‘Slave Play’ Playwright Jeremy O. Harris Arrested in Japan on Drug Allegations

Jeremy O. Harris, whose boundary-pushing “Slave Play” earned a record number of Tony nominations, has been detained in Japan for nearly three weeks following his arrest on drug smuggling charges at an Okinawa airport.
The multihyphenate writer-actor, whose work spans Broadway, HBO’s “Euphoria” and the critically lauded feature “Zola,” was stopped by customs officials Nov. 16 at Naha Airport after they allegedly found less than a gram of MDMA in his bag, according to Reuters. Harris, 36, has remained in custody since his arrest under Japan’s strict narcotics laws.
Local prosecutors received a criminal complaint Thursday from Okinawa customs officials, moving the case toward formal charges. Authorities have not disclosed whether Harris has addressed the allegations. Variety has reached out to Harris’ representatives for comment. It remains unclear whether he has secured legal representation in Japan.
The Yale School of Drama graduate had traveled to the resort island from the U.K. with a layover in Taiwan, reportedly for tourism. Okinawa, known for its beaches and located about 930 miles southwest of Tokyo, is a popular vacation destination.
Harris emerged as one of theater’s most provocative voices with “Slave Play,” which interrogated race, sex and power dynamics en route to becoming the most Tony-nominated play in Broadway history. Beyond theater, he’s built a robust screen career, co-writing A24’s “Zola” with director Janicza Bravo and contributing to Olivier Assayas’ “Irma Vep” for HBO. He’s also attached to adapt Brit Bennett’s novel “The Vanishing Half.”
Japan maintains some of the developed world’s strictest drug enforcement policies, prosecuting even small-scale possession cases. The country’s penalties, while severe, stop short of the death sentences imposed in other Asian nations including China and Singapore.
Other entertainment figures have faced similar troubles in Japan: Grammy-winning DJ David Morales was arrested in 2018 at Fukuoka airport over alleged MDMA possession, while Paul McCartney’s 1980 marijuana arrest in Tokyo resulted in a lengthy entry ban.




