Saymoukda Duangphouxay Vongsay

Saymoukda Duangphouxay Vongsay is a Lao American poet and playwright. CNN’s “United Shades of America” host W. Kamau Bell called her work “revolutionary.” Minnesota's Governor Mark Dayton recognized her and others with a Lao Artists Heritage Month Proclamation.

Saymoukda is currently a Bush Foundation Leadership Fellow, a second-term Mellon Foundation National Playwright in Residence at Theater Mu, a Jerome Foundation Fellow in playwriting, a Center for Cultural Power Fellow in narrative change, a grantee of the MN State Arts Board and the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council. She's a recent writer in residence at Hedgebrook (by invitation of the McKnight Foundation and Artist Communities Alliance) and Djerassi (by invitation of the Diasporic Vietnamese Artists Network).

She received an...

Saymoukda Duangphouxay Vongsay is a Lao American poet and playwright. CNN’s “United Shades of America” host W. Kamau Bell called her work “revolutionary.” Minnesota's Governor Mark Dayton recognized her and others with a Lao Artists Heritage Month Proclamation.

Saymoukda is currently a Bush Foundation Leadership Fellow, a second-term Mellon Foundation National Playwright in Residence at Theater Mu, a Jerome Foundation Fellow in playwriting, a Center for Cultural Power Fellow in narrative change, a grantee of the MN State Arts Board and the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council. She's a recent writer in residence at Hedgebrook (by invitation of the McKnight Foundation and Artist Communities Alliance) and Djerassi (by invitation of the Diasporic Vietnamese Artists Network).

She received an Ordway Center for Performing Arts Sally Award for Initiative which recognizes “strategic leadership undertaken by an individual…that will have a significant impact on strengthening Minnesota’s artistic/cultural community.” She is the author of the children’s book When Everything Was Everything (Full Circle Publishing 2018) and is best known for plays, Kung Fu Zombies vs Cannibals (Theater Mu 2013), Hmong/Lao Friendship Play (Lazy Hmong Woman Productions 2015), Kung Fu Zombies vs Shaman Warrior (Smithsonian APAC 2016), The Kung Fu Zombies Saga: Shaman Warrior & Cannibals (Theater Mu 2023) and In the Camps: A Refugee Musical (Refugenius 2023). Her work has been presented by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, Theater Mu, Walking Shadow Theatre Company, Lower Depth Theater, Asian Improv Arts, and elsewhere.

Scripts

The Kung Fu Zombies Saga: Shaman Warrior & Cannibals

by Saymoukda Duangphouxay Vongsay

Synopsis

The Kung Fu Zombies Saga: Shaman Warrior & Cannibals tells the story of Arun (Shaman Warrior) and Sika (Cannibals) in two acts. SHAMAN WARRIOR and CANNIBALS can each be a stand-alone play.

SHAMAN WARRIOR: Arun is a shaman who suffers from imposter syndrome and must save her sister from the sinister village school teacher. Shaman Warrior examines mental illness, spiritual traditions, and the impact of...

The Kung Fu Zombies Saga: Shaman Warrior & Cannibals tells the story of Arun (Shaman Warrior) and Sika (Cannibals) in two acts. SHAMAN WARRIOR and CANNIBALS can each be a stand-alone play.

SHAMAN WARRIOR: Arun is a shaman who suffers from imposter syndrome and must save her sister from the sinister village school teacher. Shaman Warrior examines mental illness, spiritual traditions, and the impact of colonialism and genocide on the ethnic Akha people of Laos. Many Laotians believe mental illness to be caused by a curse, bad karma, or spirit possession, and that having the ability to engage with the spirit world is a gift. In this post-apocalyptic world littered with zombies, Arun must decipher between the monsters inside of her and the flesh-eating 'raw ghosts' roaming the mountains of Laos if she wants to save her sister, Khwan. 90 mins

CANNIBALS: Sika is a typical Midwestern teen trying to find her way. At the start of the apocalypse, her parents and little sister were ravaged by a horde of zombies. Sika must keep a promise to her parents and bring their ashes to their home village in Laos. In her journey, she makes an unlikely family of two ex-gangbanging monks an orphan, and a mysterious little girl. Framed by the five Buddhist tenets, Cannibals examines the consequences of the American empire with the zombies symbolizing the 80,000,000+ unexploded bombs left in Laos' soil (270,000,000+ bombs dropped on Laos during the Vietnam War). Like zombies, the unexploded cluster bombs reanimate from the ground years and decades later to maim and kill. Laos' unknown legacy is that it is the most bombed country per capita in history. 70 mins

Uses an original Hip Hop score, martial arts, pop cultural references, and most importantly, humor to create greater access points for audiences to engage in history and difficult topics such as mental illness, imperialism, and trauma. By permitting audiences to laugh, we also give them a safer space to cry.