Categories
Film Interview

Chinatown (1995) – CHSA Film Screening & Discussion

Wednesday, April 29,
1:00 – 3:00 p.m.
CCSF Chinatown Campus Auditorium, 628 Washington Street

Film screening and post-film discussion with Director, Felicia Lowe and San Francisco Poet Laureate, Genny Lim.

Through interviews and archival images, Chinatown offers an intimate look at San Francisco’s oldest neighborhood. The film, which features the poetry of Genny Lim received an Emmy Award for Best Cultural Documentary.

“Chinatown is definitely a living neighborhood, one that reflects, almost block by block, the long struggle of a people trying to gain a foothold here, often against overwhelming odds.”

FELICIA LOWE

Chinatown — A Portrait of a World-Renowned Neighborhood

Neighborhoods: The Hidden Cities of San Francisco – Chinatown premiered Wednesday, July 30, 1997 at 10pm ET on PBS
https://www.pbs.org/kqed/chinatown/ctpr.html

Thousands of tourists flock through its streets every day; its curio shops, all-night restaurants and crowded alleys have been celebrated from Broadway to Hollywood. But few people know the human drama and history that are hidden in the streets and faces of San Francisco’s Chinatown. This one-hour documentary tells the neighborhood’s story from the point of view of those who have lived their lives there, from the first immigrants who came to “Gold Mountain” in search of work and wealth, through the pain of a century of isolation and racism, to the recent arrivals who even today are revitalizing America’s gateway.


Early Chinatown was populated primarily by men, so it was called a “Bachelor Society.” It was a world without women, though many men were married with families in China. The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 banned the immigration of Chinese laborers for 61 years.

Photo Credit: D.H. Wulzen/Frank E. Wulzen

The Chinese Telephone, or “China 5” as it was called, served Chinatown’s residents from 1894-1949. It’s a perfect example of how the neighborhood took care of itself.

Photo Credit: Pacific Bell Museum Archives


Chinatown’s children had everything they needed within the boundaries of California and Broadway, Kearny and Powell. The public school, Commodore Stockton, was segregated until the 1940s.

Photo Credit: Chester Gan

Chinatown Resource Guide
https://www.pbs.org/kqed/chinatown/resourceguide

The oral histories and thoughtful profiles of CHINATOWN provide students and teachers with a colorful journey through the history of a unique neighborhood. Classes will find stimulating ways to study how immigrants contributed to the building of San Francisco and how the local and federal government responded to immigration in California during the last 150 years.

Educators can use CHINATOWN to integrate historical, geographic and economic topics into the curriculum. To help educators explore the rich historical materials, this resource guide provides lesson ideas for elementary, middle and high school. The program may be recorded off-air for educational use by K-12 schools and kept in perpetuity.

NEIGHBORHOODS: The Hidden Cities of San Francisco is an ongoing television series designed to explore the rich history of this unique American city. From the earliest Native American villages of the Mission District to the ethnic enclaves of Chinatown and North Beach, each program will reveal the city as a mosaic of communities with interconnecting pasts.

NEIGHBORHOODS:The Hidden Cities of San Francisco reveals the social, political, economic and cultural movements that create this city. Viewers will be fascinated by the stories as they discover the meaningful connections between our daily lives and our historical past. As we continue to grow in our appreciation of diverse cultures, NEIGHBORHOODS will give viewers a crucial sense of the traditions that link us, not only to the past but to one another.

Access the series online at the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.

Categories
Music Performance Poetry

2025 Mayoral Inauguration Day: Chinatown Night Market & Community Festival

Wednesday, January 8, 2025
5:30 PM – 9:00 PM
Grant Avenue
(between Sacramento & Jackson, Ross Alley & Commercial Street)
FREE and open to the public

San Francisco, the oldest Chinatown in the United States, celebrates with an evening of food, culture, and community at the Chinatown Night Market & Community Festival, held in honor of Daniel Lurie’s inauguration as the 46th mayor of San Francisco on Wednesday, January 8.

Web Gallery
2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration in Chinatown: Francis Wong and Genny Lim perform at Edge on the Square
2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration in Chinatown: Francis Wong and Genny Lim perform at Edge on the Square
2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration in Chinatown: Francis Wong and Genny Lim perform at Edge on the Square
2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration in Chinatown: Francis Wong and Genny Lim perform at Edge on the Square
2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration in Chinatown: Francis Wong and Genny Lim perform at Edge on the Square
2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration in Chinatown: Francis Wong and Genny Lim perform at Edge on the Square

For this special, unprecedented event, Edge on the Square is co-presenting cultural arts programs with organizations such as the Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco, the S.F. Chinese Chamber of Commerce, BeChinatown, and more collaborating to created an evening in Chinatown to be remembered for the ages!

Web Gallery
Cantonese Opera at the 2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration
Cantonese Opera at the 2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration
Genny Lim, Francis Wong and Terri Dora Wong at the 2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration
Genny Lim, Francis Wong and Terri Dora Wong at the 2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration
Web Gallery
2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration in Chinatown: Genny Lim, Francis Wong, Ralph and Mary Remington
2025 Mayoral Inauguration Celebration in Chinatown: Genny Lim, Francis Wong, Ralph and Mary Remington
6:00 – 9:00 PM
Chinatown Night Market; Edge is open until 9pm.

What to Expect:

  • A bustling night market featuring delicious food and beverages for sale from local vendors.
  • Live performances, including a soon-to-be-announced local headliner.
  • An inclusive celebration spotlighting the rich heritage and vibrant spirit of Chinatown.

This event is open to the public, so bring your friends, family, and anyone who shares a passion for a stronger, brighter San Francisco.

Please take public transportation or ride share, as parking will be very limited.

Categories
Film

“Paper Angels” (1985) Film Screening at Clarion

Clarion Performing Arts Center hosts a special film screening of the 1985 American Playhouse television adaptation of Genny Lim’s Paper Angels (1985)

Join Genny Lim, playwright of award winning drama; co-author of Island: Poetry & History of Chinese Immigrants on Angel Island, for a rare archival screening of the 1985 American Playhouse television adaptation of her 1980 play, Paper Angels.

Saturday, Jun 29, 2024, 4:00PM – 6:00PM; Clarion Performing Arts Center, 2 Waverly Place, San Francisco, CA 94108, USA

Web Gallery
Paper Angels: Post-screening Q+A with Genny Lim at Clarion
Paper Angels: Post-screening Q+A with Genny Lim at Clarion
Web Gallery
Paper Angels (1985) Publicity Still
Paper Angels (1985) Publicity Still

Directed by John Lone, featuring an all-star cast, with searing performances by Victor Wong, Beulah Quo, James Hong, Joan Chen and Rosalind Chao and others.


“We were invisible on television, in films, and the mass media. Nobody looked like us.”

— BEULAH QUO

Breaking the Color Line in Hollywood: Beulah Ong Kwoh, Actor
Web Gallery
Beulah Quo as Chin Moo in “Paper Angels” (1985)
Beulah Quo as Chin Moo in “Paper Angels” (1985)
Web Gallery
Under Investigation - American Playhouse television adaptation of Paper Angels (1985)
Under Investigation – American Playhouse television adaptation of Paper Angels (1985)

Production Credits

  • Lindsay Law … Executive Producer
  • Phylis Geller … Executive Producer
  • Ricki Franklin … Producer
  • Marilyn Larson … Associate Producer
  • John Lone … Director
  • Genny Liu … Developed by
  • Genny Lim … Writer
  • Lucia Hwong … Music by
  • Michael Small … Theme Music by
  • William St. James … Announcer
  • Rosalind Chao … Cast, Ku Ling
  • Joan Chen … Cast, Mei Lai
  • Dennis Dun … Cast, Mr. Wong
  • Mike Genovese … Cast, Henderson
  • Robert Harper … Cast, the Inspector
  • James Hong … Cast, Fong
  • David Huang … Cast, Lum
  • Karen Huie … Cast, Miss Chan
  • Beulah Quo … Cast, Chin Moo
  • Tom Rosqui … Cast, the Warden
  • Kate Williamson … Cast, the Matron
  • Victor Wong … Cast, Chin Gung
  • Ping Wu … Cast, Lee
  • Grace Zabriskie … Cast, Miss Gregory

Source: https://www.paleycenter.org/collection/item/?item=T86:1895


About “Paper Angels”

Paper Angels premiered on September 12, 1980 at the Asian American Theater Company. In 1982, the New Federal Theatre in New York produced the play. That same year, Lim founded her own production company, Paper Angels Productions, and brought the play to the Chinese Cultural Center in San Francisco. A television adaptation of Paper Angels was later filmed and appeared on PBS’s AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE in July of 1985.

The play has been awarded the SF Fringe Festival Award, the Viillager Award from Village Voice, NY, and the James Wong Howe Award from AAPAA, Los Angeles.

Watch the Asian American Theater Company’s 1980 production on the Internet Archive. Digitized by California Revealed, from the AATC Archives.

Web Gallery
Original Cast of Paper Angels premiere at Asian American Theater Company (1980)
Original Cast of Paper Angels premiere at Asian American Theater Company (1980)
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