Amao Leota Lu Explained

Amao Leota Lu
Birth Date:1971
Nationality:Samoan
Occupation:Performance artist, poet, LGBT rights activist

Amao Leota Lu (born 1971) is a Samoan fa’afafine, who is a performance artist, poet and community activist.

Biography

Amao Leota Lu was born in 1971 in Auckland, New Zealand. Her early years were spent there, before emigrating with some of her Samoan diaspora family to Sydney in the 1980s.[1] She returned to Australia after a period away in her early twenties and it was during this time that she came to terms with her gender identity as a woman and as a fa'afafine.[2] She uses her performances to advocate for fa'afafine identity, particularly in resistance to western LGBT categorisations.[3] These performances are situated at the confluence of gender identity, Pacific culture and intersectionality.[4]

In 2020 she curated the very first queer Pacific event at Midsumma Festival in Melbourne, and performed there with an event entitled Pacific Essence: Tales of a Migrant Plantation, which was staged at the Immigration Museum.[5] In 2019 she was part of the ensemble cast of Gender Euphoria, which was staged as part of Melbourne International Arts Festival.[6] Her performances are part of a "cult phenomena" where queer perspectives are combined with "Indigenous knowledge-making".[7] Leota Lu is also outspoken about the discrimination that gender diverse members Pacific Islander communities still face. Former occupations have included community support worker.

References

  1. Web site: 5 September 2019. Fa'afafine: All Hail the Queen (Samoan Sashay). Amao Leota Lu. Archer Magazine. 17 June 2021.
  2. Web site: Amao Leota Lu . Outings. 17 June 2021.
  3. Web site: 31 August 2019. Fa'afafine, fakaleitī, fakafifine — understanding the Pacific's alternative gender expressions . . Alan. Weedon. 17 June 2021.
  4. 6 September 2019. Melbourne. Transgender Warriors Local Hero Edition. Sam. Elkin. Gemma. Amao Leota Lu. 17 June 2021. JOY 94.9.
  5. Web site: 2 January 2020. Midsumma 2020 promises queer culture in all its breadth and diversity . 17 June 2021. The Age. Cameron. Woodhead.
  6. Web site: 16 October 2019. A joyful and poignant celebration of difference. 17 June 2021. The Age. Cameron. Woodhead.
  7. Book: Pallotta-Chiarolli, Maria. Living and Loving in Diversity: An anthology of Australian multicultural queer adventures. 24 September 2018. Wakefield Press. 978-1-74305-595-3. 22. en.

External links