Revenge of the Nerd

Heroes star Masi Oka is the hottest geek in Hollywood. But he still can't find a girlfriend

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OUR HIRO Oka's time-traveling character, Hiro Nakamura, drops into Time Square

Leave it to Masi Oka to have perfect timing. At age 12, his cherubic face was plastered on the cover of Time magazine in an expose on "those Asian-American whiz kids." Oka, however, was never profiled in the story. His mother, he explains, knew the photographer shooting the cover, and they were looking for Asians who "looked smart." But fate can be funny. The child prodigy "model" did become an actual whiz kid (garnering a reported IQ of 180), graduated from Brown University with degrees in computer science and mathematics, took a job as a programmer for George Lucas' visual effect company, and then, an unexpected move, headed to Hollywood.

Twenty years after that first cover shoot, Oka is known to millions as lovable wide-eyed Hiro Nakamura from NBC's Monday night drama Heroes and has graced the covers of publications from WIRED to Entertainment Weekly. Season two of the hit series premiered last Monday and Oka, the first of the cast to be nominated for an Emmy, has been on a whirlwind promotional tour. He takes a break to talk to Radar about the big things: being a hero, being a nerd, and why, if you're a casting director looking for a guy to do a funny Asian accent, you best look elsewhere



Radar: You're one of the most -- if not the most -- recognizable Asian-American actor in America now. But a year ago, barely anyone knew who you were. How do you feel about all this new attention?
Masi Oka: Well it's great to portray Asian-Americans in a positive light in American media and to be one of the few. We went to Japan [as part of the Heroes world tour] and the press out there would ask me, "How do you feel about being the most famous Japanese guy in America?" "How do you feel about representing Japanese culture on American television?" "How do you feel putting the weight of the whole country on your shoulder?" Then the next day the press wrote, "MASI OKA'S TRIUMPHANT RETURN TO JAPAN." I'm like, whoa, I'm not a war hero!

Also it's interesting, I thought they'd be calling me Masayori Oka, my full name, or Oka-san. Instead they would call me one name -- "Masioka" -- kind of like "Madonna."

You've been cast as part of the new "geek chic" trend in fall television. How does it feel?
To be a freak?

I grew up being your standard geek. I was into math and computer science, and I had friends who thought the same, looked the same, and started smelling the same.I was thinking more "geek".
I think it's great. My definition of a geek is someone who's passionate about something, whether music or science or grandfather clocks. To show what you're passionate about shows our individuality. And I'd rather be passionate about something than apathetic about everything. I say you're either a geek or a robot.

Do you think that, thanks to you, geeks around the world now have an easier time of getting laid?
I think I can probably help give people confidence and help them be more open about expressing who they are. But I'm bad with women.

Oh come on...
No, I'm pretty bad. But Heroes definitely helped me improve my social skills, and helped me not get rejected so much.

Your character in Heroes, Hiro Nakamura, is the comic relief of a mostly dark show. He takes his superhero responsibilities seriously and has a clear vision of what's good and bad. Do you see morality in those black-and-white terms?
There are things that are black and white for me, but I'm always open to the possibility of looking at it from another person's point of view. What might be right for you may not be right for some. Oh God, I'm about to sing the Different Strokes song! [singing] A man is born, he's a man of means. What am I doing? I must be really tired.

But you know, it's the people who think differently that change the world. Even the villains, in their mind they were doing something right. In no way am I advocating Hitler, but he changed the world. For the worse, but in his mind he was changing it for the good. And I absolutely do not agree with what he did, but I'm open to the idea that there are thoughts out there like his.

Heroes was the breakout show last season. What do you think it is about Heroes that appeals to some many people from so many different countries?
I think that the message of hope is something that resonates with so many people.
It's about ordinary people with extraordinary powers. Everyone is trying to escape their ordinary lives in some sense. In this world that's chaotic and unstable, we want to grasp on to some hope. And it's always great to know that there are these people out there trying to make a difference in the world.

What brought you into acting?

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DOUBLE EXPOSURE Masi Oka gracing the cover of Time's "Asian American Whiz Kids" issue in 1987, and 20 years later posing for Wired

I wanted to try to be comfortable with who I am. I mean I grew up being your standard geek. I was into math and computer science, and I had friends who thought the same, looked the same, and started smelling the same. I thought, college is a place where I can learn, and not just get an academic education, but a social education. I wanted to learn more about the human condition and to learn more about myself. That's why I got into theater.

There's something I'm very curious about. I'm Taiwanese and was raised by a very traditional Asian mother. I was wondering what your mom thought of your career choice. How did she react when you told her you wanted to be an actor?
She was like, "Ummm ... okay whatever you want." She wasn't overjoyed, but luckily things worked out. My thing was as long as I didn't put any financial burden on my mother, I figure she'd be supportive of what I did. I always had a great job at ILM [George Lucas' Industrial Light & Magic], which supported my acting career, and they were very patient with me while I was pursuing it as well. Which is what I came to L.A. for and I got relatively lucky in the first few years.

You mentioned luck a couple of times. How much of your success do you think comes from luck?
So many things! Right timing, right place. Like with Heroes. That was my last pilot season as an actor. I was ready to give-up acting, and instead work at creating roles for Asian-Americans. I wrote a script or two that I was going to pitch and I found a great mentor who said let's go ahead and start pitching it to other folks. Then the next thing you know, Heroes comes up.

Hiro was a character specifically for an actor who spoke fluent Japanese and had American television experience. It was definitely luck. I had no control over that and that the show would get picked up. All these great NBC shows are coming out now, and they don't have the same bang that Heroes did last year. There are a lot of things that play into [success], but there are a lot of things that can't be controlled.

So do you consider yourself fatalistic?
I do. I think there's definitely karma. You put something out there for a reason and it comes back. I mean is it destiny or a coincidence that the year I was ready to quit, the first thing that came to my doorstep was Heroes? I had a deal with ILM while I was in San Francisco that I'd only be down in L.A. for 6 months, and if I didn't get a role within that time, I'd go back up. That was a one in a million shot. I was very naïve. Anyone who is pursuing a career in the industry knows that it's about perseverance. Yet it kind of all worked out. When something just falls in your lap like that you just kind of have to wonder why certain things happened. Some things are too weird to be coincidence.

Continue >>

 


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