Cheryl Thompson is author of Canada and the Blackface Atlantic: Performing Slavery, Conflict, and Freedom, 1812-1897 (2025), Uncle: Race, Nostalgia, and the Politics of Loyalty (2021) and Beauty in a Box: Detangling the Roots of Canada's Black Beauty Culture (2019). She holds a PhD in Communication Studies from McGill University.
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Description
Prologue Introduction: Staging Blackface in Canada's Modern Era Chapter 1: Free, Continuous and "High-Class" Vaudeville at Toronto's Amusements, 1898-1910 Chapter 2: Black Vaudeville and Burlesque at Theatres: Salome, Oriental Operas, and the Integration of the Stage, 1898-1909 Chapter 3: American Syndicates, Jewish "Coon" Acts, and the Foreign Annexation of Canadian Stages, 1904-1913 Chapter 4: Ziegfeld Follies and Sound Recording Modernize the Musical with Imitation Songs, and Mimetic Dances in Toronto and Montreal, 1907-1919 Chapter 5: Amateur Blackface During World War One, and the Birth of a Nation at Home, 1914-1919 Conclusion Selected Bibliography

