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Book Cover for: Yellow Face (Broadway Edition), David Henry Hwang

Yellow Face (Broadway Edition)

David Henry Hwang

"A chewy, challenging work that draws its comedy from racial misunderstandings and from shrewd dissection of ways in which we are all, at times, blind."--Daniel D'Addario, Variety

Part biography, part comic fantasy, Yellow Face is Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright David Henry Hwang's sendup of anti-Asian stereotypes and the traps he falls into searching for acceptance in a not-so-colorblind world. The play starts in the 1990s as the fictional DHH is casting Miss Saigon and unwittingly casts a white actor in the role of the engineer. This happens alongside the real-life investigation of Hwang's father, the first Asian American to own a federally chartered bank, and the espionage charges against physicist Wen Ho Lee. Adroitly combining a light touch with weighty political and emotional issues, Hwang creates a "a docu-style comedy recounting [a] controversy from his point of view" (Washington Post).

The Broadway version of Hwang's incisive play is leaner and more adept at balancing the comedy and seriousness of the stories portrayed. The play also "blurs the notions of racial 'authenticity' or 'racial-subversive' casting, with each actor playing various spectrums of characters not aligned with their race" (New York Theatre Guide). Having originally debuted Off-Broadway nearly two decades ago, the core takeaway is this: Yellow Face remains as poignant as ever.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Theatre Communications Group
  • Publish Date: Nov 11st, 2025
  • Pages: 112
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 0.00in - 0.00in - 0.00in - 0.00lb
  • EAN: 9781636702506
  • Categories: American - Asian & Pacific IslanderContemporary

About the Author

Hwang, David Henry: - David Henry Hwang's stage works include the plays M. Butterfly, Chinglish, Yellow Face (2007 Off-Broadway, 2024 Broadway revival), Kung Fu, Golden Child, The Dance and the Railroad, and FOB, as well as the Broadway musicals Aida (libretto co-written with Linda Woolverton and Robert Falls, with music by Elton John and lyrics by Tim Rice), Flower Drum Song (2002 revival), and Disney's Tarzan. Hwang is a Tony Award winner and three-time nominee, a three-time OBIE Award winner, and a three-time finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. He is also the most produced living American opera librettist, whose works have been honored with two Grammy Awards. He co-wrote the Gold Record Solo with the late pop icon Prince, and he worked from 2015-2019 as a writer/consulting producer for the Golden Globe-winning television series The Affair. His newest work, Soft Power, a collaboration with composer Jeanine Tesori (Fun Home), premiered at Los Angeles's Ahmanson Theatre, where it won six Ovation Awards. Its subsequent run at The Public Theatre in NYC received four Outer Critics Honors, eleven Drama Desk Nominations, a Grammy nomination for Best Musical Theatre Album, and was a finalist for the 2020 Pulitzer Prize in Drama.

More books by David Henry Hwang

Book Cover for: M. Butterfly: With an Afterword by the Playwright, David Henry Hwang
Book Cover for: Yellow Face (TCG Edition), David Henry Hwang
Book Cover for: Golden Child, David Henry Hwang
Book Cover for: Chinglish (Tcg Edition), David Henry Hwang
Book Cover for: M. Butterfly: Broadway Revival Edition, David Henry Hwang
Book Cover for: Trying to Find Chinatown: The Selected Plays, David Henry Hwang
Book Cover for: Flower Drum Song, David Henry Hwang

Praise for this book

"A pointed critique of identity, masquerading as a mockumentary...[A] smart thing about Yellow Face, aside from the authorial self-defamation, is that as it gets more hopelessly tangled and thus funny it also gets more serious and thus damning. The questions of identity considered as cultural matters in the first half become personal and political in the second."

--Jesse Green, New York Times

"Yellow Face might be the prolific Hwang's magnum opus, but it's also wily, wry, and slippery. It resists classification practically to its final moments, even as it builds to a climax of startling power...Hwang is among the great writers of big ideas currently working on the American stage; turning his careful and precise attention to his own experience of failure and of regret is something of a gift."

--Daniel D'Addario, Variety

"An admirably self-aware work, Yellow Face is a good time in the company of smart, self-aware people, critical thinkers willing to ponder the lessons and the follies of the past."

--Chris Jones, Chicago Tribune

"A witty, damning analysis and exposure of racism as reflected in the casting of white actors in Asian roles...[T]he real power Yellow Face proposes is of minority voices not just delivering sober-minded rebuttals to bigotry, but--in occupying spaces like a Broadway theater--offering those rebuttals with irreverent humor and pointed swagger while playing with audiences' perceptions and expectations as freely as possible."

--Tim Teeman, Daily Beast