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Still dancing after all these years

By Xu Fan | China Daily | Updated: 2024-12-20 06:35
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A poster from the documentary Chinatown Cha-Cha by Chinese director Luka Yuanyuan Yang that brings veteran dancers from mid-century San Francisco's Chinese nightclub scene to screen. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Originally set up by four retired dancers who had once been part of the nightclub scene in Chinatown during its golden age, the troupe consists of 10 elderly dancers in their 70s and 90s.

"I was excited to learn that they were still performing, so I contacted them and discovered they were scheduled to perform in Las Vegas," Yang says.

It was there that Yang first met 92-year-old dancer Coby Yee. Dressed in a fluorescent green dress and a pretty headdress, Yee's costume, which she had designed herself, evoked a blend of cultures from China, Mexico and Morocco. "I had never seen a woman of her age exuding such dynamism and charm," Yang says.

The child of immigrants from Guangdong province, Yee was born in the US in 1926 and grew up helping her parents at the family laundry store, ironing hundreds of shirts each day from a young age.

Unwilling to follow in her parents' footsteps, Yee discovered a passion for dancing and eventually became a star in San Francisco nightclubs.

"Most Chinese immigrant families at the time thought that being a dancer was not a decent profession, but Yee bravely pursued her dream, demonstrating her taste and talent for fashion," says Yang.

Despite lacking experience in producing feature-length films at the time, Yang's admiration for Yee and the other members of the Grant Avenue Follies pushed her to learn, and ultimately to make the documentary.

She says that the Chinese title of the film Nuren Shijie was inspired by the 1939 film It's a Women's World, the first all-female film directed by Esther Eng, the first female director of Chinese-language films in the US.

During the six years she spent producing Chinatown Cha-Cha, Yang faced a series of challenges, including battling cancer and getting pregnant.

"During post-production, my female editor visited my home twice a week as I needed to take breaks for breastfeeding. It was an incredible experience to assemble a team predominantly comprised of talented women to tell a story about a group of resilient older women," Yang says.

The film is scheduled to be released overseas in 2025.

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