Rick Shiomi calls this weekend's opening of "Yellow Fever" a "nice bookend" for his career with Mu Performing Arts.
"Yellow Fever" put Shiomi's name on the theatrical map as a playwright when it first was produced in San Francisco in 1982. And shortly after he formed Mu in the early 1990s, "Yellow Fever" was one of the first works he directed with the Asian-American company. The Mu production that opens Saturday at the Guthrie Studio is his swan song as artistic director.
"There is an importance in the ritual of transition," said Shiomi, who officially leaves Mu this summer. "I've spent 20 years here, and I've had a great time."
Not that Shiomi is going anywhere. He has a couple of plays he wants to work on; he will return to direct shows for Mu and other Twin Cities theaters and he will do some consulting — "if someone will pay me. If not, I'll give them my advice anyway."
Shiomi has never taken himself too seriously, even while he has gone about the very serious business of building Mu into one of the nation's leading Asian-American performing-arts companies. He is stepping down as artistic director and hoping to make a smooth transition for Randy Reyes, the actor and director who will succeed him as head of the organization. Shiomi leaves a solid foundation, as Mu's annual budget has risen to $550,000.
Retirement will give Shiomi, who turns 66 in May, one more "kick at the can" as an independent artist.
"I've never been one to look back, no matter how great the times were," he said. "What happens tomorrow is what keeps me jazzed about life."
Fell into Mu
Shiomi, who was born in Vancouver and raised in Toronto, came to the Twin Cities in 1991 at the invitation of Martha Johnson, a theater professor at Augsburg College. He stayed and eventually married Johnson. They live in south Minneapolis.