As Shen Yun’s opening night performance was about to begin at Lincoln Center in New York on March 26, 2025, investigative journalist Steve Lance saw people holding signs outside the venue showing excerpts from hit pieces attacking the classical Chinese dance company.
Lance spoke to The Epoch Times while in Toronto for the film’s Canadian premiere at Hotel X on April 22, sharing both his findings and his concerns about the recent cancellation of Shen Yun performances in the city due to a hoax bomb threat.
Recalling the scene outside Lincoln Center a year ago, Lance said that when he asked the demonstrators why they were there, they struggled to give a clear answer, saying, “they didn’t really know why.”
“They were very evasive,” Lance said. “We asked one man what he did for a living—he said he was a consultant.” He noted the group appeared to be made up of people from varied backgrounds, not individuals one would typically expect to be closely tied to the issue.

One man admitted on camera that he was paid to protest, and would get $20 after he finished distributing materials critical of Shen Yun.
Lance also observed another individual, an Asian man standing apart from the group, who appeared to be directing the demonstrators and supplying additional flyers. He said further investigation traced the protesters back to an individual known to be connected to the CCP.
As he looked into the bomb threats and death threats against Shen Yun in recent years—all hoaxes—Lance said the patterns all trace back to the CCP. He said he found it “hard to believe and beyond concerning” that such interference could result in the recent cancellation of six Shen Yun shows in Toronto.
New York-based Shen Yun was founded in 2006 and quickly grew from one to eight touring companies travelling the world every year. This year marks its 20th anniversary, and the show has hundreds of performances scheduled in nearly 200 cities in some 20 countries.
The Toronto cancellations mark the first known instance of a theatre calling off Shen Yun performances in response to a hoax bomb threat.
Lance said what he witnessed outside Lincoln Center is part of the CCP’s broader transnational repression and interference campaign targeting Shen Yun. Tactics range from slashed tires on Shen Yun tour buses to fake bomb threats and death threats, as well as news articles slandering Shen Yun with CCP-linked sources, and lawfare weaponizing the legal system to attack the performance.

Shen Yun’s stated mission is to revive China’s 5,000 years of traditional culture, which the company says has been all but destroyed under decades of communist rule. The company performs under the tagline, “China Before Communism.” Shen Yun also highlights human rights abuses by the Chinese communist regime, including the persecution of Falun Gong.
Meanwhile, Lance said what stands out most about the multi-pronged interference efforts is the “resilience” of Shen Yun’s artists—and their absence of resentment.
‘Noble Mission’
“Unbroken,” which was released on March 24, follows Levi Browde and his two sons, Jesse and Lucas Browde, who are principal dancers with Shen Yun, as they contend with bomb threats, lawfare, and media coverage attacking the performing arts company.
Lance recalled that Lucas Browde, who is featured in “Unbroken,” said he doesn’t take the threats against Shen Yun personally and is “just trying to live his life in a way that shows people the true situation and the true nature of what Shen Yun is all about.”
Drawing on his own experience as a former competitive hockey player, Lance noted the intense focus required to perform at a high level—and said he can only imagine how challenging it is for Shen Yun’s performers to maintain that standard while facing threats at the same time.
“When a goaltender prepares, he doesn’t talk to anybody else in the team. He’s just focusing,” Lance said. “Can you imagine if every game he had to evacuate and deal with a bomb threat?”
He said Shen Yun’s artists are “essentially Olympians” in terms of their training and that dealing with the stress that comes with the threats the performing arts company receives “really sets them apart.”
In his experience spending time with Shen Yun’s artists, Lance says they have a level of humility he has not experienced elsewhere. He noted that more than 90 Shen Yun performers and employees either have themselves been persecuted by the CCP or have one or more family members that have been persecuted.
“This is very personal, and it’s very real, and it’s a very noble mission that they’re all behind,” Lance said.

Toronto Cancellations
Shen Yun’s backstory, Lance said, is what makes it so “hard to believe and deeply concerning” that six performances scheduled in Toronto in late March and early April were cancelled after Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts—the show’s venue—received bomb threats from an email account bearing a Chinese name, which was later determined to be a hoax.“What that told us was that the Chinese Communist Party has been harassing this group, and this is a state actor just using intimidation tactics. This is not a domestic act of terrorism,” Lance said.
Lance said he expected that authorities and intelligence services in democratic societies would read the threats as such, and would be able to advise the public about the nature of the threats.
He said that by cancelling the shows, the Toronto theatre is in a sense “emboldening the CCP” in its activities to suppress Shen Yun and disrupt performances using hoax bomb threats.
“It’s sort of like why you don’t pay a terrorist ransom, because if you do, they know that it works and they’ll keep doing it,” he said. “By shutting the show down, you’re opening the door for even more on top of what they’ve been doing.”

‘Resist the Fear’
Lance noted that similar threats have occurred in other cities, but the shows went on anyway with increased security.The Toronto presenter of the show said Shen Yun’s performances around the world have been targeted by such threats more than 150 times over the past two years and that each time the shows were allowed to proceed after police confirmed the threats were unfounded.
The Vancouver Police Cybercrime Unit determined that email account that sent the threats to the Vancouver theatre, which is the same email account that sent threats to the Toronto theatre, was linked to a Chinese phone number based in China.
There are multiple layers to the CCP’s intent in sending hoax threats, including to scare the population and to change the way people carry out their daily lives, Lance noted.
“I think it’s in the spirit of free and democratic countries to resist the fear that some of these terrorist campaigns are trying to instill,” he said.
Lance also said he hopes “Unbroken” adds “another dimension” to what the Toronto audiences who were directly affected by the cancellations have personally experienced.
“If the Chinese communist regime continues to go unchecked, if their bad behaviour continues to be swept under the rug and go unnoticed because of business deals, because of self-interest, it’s only a matter of time until each and every one of us becomes a victim of their crimes,” he said.
He added that he hopes the cancellations in Toronto serve as a warning and a “wake up call.”







