Anna and the King

My Global Niche: An Interview With Today's Zaman Newspaper

American reporter in Turkey Brooks Emerson asked me about the foreign edge, and the challenges of finding my niche in Turkey for his series on expat success stories in national English-language newspaper Today's Zaman. In the far-ranging interview, Emerson asks me what the initial impetus for my success as an expat was, and how I've evolved.

No surprise to those who know me, foreign language adoption has not played much of a role -- once I realized that taking business meetings and doing live television interviews in Turkish literally was rendering me mute! But mentoring in all realms of my personal and professional life has been a "secret weapon" in the creative entrepreneurship of self that I aim to practice.

Emerson asks me how the environment affects the outcome of an expat's endeavors. I tell him how sense of place can inspire a sense of self.

"Anastasia says that she has always been attracted to places with an amalgamation of people and cultures. However, the biggest pull is “the idea of crossroads … like Rome, where [she] studied in college … and now here on the Bosporus,” where she senses a positive energy and vibration for self-discovery and reinvention.

"Anastasia believes that working and living abroad is an excellent way to discover new self-potential."

Read Emerson's entire July 2011 interview "The global niche of Anastasia Ashman" online.

Filming Anna & The King With Jodie Foster and Chow Yun Fat

Just got back from the filming of 20th Century Fox's extravaganza ANNA AND THE KING (of Siam) in Ipoh, two hours north of here. No, I was not Anna although my English accent would have been equally as bad as Jodie Foster's.

Her simpering dialogue coach would run up and say, "That was perfect! But if you want to make it even more perfect --"

I played an attitudinal European, "Lady Hay", in 1870s Bangkok. This mainly amounted to being uncomfortably-trussed-up-in-the-tropics and giving Jodie the evil eye around town, and at the big banquet and ball thrown by gorgeous King Mongkut at his Winter Palace.

I also did my share in giving her and Chow Yun Fat a really hard time out on the marble dance floor. With 25 barely-trained couples it quickly became more like a bruising, tripping, sweaty mosh pit than an evening of civilized diversion. The editor will have to be a genius to make us look like we know what we're doing.

We'll be waltzing across the screen in December.

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