Los Angeles, Off-Broadway and London Yellow Face premiered in Los Angeles at the
Mark Taper Forum in association with
East West Players in May 2007. The play opened
Off-Broadway at the
Joseph Papp Public Theater on December 10, 2007, and closed on January 13, 2008. Directed by
Leigh Silverman, the cast featured
Hoon Lee and
Noah Bean as the leads, with
Francis Jue as HYH and others,
Kathryn Layng, Anthony Torn, Julienne Hanzelka and Kim Lucas Caleb Rooney. Hwang won his third
Obie Award in Playwriting, and he was a third-time finalist for the
Pulitzer Prize for Drama. This production transferred to the
Royal National Theatre on May 5, 2014.
Later productions In 2021,
Yellow Face was first produced in Australia at the Kings Cross Theatre, Sydney, opening on 23 April and closing on 8 May after a sold-out run. 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. In June/July 2022, the play was produced by Theatre Raleigh in North Carolina 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. The play was presented on
Broadway by
Roundabout Theatre Company for a limited run from October 1 through November 24, 2024, with previews beginning September 13. Silverman again directed, with
Daniel Dae Kim portraying DHH. Joining Kim were
Francis Jue reprising his role as HYH 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. In 2025, it was nominated for the
Drama League Award for Outstanding Revival of a Play,
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Revival of a Play and
Tony Award for Best Revival of a Play. Daniel Dae Kim and Francis Jue were nominated for Tony Awards for
Best Actor and
Best Featured Actor in a Play respectively.
Adaptations In 2013, the play was produced as a two-part YouTube video that was directed & 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. Kim also portrays DHH in an audio adaptation for
Audible, directed by Silverman, released on May 2, 2024. The audio adaptation stars
Jason Biggs as Marcus G. Dahlman,
Ashley Park as Leah Anne Cho and others,
Wendell Pierce as NWOAOC and others, and
Benedict Wong as HYH. The rest of the cast from the off-Broadway production (Bean, Torn, Rooney, Kim, Layng and Jue) perform additional voices, alongside
Dick Cavett,
Margaret Cho,
Ronan Farrow, Fritz Friedman,
Joel de la Fuente, Margaret Fung, Gish Jen,
Jane Krakowski,
Mark Linn-Baker, and
Frank Rich, several of whom voice themselves.
Background 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." 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. 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. 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. ==Plot summary==