By C.J. Hirschfield
Oakland resident Phil Wong, 27,
is an actor, educator, musician, and comic. He’s also a featured performer in
Fairyland’s latest Theatre for the Very Young (TVY) production, “Teddy Bears’
Picnic.” Until the show opened, Phil hadn’t been at Fairyland since he was very
young himself. So we were surprised to notice that he sports a tattoo of our
Magic Key on his arm.
Clearly, he had come home.
Phil Wong's Magic Key tattoo. |
Phil’s parents first brought him to Fairyland when he was 4 or so. “My brain imploded,” he recalls, exaggerating slightly. “The stories I knew were manifested in real life, and my imagination completely opened up.” He credits Fairyland with leading him to a life in the arts, where he has flourished.
Phil’s favorite set was the
maze at the end of our Alice Tunnel. He had memorized the Disney “Alice in
Wonderland” movie, and there he was, in the story itself.
After graduating from Bentley
School, Phil went on to Oberlin College, where he majored in theater and minored
in East Asian studies. Returning to his hometown after graduation, Phil worked
consistently in theater, mostly for the San Francisco Shakespeare Festival, where
he is a resident artist. He has also performed in several hundred schools over
the course of a year.
Phil Wong (right) as Brother Bear, with Jackie Kappes as Sister Bear, in "Teddy Bears' Picnic." |
He’s also worked with
Fairyland’s TVY partner, Bay Area Children’s Theatre, where he performed in “Bad
Kitty on Stage!” and “Seussical, the Musical.” But he’d never acted for
children as young as 6 months, who are part of the Theatre for the Very Young
audience. His audition included improvising the making of sandwiches on the Moon,
at which he apparently excelled.
Phil was excited to come back
to Fairyland, where his very first stop was ... the Alice Tunnel maze. “It’s so
much smaller now; it used to tower over me,” he says. (It’s something we hear a
lot from adults.) He had never seen the park empty, with animals roaming the
meadow (which we allow them to do when the park isn’t open to visitors). Now
his favorite thing to do is observe the sense of wonder on the faces of kids
entering the park.
The show has been doing very
well, and Phil says that his young audience members are the most receptive he
could ask for. “The earlier we expose kids to art of any kind, the much more
sympathetic and empathetic their generation will be,” he says. He says he’s also
impressed with how engaged the adults are.
Phil (foreground) and Jackie Kappes. |
Oh, and about that tattoo?
Phil got it on his 27th
birthday, about a year ago. He told me he’d kept a hot-pink Magic Key from his
youth for many years, even after it had broken. He says it represented the key
to his imagination, “the first creative agency I ever got.”
Once, while he was riding the
New York subway system, another rider noticed his tattoo. “Fairyland!” said the
stranger, smiling in recognition. “It was bizarre to me that the image
resonated with someone all the way across the country,” says Phil. It’s also a
symbol of his deep Oakland roots. “It’s getting more important for locals to
stay local and not move out,” he says, referring to the city’s rising cost of
housing.
I asked Phil if he knew of anyone else who
sported a Fairyland Magic Key tattoo.
“Yeah,” he said, laughing. “My
barber, Syd.”
“Teddy Bears’ Picnic” plays in Fairyland’s
cozy, climate-controlled performance space Fridays through Sundays through
October 29. Advance tickets (required) include all-day admission to Fairyland;
go to the Bay Area Children's Theatre site to buy.
__
C.J. Hirschfield has served for 15 years as executive director
of Children’s Fairyland, where she is charged with the overall operation of the
nation’s first storybook theme park.
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