Below, we break down the play’s plot, characters, major themes, and its lasting significance in Cho’s oeuvre. Set in a generic, unnamed suburb of Phoenix, Arizona, BFE follows Pansy Han , a gawky, isolated fourteen-year-old girl obsessed with beauty pageants and true-crime television. Pansy lives with her emotionally distant mother, Soo-Jin , and is haunted by the recent departure of her father.
BFE is not just a play about location; it is a play about emotional geography. The title itself—slang for "Bum Fuck, Egypt" (or "Middle of Nowhere")—serves as the play’s thesis. It tells the story of the Han family, Korean-Americans stranded in the vast, soul-crushing sprawl of the suburban Southwest, and the violent, absurd, and heartbreaking events that unfold when a mysterious drifter arrives. bfe julia cho
Julia Cho’s BFE is a warning against the myth of the "small life." It argues that there is no such thing as a small life—only small ways of looking. And in the BFE of the American soul, everyone is waiting for a talent scout who will never come. If you are interested in producing or reading BFE , the script is published by Dramatists Play Service . It requires a flexible set design (suggesting multiple locations: a living room, a fast-food restaurant, a motel room) and actors capable of delivering long, confessional monologues directly to the audience. It is a two-act play running approximately 90 minutes. Handle with care: the themes of emotional neglect and implied endangerment of a minor are intense, though handled with Cho’s signature humanity and dark wit. Below, we break down the play’s plot, characters,