2025 Editorials | ||||||||||||||||||
Pick Your Target | ||||||||||||||||||
Hanging In There | ||||||||||||||||||
Dragon My Ass | ||||||||||||||||||
Let's Get Things In Order | ||||||||||||||||||
FAQ | ||||||||||||||||||
Jenny Awards | ||||||||||||||||||
Jenny Awards 2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
Jenny Awards 2023 | ||||||||||||||||||
Jenny Awards 2022 | ||||||||||||||||||
30th Year Special Features | ||||||||||||||||||
Jenny Awards Gallery | ||||||||||||||||||
Making Contact Write your comments/reviews. Sign your written submission and include a phone number or e-mail address where you can be reached in case we need clarification (phone numbers etc., will not be printed or given out); and get it to us by one of these methods:
Social Media Please Follow us on Social Media to get updates on Reviews, News and other content about the Winnipeg Fringe.
| ||||||||||||||||||
The Jenny Revue is a publication of The Jenny Revue Inc., a not-for-profit corporation, funded solely by advertising and donations. It is not affiliated with The Winnipeg Fringe Festival, MTC, or any other organization. Privacy Policy The Jenny Revue is published on Treaty 1 territory, the lands and traditional territory of the Anishinaabeg, Cree, Anisininew, Dakota, and Dene Peoples, and on the Homeland of the Red River Métis. |
Hmong Class 101
Jasmine Vang—The Rachel Browne Theatre
Jasmine Vang delivers a surprisingly relatable yet personal tutorial on life as a Hmong-American. Her experience echoes that of many second and third generation North Americans who feel caught between competing identities: disconnected from the traditional expectations, language, and culture of their parents and grandparents; feeling out of place in the country where they were born; and conforming to or confronting the ideals and stereotypes that outsiders might assume of one’s ethnic background.
Vang’s polished celebration of her heritage features excellent physical portrayals of her intergenerational Hmong relations, along with an exploration of her insecurities around identity growing up Hmong in the United States. While audiences will certainly learn something about the ethnic and historical nuances of Hmong culture, the show also offers a broader, resonant insight into the push and pull of competing identities, something many descendants of immigrant diaspora will recognize.
Ashley Frantik