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How culturally diverse is New Zealand television and when did things start to shift? Sonia Yee explores the making of character Dr Grace Kwan - the first Asian character to become part of mainstream TV on New Zealand's m...
The Making of Grace Kwan is an episode from Eyewitness by RNZ. How culturally diverse is New Zealand television and when did things start to shift? Sonia Yee explores the making of character Dr Grace Kwan - the first Asian character to beco...
This episode belongs to Eyewitness.
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Published Nov 4, 2020, 00:15:49 long, audio available.
How culturally diverse is New Zealand television and when did things start to shift? Sonia Yee explores the making of character Dr Grace Kwan - the first Asian character to become part of mainstream TV on New Zealand's most loved soap opera, Shortland Street. Twenty-five years ago, actor Lynette Forday was a pioneer on our screens, playing Dr Grace Kwan - the first Asian face to appear on mainstream New Zealand television. And we still have a long way to go to improve how people of colour are represented in the media and on our screens, Forday says. A graduate of the National institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA) in Sydney, Forday played Dr Grace Kwan on Shortland Street between 1994 and 1997. Listen to The Making of Grace Kwan Forday was sent some episodes of the show before her audition, and found the cultural diversity of Shortland Street appealing. And when she landed the role, she was more than happy to leap across the ditch, and onto our screens. "She was such a well rounded character...she was fun, loved shopping...she loved food. She was very three dimensional," Forday says of playing the feisty, fun-loving, Dr Grace Kwan. Forday was 28 when she made her first appearance on Shortland Street, joining the popular soap two years after it launched. The show initially received mixed reviews - Kiwis could barely stomach hearing their own accents played by an array of young actors who were learning the tricks of fast-turn-around TV on the job. The format of the show was new for New Zealand, and much of it came across as trial and error. On top of that, introducing an Asian character onto the show came with some obstacles. Back then, there were not enough Asian actors in New Zealand who were suitable to play the role of Kwan. So the casting directors had to look further afield in Australia to find Forday. Forday says Australian TV wasn't exactly multicultural in the mid-nineties either, but she grew up watching shows on channels such as SBS, which were always culturally inclusive. "I didn't imagine that the colour of my skin would ever be an issue," she says. At the time, Forday was to become the first Asian face to be on mainstream television in New Zealand. But being part of a show that was breaking new ground was as eye opening for Forday as it was for viewers. After appearing on the show for only a couple of weeks, the biggest shock came when she opened the weekend newspaper and saw an article written by a well known journalist. "It was the very first bit of prejudice I received...on the cover it said 'Grace Kwan must go'." And if that wasn't eye-opening enough, the headline that followed read "Asian Invasion"… Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
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The Making of Grace Kwan is an episode from Eyewitness by RNZ.
This episode is 00:15:49 long.
This episode was published on Nov 4, 2020.
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The Making of Grace Kwan is from Eyewitness by RNZ.
Published Nov 4, 2020 and 00:15:49 long