The Malaysian stand-up and The Daily Show correspondent on reliving his university days on the sitcom International Student, and making his movie debut in Crazy Rich Asians.
RONNY CHIENG: [When I started out in standup,] I didn’t really have any idea where I was going with it. I was just trying to make people in a room laugh, so it wasn’t like I had a grand plan to do a TV show someday. What happened was that I was doing pretty well as a stand-up in Australia, and then ABC [Australian Broadcasting Corporation] approached me to do a TV show. But I had no experience in making television. One of the rules I knew about television was that you want to tell stories only you can tell. In other words: try to make a TV show where I am irreplaceable, so I can’t get fired (laughs). The only story I felt I could tell and hadn’t been told yet was that of Asian students studying overseas and telling it from their perspectives.
You studied Law at Melbourne University. What was your first day on campus like? Awash with awkwardness like the rest of us?
That’s the cool thing about the story, right? We all went through [that phase] of awkwardness, and I hope that translated on the show. It’s a moment that you had, I had, and we had. So one of the messages in the show is that being uncomfortable with yourself at that age is very normal. So for those of us who are well past that age, we can look back and go, “Yeah, we can remember that time.” And for people who are currently in university, they can look at that and be like, “Oh yeah, it’s normal to be awkward, weird, and all that stuff.”
This story is from the December 21, 2017 edition of 8 Days.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 21, 2017 edition of 8 Days.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
What a G.E.M.!
Hongkong singer and new Tag Heuer global ambassador G.E.M. TANG, in town recently for F1, has a “guilty indulgence” that will just make you feel more guilty about yours.
The Twins Effect
Is the local showbiz scene big enough for both JAYLEY and HAYLEY WOO to twin and win? We compare and contrast.
Wake-Up Call
Following SHINee frontman JONGHYUN's suicide after a long struggle with depression, fans and celebs are urging the K-pop industry to pay more attention to the well-being of their artistes.
Coming Clean
Chart-topping British band CLEAN BANDIT, in town on Jan 22 for a gig, may be famous for using classical music in their hits, but that won’t stop them from collaborating with Beyoncé, as bassist Jack Patterson tells us over the phone.
Wong Time Right Target
The always-glam FANN WONG goes glum for her first major movie role in three years.
Star Ship Troopers
Space Travel is about to get more exciting. Chris Pratt and Jennifer Lawrence, two actors already in Hollywood’s Stratosphere, take off this week for the Sci-Fi Romance Passengers.
Sandra Riley Tang, 25
The Sam Willo ws singer works out because “I really love to eat”. Yes, The Yoga Cofounder’s fad diet days are definitely over.
Comme What May
The man behind the Comme des F***down streetwear, Rusland Karablin, is so Zen (check out the mantra emblazoned on his swag), he doesn’t mind that everyone from Bugis to Bangkok is bootlegging his stuff.
“My Parents Told Me: You're On Your Own Now”
Getting cut off financially by her folks turned Asia’s Next Top Model alum AIMEE CHENG- BRADSHAW into a “super frugal” model. Except when it comes to yoga and shoes.
A Slice Of New York In Singapore
WOLFGANG’S STEAKHOUSE at the new Intercontinental Singapore Robertson Quay offers an authentic NYC steakhouse dining experience. But be prepared to leave with a much emptier wallet and smelling of beef fat.