David Henry Hwang | |
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Born | Los Angeles, California, U.S. | August 11, 1957
Occupation | Playwright, screenwriter, television writer, librettist, lyricist |
Education | Stanford University (BA) Yale University (MFA) |
Period | 1980–present |
Genre | Drama |
Subject | Asian-American Identity Gender Politics |
Literary movement | Contemporary Drama |
Notable works | FOB The Dance and the Railroad Family Devotions M. Butterfly Golden Child Flower Drum Song (revival) Yellow Face Chinglish Soft Power |
Spouse |
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Children | 2 |
David Henry Hwang | |||||||||||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 黃哲倫 | ||||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 黄哲伦 | ||||||||||||||||
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David Henry Hwang (born August 11,1957) is an American playwright,librettist,screenwriter,and theater professor at Columbia University in New York City. He has won three Obie Awards for his plays FOB , Golden Child ,and Yellow Face . He has one Tony Award ( M. Butterfly ) and two other nominations (Golden Child and Flower Drum Song ). Three of his works (M. Butterfly,Yellow Face,and Soft Power ) have been finalists for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
He was born in 1957 in Los Angeles,California,to Henry Yuan Hwang,the founder of Far East National Bank, [1] and Dorothy Hwang,a piano teacher. The oldest of three children,he has two younger sisters. He received a bachelor's degree in English from Stanford University in 1979 and attended the Yale School of Drama between 1980 and 1981,taking literature classes. [2] He left once workshopping of new plays began,since he already had a play being produced in New York. His first play was produced at the Okada House dormitory (named Junipero House at the time) at Stanford University after he briefly studied playwriting with Sam Shepard and María Irene Fornés. [3] In summer 1978,he studied playwriting with Sam Shepard and attended Padua Hills Playwrights Festival,both of which led him to write his first plays such as FOB. [4]
Hwang's early plays concerned the role of the Chinese American and Asian American in the contemporary world. His first play, FOB , [5] explores the contrasts and conflicts between established Asian Americans and "Fresh Off the Boat" new immigrants. The play was developed by the National Playwrights Conference at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center and premiered in 1980 Off-Broadway at the Joseph Papp Public Theater. In 1981 it won an Obie Award for Best New American Play. [6] Papp produced four more of Hwang's plays,including two in 1981: The Dance and the Railroad ,which tells the story of a former Chinese opera star working as a coolie laborer in the 19th-century American West, [7] and Family Devotions , [8] a darkly comic take on the effects of Western religion on a Chinese-American family. This was nominated for the Drama Desk Award. Those three plays added up to what the author described as a "Trilogy of Chinese America." [9]
After this,Papp also produced the show Sound and Beauty ,the omnibus title to two Hwang one-act plays set in Japan. At this time,Hwang started to work on projects for the small screen. A television movie, Blind Alleys ,written by Hwang and Frederic Kimball and starring Pat Morita and Cloris Leachman,was produced in 1985 and followed a television version of The Dance and the Railroad. [7]
His next play Rich Relations ,was his first full-length to feature non-Asian characters. It premiered at the Second Stage Theatre in New York. [10]
Hwang's best-known play was M. Butterfly ,which premiered on Broadway in 1988. The play is a deconstruction of Giacomo Puccini's opera Madama Butterfly , [11] alluding to news reports of the 20th-century relationship between French diplomat Bernard Boursicot and Shi Pei Pu,a male Chinese opera singer. Shi purportedly convinced Boursicot that he was a woman throughout their twenty-year relationship. [12] The play won numerous awards for Best Play:a Tony Award (which Hwang was the first Asian American to win),the Drama Desk Award,the John Gassner Award,and the Outer Critics Circle Award. It was the first of three of his works to become a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
The success of M. Butterfly prompted Hwang's interests in many other different directions,including work for opera,film,and the musical theatre. Hwang became a frequent collaborator as a librettist with the world-renowned composer Philip Glass. [13]
One of M. Butterfly's Broadway producers,David Geffen,oversaw a film version of the play,which was directed by David Cronenberg. [14] Hwang also wrote an original script, Golden Gate ,which was produced by American Playhouse. [15] Hwang wrote an early draft of a screenplay based upon A. S. Byatt's Booker Prize-winning novel Possession ,which was originally scheduled to be directed by Sydney Pollack. Years later,director/playwright Neil LaBute and Laura Jones would collaborate on the script for a 2002 film. [16]
Throughout the 1990s,Hwang continued to write for the stage,including short plays for the famed Humana Festival at the Actors Theatre of Louisville. His full-length Golden Child ,received its world premiere at South Coast Repertory in 1996. Golden Child was later produced in New York City. It won a 1997 Obie Award for playwriting for Hwang's 1996 off-Broadway production. In 1998 it was produced on Broadway,and was nominated that year for a Tony Award for Best Play. [17]
In the new millennium,Hwang had two Broadway successes back-to-back. He was asked by director Robert Falls to help co-write the book for the musical Aida (based upon the opera by Giuseppe Verdi). In an earlier version,it had failed in regional theatre tryouts. Hwang and Falls re-wrote a significant portion of the book (by Linda Woolverton). Aida (with music and lyrics by Elton John and Tim Rice) opened in 2000 and proved highly profitable. [18]
His next project was a radical revision of Richard Rodgers,Oscar Hammerstein,II,and Joseph Fields' musical Flower Drum Song . [19] Although successful when introduced in the 1950s and early 1960s,it had become dated. The Civil Rights Movement and other cultural changes had disrupted continuing stereotypical portrayals of Asian American communities[ citation needed ]. Though it had never been a full critical success,the work inspired another generation of Asian Americans to re-imagine this musical. It was adapted from the novel The Flower Drum Song by C. Y. Lee,and tells the culture clash encountered by a Chinese family living in San Francisco. [20]
The Rodgers and Hammerstein Organization allowed Hwang to significantly rework the plot,while retaining character names and songs. His 2002 version —both an homage to the original and a modern re-thinking—won him his third Tony nomination. [21] Though Flower Drum Song is often called the first musical with an all-Asian cast,the original production had cast many non-Asians in leading roles,including Caucasians and an African-American (Juanita Hall). But the 2002 revival was produced with an all-Asian cast of actor-singers,and it toured nationally. [20]
Hwang's 2007 play Yellow Face relates to his play Face Value ,which closed in previews on Broadway in the early 1990s. He wrote it in response to a controversy about the casting of Jonathan Pryce in an Eurasian role in Miss Saigon . Face Value ,which included music and lyrics for a musical-within-a-play by Hwang,lost millions of dollars. It was a stumbling block in the careers of Hwang and producer Stuart Ostrow. [22]
In Yellow Face,Hwang wrote a semi-autobiographical play,featuring him as the main character in a media farce about mistaken racial identity. This had been also an important element in Face Value . [22]
Yellow Face premiered in Los Angeles in 2007 at the Mark Taper Forum as a co-production with East West Players. It moved Off-Broadway to the Joseph Papp Public Theater,an important venue for Hwang's earlier work. It enjoyed an extended run at the Papp,and won Hwang his third Obie Award for Playwriting. The play was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. [23]
Hwang also wrote a new short play, The Great Helmsman for the Papp's night of plays:Ten. [24]
Hwang has continued to work steadily in the world of opera and musical theatre,and has written for children's theatre as well. Hwang co-wrote the English-language libretto for an operatic adaptation of Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland with music (and part of the libretto) by the Korean composer Unsuk Chin. It received its world premiere at the Bavarian State Opera in 2007 and was released on DVD in 2008. [25]
Hwang wrote the libretto to Howard Shore's opera The Fly ,based on David Cronenberg's 1986 film of the same name. The opera premiered on July 2,2008,at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris,France,with Cronenberg as director and Plácido Domingo conducting. [26]
Hwang wrote the libretto for Tarzan ,a musical based on a film by Walt Disney Pictures,which was produced on Broadway. [27]
Hwang also collaborated on the multi-media event Icarus at the Edge of Time ,adapted from Brian Greene's novel of the same name. It featured music by Philip Glass and a film by "Al and Al." The piece premiered as part of the World Science Festival. [28]
After its major success at Chicago's Goodman Theatre,Hwang's play, Chinglish ,quickly made its way to Broadway in October 2011. It won the Joseph Jefferson Award. Chinglish was largely inspired by Hwang's frequent visits to China and his observations of interactions between Chinese and American people. Ticket sales of Chinglish were conservative. [29]
Hwang's short play A Very DNA Reunion was written for the evening of plays The DNA Trail,which was conceived by Jamil Khoury and premiered at the historic Chicago Temple Building. [30]
Hwang worked on a theatrical commission for the Oregon Shakespeare Festival and Arena Stage in Washington,DC. This was a musical version of Aimee Mann's album The Forgotten Arm ,with Mann and Paul Bryant. He also worked on screenplays for DreamWorks Animation and directors Justin Lin and Jonathan Caouette. [31] In 2013,a production of Yellow Face premiered on YouTube. It was directed and adapted by Jeff Liu,and featured Sab Shimono among other actors. [32]
In 2014 two new Hwang plays were premiered. The first,Kung Fu,about the life of Bruce Lee,premiered as part of his residency at the Signature Theatre Off-Broadway. The play opened February 24,2014 in a production directed by Leigh Silverman,and featuring Cole Horibe,who had gained fame in the TV series, So You Think You Can Dance . [33] The second was Cain and Abel,one of many plays included in The Mysteries,a re-telling of Bible stories. Conceived by Ed Sylvanus Iskander,The Mysteries also featured the work of playwrights Craig Lucas,Dael Orlandersmith,Jose Rivera,and Jeff Whitty. [34]
In 2014,Hwang joined the Playwriting Faculty of the Columbia University School of the Arts Theatre Program. He was appointed the director of the Playwriting Concentration and will serve as an Associate Professor of Theatre in Playwriting. Hilton Als of the New Yorker has described him as "the most successful Chinese American playwright this country has produced." [35]
In 2016,Hwang became a writer and consulting producer of the Golden Globe-winning television series The Affair [36] and in 1993 wrote a song "Solo" in association with Prince. [37]
In the fall of 2016,the San Francisco Opera premiered Dream of the Red Chamber, an opera by Hwang and Bright Sheng,based on the eighteenth-century Chinese novel of the same name. [38] In the summer of 2016,Hwang became the chair of the board of the American Theatre Wing. [39]
In the Spring of 2018,Hwang's Soft Power premiered at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles,California. The music and additional lyrics are by Jeanine Tesori. Its cast is largely Asian. [40] It transferred to Off-Broadway at the Public Theater in September 2019 (previews). [41] In May 2020,it was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama,making Hwang the first person to be a three-time finalist without winning.
Hwang has been awarded numerous grants,including fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts,a Guggenheim Fellowship [42] and Rockefeller Foundations,the New York State Council on the Arts,and the Pew Charitable Trusts. He has been honored with awards from the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund, [43] the Association for Asian Pacific American Artists,the Museum of Chinese in the Americas,the East West Players,the Organization of Chinese Americans,the Media Action Network for Asian Americans,the Center for Migration Studies,the Asian American Resource Workshop,the China Institute,and the New York Foundation for the Arts. In 1998,the nation's oldest Asian American theatre company,the East West Players,christened its new mainstage The David Henry Hwang Theatre. Hwang was featured in an autobiographical series by Boise State University with a summary of his early work,as part of the Western Writers Series, [44] written by Douglas Street. In 2011,Hwang received the PEN/Laura Pels International Foundation for Theater Award as a Grand Master of American Theater. [45] In 2012,he was awarded the William Inge Award for Distinguished Achievement in the American Theatre, [46] the Asia Society Cultural Achievement Award,the China Institute Blue Cloud Award, [47] and the Steinberg Distinguished Playwright Award. [48] In 2014,he received the Doris Duke Artist Award. In 2015,he received the 2015 ISPA Distinguished Artist Award. [49]
Mr. Hwang sits on the boards of the Dramatists Guild,Young Playwrights Inc.,and the Museum Of Chinese in the Americas (MOCA). He conducts interviews on arts-related topics for the national PBS cable television show Asian America. From 1994 to 2001,he served by appointment of President Bill Clinton on the President's Committee on the Arts and the Humanities. [50]
Hwang holds honorary degrees from Columbia College Chicago (1998), [51] the American Conservatory Theater (2000), [52] Lehigh University (2011), [53] University of Southern California (2013), [54] and State University of New York at Purchase (2015). [55]
In 2012,Hwang was named a Fellow of United States Artists. [56]
In 2015,Hwang was named a Ford Foundation Art of Change Fellow. [57]
In 2018,Hwang earned induction into the American Theater Hall of Fame. [58]
Hwang served on the board of directors for Far East National Bank founded by his father Henry Yuan Hwang. In 1999,American regulators investigated some of the bank's transactions with Chinese banks as possible funding for illegal campaign contributions,Chinese espionage,and other possibilities,but the results were inconclusive. [59] In 1989,Hwang's father hired then-Los Angeles mayor Tom Bradley as a consultant who received a loan from the bank,helping it secure $2 million from city funds. [60] When this became a major scandal in the city,however,Bradley returned his $18,000 in payments,and resigned from the consulting work. [61] Hwang addresses his father's controversies in his semi-autobiographical 2007 play Yellow Face .
Hwang was married to Ophelia Chong from 1985 until their divorce in 1989. [62] [63] In 1993,he married actress Kathryn Layng. They have two children together. [64] [65]
In November 2015,Hwang was the victim of a stabbing near his home in Fort Greene,Brooklyn. The assailant stabbed Hwang in the neck,severing his vertebral artery,before running from the scene. Hwang was seriously injured and underwent surgery before being discharged from the hospital. The attack appeared to be random,as nothing was taken;the assailant was never found. Hwang wrote about the experience in The New York Times . [66] [67] The stabbing also inspired a semi-autobiographical portion of Soft Power ,in which the lead character,also named David Henry Hwang,is the victim of a random stabbing.
Hwang endorsed Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election. [68]
Jeanine Tesori, known earlier in her career as Jeanine Levenson, is an American composer and musical arranger best known for her work in the theater. She is the most prolific and honored female theatrical composer in history, with five Broadway musicals and six Tony Award nominations. She won the 1999 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music in a Play for Nicholas Hytner's production of Twelfth Night at Lincoln Center, the 2004 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Music for Caroline, or Change, the 2015 Tony Award for Best Original Score for Fun Home, making them the first female writing team to win that award, and the 2023 Tony Award for Best Original Score for Kimberly Akimbo. She was named a Pulitzer Prize for Drama finalist twice for Fun Home and Soft Power.
Chay Yew is a playwright and stage director who was born in Singapore. He was artistic director of the Victory Gardens Theater in Chicago from 2011 to 2020.
FOB is a 1980 Obie Award-winning play by American playwright David Henry Hwang. His first play, it depicts the contrasts and conflicts between established Asian Americans and "fresh off the boat" (FOB) newcomer immigrants.
Francis Jue is an American actor and singer. Jue is known for his performances on Broadway, in national tours, off-Broadway and in regional theatre, particularly in the San Francisco Bay Area and at The Muny in St. Louis. His roles in plays and musicals range from Shakespeare to Rodgers and Hammerstein to Disney to David Henry Hwang. He is also known for his recurring role on the TV series Madam Secretary (2014–2019).
Allan Havis is an American playwright whose dramas have pronounced political themes and probe colliding cultures. His works range from minimal-language texts to ambiguous, ironic narratives that delineate the genesis, paradoxes, and seduction of evil. Several of his stories involve Jewish identity, cultural alienation, and universal problems of racism. He has been influenced by August Strindberg and Harold Pinter.
Golden Child is a play by American playwright David Henry Hwang. Produced off-Broadway in 1996, it was produced on Broadway in 1998. It explores an early twentieth-century Chinese family being faced with Westernization. It was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Play.
Philip Kan Gotanda is an American playwright and filmmaker and a third generation Japanese American. Much of his work deals with Asian American issues and experiences.
Yellow Face is a semi-autobiographical play by David Henry Hwang, featuring the author himself as the protagonist, DHH, mounting his 1993 play Face Value. The play's themes include questions of race and of the interaction between media and politics.
Asian American theatre refers to theatre written, directed or acted by Asian Americans. From initial efforts by four theatre companies in the 1960s, Asian-American theatre has grown to around forty groups today. Early productions often had Asian themes or settings; and "yellowface" was a common medium for displaying the perceived exoticism of the East in American performance. With the growing establishment of second-generation Asian-Americans in the 21st century, it is becoming more common today to see Asian-Americans in roles that defy historical stereotypes in the United States.
Madame Butterfly: A Tragedy of Japan is a play in one act by David Belasco adapted from John Luther Long's 1898 short story "Madame Butterfly". It premiered on March 5, 1900, at the Herald Square Theatre in New York City and became one of Belasco's most famous works. The play and Long's short story served as the basis for the libretto of Puccini's 1904 opera, Madama Butterfly. The title role was originally played in New York and London by Blanche Bates; in 1900–01 in New York by Valerie Bergere; and in 1913 by Clara Blandick.
Kathryn Anne Layng is an American actress.
Chinglish is a play by Tony Award winner David Henry Hwang. It is a comedy about an American businessman desperate to launch a new enterprise in China, which opened on Broadway in 2011 with direction by Leigh Silverman.
Jennifer Lim is an American theatre actress most noted for her performance in the 2011 Broadway show Chinglish by playwright David Henry Hwang, appearing at the Longacre Theatre.
M. Butterfly is a play by David Henry Hwang. The story, while entwined with that of the opera Madama Butterfly, is based most directly on the relationship between French diplomat Bernard Boursicot and Shi Pei Pu, a Beijing opera singer. The play premiered on Broadway in 1988 and won the 1988 Tony Award for Best Play. In addition to this, it was a Pulitzer Prize for Drama finalist in 1989.
Stephen Karam is an American playwright, screenwriter and director. His plays Sons of the Prophet, a comedy-drama about a Lebanese-American family, and The Humans were finalists for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 2012 and 2016, respectively. The Humans won the 2016 Tony Award for Best Play, and Karam wrote and directed a film adaptation of the play, released in 2021.
Jeff Locker (傑夫) is an American actor, playwright, screenwriter, host, and author. He appeared on Marvel's Agent Carter, in feature films Stasis, Warner Bros. release Disaster L.A. and Taiwanese box office smash Formula 17 (17歲的天空), in multiple sketches on Jimmy Kimmel Live!, and starred as Peter Timms in the play Chinglish by David Henry Hwang. Among his several award-winning plays, The Forgotten Place won the 43rd Samuel French Off Off Broadway Short Play Festival and is published and licensed worldwide by Samuel French. The short film adaption of The Forgotten Place won 21 awards during its film festival run. As a screenwriter, he made The Black List's GLAAD List and won the Atlanta Film Festival Screenplay Competition. Fluent in Mandarin Chinese, he was the host of the 75th Golden Globe Awards Red Carpet Show, game show Who's Smart 金頭腦 on ETTV America, Sony AXN's Fear Challenge, as well as a host at the Huading Awards, Golden Horse Awards and Golden Bell Awards. He also published eight bestselling books on learning English and understanding American culture and has lectured extensively throughout Taiwan and China.
Leigh Silverman is an American director for the stage, both off-Broadway and on Broadway. She was nominated for the 2014 and 2024 Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical for the musicals Violet and Suffs, and the 2008 Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Director of a Play for the play From Up Here.
Harrison David Rivers is an American playwright. Rivers' work has won him the Relentless Award, a GLAAD Media Award, a McKnight Fellowship for Playwrights, a Jerome Foundation Many Voices Fellowship, an Emerging Artist of Color Fellowship, a Van Lier Fellowship and the New York Stage & Film's Founders Award. He is based in Saint Paul, Minnesota and is married to Christopher Bineham.
An American Soldier is an opera in two acts composed by Huang Ruo to a libretto by playwright David Henry Hwang. It initially premiered in a one-act version in 2014 and was subsequently expanded to two acts. The two-act version had its world premiere on 3 June 2018 during the Opera Theatre of Saint Louis festival. A New York production ran from 12-19 May 2024 at PAC NYC. The opera is based on a true story, the suicide of Danny Chen, a Chinese-American U.S. Army soldier who had been subjected to racial harassment and beatings by his fellow soldiers. Chen died in 2011 at his U.S. Army post in Afghanistan from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Soft Power is a musical with book and lyrics by David Henry Hwang and music and additional lyrics by Jeanine Tesori.