New Documentary Reveals Illuminating Perspectives On Asian American Theater Over The Past 20 Years by David Hwang

In The First Twenty: 20 Years of Asian American Playwriting, the voices and perspectives of six Asian American theater luminaries are brought to life through a series of thoughtful and engaging interviews that move far beyond identity politics.

The First Twenty, an initiative from ALL ARTS, invites artists from diverse and traditionally underrepresented communities to create original content that reflects their insights, discoveries and hopes for the future after the shifts of the last 20 years.

A Ma-Yi Theater Company production under the direction of Ralph Peña, The First Twenty highlights the perspectives of David Henry Hwang, Young Jean Lee, Mike Lew, Rehana Lew Mirza, Qui Nguyen, Lauren Yee and Chay Yew.

Insightful throughout and at times disarming, this newest documentary illuminates the evolution of Asian American theater over the last two decades.

The film examines the shift in how Asian American plays are broadly perceived, as well as the widening scope of subjects tackled by Asian American writers that move far beyond identity politics.

At a time when Asian American representation in the creative arts is more important than ever, the artists featured in the documentary are presented with an opportunity to weigh in on personal experiences with racism and to provide valuable insight into why visibility matters.

Read more at Hyphen Magazine

David Henry Hwang: ‘Tick, Tick … Boom!’ is ‘Heart-Wrenching Love Letter’ to Follow Dreams Despite Rejection by David Hwang

For Variety‘s Writers on Writers, David Henry Hwang pays tribute to “Tick, Tick … Boom!” (screenplay by Steven Levenson; based on the musical by Jonathan Larson).

Movies about writers are notoriously difficult, since the central action of the protagonist is largely cerebral. Here, that protagonist is composer-dramatist Jonathan Larson, whose musical “Rent” defined a generation.

However, this story is not about the making of “Rent,” which would build to a victorious if bittersweet ending (Larson tragically passed away before the show’s first performance). Instead, “Tick, Tick … Boom!” concerns an earlier show, “Superbia,” abandoned by its author after a disappointing developmental workshop.

Read more at Variety

Photos: SLAVE PLAY Celebrates Re-Opening Night on Broadway by David Hwang

Slave Play, the ground-breaking work by Tony Award nominee Jeremy O. Harris under the direction of Tony Award nominee Robert O'Hara, re-opened just last night at the August Wilson Theatre (245 West 52nd Street).

Following the run at the August Wilson Theatre, the Broadway production, under the direction of O'Hara, will travel to Los Angeles as part of Center Theatre Group's upcoming Mark Taper Forum season. Casting for the CTG run of Slave Play will be announced shortly.

Slave Play received 12 Tony Award nominations, the most for any play in Broadway history and the 2019 production was the best reviewed play of the year.

Among those in the reopening audience were Dominique Morisseau and David Henry Hwang.

Read more at Broadway World

Guggenheim Works & Process’ 2022 Spring Season by David Hwang

“Works & Process,” the performing arts series at the Guggenheim, has announced the spring 2022 season. Here is a look at the operatic workshops that the Guggenheim will offer.

The Washington National Opera will present “Written in Stone” with Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang, and Kamala Sankaram and A.M. Homes. The work is inspired by iconic monuments in Washington, D.C., and the ideals embodied by President Kennedy. “Written in Stone” is a series of intimate short works interwoven into a single evening celebrating the Kennedy Center’s 50th anniversary. For one night only, prior to the March world premiere, select creators of “Written in Stone” will discuss their creative process with Artistic Director Francesca Zambello. Cast members will also perform highlights illuminating the intimate stories that celebrate diversity and acknowledge the struggles of today’s America.

Workshop Date: Feb. 6, 2022

Read more at Operawire

Works & Process At The Guggenheim Announces Spring 2022 Season by David Hwang

Works & Process, the performing arts series at the Guggenheim, has announced its spring 2022 season Featuring Commissions Celebrating New York's Modern, Street, and Vernacular Dance and Beatbox artists, and World Premiere of Third Bird by Isaac Mizrahi, Nico Muhly, and John Heginbotham. Throughout the pandemic, Works & Process continued to provide opportunities for artists and pioneered the bubble residency to support their work safely.

Season at a Glance:

New York City Ballet: Silas Farley

Alethea Pace and Yin Yue

Washington National Opera: Written in Stone with Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang and Kamala Sankaram and A.M. Homes

Read more at Broadway World

Lynn Ahrens, Stephen Flaherty, Sergio Trujillo, David Henry Hwang and More Will Take Part in EPIC by David Hwang

Other speakers will include Misty Copeland, Paul Tazewell and more.

The Entertainment and Performing Arts Industry Conference (EPIC) is thrilled to announce some of Broadway's best to join a multi-national and highly regarded group of entertainment industry leaders to participate in the first-ever, 24-hour global online event for everyone working in, aspiring to work in, or wishing to explore the arts and entertainment sector. 

A diverse and dynamic group of more than 100 speakers and panelists are coming to EPIC to share their stories and perspectives in 50 unique sessions, representing four pillars: CREATE, PERFORM, DESIGN, and PRODUCE. Never before have these leaders come together on one platform and in one conference for interviews, panels, and discussions about the evolution of the arts and entertainment industry.

Read more at Broadway World

‘Billion Dollar Whale’ Series Adaptation in the Works From SK Global, Westward by David Hwang

“House of Cards” creator and showrunner Beau Willimon and his Westward producing partner Jordan Tappis will work with “Crazy Rich Asians” co-financier SK Global to develop a TV series based on the blockbuster novel “Billion Dollar Whale: The Man Who Fooled Wall Street, Hollywood, and the World.”

SK Global and Willimon’s independent film, TV and music studio Westward will independently finance and oversee all stages of development and production.

David Henry Hwang — the three-time Pulitzer finalist and playwright, librettist, screenwriter and Columbia University professor, known for his works “M. Butterfly,” “Yellow Face” and “Soft Power” — will write and executive produce. Other executive producers include Willimon, Tappis, SK Global co-CEOs John Penotti and Charlie Corwin and SK Global president of TV Marcy Ross. Actor Michelle Yeoh will also be a producer on the series.

Read more at Variety

‘Billion Dollar Whale’ Series Adaptation In Works From SK Global & Westward by David Hwang

House Of Cards creator and showrunner Beau Willimon and his Westwardproducing partner Jordan Tappis have teamed with Crazy Rich Asians’ co-financier SK Global to develop a television series based on Tom Wright and Bradley Hope’s bestseller Billion Dollar Whale: The Man Who Fooled Wall Street, Hollywood, and the World. Tony Award-winning M. Butterflyplaywright David Henry Hwang is attached to write the adaptation and executive produce.

SK Global and Westward will finance and oversee all stages of development and production.

Read more at Deadline

Join the Global EPIC Event Now! by David Hwang

The Entertainment and Performing Arts Industry Conference (EPIC) is a 24-hour Global Event for everyone working in, aspiring to work in, or wishing to explore the arts and entertainment sector. Misty Copeland (Principal Dancer at ABT) Michael Curry (Visionary Puppet Designer), Natasha Katz (6 time Tony Award Winning Lighting Designer), David Henry Hwang (Playwright, Librettist, and Screenwriter, Tony Award Winner and three-time nominee, three-time OBIE Award Winner, and two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist), Patti Murin (Broadway & TV Actor, Singer, Dancer), Tara Rubin (Casting Agent), Gilles Ste-Croix (Co-Founder of Cirque du Soleil), Paul Tazewell (Tony Award Winning Costume Designer), and Sergio Trujillo (Tony & Olivier Award Winning Choreographer) are all speakers at EPIC.

Read more at Broadway World.

The National Arts Centre and Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards Television Special on CBC/Radio-Canada by David Hwang

Star-studded lineup includes Lorne Cardinal, Elisapie, Pura Fé, David Henry Hwang, Hugh Jackman, Blake Lively, Karen Kain, Tina Keeper, Dan Levy, Eugene Levy, Andrea Martin, Annie Murphy, Steven Page, Cobie Smulders, and many more

The National Arts Centre (NAC), in partnership with the Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards Foundation (GGPAAF) and Vérité Films, is delighted to announce the star-studded lineup and new details about the Governor General’s Performing Arts Awards one-hour television special that will air on CBC/Radio-Canada on CBC TV, ICI TÉLÉ and the free CBC Gem and ICI TOU.TV streaming services on Friday, November 26 at 7 p.m. | 7:30 NT. The program will also be available on demand for a limited time on both CBC Gem and ICI TOU.TV.

HE LINEUP

The many special guests paying tribute to the laureates are a remarkable group who represent the diversity, breadth and excellence of the performing arts in Canada. They include:

For Alexina Louie: Radio host, author and musician Tom Allen; composer David Henry Hwang; pianist Jon Kimura Parker; composer and conductor Alex Pauk; radio host, producer, writer and musician Paolo Pietropaolo; and writer and actor Dan Redican and film director Larry Weinstein; with a performance by Vania Chan and Justin Cho;

Read more at CBC

‘The First Twenty’ highlights Asian American playwrights with Bay Area ties by David Hwang

“People of color are used to watching stories about white people and empathizing with them,” says playwright David Henry Hwang in the documentary “The First Twenty: 20 Years of Asian American Playwriting.” “And the reverse has to happen as well.”

The 30-minute film, a production of Ma-Yi Theater Company, surveys how Asian American drama has evolved in the first 20 years of our new millennium. Many interviewees have strong Bay Area ties, including Hwang (Stanford grad), Lauren Yee (San Francisco native) and Young Jean Lee (Stanford professor). And others are hardly strangers; Lloyd Suh’s “The Chinese Lady” was produced at Magic Theatre in 2019, and ACT mounted Qui Nguyen’s “Vietgone” the previous year.

The film — which premieres online Tuesday, Nov. 9, via All Arts, an arm of New York’s PBS stations — offers theater fans a chance to meet some of the voices behind a vital, dynamic branch of American storytelling.

Read more at Datebook

20 Years of Asian American Playwriting by David Hwang

Luminaries explore Asian American playwriting, including David Henry Hwang, Young Jean Lee, Mike Lew, Rehana Lew Mirza, Lauren Yee, Chay Yew, Qui Nguyen and Lloyd Suh. Created by Ralph B. Peña of Ma-Yi Theater Company. Audio description, captions.

See more at Thirteen PBS

Isabel Leonard, Michael Fabiano, Quinn Kelsey, Kangmin Justin Kim, Jamie Barton Headline Santa Fe Opera’s 2022 Season by David Hwang

Santa Fe Opera has announced its 2022 festival, which will run between July 1 through August 27, 2022.

The season will include five new productions, 38 performances, one world premiere, one company premiere, and an international co-production. In sum, there will be 26 artists making their debuts and another 29 returning to the company.

Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang’s “M. Butterfly” will world premiere in a production by James Robinson. Carolyn Kuan conducts a cast headlined by Mark Stone, Kangmin Justin Kim, Hongni Wu, Kevin Burdette, and Joshua Dennis.

Performance Dates: July 30 – August 24, 2022

Read more at Operawire

SF Opera plans return to five productions in 2022 by David Hwang

After going dark in 2020 and offering only four operas and reduced seating this summer, the Santa Fe Opera plans to be back in 2022 with postponed programming and a standard five-opera season.

There will be 36 performances of the operas, all in new productions, as well as two evenings of scenes by the apprentice singers and technicians, General Director Robert Meya announced in a virtual event Thursday.

The season opens July 1, with Georges Bizet’s Carmen, followed the next evening by Gioachino Rossini’s The Barber of Seville, Giuseppe Verdi’s Falstaff on July 16, Richard Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde on July 23, and the world premiere of Huang Ruo’s and David Henry Hwang’s M. Butterfly on July 30.

Read more at Santa Fe New Mexican

“Yellow Face” Opens the Conversation with Satire – Nov. 4th -7th by David Hwang

Continuing Culver City High School’s Academy of Visual and Performing Arts tradition of thoughtful, relevant theater, the AVPA/CTE Theatre has the immense honor of putting on “Yellow Face” by David Henry Hwang. Debuting Thursday evening, November 4 and running through Sunday, November 7, 2021, the production is a collaboration with East West Players Theatre Company, and Stephanie Lee as guest director. Professional actor Christopher Chen will be onstage with the theater students as David Henry Hwang’s father, Henry Hwang.

For technical theatre students, AVPA has partnered with professional designers from the industry to come in as design mentors for each department within the production team.

“Yellow Face” is a wonderful satire that uses comedy to discuss important and difficult issues such as race in America, representation in the arts, and cultural appropriation. The theatre staff, and guest producers and directors created a series of professional development opportunities to accompany the play, so CCUSD teachers can use the themes and issues to educate and empower other students to learn from Yellow Face. 

Read more at the Culver City Crossroads

Curtain Calls: East Bay company to premiere romantic comedy ‘Chinglish’ by David Hwang

Story showing in Castro Valley highlights importance of having your own interpreter as cultures collide

It’s red-carpet-premiere time for Plethos Productions as it presents David Henry Hwang’s “Chinglish” in Castro Valley, starting Nov. 6.

Showing at the Chabot Theatre, 2853 Castro Valley Blvd., this romantic comedy highlights the importance of having your own interpreter as cultures collide in a hilarious way as the story revolves around Daniel, an American businessman trying to land the deal of a lifetime in China. The show features Will Livingston as Daniel and Lan Zhong as the woman across the negotiating table. The cast also includes Tony Cardoza as Daniel’s unhinged consultant, Xun Zhang as the powerful Chinese minister, with Byron Guo, Bingcong Zhu and Skyler Riordan as an assortment of terrible translators who add mayhem to this comedy of errors.

Read more at East Bay Times

Applications are now open for Columbia University's MFA in Theatre by David Hwang

Columbia University School of the Arts MFA in Theatre CONCENTRATIONS Acting, Directing, Playwriting, Dramaturgy, Stage Management, and Theatre Management & Producing, Theatre JD/MFA INFORMATION SESSION: Saturday, November 6 at 11am ET REGISTER.

APPLICATION DEADLINES Directing: December 1, 2021 All other Concentrations: January 5, 2022

Read more at Broadway World.

Composer Huang Ruo and Writer David Henry Hwang Talk M. BUTTERFLY in New Panel by David Hwang

In a new panel hosted by Works and Process at the Guggenheim, composer Huang Ruo and writer David Henry Hwang discussed their newest collaboration, "M. Butterfly” opera.

Inspired by the true story of a French diplomat who carried on a twenty-year love affair with a star of the Peking Opera, "M. Butterfly” opera is based on Hwang's 1988 Pulitzer Prize finalist and Tony Award-winning Broadway play of the same name.

Read more at Broadway World

This Month in Theatre History by David Hwang

October 2001 (20 years ago)

The Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles premiered David Henry Hwang’s adaptation of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Flower Drum Song. Hwang’s aim was to redeem the script by eliminating the sexist and racist stereotypes and to “write the book that Oscar Hammerstein would have written if he were Asian American.” Hwang received approval from Chin Yang Lee, the author of the novel (published in 1957) that was source material for the original musical, and he received permission from Rodgers’s and Hammerstein’s estates to completely rewrite the book of the musical, though he was not allowed to alter any lyrics. The reviews of the premiere in L.A. were overwhelmingly positive and the production received an extended run. The move to Broadway was less well-received than the L.A. premiere. The show closed after 169 performances, but Hwang’s work was recognized with a Tony nomination.

Read more at American Theatre

The Lark Is Grounded: New-Play Incubator to Fold After 27 Years by David Hwang

the-lark-theatre-space.jpg

Citing a financial ‘perfect storm,’ the organization’s board has opted to close the 27-year-old organization.

BY AMERICAN THEATRE EDITORS

NEW YORK CITY: In a stunning blow to playwrights and play development in the U.S. and worldwide, the prestigious new-play lab the Lark has announced that it will close its doors, though not before it works with “peer institutions to re-home existing Lark programs and fellowships.” According to a press release, the decision to shutter the 27-year-old play development mainstay was a “unanimous yet painful conclusion” of the organization’s board after “many long months of responding to pandemic-related crises and seeking paths to sustainability.”

In early 2020, the Lark’s founder, John Clinton Eisner, began to plan his retirement and transition out of his active role in the organization. When the COVID-19 pandemic and the attendant lockdown began, the Lark appeared to soldier on. Eisner publicly announced his departure in February 2021, and a week later director and new-play advocate May Adrales (she/her) was named as his successor, to lead alongside executive director Stacy Waring (she/her).

But behind the scenes all was not well with the organization’s finances, as its longtime board president, Colin Greer (he/him), acknowledged in an interview. Contributing to a growing crisis at the Lark, he said, Waring went on medical leave not long after Adrales’s hiring, leaving her solely in charge of a small, over-stretched staff. As the organization struggled to meet pre-pandemic funding levels, Greer said, the landlord for the Lark’s midtown space threatened to nearly double the rent. “It was really a perfect storm,” he said.

Greer, who had been with the Lark since before its founding, when he and Eisner kicked around the idea for a new-play initiative over breakfast at a Hungarian restaurant, called its ending “enormously sad,” and emphasized that the board and staff had worked tirelessly hard for the last six months to find a solution that would allow the Lark to continue, to no avail.

For her part, Adrales wrote in an email: “When I excitedly stepped into this role six months ago, I did not know that this great organization, my first artistic home of 20 years, faced such steep, insurmountable challenges. It is a devastating loss personally but also to the theatre field. I am comforted by my belief that the Lark has never been beholden to a physical place. It is a spirit, a transformation. Our methodologies and philosophies, which empower playwrights to write what they choose, have permeated the theatre landscape. We all have been transformed by the Lark experience, and we will carry all that the Lark taught us throughout its amazing 27 years. We know that its spirit will live on through every person it has touched.”

The Lark’s history and legacy is indeed substantial. As board member and playwright David Henry Hwang said in a statement, “At a time when play development in America risked slipping into formulaic dramaturgy, the Lark was founded to re-empower the playwright’s vision, a philosophy that has now become a best practice throughout the country and internationally. Its mission included centering dramatists from BIPOC, LGBTQIA, and other marginalized backgrounds, which was once also a radical idea but now sets the pace for the field. Plays developed at the Lark have become the new American canon; of the five most recent winners of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama, four were written by Lark playwrights, and two were developed directly in Lark programs. The Lark has succeeded in transforming the American theatre, and its legacy will live on.”

Read more at American Theatre