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Title: Clip: Wayson Choy discusses the significance of Cantonese Opera to North American Chinese communities
Date: Unknown
Donor: Choy, Wayson
Subject: Arts, China, Discrimination, Identity, Language, Leisure
Province: British Columbia; Ontario
Language: ENG

Choy, Wayson

Wayson Choy is a Chinese Canadian writer and author of the Jade Peony (1995), which won the Trillium Award and the City of Vancouver Book Award. Its companion All That Matters (2004) was nominated for the Scotiabank Giller Prize. Both novels follow the lives of three Chinese Canadian siblings living in Vancouver, British Columbia’s Chinatown during the Second World War. His book Paper Shadows (1999) paints a portrait of the author’s own childhood in Vancouver’s Chinatown in the 1940s. His most recent book Not Yet: A Memoir of Living and Almost Dying, intimately reflects on love and life after the author’s two near-death experiences. Since 2003, Wayson Choy has been professor emeritus at Humber College, Toronto, Ontario. In 2002, he was designated a Companion of Frontier College, and in 2010 he received a Doctor of Letters, honoris causa, from Sir Wilfred Laurier University. Since 2005, he has been a Member of the Order of Canada. He continues to reside in Toronto, Ontario and is currently working on his fifth book.

‘This was a place where they could go and be who they were, and how they would behave in China. It was a cultural bubble which kept them going.’

In this audio clip, Wayson Choy discusses the impact of Cantonese opera in the early to mid twentieth century. He suggests that the opera provided a sense of cultural identity for Chinese immigrants, who were sometimes barred from mainstream theatres and movie houses.