A-yia's father served as a lieutenant in the Hmong forces alongside the
American CIA during the Vietnam War. After the American forces pulled
out of Vietnam, the Pathet Lao started invading Hmong villages to rape
the women and kill all the men. As political refugees of the war,
A-yia's family had to flee Laos after the Americans pulled out and left
the Hmong to fend for themselves against the Communist Pathet Lao.
A-yia's family crossed the border into Thailand and was forced to live
in refugee camps segregated from the general Thai population. It was in
a refugee camp in Ban Vinai, Thailand that A-yia was born. When A-yia
was a little more than a year old, his family was sponsored to come to
the U.S. by his mom's brother. A-yia has 4 brothers and 1 sister.
A-yia's first acting role was in a third grade history play where he
played Abraham Lincoln. It wasn't until 7th grade, where he stole
scenes as Mr. McNasty in a melodrama called Way, Way, Way Down East,
that A-yia acquired the "acting bug". The next year, he was cast as
Sganarelle in the Moliere play, The Doctor Inspite of Himself.
In high school, A-yia began work with Pom Siab Hmoob Theater (now
called Center for Hmong Arts and Talent) where he played various roles
in Hmong Tapestries: Voices From the Cloth. Hmong Tapestries: Voices
from the Cloth was considered one of the 10 best plays in the Twin
Cities that year. A-yia eventually toured with the company nationally
for this role, advocating the plight of the Hmong to many audiences.
A-yia also connected with Pom Siab Hmoob Theater to play Pob Zeb in We
Are Hmong, a play about culture clashes between parents who grew up
with old country values and their children who grow up with American
values.
As a prestigious Kirby Puckett Scholar and a President's Outstanding
Minority Scholar, A-yia attended the University of Minnesota with a
full scholarship to study Neuroscience for a future career as a doctor.
However, A-yia never stopped acting during his college years and
eventually decided that he would stick with acting. In his final year
of college, he switched his major from Neuroscience to Theater. He
received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Theater with emphasis on acting
and directing from the University of Minnesota.
After graduation, A-yia wrote and directed his own play for the
Minnesota Fringe Festival. It was called The Invisible People, a play
about two lesbians who committed suicide because the community around
them would not accept their sexual orientation. The play opened to
standing room only audiences. After the Invisible People, Pangea World
Theater commissioned A-yia to write Under The Bridge with Saychay Thor,
a play about domestic abuse in a small tight knit minority community.
A-yia is working on a screen adaptation of this script.
In 2001, A-yia started volunteering on public access TV sets in Saint
Paul, MN. There he started to learn the technical aspects of
production. During his time there, A-yia performed the role of
cameraman, sound, floor manager, switcher, editor, titling and producer
for many of the shows produced at that studio. He also started a
production company, Peripheral Blur Productions. While in Minnesota,
this company has worked with Darren Sharper's Sharperpalooza, the Jack
Brewer Foundation, Jolie Magazine's 1 year Anniversary, Mint Condition,
Jelly Bean Johnson and the United Way.
Some of the people A-yia has worked with include: Rick Shiomi from
Theater Mu, Dipankar Mukherjee from Pangea World Theater and formerly
the Guthrie Theater, Lou Bellamy from the Penumbra Theater, Kent
Stephens, Dr. Stephen Kanee, Howard Dalin, and Pamela Shae.
A-yia has traveled world wide, lived in Japan for 6 months and speaks
three languages fluently. A-yia resides in Los Angeles, CA pursuing a
career as an actor and a director while working as a professional
photographer.