“Gwah Gai: Crossing the Street” (2013)


Gwah Gai: Crossing the Street, “A Musical Collage in Four Movements,” explored new possibilities for storytelling. Gwah Gai featured original music composed by Marcus Shelby for his 15-piece orchestra, with a narrative written by dramaturg Andi Wong, based on Flo Oy Wong’s “creative non-fiction” which records her husband Edward K. Wong’s memories of growing up in the segregated South.

They weren’t supposed to be friends, 19″ x 31″, mixed media -rice sack, silkscreened photo, thread, text. Photo by Bob Hsiang.
In 1993, Ed’s stories about growing up in Augusta, Georgia, inspired Flo to create her visual art installation, The Baby Jack Rice Story. In 2011, Baby Jack’s story took a new turn when Flo and Ed attended a concert by musicians Marcus Shelby and Jon Jang. Addressing the growing tensions between the African American and Chinese American communities in the Bay Area, Marcus presented a common history of people overcoming discrimination and exclusion. Flo immediately asked Marcus to compose music based on Ed’s stories, and a production team was soon assembled. On June 7-8, 2013, The Asian Pacific Cultural Center presented Gwah Gai: Crossing the Street at the ODC Theater, featuring actors Peter Macon and Tiffany Austin, with students Jason and Catherine Hou as young Flo and Ed.


Gwah Gai is a meditation on resistance and love, anchored by two coming-of-age stories – Ed’s childhood, living among African Americans in the Wrightsboro Road neighborhood of Augusta, Georgia, and Flo’s childhood in Oakland’s Chinatown. Set against an expansive timeline of cultural history – Peking opera, Othello, jump blues and a viral video – Gwah Gai explores the role of the arts in awakening social change.
In Gwah Gai, all roads to the future radiate from Augusta. Look out, world! Baby Jack, Boykin and Cush are together again, ready for more adventure.
The Baby Jack Rice Story (1993 – 1996) – Flo Oy Wong
[…] with composer Marcus Shelby. On June 7-8, 2013, The Asian Pacific Cultural Center presented Gwah Gai: Crossing the Street – A Musical Collage in Four Movements at the ODC Theater, featuring actors Peter Macon and Tiffany Austin, with students Jason and […]
Island Bound: Flo Oy Wong – ANGEL ISLAND INSIGHT
[…] Sue Shee Wong had previously spent years apart from her husband after they were married in China. Typical of the Chinese wives whose husbands were Gum Sahn Hauck, Gold Mountain guests, she waited in China in hopes that she would be able to join her husband in the United States in the distant future. As a young girl in China she didn’t know who she would marry. While working in the fields of her village one day her future husband, Wong Yet Chaw, came to call. When he arrived, she snuck a peek at him and saw that he was very handsome. The young couple eventually were married in a ceremony when she traveled from her village to his village of You Tin Cheurn in a wedding sedan chair. Soon after they started their family and he left for America. — excerpted from Sue Shee Wong: Baby Jack’s Mama (part II), a short story written by Flo Oy Wong for Gwah Gai: Crossing the Street (2013) […]