Golden Child

Play

Writers: David Henry Hwang

Overview

Show Information

Category
Play
Number of Acts
2
First Produced
1996
Genres
Drama
Settings
Period, Multiple Settings
Time & Place
Manhattan, present day, Chinese village, 1918-19
Cast Size
small
Orchestra Size
None
Dancing
None
Ideal for
College/University, Community Theatre, Diverse Cast, Mostly Female Cast, Professional Theatre, Regional Theatre, Star Vehicle Male, Star Vehicle Female
Casting Notes
Mostly female cast
Includes mature adult, adult, young adult, child, early teen, elderly characters

Synopsis

In a feudal Chinese village in the winter of 1918, Tieng-Bin returns from three years abroad. Waiting for him are his three wives (Siu-Yong, Luan, and Eling) and his favorite child, 10-year-old Ahn (the “Golden Child”). Tieng-Bin is drawn to the possibilities of the modern world--including Christianity--and invites an English missionary to his home. Faced with the prospect of losing their traditional and ancestral practices, the three wives try to negotiate how to be in the modern world with Tieng-Bin. Framing the story of Tieng-Bin is that of present-day Andrew Kwong and his mother, now 80-year-old Ahn. Inspired by David Henry Hwang’s own family, Golden Child is an exploration of how modernity meets tradition, west meets east, and family finds hope from tragedy.

Lead Characters


Golden Child guide sections