Playwright traces 4 generations of his family history in musical one-man play - Action News
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Montreal

Playwright traces 4 generations of his family history in musical one-man play

Jeff Ho, a graduate of Montreal's National Theatre School, wrote the play Trace in order to unpack his family history and as an ode to the strong women who came before him.

Excerpt of the play will be performed for free online as part of Festival Accs Asie

Jeff Ho, a graduate of Montreal's National Theatre School, wrote the play Trace in order to unpack his family history and as an ode to the strong women who came before him. (Dahlia Katz)

When Jeff Ho was 16, he travelled from Toronto to Montreal to audition for theatre school.

His mother, a single parent who had immigrated from Hong Kong, was not pleased.

Ho told CBC's All in a Weekend that his mother had expectations that he would become a doctor or a lawyer, not a theatre artist.

"It really felt like a calling," said Ho, who added that he had been inspired by notable National Theatre School graduate Sandra Oh.

While the decision caused a rift in their relationship at the time, Ho said it helped sparkhis creative urges to write a play about his own family history.

The playTrace,which played at the National Arts Centrein Ottawa in 2019, turned into an ode to the strong women in Ho's family.

"I was hoping to really excavate how and why my single mother who travelled from HongKong to Canada with just her two sons, my brother and myself, in 2001had this strength to be able to let go of her entire life, the ability to forego her entire career and education that she had set up for herself and the stability that she could find in Hong Kong just so that she could imagine a better life for future generations of her family tree," he said.

He picked up onhow his mother's story "echoed and paralleled"the journey his great-grandmother made leaving China for Hong Kong during the Second World War.

"I just wanted to understand how people can do seemingly impossible tasksso that their family can have better lives."

Listen to Jeff Ho describe how the play came into being:

He said during the trip, his great-grandmother "had to let go of her youngest son" and that the effects of this sacrifice have rippled through his family line.

Ho said that his play is "fiction weaved in with moments of truth," and built around family stories, conversationsand memories of his mother, grandmother and great-grandmother.

In performance, Ho plays the roles of all four women in the story and accompanies himself on the piano.

He said writing the play helpedheal his relationship with his mother, as he reached out to her to ask for more information about their family.

A trained musician, Ho wrote the playin the form of a five-movement piano sonata.

He said he chose music for the play that he knew was meaningful to his mother.

"All the piano music in the play were songs that my mother used to love listening to."

He said when she came to see the play in Ottawa, he felt that the music was "almost like a little secretfor her in the audience."

"Asecret of 'this is for you Mom. Ilove you. Iunderstand a little bit more now,'" he said.


An excerpt from Trace will be performed by Jeff Ho as part of Montreal'sFestival Accs Asie,Canada's longest running Asian arts festival. The online event will be streamed for free online on May 27 at 7 p.m.

With files from CBC's All in Weekend