Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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] The play premiered in Los Angeles at the Mark Taper Forum in May 2007. [2]
Playing the character of “DHH,” the actor Daniel Dae Kim begins “Yellow Face,” the new production of David Henry Hwang’s play, standing within a box, from which he promptly strides out.
Yellow Face or yellowface may refer to: Portrayal of East Asians in American film and theater; Yellow Face, a 2007 play by David Henry Hwang; Yellow Face, a 2010 film by Han Tang "The Yellow Face", an alternative title for the 1893 short "The Adventure of the Yellow Face" by Arthur Conan Doyle; Yellowface, a 2023 novel by R. F. Kuang
Interviewed by Doris Mackie for Film Weekly in 1933, Wong complained about her Hollywood roles: "I was so tired of the parts I had to play." [ 7 ] [ 8 ] She commented: "There seems little for me in Hollywood, because, rather than real Chinese, producers prefer Hungarians, Mexicans, American Indians for Chinese roles."
Daniel Dae Kim returned to Broadway on Friday, Sept. 13 after nearly a decade away, as performances kicked off for David Henry Hwang's semi-autobiographical play, Yellow Face.. PEOPLE can ...
Yellow Face (play) This page was last edited on 24 October 2020, at 01:19 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
It also serves as a quasi-sequel to Hwang's 2007 play Yellow Face. Like that play, the semi-autobiographical work centers around a stand-in for the author named DHH interacting with fictional characters. [3] The play was partially inspired by a 2015 stabbing of Hwang by a stranger on the streets of New York City. [4]
The Battle of Hastings (play) Battle of Tippecanoe Outdoor Drama; Becket; The Belle of Amherst; A Bequest to the Nation; Bhopal (play) The Black Prince (play) Black Watch (play) Blood at the Root (play) Bloody Poetry; Bloody Sunday: Scenes from the Saville Inquiry; Boesman and Lena; The Bomb (play) Bonduca; The Burning (play) Byzantium (play)