Renee Inomata, a Boston-area attorney, who was highly active ­— oftentimes behind the scenes — in the civil rights and Asian ...
We believe bigoted and hateful attacks on Somali immigrants, refugees and citizens are harmful to all of society, but ...
Fun Home is a beautiful queer memoir-musical about investigating one’s past and wrestling with the maddening slipperiness of memory. Based on Alison Bechdel’s award-winning graphic memoir, the story ...
A sweeping report by the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund explores three “swiftly changing” Chinatowns in the Northeast: in Boston, Manhattan, and Philadelphia.
Directed by Weyni Mengesha and written by Ins Choi – who also stars as Appa in the performance – the play is about a Korean family-run corner store in Toronto. Although it is pleasant to see a ...
When Chenlu Hou says her colorful, quirky and often wildly decorated clay sculptures are inspired by Chinese folk art and cut paper, it’s at first hard to believe. But then she sits down at her studio ...
A news report on GBH posted recently caught our attention. The story was about how the head of a national media company, Brian Timpone, who runs Metric Media, was seeking information from public ...
When director Lukas Dong set out to tell the story of Boston's Chinatown, he not only visited the neighborhood, but also its people. Then he discovered former longtime resident Cynthia Yee and current ...
Review of The Ceremony, which ran at the Joan & Edgar Booth Theatre at Boston University. The Ceremony is a masterpiece. The sixth play in playwright Mfoniso Udofia’s nine-play cycle about three ...
Sardines is a comedy show about death. A 60-minute one-man show, comedian Chris Grace presents a compelling autobiographical monologue about life and death. He shares his personal experiences with ...
After moving to the United States with his family in the 1980s, Kuang Ching Mei led a life like so many of his peers of his time. Born in Duanfen Model Village in southern China in 1936, Mei endured a ...
Walk through Chinatown today, and you might see some colorful bilingual posters in the windows of upstairs apartments and ground-level businesses with slogans reading “Chinatown Is My Home, We Are ...