Lessons this Bay Area arts leader learned from working at her parents’ Chinese restaurant

Debbie Chinn hardly enjoyed a typical childhood in suburban Long Island in the 1960s and 1970s. Her immigrant parents put her to work at the House of Mah Jong, their popular Chinese restaurant in Syosset, selling cigarettes, greeting customers and later hula dancing in its Polynesian-themed floor show.

But after school and on weekends at Mah Jong, Chinn learned valuable lessons in resilience, business leadership, customer service and entrepreneurship, which she’s used to lead some of the Bay Area’s most venerated arts companies over the past 20 years, including, most recently, TheatreWorks Silicon Valley.

As Chinn wrote in her 2022 memoir, “Dancing in their Light,” her parents’ ability to remake their lives in the United States, a country that didn’t always welcome them, provided a template for surviving change, which Chinn has employed to help arts groups navigate challenges in the 21st century, made worse by the COVID pandemic.

“My parents were small business owners and I’ve always replicated their ethos when I run arts arts organization,” Chinn says.  “I grew up learning how to treat a customer, how to be present, how to greet them, how to do all the stuff I do when I’m at my theaters. People want to see the owner when they come in. It makes you feel special when you’re known by name in the restaurant.”

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