AAPI Celebration with Senator Kamala Harris by David Hwang

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Please join 
Senator Kamala Harris

Maya Harris | Andrew Yang 

and special guests

Margaret Cho | Connie Chung | Darren Criss 

David Henry Hwang | Padma Lakshmi | Lucy Liu | Aasaf Mandvi 

Kumail Nanjiani | Ravi Patel | Lou Diamond Phillips 

 Maggie Q | Lea Salonga | George Takei and more

for
 A Celebration 

Saturday, October 24, 2020

Learn more at Joe Biden.com

Breaking: Tony Nominations Coming Next Week; Sets Digital Ceremony for Early December by David Hwang

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Tony Award Productions will announce the nominations for American Theatre Wing's 74th Annual Awards® on Thursday, October 15th. The Awards Nominating Committee will meet to vote on this year's nominations on Tuesday, October 13th. The nominations announcement will be hosted by Award-winning actor James Monroe Iglehart on the official Tony Awards YouTube Channel www.youtube.com/tonyawards at 12:00 noon ET.

The American Theatre Wing's Tony Awards are presented by The Broadway League and the American Theatre Wing. At The Broadway League, Thomas Schumacher is Chairman and Charlotte St. Martin is President. At the American Theatre Wing, David Henry Hwang is Chair and Heather A. Hitchens is President & CEO.

Read more at Broadway World

Re-Imagined Public Theater Virtual Gala by David Hwang

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"We must strive to build institutions worthy of the beauty of our artists," says Kenny Leon, who directs the event.

A re-imagined virtual gala from The Public Theater will be a star-studded affair as the institution looks to the future following the year’s reckoning around racism in the country. FORWARD. TOGETHER., directed by Tony winner Kenny Leon, will take place October 20 at 8 PM ET. 

The event will be live streamed on The Public’s website, YouTube, and Facebook. While free to watch, donations are encouraged to support the Off-Broadway institution. 

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The lineup includes Jelani Alladin, Jacqueline Antaramian, Antonio Banderas, Laura Benanti, Kim Blanck, Ally Bonino, Danielle Brooks, Jenn Colella, Elvis Costello, Daniel Craig, Alysha Deslorieux, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Holly Gould, Danai Gurira, Stephanie Hsu, David Henry Hwang, Oscar Isaac, Nikki M. James, Alicia Keys, John Leguizamo, John Lithgow, Audra McDonald, Grace McLean, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Kelli O’Hara, Mia Pak, Suzan-Lori Parks, David Hyde Pierce, Phylicia Rashad, Liev Schreiber, Martin Sheen, Phillipa Soo, Meryl Streep, Stingand Trudie Styler, Will Swenson, Shaina Taub, Kuhoo Verma, Ada Westfall, and Kate Wetherhead. As previously planned for the June 1 ceremony, the gala includes a special tribute to this year’s honorees Sam Waterston and Audrey and Zygi Wilf.

Read more at Playbill

Meet Theater’s Most Famous Superfan: Hillary Clinton by David Hwang

Alyse Alan Louis, as Hillary Clinton in the Public Theatre production of SOFT POWER by David Henry Hwang.

Alyse Alan Louis, as Hillary Clinton in the Public Theatre production of SOFT POWER by David Henry Hwang.

She’s been to 39 shows since the 2016 election, and believes Broadway will return. But she doesn’t have the “gumption” to see herself depicted just yet.

Hillary Clinton has long loved theater — back in the day, she wore out a “Camelot” cast album and got standing room tickets to the original production of “Hair.”

A few dramatists have started writing about you. Last year a play called “Hillary and Clinton” imagined your 2008 campaign in an alternate universe, and then there was a musical called “Soft Power” that featured a character named Hillary Rodham Clinton who dances and sings and eats a lot of ice cream.

(Laughing) Well in my house, the dancing, singing and eating ice cream does go on. [But] I have not had the courage to go see anything about me. Sometimes in a pre-existing production, somebody will have a reference to me, and I obviously catch that. But to go and see a play about me — I haven’t gotten the gumption up to do that yet.

Read more at New York Times

NEW YORK CITY: The civic-minded theatre company Waterwell has announced a national series called The Flores Exhibits: Conversations Around the Country by David Hwang

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Aimed at creating meaningful conversations about immigration. The Flores Exhibits is a collection of videos featuring artists, lawyers, advocates, and immigrants reading the testimonies of children held in detention facilities at the U.S. border. This fall, Waterwell is partnering with organizations across the country to present a series of virtual events to spark conversations about U.S. immigration policy. All videos are currently available online.

The Flores Exhibits was originally conceived by artistic director Lee Sunday Evans and co-created by Waterwell and the Broadway Advocacy Coalition in collaboration with the Immigrants’ Rights Clinic and the Center for Institutional and Social Change at Columbia Law School. The testimonies for the project were gathered in June 2019 by a team of lawyers who visited detention facilities as monitors for the 1997 Flores Settlement Agreement, which limits the length of time and conditions under which children can be held in immigration detention. In response to discovering the severely detrimental conditions in detention centers, members of that team reached out to artists, journalists, and community leaders to share the stories of those affected and advocate for protections for children in government care.

The videos in The Flores Exhibits feature Elizabeth Rodriguez, Sakina Jaffrey, Kathleen Chalfant, David Schwimmer, Malina Weisman, Arian Moayed, Bitta Mostofi, Jeffrey S. Chase, David Henry Hwang, and Luis Mancheno reading exactly what is presented in a child’s sworn testimony.

Read more at American Theatre

Playing On Air Announces Stevenson Prize Winner, Selected by Lynn Nottage, Rebecca Taichman and David Henry Hwang by David Hwang

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Theater podcast and public radio program Playing on Air has announced the winners of the third annual James Stevenson Prize for Comedic Short Plays. The nation's largest open-submission short play prize, the Stevenson Prize awards a professional audio production and $6,000 cash prize to the play that best celebrates the comic wit of longtime author, illustrator, and New Yorker cartoonist James Stevenson.

From 960 open submissions, the 2020 winner of the Stevenson Prize is "I think it's worth pointing out that I've been very serious throughout this entire discussion or, Dave and Julia are stuck in a tree" by Mallory Jane Weiss.

The second prize of $3,000 goes to "S.W.A.T." by Jaymes Sanchez, and third prize of $1,000 goes to "The Donor" by Avery Deutsch.

This year's top plays were selected by an acclaimed panel of judges. Two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Lynn Nottage, Tony-winning director Rebecca Taichman, and Tony-winning playwright David Henry Hwang were joined by Playing on Air founder and Producing Artistic Director Claudia Catania and prize sponsor Josie Merck as jurors for the final round of scripts. All readers and judges scored scripts blind, with no knowledge of playwrights' past credits.

Read more at Broadway World

VIDEO: Watch a FLOWER DRUM SONG Reunion on Stars in the House by David Hwang

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Stars in the House continues tonight (8pm) with a Flower Drum Song reunion with David Henry Hwang, Alvin Ing, Baayork Lee, Jose Llana and Lea Salonga.

Flower Drum Song was the eighth musical by the team of Rodgers and Hammerstein. It is based on the 1957 novel, The Flower Drum Song, by Chinese-American author C. Y. Lee. It premiered on Broadway in 1958 and was then performed in the West End and on tour. It was adapted for a 1961 musical film. It last appeared on Broadway in 2002.

Read more at Broadway World

Playing On Air Announces Stevenson Prize Winner, Selected by Lynn Nottage, Rebecca Taichman and David Henry Hwang by David Hwang

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The winner is 'I think it's worth pointing out that I've been very serious throughout this entire discussion or, Dave and Julia are stuck in a tree' by Mallory Jane Weiss.

Theater podcast and public radio program Playing on Air has announced the winners of the third annual James Stevenson Prize for Comedic Short Plays. The nation's largest open-submission short play prize, the Stevenson Prize awards a professional audio production and $6,000 cash prize to the play that best celebrates the comic wit of longtime author, illustrator, and New Yorker cartoonist James Stevenson.

From 960 open submissions, the 2020 winner of the Stevenson Prize is "I think it's worth pointing out that I've been very serious throughout this entire discussion or, Dave and Julia are stuck in a tree" by Mallory Jane Weiss.

The second prize of $3,000 goes to "S.W.A.T." by Jaymes Sanchez, and third prize of $1,000 goes to "The Donor" by Avery Deutsch.

This year's top plays were selected by an acclaimed panel of judges. Two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Lynn Nottage, Tony-winning director Rebecca Taichman, and Tony-winning playwright David Henry Hwang were joined by Playing on Air founder and Producing Artistic Director Claudia Catania and prize sponsor Josie Merck as jurors for the final round of scripts. All readers and judges scored scripts blind, with no knowledge of playwrights' past credits.

Read more at Industry Insider

VIDEO: Broadway Stars Talk Shutdown, the State of the Industry, and A Hopeful Future by David Hwang

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Brian Stokes Mitchell, David Henry Hwang, John Lithgow, Christine Baranski, and more talk Covid-19 from Broadway's perspective.

The New Yorker is highlighting the trials and triumphs of Broadway throughout the Covid-19 pandemic.

See some familiar Broadway faces including Brian Stokes Mitchell, David Henry Hwang, John Lithgow, Christine Baranski, and more join the feature to discuss their experiences in the coronavirus pandemic, from day one of the shutdown to the present.

Celebrating the resiliency of the industry and its members, look back on the last few months from the point of view of Broadway as its denizens grapple with the present, reflect on the past, and look to the hopeful future.

Read more at Broadway World

Stars in the House Welcomes Flower Drum Song's Lea Salonga, Jose Llana, More September 4 by David Hwang

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Seth Rudetsky and James Wesley's daily series benefits The Actors Fund.

Stars in the House, the daily live streamed concert series created by Playbill correspondent and SiriusXM Broadway host Seth Rudetsky and producer James Wesley, celebrates the 2002 Tony-nominated revival of Flower Drum Song September 4. Watch the stream in the video above beginning at 8 PM ET.

Guests include Tony winner Lea Salonga, Jose Llana, and Alvin Ing, librettist David Henry Hwang, and Tony recipient Baayork Lee, who appeared in the original 1958 production of the Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II musical.

The reworking of Flower Drum Song officially opened on Broadway in October 2002. Featuring direction and choreography by Robert Longbottom and a new book by Tony winner Hwang, the musical played 25 previews and 169 performances. The production was nominated for three 2003 Tony Awards.

James Wesley and Seth Rudetsky Joseph Marzullo/WENN

Stars in the House launched March 16 to promote support for The Actors Fundand its services in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. It has also raised funds for the NAACP's Legal Defense Fund in support of the Black Lives Matter movement.

Read more at Playbill

Recording of SigSpace Summit: David Henry Hwang and Prof. Diane C. Fujino by David Hwang

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Playwright David Henry Hwang (Mme. Butterfly, Golden Child)  hosted Diane C. Fujino, Professor of Asian American Studies at UC Santa Barbara, for the SigSpace Summit on Black-Asian Alliances on August 26, 2020. Their conversation explored the historical alliances between Black and Asian American progressive activists, and how that legacy can shape the future.

Watch video below.

Read more at UCSB

What the Coronavirus Pandemic Means for the Future of Broadway by David Hwang

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The last time I attended a Broadway show—a buzzed-about revival of “West Side Story”—was on March 6th. Even then, a night at the theatre felt like a calculated risk: riding the A train, sitting close to strangers in the audience, going out for a post-theatre drink. The next Thursday, amid reports that a part-time Broadway usher had tested positive for covid-19, Broadway shut down completely. Theatre is ephemeral, but the idea of Broadway—a $1.8-billion industry and a major part of the city’s (and the country’s) artistic lifeblood—disappearing like a soap bubble was hard to fathom. “It was unimaginable that New York would not have theatre, would not have shows on Broadway, and crowds in Times Square every night,” the actor John Lithgow says in the video above.

The Broadway drought, which at this point seems certain to last into 2021, has coincided with another upheaval: the Black Lives Matter protests and the calls for change that they’ve inspired in the arts. Newly formed collectives such as Black Theatre United and We See You, White American Theatre have demanded active measures to counter structural racism onstage and off. No one is cheering the prolonged pause, but the shutdown might help to open up space for a deeper reckoning than would be possible with Broadway in full swing. “Once it is possible to begin bringing audiences back, it may also be the case that we have to think about lowering ticket prices, and maybe we will have a younger audience, and maybe we will have a more diverse audience,” the playwright David Henry Hwang says. “Out of all this tragedy, there might be some silver linings for Broadway.”

Read more at The New Yorker

The 2020 Tony Awards to Be Held Digitally This Fall by David Hwang

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The 74th annual ceremony, originally scheduled for June 7, was put on hold due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The Tony Awards, having put its 74th annual ceremony on hold earlier this year, will head online in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic. The Broadway League and the American Theatre Wing, co-presenters of the annual tradition, have revealed that the 2020 proceedings will take place in the form of a digital ceremony this fall.

No word yet on further details, including an exact date.

Read more at Playbill

Santa Fe Opera @ Home: "M. Butterfly" by David Hwang

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The author

The creation of M. Butterfly began on May 11, 1986, with a report by The New York Times’ Paris correspondent.

“A former French diplomat and a Chinese opera singer have been sentenced to six years in jail for spying for China after a two-day trial that traced a story of clandestine love and mistaken sexual identity. … Bernard Boursicot was accused of passing information to China after he fell in love with Shi Pei Pu, whom he believed for 20 years to be a woman. … Mr. Boursicot said their meetings had been hasty affairs that always took place in the dark. ‘He was very shy. I thought it was a Chinese custom.’ ”

The trial of Bernard Bouriscot and Shi Pei Pu

The trial of Bernard Bouriscot and Shi Pei Pu

David Henry Hwang read the Times story and was convinced it had the potential to become a play. The then-28-year-old Angeleno had attended the Yale School of Drama for a year, dropping out of its graduate program when his plays began to be professionally performed at New York’s Public Theater and elsewhere.

Determined not to write a docudrama, Hwang did no further research into the news item. “Frankly, I didn’t want the ‘truth’ to interfere with my own speculations,” he wrote in an afterword to M. Butterfly.He even told Stuart Ostrow, who eventually produced the play, that he thought it could be “some great Madame Butterfly-like tragedy,” although he hadn’t yet made the conceptual connection between the opera and the real-life story.

Read more at Santa Fe New Mexican

John Lithgow: A mentor on and off camera by David Hwang

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In the span of his long acting career, one thing is sure; John Lithgow is a mentor, both literally and figuratively.

Lithgow’s best-known role is arguably the alien commander Dick Solomon in the sitcom 3rd Rock from the Sun, which ran from 1996 to 2001.

Despite the sitcom’s massive popularity, Lithgow said his most memorable role was in the award-winning 1988 play M. Butterfly by David Henry Hwang.

Starring alongside BD Wong, he plays a French civil servant who falls in love with a star of the Peking opera, not knowing that the woman is a spy and actually a man cross-dressing in order to seduce him and extract information.

“An extraordinary, preposterous story, but David Henry Hwang took that and turned it into an extraordinary metaphor for the differences between the East and the West in particular, but Western men and Eastern women,” he said.

Read more at Jakarta Post

SONGS FROM THE SANTA FE OPERA at Home Computer Screens by David Hwang

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On August l, 2020, Songs from the Santa Fe Operapresented Episode. 5: M. Butterfly. The opera by composer Huang Ruo and librettist David Henry Hwang, was to have been premiered on this date. We heard an usher playing the musical call to the non-existent audience. We saw a beautifully marked butterfly gliding through the empty open air theater and heard the "Humming Chorus" from Ruo's opera pleasingly sung by Apprentices: Stephen Carroll, Hayan Kim, Seiyoung Kim, Nicholas Martorano, Nate Mattingly, Jana McIntyre, Elliott Paige, Heather Petrie, Elizabeth Picker, Rachel Policar, and Jarrett Porter. John Arida accompanied at the piano and Susanne Sheston conducted. While they were singing, watchers online saw a tour of the grounds as the sun set behind the Jemez Mountains.

Read more at Broadway World

John Lithgow on the Asian-American play that changed his life forever by David Hwang

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BD Wong and John Lithgow

During an video interview with Asian press members yesterday to promote his latest show, ‘3rd Rock from the Sun’ actor John Lithgow was asked if there was a part he played that deeply affected him on a personal level.

The Harvard alum cited the groundbreaking 1988 play M. Butterfly by Asian-American playwright David Henry Hwang that’s loosely based on a true story and inspired by the Italian opera Madama Butterfly.

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John Lithgow (Gallimard) and BD Wong (Song Liling) in M. Butterfly on Broadway

In the play, Lithgow plays a French diplomat who falls in love with the star of the Peking Opera (played by actor BD Wong) whom he discovers is a spy for the Chinese government and a man.

“It was the first major, straight play big hit on Broadway, written by an Asian-American about very essential issues between the East and the West — a wonderful bold play and won the Tony Award that year,” Lithgow said.

“It’s become a major part of the American cannon ever since and the role was terrific.”

He added that the character who cross dressed was able to deceive a Western diplomat.

“An extraordinary preposterous story but David Henry Hwang took that and turned it into an extraordinary metaphor for the differences between the East and the West, in particular about Western men and Eastern women — I found that a real life-changing experience.”

Read and see more at Malaymail.com

Stars on the Moon: 9 Shows to Celebrate the Anniversary of the Lunar Landing by David Hwang

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From Spaceman Off-Broadway in 2019 to the Andy Warhol-produced Man on the Moon in the ‘60s, these cosmos-set shows are out of this world.

On July 20, 1969, Apollo 11 touched down on the moon and Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans to set foot on it. 

To celebrate the anniversary, Playbill has gathered a list of space–related shows ranging from operas set on the moon to an Olivier Award–winning musical.

The '90s saw Phillip Glass and David Henry Hwang create The Voyage, a three-act opera that celebrates the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus' discovery of America. Rather than center the show on him, however, the team focused on exploration through space and time. (Glass also wrote The Making of the Representative for Planet 8, which debuted in the '80s.)

Read more at Playbill

Video Flashback: Lea Salonga Sings a Cut Song From FLOWER DRUM SONG in 2001 by David Hwang

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David Henry Hwang's reimagining of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Flower Drum Song made its world premiere at the Taper in 2001.

This new production, starring Tony Award® winner Lea Salonga, was the first major revival since its original Broadway run in 1958. After a successful run at the Taper, the revival moved to Broadway.

Inspired by his lifelong search for authentic representations of Asians and the Asian American diaspora, Hwang re-contextualized Rodgers and Hammerstein's Broadway hit after asking himself, "Could I aspire to write the book that Hammerstein might have written had he been Asian-American? Could I re-envision the musical in a way that would feel relevant and moving to more sophisticated, contemporary audiences?"

See video and more at Broadway World

Ruthie Fierberg Launches Debut Podcast by David Hwang

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On July 15, Ruthie Fierberg, in association with the Broadway Podcast Network, launches the new podcast Why We Theater

The premiere episode will be available July 15, with new episodes released every subsequent Thursday for a limited season. Find it now at BPN.FM/WWT

An intersection of theatre and social justice, Why We Theater digs into today’s most thought-provoking and urgent onstage works with the artists who made them and real-world experts who advise us on how we can create impactful change in our offstage lives. “I like to think of ‘theatre’ not just as a place or a presentation but as an action,” Fierberg says. “‘To theater’ is to engage with art presented onstage. The curtain call of a play or musical is not the end of the experience; it’s the beginning.”

Each episode begins with a one-on-one discussion between Fierberg and the artist behind the theatrical piece at hand and then opens up to include real-world experts in that field to offer advice and steps to help us all take actions (re-wire a thought pattern, sign a petition, donate to a related charity, volunteer for a related organization, etc.) and manifest progress.

Fierberg also tackles Octet and internet addiction with the musical’s Drama Desk-nominated director Annie Tippe, USC Professor of Neurology, Psychology, and Education Dr. Mary Helen Immordino-Yang, co-founder and Chief Clinical Director at reSTART Dr. Hilarie Cash, and Senior Software Engineer at Niantic Inc. Daphne Larose; Soft Power, democracy, U.S.-China relations, and Asian-American culture with three-time Pulitzer Prize finalist David Henry Hwang, director Silverman, author and “Asian Pop” columnist Jeff Yang, and senior policy advisor to Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign Jake Sullivan; and Pipeline, education inequity, and the school-to-prison pipeline with Obie-winning playwright Dominique Morisseau, Director of Integration and Innovation Initiative at NYU Metro Center Matt Gonzales, and Executive Director of Camelot Education Tyree Booker.

Read more at Playbill