Skip to main content

ResourceSpace
Menu Account
  •  Dash
  •  Featured collections
  •  Recent
  •  Knowledge Base
  • Log in
Search
Browse
  All resources





 New content RSS feed

Geographic search

Advanced search

Log in

Username
Password


 Apply for an account

 Forgotten password?


Powered by Powered by ResourceSpace
%BROWSE_INDENT% %BROWSE_EXPAND% %BROWSE_TEXT% %BROWSE_REFRESH%
Browse by tag
Featured collections
Collections
Workflow

Rexall Pharmacy (former theatre), Changing Chinatown Tour, June 02, 2024. Image by Rachna Shah.  

Full screen preview
Resource tools
File information Options

Original JPG File

4000 × 3000 pixels (12 MP)

33.9 cm × 25.4 cm @ 300 PPI

7.1 MB

Restricted
  •  Add to collection
Resource details

Resource ID

11123

Access

Open

Credit Line

Rachna Shah

Date of Creation

02 June 2024

Keywords

Chinatown
theatre ​history

Program Category

Tours

Rights

Rachna Shah

Caption

Rexall Pharmacy (former theatre), Changing Chinatown Tour, June 02, 2024. Image by Rachna Shah.

Description

Built in 1921, the Standard Theatre was the first purpose-built Yiddish-language theatre in Canada and a cultural landmark in the local Jewish
community. During the 70 years when the theatre was in active use, it served two communities with very different pasts, Chinese and Jewish,
but both sought a connection in the new country they settled in. The Standard Theatre showed how communities came together through
language, culture, arts, and social activism. The building reflects the changing nature of the neighbourhood.

Now a Pharmacy owned by Rexall.

Discover the past and present along Spadina Avenue; from the historical lakeshore and Indigenous trade route to a diverse international neighbourhood; the advocacy by the Jewish and Chinatown community against discrimination so that they could not only survive but thrive in their new home; and the evolving definition of public space and art that grounds the community and its shops, homes, and businesses.

License management
Comments
Related resources