May Adrales, whose full name is Jocelyn May Divinagracia Adrales, is a Filipina American theatre director and teacher in New York City.
Early life
May Adrales was born in Covington, Virginia to Filipino immigrant parents. Her mother was a nurse, her father was a general surgeon, and both moved from medical training and residencies in New York to rural Virginia to fill a need for medical professionals. When she was younger, she loved to run, and she still continues this hobby today. She received her Bachelor of Arts in English Literature and Modern Studies from University of Virginia, and her Master of Fine Arts in Directing from the Yale School of Drama.
Career
When asked what inspired her to go into directing, she said, "Be the change you wish to see in the world. I took that adage pretty seriously. I wanted to figure out how to make the world a more joyous, more democratic, and more beautiful place -– a world that embraces complexity, creativity and diversity on every level". She originally wanted to go into law, but eventually found theatre. Even then, though, she was faced with a challenge of access; when she first moved to New York, she had no formal training nor contacts in the business. Additionally, in her words, "For the most part there weren’t stories that reflected my experience or people on stage that looked like me. Theater felt impenetrable". Eventually, in part with the support of a community and a mentor, she became an award-winning professional director, teacher, and artist.
Reception
Vietgone
In 2016, Adrales directed Vietgone, by Qui Nguyen, at the Manhattan Theatre Club. The show features two Vietnamese refugees who meet in America in 1975, during the fall of Saigon. The production was well-received, earning three Lucille Lortel Award nominations, as well as several rave reviews. The New Yorker mentioned "its resourceful director, May Adrales," in talking about the "gleefully salacious quasi-musical". The Los Angeles Times said that the show was "directed with controlled spunk by May Adrales". Time Out New York, a city-culture promotion website, said, "May Adrales’s high-octane staging moves so swiftly and surely, you may not initially appreciate the buckets of stagecraft she and Nguyen throw at us scene after scene".
Chinglish
In early 2014, Adrales directed Chinglish, a comedy about cross-cultural communication at the Portland Center Stage. This too was well-received. The Oregon Artswatch says, "The show, directed by May Adrales, is as smooth as its revolving scene changes, capturing a brittle and deftly timed presentational comic edge in its performances and navigating the tricky shoals of its bilingual text without an apparent hitch".
Awards
Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation’s Denham Fellowship