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Conductor Elim Chan on channelling Hong Kong’s can-do spirit, and her harshest critics

Chan, 38, back in her home city to conduct, talks about shaking up ‘dinosaur’ orchestras, women conductors and not messing up

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Elim Chan conducts the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra in a Symphony Under The Stars concert in November 2024. Photo: Desmond Chan/Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra

Since her first brush with fame a decade ago, Hong Kong-born conductor Elim Chan has fought a “long-term battle” against tired assumptions about herself, music and how orchestras should be run.

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In 2014, Chan became the first woman to win the major Donatella Flick Conducting Competition, kick-starting an international career that included a stint at the London Symphony Orchestra and opening this year’s BBC Proms, Britain’s top classical music festival.

“I love to surprise people,” Chan, 38, said in an interview ahead of guest-conducting the Hong Kong Philharmonic this month.

“When I started, people had super low expectations of me. They thought, ‘Yeah, a little Asian girl … what can she do?’”

Elim Chan conducts the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra. She is considering how to reach audiences beyond the concert hall. Photo: Facebook/@Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra
Elim Chan conducts the Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra. She is considering how to reach audiences beyond the concert hall. Photo: Facebook/@Hong Kong Philharmonic Orchestra

Her rise reflects how the classical music world is being gradually reshaped by a new generation of conductors.

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