It might seem like a dream to come to Texas from Singapore as an 11-year-old boy,
find a way to cope successfully with all the social and cultural adjustments that
immigrant kids face, finish college and become the best-selling author of a book trilogy
who has recently taken his place on the 2018 Time 100 List. With the first book of
the trilogy, “Crazy Rich Asians,” to be released in movie theaters this summer, Kevin
Kwan has been living what might be described as a dream. But the University of Houston-Clear
Lake 1994 alumnus said for him, his years working toward his bachelor’s degree in
media studies were the “dream experience.”
“From start to finish, I never missed a class the entire time I was a student at UHCL,”
Kwan said. “It’s the first time I was really engaged in learning. I wasn’t very academic
in high school. I spent the first few years just adjusting to being in America. When
I came to UHCL, I came into my own.”
With a great learning community that activated him, Kwan said he began looking forward
to classes and got very involved in student life at UHCL, becoming the Student Forum
representative for the Literature Club, and the vice president of the Media Association,
among many other organizations. “I just got really active and one organization pulled
me into other things and I had a blast,” he said. “It’s the first time I made real
friends. High school was fun, but it was superficial. At UHCL, it was different because
the average student was a little older and I felt like I was in more of an adult world
of learning. My professors and my peer group encouraged me to play my ‘A’ game. It
was great for me.”
Inspirational, profound and genius
Without the support of teachers dedicated to their students’ success, stories that
evolve as well as Kwan’s could not be possible. “I had several professors who were
incredibly important to me,” Kwan said. “Gloria Morris, who taught humanities and
fine arts, was a profound influence on my life. She championed my writing talent.
I didn’t even know I could write until I came to UHCL.”
Kwan said Morris insisted he join the UHCLIDIAN, UHCL’s student newspaper at the time.
“I became a writer and photographer and I wrote film reviews. She pushed me and really
raised my journalistic standards.”
He remembered Morris telling him that if he wanted to write like (New York Times film
and literary critic) Janet Maslin, then write like Janet Maslin. “Now she’s reviewed
me twice! She’s been fantastic to me,” Kwan said. “That’s a full-circle moment. I
really flourished in the Media Studies program at UHCL.”
As a media studies student, Kwan said that he’d spent hours in Professor of Media
Studies Jib Fowles’ class, paying rapt attention to every word. “I felt like I was
just downloading his intelligence,” Kwan said. “We discussed theories about TV violence
and how it affected people. He was an amazing philosophical genius on the topic of
mass media in society.”
At the time, Kwan said, the internet was still just an experiment that he’d heard
about for the first time in Fowles’ class. “Jib Fowles was at the forefront of high-definition
television. He actually brought one in for the class to look at,” Kwan said. “We huddled
around it and saw HDTV for the first time. There was so much about technological advances
in media that was theorized and predicted that I actually learned about at UHCL.”
Since he was also minoring in literature, Kwan encountered Professor of Literature
John Gorman in a class and described him as another profound influence at UHCL. “I
ran with the Lit Club crowd, and I took creative writing and poetry classes,” he said.
“John Gorman was the poet laureate of UHCL. I was so inspired by him before I met
him, then I took his classes. I worked those muscles to learn to write creatively
and he really helped me build my confidence as a creative writer.”
It was in Gorman’s class that Kwan wrote a poem called “Singapore Bible Study.” In
the poem, Kwan described a world in which wealthy women in Singapore gathered for
Bible study, pretending to be Christian while gossiping, showing off their jewelry
and talking about their designer clothes and their big houses. “The reaction was so
intense,” he said. “I described a world no one knew anything about. The poem was published
and won a juried award at the Houston Poetry Fest and it’s how I became involved in
the Houston poetry circuit.”
What followed was another full-circle moment: 20 years later when Kwan sat down to
write “Crazy Rich Asians,” the first chapter of which was inspired by that poem. “It’s
the first thing I wrote for that book,’” he said.
A new world
Considering his untapped visual side – the side that loved photography, video-making
and all he’d learned about the internet and websites from Fowles – Kwan thought that
he’d like to try combining his written and visual talents. “I thought if I could conquer
this new world I had learned about in my classes, the center of this new world would
be in New York. So I enrolled at Parsons School of Design in New York.”
Kwan said he began going to school and working full-time for national magazines like
Martha Stewart Living and Andy Warhol’s Interview, and started to get into the mix
of the media world. “Fast forward after my graduation from Parsons, I was pulled into
the design industry as a creative consultant using my design skills,” he said. “But
the real asset was that I was a good writer. I could synthesize words and pictures.
It made me very sought-after in the publishing world.”
His next projects focused on producing coffee-table books for the likes of Elizabeth
Taylor and Oprah Winfrey. “Elizabeth Taylor’s book, ‘My Love Affair with Jewelry’
was the most fun project I ever did, handling her incredible jewelry collection that
rivals the Queen of England’s,” he said. “That book sold out in one day.”
Other clients came quickly, including best-selling writers Michael Korda, Gore Vidal
and Pulitzer Prize-winning author Larry McMurtry. “These brilliant, legendary authors
inspired me to write again,” Kwan said. “So that’s what I did. Having that 20-year
gap between UHCL and this other world of experience in design was part of the download,
I put it all in ‘Crazy Rich Asians.’”
2018 Time 100 List
Each year, Time magazine assembles a list of what its editors deem to be the 100 most
influential people in the world. Its release is a yearly event and to be named is
an honor.
“I found out a couple days before it published that my name was on the list,” Kwan
said. “My publisher at Doubleday called and said to get ready because my phone would
start ringing. My reaction was really shock and disbelief. I thought it was a mistake.”
But upon checking Time’s website the next day, Kwan saw his friend Constance Wu’s
essay about him. Wu has been cast as Rachel Chu, the main character in the film adaptation
of Kwan’s novel, “Crazy Rich Asians.”
“To see she’d written that beautiful essay was really incredible,” he said. “I had
just spoken with her three days before and she didn’t let on. It was a lovely surprise.”
The dream continues
These days, Kwan said, he wished he could spend more time pursuing his passion for
photography projects, but there’s just not enough time. “I have to take a hiatus at
the moment, because those projects are all-consuming,” he said. “Those photography
projects used to be my after-work job, but it takes me a year to complete one project.
Now I’ve got the movie coming out and I am concentrating on that.”
So much has happened in Kwan’s professional life since the “dream experience” at UHCL
began. Although he hasn’t been back to campus in over a decade, Kwan still looks back
on his undergraduate days with great fondness. “I have such happy memories about my
years at UHCL,” he said. “We used to love to hang out at the café on campus, and we
actually loved the food! A bunch of us would always gather for lunch and move all
the tables. Those were great times. They were the best years of my youth.”
UHCL offers a bachelor of communication and a master of digital media studies. For
more information, visit www.uhcl.edu/human-sciences-humanities/departments/communication-studio-arts.
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