same.â Those words are the thing that made me realize I have to do this movie now. Part 1 is the choice to rise, and Part 2 is what happens when you stand up. It gets way more complicated.
[As Chu and I are talking, his mother appears in the banquet hall to kiss her son on the forehead. Sheâs a spry, slender woman with short, gray hair. Chu says, âHi, Mom! Love you.â She turns to me and says, âNow, he wonât disappear. When you kiss your kids, they donât disappear.â I choke up. Chu says to his mother, âWeâre in the middle of a meeting. I was trying to stay focused here.â She waves off his concern and leaves as quickly as she appeared.]
I love that she came to give you a kiss.
She didnât fix my hair. Thatâs good. Or say that Iâm fat.
I know, right? To Asian relatives, weâre always fat, even if weâre not. Are you a good cook?
No, Iâm terrible.
But you grew up in a restaurant.
When people cook for you, when are you going to learn how to cook? Although, when I do cook I think I could be good if I just focused. Iâll tell my wife, âI think Iâm on to something.â Sheâs like, âNo.â I definitely love setting the table and getting the people in and then bringing each dish out and talking about it. But no, I am not a good cook.
Food is like a character in your movies. The hawker market scene in Crazy Rich Asians made me want to go to Singapore. Of course, I love your dance numbers, especially the choreography in In the Heights. The scene when they dance along the side of the building, I mean, come on.
I took tap, but Iâm not a great dancer. You would never see me and say, âThat guy should keep doing that!â No, but I was friends with great dancers. I know what theyâre trying to express. If a B-boy gets down and he starts spinning, donât spin with him. Let him carry. That doesnât mean I donât have a concept, but a lot of times itâll be driven by the dance.
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