Banned in his native Singapore, Chay Yew has been hailed as "a promising
new voice in American theater" by Time magazine. With these two
powerful, provocative plays, Yew first brought his startling and poetic
voice to stages across America and abroad, exploring the battlegrounds,
both internal and external, where matters of the heart conflict with
barriers of race and sexuality. Porcelain is an examination of a young
man's crime of passion. Triply scorned -- as an Asian, a homosexual, and
now a murderer -- 19-year-old John Lee has confessed to shooting his
lover in a public lavatory in London. A winner of the London Fringe
Award for Best Play, Porcelain dissects the crime through a prism of
conflicting voices: newscasts, flashbacks, and John's own recollections
to a prison psychiatrist. A Language of Their Own is a lyrical and
dramatic meditation on the nature of desire and sexuality as four men --
three Asian and one white -- come together and drift apart in a series
of interconnected stories. A critical and popular success at New York's
Public Theater, it won both the George and Elisabeth Marton Playwriting
Award and the GLAAD Media Award for Best Play.