DHH Marcus G. Dahlman HYH Leah Anne Cho Stuart Ostrow Rocco Palmieri Jane Krakowski Miles Newman The Announcer Name Withheld on Advice of Counsel (NWOAOC) and others
1990 to the present. New York City, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., Boston, San Francisco, Guizhou Province
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.[1]
In 2013, Yellow Face made its UK premiere at Park Theatre in Finsbury Park, London, on May 21, produced by Special Relationship Productions and directed by Alex Sims.[1] This production transferred to the Royal National Theatre on May 5, 2014.[6]
In 2021, Yellow Face premiered in Australia at the Kings Cross Theatre, Sydney, opening on 23 April and closing on 8 May after a sold-out run.[7][8] The production was directed by Tasnim Hossain and produced by Janine Lau and Jasper Lee-Lindsay, with Shan-Ree Tan as DHH, Adam Marks as Marcus G. Dahlman, Jonathan Chan as HYH/Wen Ho Lee/others, and Kian Pitman as the Announcer/Name Withheld, together with Helen Kim, Whitney Richards and Idam Sondhi, and featuring production and costume design by Ruru Zhu, lighting design by Lucia Haddad, and music and sound design by Prema Yin.[7] The production was nominated for six Sydney Theatre Awards in 2021, winning for Best Direction (Independent Production) and Best Performance in a Leading Role (Independent Production).[9][10]
In June/July 2022, the play was produced by Theatre Raleigh and directed by Telly Leung. The production featured Hansel Tan as DHH, Alan Ariano as Henry Y Hwang, and Pascal Pastrana as Marcus G. Dahlman. The production also featured Lighting Design by Charlie Raschke and Scenic design by Mayuki Su. [11]
The fictionalized DHH also appears in Hwang's musical Soft Power.[12]
The play is being presented on Broadway in September 2024 by Roundabout Theatre Company. Silverman again directs, with Daniel Dae Kim portraying DHH.[13] Joining Kim are Francis Jue reprising his roles from 2007, Ryan Eggold as Marcus, Kevin Del Aguila as Actor A, Marinda Anderson as Actor B, Greg Keller as Reporter/NWOAC, and Shannon Tyo as Leah and others. Previews began September 13 with the opening night scheduled for October 1, for a limited engagement through November 2024.[4]
Adaptations
In 2013, the play was produced as a two-part YouTube video directed and adapted by Jeff Liu, starring Ryun Yu as DHH, Sab Shimono as HYH, and Christopher Gorham as Marcus G. Dahlman, with the rest of the cast played by Ki Hong Lee, Emily Kuroda, Linda Park, Justin James Hughes, Michael Krawic, and Tracy Winters.
In an interview, Hwang explained: "It’s a memoir – a kind of unreliable memoir. The main character is named after me and based on me. There are some things in it that are true and there are some things in it that aren’t true. ... The story of 'Yellow Face' dates back to the 'Miss Saigon' controversy in 1990. That was when I was involved in the big casting controversy... I just naturally tend to write humorously, and for me, it’s not an issue of trying to write lines that are funny. I don’t think that works. It’s having a situation that’s inherently comic and then trying to be truthful to the character in that situation."[16]
Though only referred to in the script as "Name Withheld On Advice Of Counsel", the Times investigative reporter whom Hwang's counterpart meets is known to be based on Jeff Gerth, which Hwang has freely acknowledged is easily determined through the list of articles quoted and referred to in the play.[17][18] Gerth denies having ever spoken to Hwang, while his co-writer on the Henry Y. Hwang story Tim Golden claims Hwang exaggerated a real-life phone call the two had and denies bias in the Wen Ho Lee story, though he has acknowledged flaws in their reporting.[19] Contrary to the character's title, Hwang censored the reporter's name while writing the play due to the belief the Times would be protective of the reporter; he briefly considered uncensoring the character's name for the 2024 Broadway production, but elected to leave it as is for dramatic purposes.[17]
Plot summary
Yellow Face opens with DHH receiving an E-mail from Marcus G. Dahlman in 2006 about his recent travels in China. DHH reflects on how Marcus disappeared from the public eye. He begins in 1990 with the controversy over the casting of Jonathan Pryce, a Welsh actor, in an Asian role in Miss Saigon as the musical transfers from London to New York City. Although DHH receives a lot of publicity about his protests against the casting and yellow face makeup, especially as the first Asian-American playwright to win a Tony Award (for M. Butterfly), the production of Miss Saigon ultimately continues without changes to the cast.
DHH then writes the play Face Value, based partly on the Miss Saigon controversy, and casts Marcus G. Dahlman as one of the lead Asian roles in his play. DHH is at first convinced that Marcus is part Asian but eventually realizes he is fully white. DHH fears he will appear hypocritical for the casting after his protest of yellow face, but is unable to fire Marcus on the basis of his race. DHH has him adopt the name "Marcus Gee" and tells the public that Marcus has Eurasian ancestry as a Jew with Siberian ancestry. Though their deception is successful, Face Value receives negative reviews and closes in previews, losing $2 million. DHH tries to move on, but he later discovers that Marcus has continued playing his role as an Asian in all parts of his life, acting in Asian roles and becoming an activist for Asian American rights. This angers DHH, who views him as an "ethnic tourist".
The play further explores DHH's relationship to his father, HYH, and the relationship of the Chinese American community to America. HYH is a successful immigrant who built the Far East National Bank in California. After contributing monetarily to political campaigns, he and others affiliated with the bank, including Wen Ho Lee, get investigated by Senator Fred Thompson, who believes they are funneling money from China to influence American politics. In the course of this, DHH and Marcus get implicated as Chinese collaborators. DHH beseeches Marcus to reveal his true identity as white, deciding he cares more about defending the Chinese American community than hiding his mistakes. Marcus ends his deception, and Thompson's investigation breaks down.
DHH's father dies in 2005, having lost faith in the American Dream. DHH and Marcus converse after their E-mails, before DHH admits to the audience that Marcus is an entirely fictional character he created to explore messy questions about race and nationality. At the character’s request, DHH writes Marcus a "happy ending" in which he moves to a small village in China and is eventually accepted into the community there.