- Hiroshi Kashiwagi
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name = Hiroshi Kashiwagi
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birthdate = birth date and age|1922|11|8
birthplace =Sacramento, California ,United States
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occupation =author playwright poet actor
nationality = American
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website =Hiroshi Kashiwagi is a "
Nisei " (second-generationJapanese American ) poet, playwright and actor. For his writing and performance work on stage he is considered an early pioneer ofAsian American theatre .Biography
Kashiwagi was born in 1922 in
Sacramento , California. He grew up in Loomis, a small fruit-growing town inPlacer County, California , where his "Issei " parents ran a fish market. He attended Loomis Elementary school, Placer High School and Dorsey High School in Los Angeles, graduating in 1940. He also attended Japanese language school, where he did his first writing and performing.During
World War II , Kashiwagi and his family were sent to theTule Lake War Relocation Center , a internment camp for Japanese Americans. In camp, Kashiwagi spent time reading, and joined a theatre group. When the U.S. government forced detainees to fill out a Leave Clearance Application Form, commonly known as a the "loyalty questionnaire," Kashiwagi refused to answer the infamous questions 27 & 28, key questions which asked internees, after a year of unjustified incarceration, if they were willing to swear unqualified allegiance to, and serve in the military for, the same government that had forced them into the camps in violation of the constitutional rights, "and", if they were willing to forswear allegiance to Japan, thereby admitting an allegiance to the enemy. Unable to answer "yes-yes," to the two questions, the government took Kashiwagi's refusal to reply as a "no-no," and he was branded a "No-No Boy ", and he and his family were segregated by the government as "disloyals" and were ostracized by the Japanese American community. Through government coercion, Kashiwagi and others at Tule Lake renounced their U.S. citizenship.After the end of World War II, Kashiwagi attended
UCLA . He wrote his first play in 1949 for the Nisei Experimental Group, a theatre group formed in Los Angeles. His one-act play, THE PLUMS CAN WAIT, was first performed in Los Angeles in 1950, and in San Francisco and Berkeley the following year. He graduated fromUCLA , receiving a B.A. in Oriental Languages in 1952.In 1959, with the help of attorney Wayne Collins, Kashiwagi had his United States citizenship restored.
In 1966, Kashiwagi graduated from
UC Berkeley , receiving a Masters in Library Science degree.Kashiwagi worked at the Buddhist headquarters in San Francisco for almost eight years as a translator and interpreter, English secretary and editor. He also was employed at the
San Francisco Public Library as a reference librarian in literature, Japanese language materials, science and government documents, and as a branch manager. At the Western Addition Branch Library, he started what became the largest collection of Japanese language books on the West Coast. He retired after 20 years in 1987, when he was cast inPhilip Kan Gotanda 's play, "The Wash" at the Eureka Theatre.Kashiwagi appeared in several films, including "Black Rain", directed by
Ridley Scott , and "Hito Hata: Raise the Banner" produced by Visual Communications. He is a member ofScreen Actors Guild .He resides in San Francisco, California with his wife and has three grown sons, including playwright
Soji Kashiwagi , leader of theJapanese American theatre troupe, theGrateful Crane Ensemble .Bibliography
Plays
* "The Plums Can Wait"
* "Laughter and False Teeth"
* "Live Oak Store"
* "Voices From Japanese America"
* "Mondai wa Akira"
* "The Betrayed"Books
* "Swimming in the American: A Memoir and Selected Writings" – (
American Book Award )External links
* [http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/04/26/DDGQMCDR601.DTL profile by Annie Nakao, San Francisco Chronicle]
* [http://www.asianamericanbooks.com/newslets/nl0305.htm "Swimming in the American" book review on AsianAmericanBooks.com]
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