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Monkey Business

In the 1996 comedy Multiplicity, Michael Keaton plays a man who decides to clone himself several times over in order to meet the demands of work and family. Chaos ensues.

On November 14, San Francisco Opera premiered “The Monkey King” by Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang. While the narrative features chaos, the line drawn between the 30-year-old film and this new opera is that the titular Monkey King is played by three performers; or one singer, one dancer, and a puppet; or, six performers total, because the puppet Monkey King requires three puppeteers. The Monkey King is an agent of chaos, but the portrayal of the protagonist was never chaotic, no matter how you splice him.

Performance

San Francisco Opera: “The Monkey King” by Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang. Directed by Diane Paulus and choreographed by Ann Yee

Place

War Memorial Opera House, San Francisco, California, November 14, 2025

Words

Garth Grimball

Kang Wang as the Monkey King with the San Francisco Opera chorus in Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang's “The Monkey King.” Photograph by Cory Weaver | San Francisco Opera

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Director Diane Paulus was joined by Basil Twist, puppetry director and set and puppetry designer, and choreographer Ann Yee in bringing to life the story of the Chinese trickster god over the course of two action-packed acts.

“The Monkey King” is perhaps the most impressive stage production I have ever seen in terms of stagecraft and scale. There are 53 musicians in the orchestra, 68 performers on stage, and what I can only assume to be over 500 technical cues. Kudos to the stage manager!

The Monkey King, eventually given the name Sun Wukong by his teacher, was performed primarily by the tenor Kang Wang. Huiwang Zhang, currently a dancer with Bill T. Jone/Arnie Zane Company, took over as the Monkey King intermittently but especially in battle scenes or when the god was required to travel into different planes of existence, celestial or aquatic. Similarly, Twist’s puppet tagged in to increase the stage magic when scale was a narrative device, or to more delicately interact with fellow puppets. The movement language for the protagonist had to be consistent across the two human and one puppet interpretations to maintain the physicality and character of the Monkey King. Yee accomplished this via posture and gesture. 

Dancer Huiwang Zhang as the Monkey King in Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang's “The Monkey King.” Photograph by Cory Weaver | San Francisco Opera

No matter the performer, the Monkey King’s default pose was a contumelious contrapposto. Hip swayed back over a bent knee. The opposite leg extended out with the ball of the foot kissing the floor like it’s testing the temperature of water. The torso leaned back but with a forward energy, as if he’s always ready to leap. Throughout the opera the Monkey King rarely stands on his center or keeps his limbs hanging by his side. When he’s not the center of attention he’s often scratching himself, still drawing the eye. Paulus, with Twist and makeup designer Jeanna Parham, keeps the Monkey King in a perpetual grin. He is a joker ready to laugh at you, not a jester for your entertainment. Wang, Zhang, and the trio of puppeteers were outstanding in their collective embodiment of Sun Wukong. 

Yee and Twist choreographed superlative ensembles. The choreography in opera often stands on its own during a musical interlude (Carmen) or gently moves the soloists, choristers and supernumeraries around the stage to bring motion to the music. There was rarely stillness in “The Monkey King.” Zhang flipped and tumbled across the stage. The cast of ten corps dancers similarly catapulted in back handsprings or flowed through poses evocative of kung fu. In one of the most maximalist scenes, the Jade Emperor (Konu Kim) was joined by fellow deities decked out in 1980s glam rock colors and wigs. As the ensemble sang about their questionable leadership, two dancers flanked the emperor punctuating Huang’s music with high kicks and punches. 

Jonathan Smucker as King of the East and dancer Huiwang Zhang in Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang's “The Monkey King.” Photograph by Cory Weaver | San Francisco Opera

Twist’s puppets danced as much as the corps. The Jade Emperor offers the Monkey King the meaningless title of “Master of the Stables” to keep him occupied. The stables scene was enchanting. Twist’s silk horses floated like they were in a Redon painting. When the Monkey King travels to the Dragon Palace of the Eastern Sea, giant jellyfish swim above dancers in colorful fish heads puckering and wobbling under Ayumu Saegusa’s marine lighting design. 

Wu Cheng’en’s 1592 novel Journey to the West is the foundational text for all subsequent iterations of the Monkey King’s story. Of his many powers detailed in the novel, most material is his ability to clone himself into 72 different forms. While San Francisco Opera’s “The Monkey King” doesn’t feature all 72 forms, it is a rich, dynamic addition to the trickster god’s centuries of influence.

Garth Grimball


Garth Grimball is a dance writer and artist based in Oakland, CA. He has danced with Asheville Ballet, Oakland Ballet, Dana Lawton Dances, and Brontez Purnell Dance Company. He received his MFA in Dance from Mills College. He is the co-director of Wax Poet(s) performance collective. He hosts the podcast Reference Desk and is the Executive Associate at ODC in San Francisco.

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In the 1996 comedy Multiplicity, Michael Keaton plays a man who decides to clone himself several times over in order to meet the demands of work and family. Chaos ensues. On November 14, San Francisco Opera premiered “The Monkey King” by Huang Ruo and David Henry Hwang. While the narrative features chaos, the line drawn between the 30-year-old film and this new opera is that the titular Monkey King is played by three performers; or one singer, one dancer, and a puppet; or, six performers total, because the puppet Monkey King requires three puppeteers. The Monkey King is an agent...

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