Edison High to stage ‘Tarzan’ on Nov. 22-23 by David Hwang

EHS-Tarzan-Photo-1100x817.jpg

RICHMOND — The King of the Jungle will swing into action at Edison High School when “Tarzan” hits the stage.

The school’s vocal music department will stage two performances of the musical in the auditorium on Nov. 22-23 under the direction of Dani Carroll. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. and the show starts 7:30 p.m., while tickets cost $5 for students and $8 for adults.

The play was originally produced on Broadway by Disney Theatrical Productions with music and lyrics by Phil Collins and the book by David Henry Hwang.

Read more at The Weirton Daily Times

Photo Flash: George Takei Stopped by SOFT POWER at The Public by David Hwang

tn-500_georgetakeidavidhenryhwangphototimmyblupe.jpg

Conrad Ricamora who plays Oliver in the ABC Series "How To Get Away With Murder" has been jetting back and forth across the country filming the final season of the show and also starring in the new musical "Soft Power" written by David Henry Hwang and Jeanine Tesori at The Public Theater in NY. Over the weekend, an old friend, George Takei stopped by to see the show and congratulate him backstage along with Playwright David Henry Hwang and the cast.

See more at Broadway World

Stephen Schwartz, Andrew Lippa and More Attended 'And the Tony Award Goes To…Celebrating TheatreWorks at 50' by David Hwang

Emmy, Grammy, and Tony-winning composer Stephen Schwartz ("Wicked," "Pippin," Disney's "Pocahontas", DreamWorks's "The Prince of Egypt") performed "For Good" from Wicked at "And the Tony Award Goes to...Celebrating TheatreWorks at 50," paying tribut…

Emmy, Grammy, and Tony-winning composer Stephen Schwartz ("Wicked," "Pippin," Disney's "Pocahontas", DreamWorks's "The Prince of Egypt") performed "For Good" from Wicked at "And the Tony Award Goes to...Celebrating TheatreWorks at 50," paying tribute to TheatreWorks Founding Artistic Director Robert Kelley.

Stars of stage and screen, playwrights, composers, and supporters of TheatreWorks Silicon Valley came together Saturday, November 2, 2019 to celebrate the acclaimed regional theatre at And the Tony Award Goes To...Celebrating TheatreWorks at 50, a once-in-a-lifetime event honoring the company's half-century and its 2019 Regional Theatre Tony® Award. Some 480 guests attended extraordinary event which raised nearly $800,000 for TheatreWorks marking it the most attended and most successful fundraiser in the company's history. Guests appropriately gathered in the heart of Silicon Valley at Mountain View's Computer History Museum for cocktails, dinner, and a lively auction, then proceeded to the Mountain View Center for the Performing Arts, where a stellar array of TheatreWorks alumni returned to pay tribute to its history through words and music.

Also on hand were Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and American Theatre Wing chair David Henry Hwang (M. Butterfly, Yellow Face, Aida, Soft Power), and Drama Desk and Emmy Award winner, multiple Tony nominee Željko Ivanek (Damages, Madam Secretary, Cloud Nine, The Pillowman), who offered heartfelt remarks highlighting their long relationships with TheatreWorks. Tony nominated Broadway composer Andrew Lippa (The Wild Party, The Addams Family, Big Fish) also received an ovation as he performed selections from his musicals developed at TheatreWorks. Broadway composer Paul Gordon, another Tony nominee (Jane Eyre, Daddy Long Legs, Jane Austen's EMMA, Being Earnest) who has debuted several hit productions at TheatreWorks, introduced a song from the upcoming holiday production of his Pride and Prejudice-which will mark TheatreWorks's 70th world premiere-performed by its leading lady, Mary Mattison.

Read more at Broadway World

Conrad Ricamora Is Ready to Be a Leading Man by David Hwang

Conrad Ricamora in rehearsal for the "Soft Power." (Photo by Joan Marcus. Photographed at New 42nd Street Studios.)

Conrad Ricamora in rehearsal for the "Soft Power." (Photo by Joan Marcus. Photographed at New 42nd Street Studios.)

Why is he doing ‘Soft Power’ in New York while filming ‘How to Get Away With Murder’ in Los Angeles? Because he finally gets to play the hero.

In the early 2000s, actor Conrad Ricamora was playing a Chinese character in a local community theatre production of Anything Goes. During the first week of rehearsal, the director asked him, “Can you be more Chinese?” Ricamora is half Filipino, half white.

Starring in Soft Power at the Public Theater (through Nov. 17). A new musical by David Henry Hwang and Jeanine Tesori, Ricomara also starred in Soft Power last year in Los Angeles and San Francisco. He plays Xuē Xíng, a Chinese entertainment producer who wants David Henry Hwang (played by Francis Jue) to write a musical about China that can play on Broadway. The country is after soft power, something America has in spades, which Xuē defines as “our ideas, inventions, culture,” which can “change the way people think.”

Read more at American Theatre

M. Butterfly [SOLD OUT] by David Hwang

Screen Shot 2019-08-29 at 09.29.48.png

Exclusive working rehearsal presented with the Santa Fe Opera.

Asia Society and the Santa Fe Opera’s 2020 Season proudly present the exclusive working rehearsal of Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang's new opera, M. Butterfly. Based on Hwang’s 1988 Tony Award-winning and Pulitzer-Prize finalist Broadway play, M. Butterfly is the story of Rene Gallimard, a French diplomat who carried on a 20-year love affair with Song Liling, a Peking opera star with an astonishing secret that leads to Gallimard's professional and personal ruin. The story’s many parallels with Puccini’s well-known Madama Butterfly are echoed in the new opera’s music, composed by the celebrated young Chinese American composer Huang Ruo. With Kangmin Justin Kim (countertenor) as Song Liling and David Bizic (baritone) as Rene Gallimard.

Read more at Asia Society

SEEING MYSELF ONSTAGE by David Hwang

Ensemblist_logo_black.jpg

In light of the show’s focus on Asian-American representation, we asked the company of Soft Power when was the first time they saw themselves represented on stage.

I honestly don't know that I have ever truly felt represented on stage before Soft Power. In other shows that I've seen or even been in, there's usually an element of otherness in those representations--whether it's portraying Asians as foreigners, as historical characters, and/or tokenism.

Read more at The Ensemblist

In ‘Soft Power,’ Hillary Clinton Sings and Dances to Keep Democracy Alive by David Hwang

Alyse Alan Louis as Hillary Clinton in 'Soft Power,' running at The Public Theater.Joan Marcus

Alyse Alan Louis as Hillary Clinton in 'Soft Power,' running at The Public Theater.

Joan Marcus

David Henry Hwang’s “play with a musical” investigates why we’re addicted to our political system — even if it nearly kills us.

“Musicals can be very tricky,” Jeanine Tesori explains. “Because when you deliver something and you put a beautiful string section underneath it, it sways you. It sways you because of the physics of music, and the overtone series and the ways that music is embedded inside the science of being alive.”

Read more at Rolling Stone Magazine

American theatre NYC roundup by David Hwang

copy-AT_masthead_tcg_blk_pad_logo.png

Soft Power by David Henry Hwang and Jeanine Tesori, currently running at the Public Theater through Nov. 17 ($100). In this send-up of The King and I, a Chinese entertainment producer meets Hillary Clinton and teaches her a thing or two about politics.

Read more at American Theater

Hard talk: Broadway gets tough on America in crisis by David Hwang

1433.jpg

In an era of uncertainty and anxiety, New York theatre is shunning its obsession with private lives to throw a powerful spotlight on politics.

It used to be argued that British drama is driven by a fascination with public affairs and its American counterpart by a preoccupation with private lives. On the evidence of a week’s intensive theatregoing in New York, I would suggest that hoary generalisation has been blown to smithereens. At a time of potential impeachment, political polarisation and profound uncertainty, American theatre seems to be heavily engaged with the wider world.

Soft Power at the Public Theater addresses the nation’s ills with the breezy bounce you expect in a musical. It has a strong pedigree in that the play and lyrics are by David Henry Hwang (M Butterfly) and the score by Jeanine Tesori (Caroline, or Change). The framework is complicated and derives from a street stabbing in which Hwang was the victim. But what we see is a fantasy musical that he imagines in his fevered post-op dreams and that offers a parodic inversion of The King and I. Instead of a British governess lecturing a Siamese monarch we see a Chinese film producer, Xue Xing, arriving in America and offering a lesson in civics and good governance to Hillary Clinton.

Read more at The Guardian

Why David Henry Hwang defends theater’s Michael Ritchie and ‘bravest act of producing’ by David Hwang

maxresdefault.jpg

I can only relate my own experience as an artist working with Center Theatre Group and its artistic director, Ritchie, on the commissioning and development of our recent show, “Soft Power,” which premiered at CTG in 2018 and just opened at the Public Theater in New York. In 2014, Ritchie offered me a commission and production slot for the Mark Taper Forum, which I gratefully accepted. While commissions are nice enough, a guaranteed slot represents real faith in an artist.

Read more at Los Angeles Times

ATCA Critics Join Award Winners At NYC Conference by David Hwang

285044479-FE7D-C9B2-EC825D9BB3657CB1.jpg

What will two Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning playwrights have to say to each other in a room full of critics about creating drama based on real-life characters and events?

Tony Award winning playwright David Henry Hwang ("Soft Power"), playwright Jeremy O. Harris ("Slave Play"), culture critic Soraya Nadia McDonald, playwright Nambi E. Kelley ("Native Son") and playwright Leah Nanako Winkler ("God Said") will speak on "writing with cultural awareness."

Read more at Broadway World

10 must-see Off-Broadway shows by David Hwang

SoftPower4.jpg

hese 10 newly-opened Off-Broadway shows are worth looking into.

While many new Broadway shows have opened and will continue to open through the end of the fall, this is also an especially bountiful time for Off-Broadway, with some of the most well-known not-for-profit companies presenting ambitious and diverse productions.

Below are 10 newly-opened Off-Broadway shows that are worth looking into, including three being produced just by the Public Theater.

‘Soft Power’

“The King and I” gets mixed up with China and Hillary Clinton in David Henry Hwang (“M. Butterfly”) and Jeanine Tesori’s (“Fun Home”) wild new musical in which an Asian-American playwright is asked to write a Broadway musical for Shanghai. Public Theater, 425 Lafayette St., publictheater.org. Through Nov. 17.

Read more at AM New York

Playwright David Henry Hwang: ‘It’s great being the first, but then the expectations are impossible’ by David Hwang

DHH-Photo-by-Lia-Chang-copy.jpg

While David Henry Hwang appreciated the acclaim that came with being the first Asian-American playwright to have a show produced on Broadway, with M Butterfly in 1988, looking back, he says it put him in a difficult position.

“There are obviously great things about getting to lead some kind of breakthrough or being the first,” Hwang says. “But the downside is that there’s an impossible set of expectations that you’re then expected to carry, too. If there’s only one Asian-American or Native American playwright, it’s like that person is expected to speak for the entire community. It’s just not possible for any one individual to speak for the whole of an ethnic group, a racial group, a community, a nation… anything.”

Read more at The Stage

Theatre Forward Hosts Creative Conversation & Cocktails in NYC by David Hwang

21571757028.jpg

On October 18, 2019, Theatre Forward, a non-profit arts organization based in New York City, held an evening of Creative Conversation & Cocktails with Special Guests David Henry Hwang, Tony-winning playwright of M. Butterfly, Author of Soft Power, Center Theatre Group/Public Theater, and Douglas C. Baker, Producing Director, Center Theatre Group, Los Angeles.

Read more at Broadway World

New Tracy Letts, David Henry Hwang Shows Are Among Our 5 Faves This Week by David Hwang

147251.jpg

We also recommend the return of a long-running parody revue of Broadway shows.

With so much great theater in New York City, you might need a little help deciding what to see this week. We've got you covered!

Here you'll find a list of standout shows that our TheaterMania critics consider especially worth your time. They're all top productions that you definitely won't want to miss.

Read more at Theater Mania

Bowen Yang, Jeremy O. Harris, Amy Sherman-Palladino, and More Celebrate Soft Power by David Hwang

SoftPower1.jpg

David Henry Hwang's new musical-within-a-play is now open at the Public Theater.

Soft Power celebrated its off-Broadway opening last night at the Public Theater where the production began performances on September 24. Take a look below at photos from the evening's celebration.

Read more at Theater Mania.

Playwright David Henry Hwang on Flipping a Flawed Musical on Its Head in Soft Power by David Hwang

gettyimages-1181364842.jpg

The Tony Award-winning playwright David Henry Hwang has a conflicted relationship with The King and I: enamored by its music, troubled by its exoticization and yellowface past. Soft Power, his newest musical running through Nov. 17 at New York City’s Public Theater, is his attempt to confront the musical’s contradictions and bring it into a new era. With music by fellow Tony winner Jeanine Tesori, Soft Power emulates the musical grandeur of The King and I, but also flips its racial politics on their head by depicting a Chinese man who comes to America and falls in love with a white woman—namely, Hillary Clinton.

Read more at Time.

Soft Power extends limited run at the Public Theater for a second time by David Hwang

SoftPower750x250_0.JPG

The New York premiere of Soft Power will now play its final performance at the Public Theater on November 17, 2019.

The Public Theater has announced a second 1-week extension for its current New York premiere of Soft Power, which features a book and lyrics by David Henry Hwang, music and additional lyrics by Jeanine Tesori and is directed by Leigh Silverman. Previews began at the Public's Newman Theater on September 24, ahead of an official opening on October 15. The limited engagement was originally scheduled to run through November 3, 2019, before an initial extension to November 10, and will now play its final performance on November 17, 2019.

Read more at New York Theatre Guide

Photo Flash: Constance Wu Visits SOFT POWER by David Hwang

ConstanceWu_SoftPower.jpeg

Constance Wu came to the new musical Soft Power at The Public Theater last night. She posed backstage with the cast, along with her guests, Thea Brooks and Mia Katigbak.

SOFT POWER is now running through Sunday, November 10 in The Public's Newman Theater. The new musical has a play and lyrics by Tony Award winner David Henry Hwang, music and additional lyrics by Tony Award winner Jeanine Tesori, choreography by Tony nominee Sam Pinkleton, and is directed by Tony nominee Leigh Silverman.

See more at Broadway World

New Musical Reimagines 'The King And I' As Parable Of Lost American Influence After 2016 Election by David Hwang

SoftPower4.jpg

Playwright David Henry Hwang's new play "Soft Power" takes a hard look at the state of American democracy through the lens of Chinese cultural influence. The play asks: Is it worth fighting for?

Learn more? Listen to WBUR