- Juliana Pegues
Juliana Pegues is an American writer, performer and community activist living in
Minnesota .Born in
Taiwan and raised inAlaska , Pegues, has been a member of both the women of color theater group Mama Mosaic and Mango Tribe, a national Asian Pacific Islander American women's performance collective.Her one-woman shows: "Made In Taiwan", "First the Forest", and "Fifteen" were presented respectively by the
Walker Art Center , theJerome Foundation Performance Art Commission , andIntermedia Arts . Her work has also been presented at thePillsbury House Theater , and theSouthern Theater .Her poetry has been published in several anthologies and in the
Asian American Renaissance Journal ,Mizna , andLodestar Quarterly . Her writings also include "White Rice: A Search for Identity" and pieces for the Fab Feminist Zine.Her poetry has been featured at numerous open mics and cabarets across the country.
She has worked for such groups as Asian Immigrant Women Advocates, Women Against Military Madness, Asian American Renaissance, APLB (Asian Pacific Lesbians and Bisexuals)- Twin Cities, and the Women’s Prison Book Project.
She is the author of the chapbook "Immigrant Dictionary".
Pegues is the recipient of many awards and honors including a Playwright's Center Many Voices fellow, and hosted AARGH, the Asian American Cabaret with Sandy Agustin.
In 1993, she and performance artist
Ken Choy were arrested for protesting a performance of Madame Butterfly at the Minnesota Opera. Both were charged with disorderly conduct and paid a $25 fine. Though some newspaper editorials claimed that the two were naked, Choy was wearing women's clothing. [http://www.geocities.com/kenmikec/Banned.html]
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