- Journal for the Interdisciplinary Art and Education
- Volume:2 Issue:2
- The “strange affinities”: early Chinese American Vaudevillians’ blackface performance
The “strange affinities”: early Chinese American Vaudevillians’ blackface performance
Authors : Yingze HUO
Pages : 157-168
View : 13 | Download : 6
Publication Date : 2021-12-31
Article Type : Research Paper
Abstract :In the first two decades of the early twentieth century, Chinese American vaudeville artists reinterpreted their appearances on stage by utilizing Black performative languages. As a consideration of commercial selection value and a direct response to American ethnic relations, Chinese American vaudeville performers picked black-themed cultural works to perform. The way in which the early performers portrayed Chineseness exploited the imposed stereotypical labels and indicated a self-consciousness among second-generation Chinese American on stage. However, these on-stage self-representations, though likely a response to Sinophobia, were more of a passive reaction than a conscious decision. Similarly to their African American counterparts, to succeed in vaudeville, early Chinese American vaudevillians had to negotiate between well-developed preconceptions and their own artistic desires, which required them to bear the burdens of the past’s ugliness. Most of their performative languages, especially physical features, thus preserved the long-held stereotypes of Chinese people, such as the queue, the costume, etc.Keywords : Vaudeville, Chinese American, blackface, Black Theatre, Performance Studies