In 1967, after she was married, she moved to Malaysia for fifteen years.[2] For four years, she lived in Britain while her children were in school there.[2] In 1987, she returned to Singapore.[2]
Kon was first published in 22 Malaysian Stories (1962), with the work, Mushroom Harvest.[2] Kon won the Singapore National Playwriting Competition for three plays: The Bridge (1977), The Trial (1982) and for Emily of Emerald Hill (1983).[8]
Emily of Emerald Hill is a one-woman play that debuted in 1984 and was directed by Chin San Sooi.[3] The melodrama follows the life of a Peranakan woman who is married into a family she doesn't know at age 14 to a man twice her age.[9] The story was primarily inspired by Kon's grandmother, but also includes stories drawn from the rest of her extended family.[3] The Herald Sun said that the writing in Emily was "colorful and smartly written."[10] The Honolulu Star-Bulletin wrote that "The play is rich with the details of everyday life in a well-to-do Singaporeean Chinese family."[11] The play was performed at the Commonwealth Arts Festival and the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 1986.[8] It has also been performed in Hong Kong, Australia, the United States and in Germany.[2]
Kon's play, The Human Heart Fruit, was staged by Action Theatre in 2002 and starred Nora Samosir.[12] Kon's first musical, Exodus, was written with the composer, Kenneth Lyen.[13] Her second musical, Lost in Transit, was performed at The Arts House in 2005.[13]
^ abcdefgAhmad, Nureza. "Stella Kon". Singapore Infopedia. National Library Board Singapore. Archived from the original on 29 December 2018. Retrieved 28 November 2017.
^Al-Attas, Suraya (18 October 1999). "This 'Emily' is a real gem". New Straits Times. Retrieved 28 November 2017 – via LexisNexis.
^Kate, Herbert (1 November 2002). "Emily's Winning Ways". Herald Sun. Archived from the original on 30 September 2022. Retrieved 28 November 2017 – via EBSCOhost.