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| HWANG: A meteoric rise and still burning
bright. |
| Courtesy Writers and Artists Agency |
FOR PLAYWRIGHT David
Henry Hwang, M. Butterfly was a tough act to follow. It won him
Broadways top prize, the Tony Award, in 1988. New Yorker
critic Edith Oliver called Hwang the most audacious, imaginative,
gifted young playwright in America, and Times William
Henry said that he could be the next Arthur Miller. The film version came
out in 1993 and reaped still wider attention.
Hwang, 79, had gone far fast. He wrote and staged his first play,
FOB (fresh off the boat), in his Stanford dorm. Soon after,
the legendary Joseph Papp produced it in New York, and Hwang then
23 and attending drama school at Yaletook the Obie for best new
off-Broadway play. A stream of new works, produced by Papp, followed.
One flopped. Then came Butterfly.
The acclaim was heady stuff. But in 1994, Hwang told an interviewer he
was dealing with the aftermath: people being disappointed in what
you do after a big success. True, he has failed to wow at the box
office once or twice. But mostly hes kept to an upward trajectory,
even while delving into new territorylibrettos for Philip Glass,
musicals, TV productions and non-Asian material. He co-wrote the book
for Disneys current Broadway hit, Aida, and the screenplay
for A.S. Byatts Possessions, due out in February and starring
Gwyneth Paltrow. He transformed the beloved 16th-century Chinese novel
Journey to the West into The Lost Empire, a TV miniseries
that debuted on NBC last March. He also wrote a play about artist Paul
Gauguin.
But what has really snapped critics to attention lately
is Hwangs rewrite of the politically incorrect Rogers & Hammerstein
show Flower Drum Song. Despite a slew of memorable songs (Love,
Look Away, I Enjoy Being a Girl, A Hundred Million
Miracles), the original Flower faded after its introduction in 1958
because of its stereotypical portrayal of Chinese. Hwang had to solve
the problem of keeping the music whilein his wordswriting
the book Oscar Hammerstein would have written if he had been a Chinese-American.
By all accounts, hes succeeded by creating a show-within-a-show
that was five years in the making. The musicals scheduled short
run at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles (until January 13) has been
deemed a success by critics from L.A. to the Big Apple, and a Broadway
run is widely predicted. It looks as though Hwang hasnt peaked yet.
Ginny McCormick
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