Outside Asian Court, a dim sum restaurant in Ellicott City, two dozen people crowd together in a circle on a brisk Sunday in February. They’re listening to Dai Si Jie (eldest sister) Emily Lam, a junior coach at U.S. Jow Ga Martial Arts who has been coordinating this Lunar New Year season’s lion dance performances.

“We worked really hard this year, and you guys did a great job listening to instruction,” Emily Lam says. “Just remember, last performance, make sure everybody gets a turn doing what they want. Starting roles are just starting roles, so please switch around and talk to your teammates.”

It’s the last public performance of the season and the final one that the children — who make up the majority of the team — can participate in.

As soon as the clock strikes 12:30 p.m., the drumming begins.

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Si Hing (elder brother) Eric Lam, Emily’s brother and fellow junior coach, is on the drum for the entirety of the 35-minute set. The drum is like the heartbeat of the lion, says Sifu (master) Alex Lim, owner of the school.

Firecrackers kick off a performance at Gong Cha in Ellicott City on Lunar New Year. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)
Jaina, right, smiles up at Chloe as she switches in to become the head of the kid lion during a performance at Asian Court in Ellicott City, Md. on Sunday, Feb. 18, 2024.
Jaina Yau, right, smiles up at Chloe Lockwood as she switches in to become the head of the kid lion during a performance at Asian Court. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)
Eric Lam and Donny Yau carry out the lion head and drum, respectively, after performing at the United States Pharmacopeia as another group waits to go onstage in Rockville, Md. on Wednesday, Feb. 21, 2024.
Eric Lam and Donny Yau carry out the lion head and drum, respectively, after performing at the United States Pharmacopeia in Rockville as another group waits to go onstage. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)

After the performance, Alex Lim pulls aside Emily Lam and Eric Lam. He introduces them to Howard Wong, a friend he invited to photograph the event. Howard is already in conversation with their mom, Winnie Lam.

“Howard used to lion dance with your grandfather!” Alex Lim excitedly tells Emily Lam and Eric Lam. “Isn’t that so cool?”

At U.S. Jow Ga Martial Arts, this is what it’s all about.

“Any martial arts school can teach you how to punch and kick. We try to focus on the family,” said Si Baak (elder uncle) Steven Lim, Sifu Alex’s son and a senior instructor.

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Winnie Lam helps Steven Lim take off his lion dance pants after a performance at Gong Cha in Hanover. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)
The performance team observes the lion drinking boba during a performance at Gong Cha in Ellicott City, Md. on Lunar New Year, Saturday, Feb. 10, 2024. The lion typically eats oranges and lettuce during a performance, but it was also given three cups of boba at this bubble tea stop.
The performance team observe the lion drinking bubble tea during a performance at Gong Cha in Ellicott City. The lion typically eats oranges and lettuce during a performance, but it was also given three cups of tea at this bubble tea shop. At the end of the ritual, the lion “spits out” the food onto the business to bestow health, wealth and luck. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)
From left, Emily Lam, Steven Lim and Lydia Tang open red envelopes the team received during the final performance of the New Year season at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, D.C. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)
Emily Lam bows the lion back in at the ancestral shrine after the day’s three Lunar New Year performances on Saturday, Feb. 10, 2024.
Emily Lam bows to the lion at the ancestral shrine after the day’s three Lunar New Year performances. The lions must be bowed in at the conclusion of every performance day. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)

The Yau/Lam family’s lion dance history begins with Benny Yau. Benny Yau started lion dancing around the age of 8 in his homeland of Taishan, a city in the Guangdong province of Southeast China. In the local dialect, the city is called Hoisan. This is also what the dialect is called and is what Benny Yau still speaks today.

“Back in the day, they would have to do either kung fu or lion dance,” Benny Yau’s son, Donny Yau, translates. “He wanted to try out lion dance, so him and his brothers would go out and try lion dance, but also learn kung fu on the side without grandpa knowing.”

“The people that had money would buy weapons like guns or whatever, but when you’re poor, your only way of fighting or way of defense would be kung fu,” Benny Yau’s daughter, Winnie Lam, adds.

Over time, Benny Yau gained enough knowledge that he was able to teach kung fu and lion dance in his village. In 1966, he moved to Hong Kong, where Winnie, his first child, was born. Shortly after, he made the move to Baltimore in 1967.

Benny Yau quickly became part of Baltimore’s Chinese American community. He performed lion dances at events for Grace and St. Peter’s Episcopal Church. The church on Park Avenue in Baltimore had a Chinese Language School, and the money generated from performances went directly back into the school and church.

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You can’t talk about the history of Baltimore’s Chinese culture without hearing about Lillian Kim. She orchestrated the church’s Lunar New Year celebrations for decades, was director of the Chinese Language School and wrote a Chinese newsletter.

“Anytime Miss Kim asked if we were able to help with any kind of performance, we were always there,” Donny Yau says.

In this archival photo, Benny Yau, center, drums while Donny Yau plays the lion head during a Chinese New Year performance in Baltimore. (Photo courtesy of Donny Yau)
Jaina Yau smiles up at her dad, Donny Yau, as her grandfather, Benny, helps her keep time with the cymbals to Eric Lam’s beat at US Jow Ga Martial Arts in Columbia, Md. on Sunday, March 3, 2024.
From left, Donny Yau, his daughters Mara Jade and Jaina, Benny Yau and Eric Lam practice music at USJGMA in Columbia. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)

For Winnie Lam and Donny Yau, who was born 10 years after his sister, lion dance performances were very familiar.

“We looked forward to Chinese New Year, because that’s the time we actually saw my dad performing in front of strangers,” Winnie Lam said. “So that’s how we learned the music and watched the lion dance performing, because they didn’t want us [children] running all over the place.”

The siblings were taught lion dancing by their dad and uncles, but they weren’t allowed to perform in the street; firecrackers were used when performing outside, and Benny Yau didn’t want them to get hurt.

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At 14, Winnie was finally able to perform for a crowd; the event was inside the Walters Art Museum, so there would be no firecrackers. She played head as her cousin played tail. According to Winnie Lam, they were the first all-female lion in Baltimore.

Winnie Lam and Donny Yau play lion head and tail, respectively, on Lunar New Year. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)

When Kim died in 2004, nobody picked up the role of organizing the New Year celebrations. The Yau/Lam family performed at events now and then, but primarily took a hiatus.

A new chapter in the family’s history with lion dance began in 2016, when Winnie Lam’s children, Eric and Emily, joined U.S. Jow Ga Martial Arts. Their neighbor was a former sifu at the school and recommended it. When Winnie Lam and her husband Steven, who is the cameraman at every performance, learned that the school had lion dancing, they knew the kids had to attend.

Eric Lam took to music. He learned from various teachers, but learned the foundations from his grandfather. Emily Lam gravitated toward playing lion and was partnered with Steven Lim because of their shared passion for performing.

They practiced constantly and soon were being called up to the front of the room to help demonstrate techniques. By 2019, they became junior instructors.

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“When I was younger, I was almost afraid to perform because I didn’t like to be attention-seeking like that, but now I love it,” Emily Lam said. “I love teaching it and seeing the work the students have put in over the last months of training come together.”

From left, Winnie, Emily and Eric Lam chat while on the way to a performance on Saturday, Feb. 17, 2024.
From left, Winnie, Emily and Eric Lam chat while on the way to a performance. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)
Mara Jade Yau smiles out of a lion head as her dad, Donny Yau, fixes the mechanism for the eye movements on Lunar New Year, Saturday, Feb. 10, 2024.
Mara Jade smiles out of a lion head as her dad, Donny Yau, fixes the mechanism for the eye movements. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)

Winnie Lam and Donny Yau started performing with USJGMA one year after Eric Lam and Emily Lam joined the school, and they’ve been key in helping grow the performance team. Early on, Winnie Lam got advice from Benny Yau about traditional signs of respect to uphold while performing and passed it onto the school. Today, Donny Yau — whose daughter, Jaina, has also been practicing with the team for four years — focuses on how to improve the team’s storytelling to make the performance more engaging for the audience.

“We’re keeping the family tradition alive,” Donny Yau said.

Emily Lam hugs her mom, Winnie Lam, after a long day of performances in the D.C. area on Wednesday, Feb. 21, 2024.
Emily Lam hugs her mom, Winnie Lam, after a long day of performances that wrapped up the Lunar New Year season. (Kylie Cooper/The Baltimore Banner)

This story has been updated to correct the birthplace of Winnie Yau.