
Chinese pop music's ‘deeply local' Canadian story shines in Vancouver exhibition
VANCOUVER - A new exhibition on Cantopop and Mandopop music in Vancouver is a Canadian story, says curator Melissa Karmen Lee.
The 'Dream Factory' exhibit, opening Wednesday at the Chinese Canadian Museum, pays tribute to the golden age of Chinese pop music 'through the lens of Chinese Canadian identity, migration and memory.'
Its stories are anything but foreign, said Lee, who is also the museum's chief executive.
'It is a deeply local story about how many of these Cantopop stars (and) Mandopop stars made Vancouver their home. They lived here, they worked here, they grew up here,' she said.
'They all deeply considered Canada a part of their identity, and we're so pleased to feature that in this exhibition.'
Cantopop and Mandopop refer to Chinese-language pop music in the two most widely spoken tongues in the community, Cantonese and Mandarin.
The exhibit, running through May 2026, features a collection of music from the genres between 1980 and 2000, when stars such as Leslie Cheung and Anita Mui wowed fans globally.
But Lee said many outside the community didn't realize that such giant stars were living among them in Canada.
Lee pointed out that Cheung — a singer and actor who became known to western audiences by starring in movies including 'Farewell My Concubine' and 'Happy Together' — lived in Vancouver in the early 1990s.
A park bench that honours Cheung in the city's Stanley Park is a pilgrimage site for fans of the star, who died by suicide in 2003.
Lee said singer and actress Sally Yeh grew up in Victoria before reaching stardom.
The Cantopop and Mandopop genres are intrinsically connected to Canada's large Chinese communities, especially in neighbourhoods in Metro Vancouver and Toronto where their songs were ubiquitous at Chinese malls, restaurants and karaoke bars.
Vancouver native Stephanie Kong, who designed a wedding dress at the exhibit that was inspired by Mui's 2003 farewell performance, said Cantopop music saturated many of her childhood memories.
'Growing up here in Canada, that was definitely a part of my childhood,' Kong said. 'Going to Parker Place (a mall in Richmond, B.C.) and waiting while my parents were in those music stores buying LaserDiscs, and I would be like, 'What's taking so long?'
'Because I didn't quite understand it … So it's funny that it comes kind of full circle, coming as an adult and getting a new appreciation for what I've always kind of — for the lack of a better word — just dismissed when I was a kid.'
In addition to costumes inspired by Cantopop and Mandopop in the exhibition's main room, there's a large screen blaring hit songs, a separate room featuring artwork using LaserDiscs, a stage set up for karaoke and listening stations for popular songs.
On one wall, original sheet music for famous Cantonese movies from Hong Kong composer Joseph Koo are displayed. Koo lived in Richmond before his death in 2023.
Lee said Cantopop culture seeped deep into many parts of Canada. She said Cheung's 1986 song 'Monica' was anecdotally regarded as responsible for a large number of Chinese Canadian girls bearing the name.
'They listened to Cantopop in Vancouver, in Toronto,' Lee said of immigrant waves to Canada. 'They made this very Asian music part of this global Chinese diaspora community.
'So, part of the popularity of Cantopop and Mandopop across the globe was because of these overseas Chinese communities that made it really great.
'Immigrants that came in the '60s and the '70s, they brought over their own culture and … made it a uniquely Canadian experience. And so, it's a preservation of culture, but it's also an evolution of something that is Asian into Asian Canadian.'
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 28, 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
New world no. 1 Kunlavut seals Singapore crown in style
Kunlavut Vitidsarn of Thailand is the new number one (Roslan RAHMAN) Kunlavut Vitidsarn celebrated becoming the first man from Thailand to top the badminton world rankings by winning the Singapore Open in style on Sunday. The 24-year-old demolished China's unseeded Lu Guangzu 21-6, 21-10 in just 37 minutes with his range of powerful smashes and deceptive drop shots. Advertisement Paris Olympics silver medallist Kunlavut will replace another Chinese player, Shi Yuqi, as world number one in a landmark for Thai badminton. It was his fourth title this season. "There will be pressure to be the best player in the world, but it's going to be a good pressure as that will give me the added motivation of doing my best to win all the tournaments I take part in," said Kunlavut, who lost the Paris final to Viktor Axelsen. Denmark's two-time Olympic champion Axelsen, the former number one, is currently working his way back to fitness following surgery for a back problem. Advertisement In an all-Chinese women's final at the Singapore Indoor Stadium, the fifth seed Chen Yufei outplayed second-seeded Wang Zhiyi 21-11, 21-11. Chen was runner-up to world number one An Se-young last year. Chen ended the South Korean's unbeaten run in 2025 by defeating her in the quarter-finals this year. "I'm really very happy with this win because the draw was not exactly in my favour and every match felt like a battle," said Chen. "To make it all the way to the final was honestly something unexpected. "I felt like I was not under too much pressure this time, so I played more freely and showed what I'm capable of." str/pst


Buzz Feed
11 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
11 Celebrities Who Died Right In Front Of Their Fans
On Dec. 8, 2004, "Dimebag" Darrell Abbott — formerly of the legendary heavy metal band Pantera and widely regarded as one of the best guitarists of all time — was doing a club show with his new band, Damageplan. Only 90 seconds into their first song, Nathan Gale, 25, a six-foot-three, 250+-pounds man with a shaved head, strode through the crowd and onto the stage. Fans watched in horror as Gale, at point-blank range, raised a pistol and shot Abbott in the forehead. Pandemonium broke out as Gale killed two more people and took a hostage, inching toward the exit with the gun at the hostage's temple. However, before he could escape, a police officer shot him dead. Adding to the horror of it all, this happened on the anniversary of John Lennon's murder, when he, too, was shot and killed by a troubled fan. So why did Gale murder Abbott? It later came out that Gale, a former Marine with mental health issues, held Abbott responsible for the breakup of his favorite band, Pantera. In 2016, Irma Bule, 26, was an Indonesian pop singer specializing in Dangdut, a popular music genre in her country. A mother of three, she was not yet a nationally known singer but had a following in the Karawang area of West Java. For performers like Bule, who were still looking to go national, singing in rural areas wasn't especially lucrative, and net only $20 per concert (plus tips from the crowd). However, if they performed on stage with a snake, the pay jumped up to $25. Another Dangdut singer, Yeyen, told local media. "If there are snake dancers, there will be more audience. Therefore … we have snake dancers." Bule had performed with snakes onstage for three years, but the snakes were normally nonvenomous and/or had their mouths duct-taped closed. On the night of her death, the snake she was asked to perform with was neither nonvenomous nor duct-taped. Bule's show began as it always did, with her dancing and singing, until — in a flash — the snake bit her. Footage online shows Bule crouched at the side of the stage just after the bite, with the snake handler tending to her. Forty-five minutes later, she was dead. In the category of "Yikes! That Would Never Fly Today!" we have William Ellsworth Robinson, an American magician of Scottish descent who captivated audiences using the persona of "Chung Ling Soo," a Chinese conjurer. To sell the lie, he never spoke English on stage and wore face paint to pass as Chinese. That's bad enough, but it gets worse — his entire act was almost entirely stolen from an actual Chinese magician named Ching Ling Foo. (He didn't even try to hide the theft — he changed only two letters of his name!) The two magicians had a major rivalry, and honestly, there's probably a movie there, but this post is about dying in front of your fans so... On March 23, 1918, during a performance at the Wood Green Empire in London, Soo (the fake Chinese magician, to be clear) tried to perform his most famous act, the "bullet catch," which involved catching a bullet fired at it went terribly wrong. A malfunction caused a real bullet to be fired, striking Robinson/Soo in the chest. Breaking character and speaking English onstage for the first time, he exclaimed, "Oh my God. Something's happened. Lower the curtain." He died the following death shocked the public, revealing that the "Chinese" magician was, in fact, a white dude from America. His commitment to his stage persona was so complete that many were unaware of his true identity until his untimely demise. (From the vantage of 2025, you'd think a white guy in yellowface would be pretty obvious, but maybe not 100+ years ago.) On June 10, 2016, 22-year-old Christina Grimmie — the talented young singer who'd placed third on Season 6 of The Voice — had just finished a performance in Orlando, Florida, and was holding a meet-and-greet inside the venue. She was in good spirits as she worked through the line of fans, signing autographs and taking selfies. The joyful night took a horrific turn, though, when it was 27-year-old Kevin James Loibl's turn to meet Grimmie. According to a fan behind Loibl: "The one guy in front of us was walking up to meet her. Her arms were open, waiting to greet him with a hug. Then there was a sound of three pops, like balloons. People had brought balloons to the show, and the security guards were popping them, so at first I thought it was that." The sounds weren't balloons — Loibl shot Grimmie three times at point-blank range. Grimmie's brother tackled the shooter, and the two fought before Loibl broke away and shot himself. Grimmie was rushed to the hospital but pronounced dead less than an hour after offering Loibi that learned that Loibl was obsessed with Grimmie, spending his free time watching videos of the singer and poring over her social media accounts. He believed they were soulmates, so to make himself more attractive to her, he underwent Lasik eye surgery, got hair plugs, and lost 50 pounds. When he was told it was unlikely they'd ever be together, Loibl became angry and defensive. Somewhere along the way, he decided on this new, horrible course of Mohandie — a clinical, police, and forensic psychologist — told BuzzFeed News that social media can create an unnatural obsession for some fans. "There is all this social networking stuff that is happening right now and to an unstable person that can really complicate into them thinking they do have a relationship with this person. They read more into it because of their misperceptions." When Cleveland Indians' shortstop Ray Chapman arrived at the Polo Grounds in New York on Aug. 17, 1920, he was having one hell of a season, batting .303 with 97 runs scored. That wasn't out of character, though. Chapman had hit .300 twice before and to this day holds the single-season record for sacrifice bunts. It was rumored that Chapman, who was newly married to a pregnant wife, planned to retire when the season ended to focus on his family. Tragically, while facing Yankees' submarine pitcher Carl Mays, he was hit in the head with a fastball. This was before batters wore helmets, and the ball met Chapman's head with a sickening thud. The impact was so strong that the ball bounced into play, and Mays threw it to first, believing it must have hit Chapman's bat. A dazed Chapman stood, asked someone to call his wife, and added: "I'm all right; tell Mays not to worry." He then collapsed and was rushed to the hospital, where he died the next day. Following the incident, many felt Mays had hit Chapman on purpose for crowding the plate, and Hall of Famer Ty Cobb even suggested someone should do the same to Mays. Chapman's death led to some changes in baseball. Beforehand, pitchers were allowed to dirty up the ball with soil, licorice, or tobacco juice. That was forbidden after Chapman's death, as it reduced the visibility of the baseball and made it harder to see (and thus evade).A minor leaguer died the next season in the same manner, but even so, batting helmets weren't used widely until the 1950s. Barbara Weldens, 35, was an up-and-coming French singer-songwriter who had already won several prestigious music awards. Her fans loved her emotional lyrics, haunting voice, and theatrical stage presence — often performing barefoot. On July 18, 2017, Weldens was performing at a packed church during the Léo Ferré Festival. After finishing a particularly powerful song, Weldens smiled, soaking up the crowd's applause, then suddenly collapsed. At first, some audience members thought it was part of the show — a dramatic flourish. But Weldens didn't move. Paramedics arrived quickly, but it was too late. An autopsy determined that Weldens had been electrocuted; she was performing barefoot as usual, and when her foot made contact with a defective piece of electrical equipment, it sent electricity shooting through her body. Owen Hart may have been born into a legendary wrestling dynasty (his dad was Stu Hart; his brother was Bret "Hitman" Hart), but he was a star in his own right and at the center of some of the biggest '90s storylines of the WWF (now the WWE). However, on May 23, 1999, during the WWF's Over the Edge pay-per-view event in Kansas City, Missouri, his life (and those storylines) ended. Hart was set to make a dramatic entrance as his superhero persona, the Blue Blazer, by being lowered from the arena rafters into the ring. Tragically, a malfunction occurred, and Hart fell a long distance — approximately 78 feet — landing chest-first on the top rope. He was rushed to the hospital but pronounced dead not long after arriving; the cause of death was internal bleeding from blunt force trauma, resulting in a severed aorta. The incident was not broadcast live, as a pre-recorded segment was airing at the time. The audience in attendance witnessed the fall, though, and the frantic attempts to save his life afterward. Despite the tragedy, WWF owner Vince McMahon decided to continue the live broadcast after a 15-minute widow, Martha Hart, was horrified, writing in a book about her husband, "As he lay dying in the ring, he struggled to live for our children and me. After he lost his fight for life, they just scooped him up and ordered the next match out. Where's the humanity?" In the aftermath, Martha Hart filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the WWF, claiming they were negligent and hadn't hired qualified riggers. The WWF settled for $18 million, and she used the settlement to establish the Owen Hart Foundation, supporting various charitable causes. Tommy Cooper was a towering figure in British comedy — both literally (he was a big dude, standing 6′4″) and figuratively. He was famous for his bumbling magician act. Basically, his whole shtick was that his magic tricks always went hilariously wrong, which made what happened on April 15, 1984, during a live broadcast of a variety show extra horrific. Cooper walked on stage to thunderous applause, started performing, and then collapsed backward into the curtain. The audience burst out laughing, assuming it was part of the act. But it wasn't. For several agonizing seconds, Cooper lay on the stage floor, unresponsive. The host, Jimmy Tarbuck, told the show's producer: "This isn't it [part of the act]. 'Now', he said, 'you know how he is.' He's put this in... And...I said, No... this is not him!" The cameras kept rolling — broadcasting Cooper's death live to 12 million viewers. Stagehands eventually dragged him offstage as performers tried to keep the show going. It was later confirmed that Cooper died of a heart there onstage. Nick Zoricic was a 29-year-old Canadian freestyle skier, rising fast in the dangerous, high-speed world of ski cross — a sport that combines downhill racing with motocross-style obstacles (and has been referred to as "NASCAR on skis.") But on March 10, 2012, at a ski cross World Cup event in Switzerland, Zoricic's final race became a tragedy seen by hundreds of spectators. As he approached the finish line at full speed, Zoricic flew off the final jump — but something went wrong. Instead of landing cleanly, he veered off course and slammed into the safety netting and a solid boundary structure just past the finish. He hit the barrier with brutal force, disappearing in a spray of snow. When the snow cleared, Zoricic was lying motionless. Officials quickly waved off the other competitors and rushed to his aid, but Zoricic had suffered severe head trauma. He was pronounced dead a short time incident sparked international calls for greater safety measures in ski cross and other high-speed winter sports, especially since Zoricic's death was the second high-profile skiing fatality in two months — freestyle skier Sarah Burke previously crashed and died during halfpipe training. Japan's Sankai Juku dance company was famous for their version of Butoh, a rebellious dance movement that gave the middle finger to both Western culture and traditional Japanese art. Sankai Juku's version was different, gentle and poetic. They made their American debut at the Olympic Arts Festival in Los Angeles in 1984, then toured the country, eventually stopping in Seattle on Sept. 10, 1985. There, they planned to perform a piece entitled "Jomon Sho," where four dancers hang upside down from a building by ropes attached to their ankles (a metaphor for life and death or something artsy like that). They were supposed to dance while being slowly lowered to the ground, a process expected to take 30 minutes, but after only a couple of minutes — and while still 80 feet in the air — one of the company's most senior dancers, Yoshiyuki Takada, noticed his rope was He tried to carefully reach up and grab the rope above where it was fraying, but it snapped before he could. He fell the long distance to the ground silently, landing with a thud. A doctor in the crowd tried to help, but it was no use — Yoshiyuki Takada was later came to light that they only tested one of the four ropes to be used, and that they'd requested old ropes because new ropes caused the dancers to twist and turn too much. The company stopped performing the hanging outdoor dance after the tragedy, but has since added it back into their repertoire. (The photo above is an example from a more recent performance.) British actor and comedian Sid James was famous for starring in the Carry On films (a massive British comedy franchise comprised of 31 films released between 1958 and 1992). But his life ended on April 26, 1976 — in front of a packed Sunderland Empire Theatre — as he acted onstage in the comedy play The Mating Season. The performance was proceeding as usual, according to costar Olga Lowe. "I came on, said my first lines and he answered as normal. Then I sat on the sofa with him. I said my next line and he didn't answer." James had suffered a heart attack and slumped over on the couch. "I thought it was a gag," Lowe added. "Well, you would with Sid. He was such a rascal... Ten minutes earlier, he had been the same old laughing Sid." Once the gravity of the situation set in, the curtain was dropped. James was 62.
Yahoo
18 hours ago
- Yahoo
Jackie Chan Answers The Web's Most Searched Questions
Karate Kid: Legends star Jackie Chan visits WIRED to give answers to his most searched for questions on Google. What was Jackie Chan's first job? How many languages does Jackie Chan speak? Does he have a stunt double? How does Jackie Chan train? What is his fighting style? Answers to these questions and many more await on the WIRED Autocomplete Interview of Jackie Chan. KARATE KID: LEGENDS is in theaters now. - This is Jackie Chan. This is Wired Autocomplete Interview. [upbeat music] Three, two, one. [claps] Go! [upbeat music] Okay. So one drop, so I took this one first. [interpreter speaking in a foreign language] - I can speak Cantonese, Mandrin, a little bit English, and Shandong, Shanghai. A lot of Korean, Japanese. And Taiwanese. Not many. Eight. [paper tearing] Oh. Doing his. - [Interpreter] Own stunts. - Yes, I'm still doing my own stunt. Why? Because even now, today, the technology so good. But the world audience still like to see Jackie Chan doing the own things. Maybe 40 years ago, I can do a triple kick. Ba-ba-boom. Ba-ba-boom. 20 years later, double kick. But now I do one kick. Okay. I just do, show the one kick. This is how I'm do it. If right now, jumping the floor, no. I do need a double now. Stunt. - [Interpreter] Double. [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - It depends. Like, when I have drive a helicopter, we need some professional. When I doing a triple kick, then I need, I have 100 students. We can, in the middle, I can pick out who do the best, who do this, who do that. Oh. Training. I have my training camp with all my stunt team. Like, three hour. Most of the time, we punch and talking, kicking and think about choreograph, how to different than some other movies, Use what kind of weapon, a chair. The board. How to fight with the board. Yeah. Yeah. What is Jackie Chan first job? First job, when I was eight, I was child actor. [paper tearing] First movie. Same. When I was seven, I was like a angel, and I'm singing. [Jackie singing in foreign language] That's me. The first job. First movie. [paper tearing] [Jackie speaking in foreign language] - [Interpreter] Famous quote. - My famous quote? I can do it. Never give up. Whenever I do the stunt, I will look at the dangerous things, I say, "I can do it. I can do it. I can do it. Don't give up." Boom! Then I jump. Then breaking ankle. Then break my skull. [paper tearing] [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - [Interpreter] What car does Jackie Chan drive? - The first car I drive. Ah! The boss gave to me. It was a Volkswagen. The one exactly like "Karate Kid", the Jaden Smith, I was break the car, the same car. Right now, it's Toyota. - [Interpreter] Alpha. - Alpha. More people can sit down. Easy. Not like it used to be, sport car. But now, I'm most comfortable as possible. More low-key as possible. - Next board. - Right on your face. Oh. No. [beep] [Jackie speaking in foreign language] [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - No. My family rule, no ear hole, no tattoo. Even my son. [paper tearing] [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - Can I sing? Wherever you go, whatever you do I will be right here waiting for you Whatever you do or how my heart break I will be right here waiting for you Ha-cha-cha-cha-cha! Fighting. Okay. Another one. Why so many question? Huh? [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - Where I'm living? I'm based in Hong Kong. But right now, I'm staying Beijing. I'm filming in Beijing right now. And this moment, I'm in Myanmar between China border filming in the jungle. [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - Now? Right now? Right this moment, I'm in London. [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - Oh, my teacher from China. There so many teacher in that time from China. So we teach singing, dancing, stick fight, knife fight, kicking, punch, all kind of things for 10 years. [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - My father, I'm growing up in French embassy until I'm seven. [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - I'm filming "Panda Project 2" The first one, last year was released. This year, we're making "Panda Project 2". Filming between Yunnan and Myanmar's, China's border. [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - When I learn in school, I learn southern style. After 10 years, I learn northern style. So I know both style. Southern style more jumping. Northern style more on the ground. Not so many jumping. And after that, I learn karate, hapkido, judo, boxing. I learn so many things. Because in that time, we don't have cell phone, we don't have karaoke, we don't have anything. And most important, I don't have money. Most of the time, we stay in the dojo school. Karate-ing with all of the friends. That's how we spent every day. Not like this day, you can have karaoke, drinking bar, mostly cell phone. We don't. But I'm glad. Because at that time, we don't have these kind of things, I training a lot. Change. [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - Oh. When I was young, I was very big, very fat. So in Chinese name, call me Pao. It's like a canyon. My mom speak Shanghainese, just called me Apo. In the embassy, everybody call me Po. I thought it's a English Po. It's not Shanghainese Pao. My father went to Australia, American embassy. When I get there, everybody call me, "What's your name?" I said, "Okay, my name's Po." At that time, I want to learn English. Then I go to the night school. Then the teacher asked me, "What's your name?" I said, "My name is Chan Kong-Sang." "No, your name is Steven." I said, "Okay." Embassy, Po. School, Steven. Then I went to the, some work. Then my friend bring me there. Then "Do this guy have a English name?" "No." "Okay." He use his name, put on my name. He's like, "His name called Jack." In Australia, I have Po, Steven, Jack. Then Jack, Jack, Jack, Jack, Jack. After nine months, I know a little bit English because Jack Chan, no rhythm. Just like fighting. Then I put a Y. Then Jacky Chan. Then after that, when I make a movie, after famous, I sign to Golden Harvest. And the Golden Harvest said, "Jackie, you're too strong, too man. You have to change a little bit." Then they take out the Y. They put the I-E. So you see '80s, my posters still J-A-C-K-Y. But after '80s, always J-A-C-K-I-E. Jackie Chan. Believe it or not, after I change it I-E, my career just boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. Thing was stuck. Huh? [interpreter speaking in foreign language] - Oh. I like any food. But I don't like animal stomach, inside. Especially these day, not many steaks. I don't know why. Now I like more soup, vegetable, fruit, mango, bread. Croissant. [upbeat music] I toss a lot of board. This is very fun. I see you next time. I need more board. I need more question. I need you know more about me. Bye bye. [upbeat music]