Born in Los Angeles in Studied drama at Yale & Stanford. Wrote M. Butterfly in 1988; it premiered on Broadway starring John Lithgow and BD Wong. Became the first Asian American to win a Tony Award.
Premiered at Milan’s La Scala opera house in The plot is as recited in M. Butterfly—an American diplomat “marries” a Japanese woman for convenience, leaves her pining for 3 years, and comes back only to collect his son from her. She kills herself. On of the most often performed operas in the world today.
“The need for one text to be read in the light of its allusions to and differences from the content or structure of other texts; the (allusive) relationship between esp. literary texts” (OED).
The play is based on the true story of Bernard Boursicot, a French diplomat to China who was seduced by Shi Pei Pu and was blackmailed into passing classified documents to him. Shi procured a “son” for them named Shi Dudu. Both Shi & Boursicot were sentenced to 6 years in prison, and both were pardoned early. After his release, Boursicot settled down with a male partner. After being released from prison, Shi is quoted as saying, “I used to fascinate both men and women. What I was and what they were didn’t matter,” and Boursicot is quoted as saying, “When I believed it, it was a beautiful story.”
Drama in which the author self- consciously alludes to the artificiality or literariness of a work by parodying or departing from dramatic conventions and narrative/performative techniques. Related to “breaking the fourth wall.”