Monthly Archives: February 2006

Myths & Legends: New Tang Dynasty TV's Chinese New Year Global Gala lands in Vancouver

Myths & Legends: New Tang Dynasty TV's Chinese New Year Global Gala lands in Vancouver 


The New Tang Dynasty TV Gala
touring ensemble landed in Vancouver today and put on a media
conference at the Vancouver Art Gallery with a mini-show.  This is
the first time that NTDTV has brought its Gala show to Vancouver. 
There will be 11 shows in North America plus Sydney, Taiwan, Seoul and
Paris.
http://gala.ntdtv.com/2006/en/cities/van/
The Vanouver show is Tuesday, February 7th, 7:30pm, at Queen Elizabeth Theatre on Hamilton and Georgia St.

Over
the past two years I have been attending more of these Chinese event
shows.  Growing up “North American”, I generally stayed away from
things that were “Chinesey” – except for Bruce Lee movies and other
kung fu movies in Chinatown.  That was then, this is now. 
Chinese productions used to be marked by tackiness, and low production
values.  But an opening up of China in addition to event producers
taking on a willingness to push the envelope of both traditional
Chinese and mainstream cultural shows, has resulted in a number of
Chinese cultural shows being marketed into the mainstream.
Check my reviews for Terracotta Warriors, Senses and Chung Yi: The Legend of Kung Fu.

Today I talked with one of the volunteer organizers, and she was very pleased to learn that the Gung Haggis Fat Choy
is very much about building cultural understanding between East and
West, which is also the mandate of New Tang Dynasty TV.  While
GHFC has taken a decidely fusionistic take on inter-culturalism,
leaving behind the multi-cultural folk fest pastiche, it is interesting
to see how new Overseas Chinese create their perception of
“multi-culturalism.”  Last year, I attended Lily King's Spring
Concert, and was amazed by the efforts of local immigrant Chinese,
wanting to embrace and learn about North American and European
culture.  European opera arias, may be old hat to North American
audiences, but it is new to many Chinese and Asian audiences.

I
am very truthfully learning more about Chinese culture, as well as a
Chinese-Canadian identity  untainted by 62 years of legislated
racism due to the Chinese Head Tax and Exclusion Act.  While these
shows may be unaware of the more than 150 year of Chinese Canadian
history, the shows draw on 5000 years of continuous Chinese
culture.  New Tang Dyasty TV is named after the Tang Dynasty (618-907 A.D.) considered the peak of Chinese cultural and artistic achievements.

Below are links and information to :

Please visit http://qz1.sytes.net/art/gala.htm
to view the 5-
minute intro video online. New Tang Dynasty TV (NTDTV) is the world
largest independent, non-profit
Chinese-language television network.

Headquartered in New York City,
NTDTV currently has reporters and
correspondents in over fifty cities around the
world. The worldwide viewship covers North America, Australia, Europe and
Asia
via satellite, cable television and the Internet. Please visit http://www.ntdtv.com/xtr/eng/aAboutXTR_e.htm for more information
on NTDTV.
On November 24th, 2005, NTDTV Canada was approved by Canadian Radio-television
and Telecommunication Commission ( CRTC ) to be on the lists of eligible
satellite services for distribution on a
digital basis. NTDTV's aim with the Gala is to celebrate
China¡¯s magnificent heritage and foster cross-cultural understanding between the
East and West.

For
more info on the global gala. NTDTV's 2006 Chinese New Gala :
http://gala.ntdtv.com/2006/en/

See highlights from the show:
http://gala.ntdtv.com/2006/en/hi/

Review of the Boston show by OperaOnLine
 http://www.operaonline.us/mythslegends_001.htm.

National Post – Rescuing Obasan's House – interview with Joy Kogawa


National Post – Rescuing Obasan's House
 
– interview with Joy Kogawa

 
The
National Post has published a story about Joy Kogawa and the campaign
to save the literary icon's childhood home.  Contrary to the NP
story by Brian Hutchinson, the campaign to save the house is actually
being done by
The Land Conservancy in partnership with the Save Kogawa House
committee ( I am a member along with Ann-Marie Metten and many
others).  Despite this incongruency… it's a good story and
brought a tear to my eye, with the imagery of a young child named Joy
playing at the house, her family being forcibly moved from the house,
and the forever longing by Joy's mother and her family – knowing that
no house they ever lived in afterwards would ever be as nice.

Oh – another thing.  Obasan was not
an autobiography as stated by NP writer Hutchinson, it is a novel –
based on autobiographical references. There is a difference.

Rescuing Obasan's house

Novelist fighting to save bungalow made famous in
autobiography
 
Brian Hutchinson
National
Post

VANCOUVER – There is nothing remarkable about the small wooden house, not at
first glance, aside from the fact it has somehow survived all these years.
Others around it have fallen, destroyed in the last decade by the wrecker's ball
and replaced with mundane, two-storey buildings sheathed in ubiquitous pink
stucco and smooth vinyl siding. McMansions.

The bungalow is 93 years old. It looks out of place in this increasingly
affluent and expensive neighbourhood called Marpole, located a few blocks from
the Fraser River's northern arm.

A modest house on West 64th Avenue, nestled behind a few gnarled, ancient
looking trees, its small yard delineated by a white picket fence. Now it too is
threatened. The present owner has no love for it. At the end of March, the house
is scheduled for demolition.

Unless.

There is a movement afoot to save the old house, which is not so ordinary,
after all. It is part of literary lore and a small but symbolic reminder of a
painful chapter in Canadian history. A reminder of things lost, including
innocence.

The celebrated poet and novelist Joy Kogawa spent the best of her youth in
the bungalow. She moved there with her family in 1937, when she was just two.
She learned to play the family piano inside the house's small living room. She
climbed the fruit trees in the backyard, swung from their branches, ate the
cherries and peaches.

Five years later, with war raging in distant Europe and in the Pacific,
21,000 Canadians of Japanese descent were forcibly removed from their homes,
under conditions set forth by the War Measures Act. They were declared enemies
of Canada. Their property was confiscated. They were placed in internment
camps.

Ms. Kogawa and her family were among those uprooted. They were sent to the
B.C. interior, to the rugged Slocan Valley, where life was brutal, cold,
unforgiving.

Their little Vancouver bungalow sat empty, and then others moved in. The
Kogawas yearned for it. Ms. Kogawa dreamed of it, many times. Ultimately, she
wrote about the little bungalow. It became Obasan's house.

Obasan is the title of Ms. Kogawa's famous autobiographical novel, published
in 1981 and reprinted many times, in multiple languages. The novel describes in
heartbreaking detail the Japanese-Canadian internment. The experience is
recalled by a character named Naomi Nakane and is based on the author.

In the novel, a wise aunt named Obasan raises Naomi. They lived in the little
bungalow on West 64th Avenue until the war. “It is more splendid than any house
I have lived in since,” Naomi remembers, in the novel.

“It does not bear remembering. None of this bears remembering.” It's too
painful.

Obasan won four major literary awards. Ms. Kogawa was propelled into the
limelight. In 1986, she was made a member of the Order of Canada. She went on to
receive seven honourary doctorates from Canadian universities. She published
more books, but none resonated more than Obasan.

Ms. Kogawa had already moved to Toronto, where she married, and raised two
children. But the house on West 64th Avenue stayed in her thoughts, and in her
dreams. “The longing for that house was forever,” she says now. “I always,
always wanted to come home. My mother, who had turned senile, also wanted to
come home. But it was impossible.” The house belonged to others.

She passed by a few times. In 1992, on a visit to Vancouver, she actually
knocked on the front door and stepped inside. The moment was bittersweet.

“Seeing the house reminds me of the sadness and the years when I wanted to go
back home so badly,” she told a Vancouver Sun reporter, who accompanied Ms.
Kogawa on her first visit home.

Ms. Kogawa began dividing her time between Toronto and suburban Vancouver.
Three years ago, she drove past the house on West 64th Avenue and saw a For Sale
sign in the front yard. She was exhilarated; the house, she imagined, might be
reclaimed. Then she learned the asking price: more than $500,000. Too much for
her to contemplate buying.

The house was sold. The new owner began making renovations that altered its
original character.

“She wanted no truck with me,” says Ms. Kogawa, who tried to intervene. “At
least she didn't pull it down, like all the other bungalows on the block.”

Last year, however, the owner changed her plans. She applied to the City of
Vancouver for a demolition permit. That's when the campaign to save the old
house went into full gear.

Led by friends, academics, fellow members of the CanLit community and the
Land Conservancy of B.C., a committee was formed to raise funds, buy out the
owner and restore the building to its original condition. The plan is to turn
the house into a writer's residence. Total cost of the project:
$1.25-million.

The owner is now willing to sell, should the money materialize. The city has
delayed approval of its demolition permit until March 30. Time is running out,
and Joy Kogawa is worried.

An omen: A cherry tree still stands in the backyard. It's a beautiful tree,
Ms. Kogawa says. A tree from her youth. It was severely pruned in 2004 and no
longer produces blossoms or fruit. It is dying. Ms. Kogawa managed to collect a
cutting. She planted it beside City Hall.

That may soon be all that's left of Obasan's house.

“The story is being written right now,” Ms. Kogawa says. “We don't know what
the ending will be. Will the house survive? Well, Obasan survived. So I wait,
and I watch.”

Joy
Kogawa will be doing a reading with friends such as Roy Miki, at
Chapters Book Store on Robson St., in downtown Vancouver – Feb 11,
Saturday 2pm to 4pm.

What to do with leftover haggis? Superbowl Scottish paté!


What to do with leftover haggis?  Superbowl Scottish paté!

Just what does one do with leftover haggis? 

Usually I always encourage people to serve it up as a “Scottish paté” for Super Bowl parties…
The
haggis from Peter Black & Sons, is always like a nice paté already,
especially with the nice liver and spice mixutre.  At the January
15th Cric? Crac! put on by the Vancouver Storytellers Society,
organizer Mary Gavan had made up a nice haggis paté that people were
all trying.

I always have some one pounders of  haggis left
over from the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.  They freeze very
well.  If you buy them at the store they usually come frozen and
can be readily defrosted.

Haggis lends itself very well to
fusion cooking.  In 2004, I helped to lead a Gung Haggis Fat Chili
team of Vancouver Public Library employees in the City of Vancouver
annual United Way Chili Cook-off.  People couldn't believe we
actually made a chili with haggis, that tasted very…. uh….
haggis-sy.  I LOVED our chili, and took the remainders home and
ate lots and lots of it.  My girlfriend even admitted it was a
good chili – for one made with haggis.

Adam Protter founder of the Whistler home edition of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, amd presiding chef of Big Smoke restaurant in Mt. Currie, has pioneered another  haggis fusion culinary dish.

Adam writes

I felt moved to pass on my latest discovery.

This morning I fried up my last slices of hoarded haggis with some eggs and tomato slices.
I
then topped the haggis & eggs with Lingham's & Sons Chili Sauce
from Malaysia. I had tasted combo this once before using Thai Kitchen
Sweet Chili sauce and was intrigued but not excited.


Well, as the truly
remarkable Hobbit Samwise Hamfast once remarked “Quality is as

quality
does!”.  Lingham's, with it's old fashioned quality, simple ingredients,
all natural, no tomatoes, no preservatives was the kicker. It's hotter,
sweeter and cleaner tasting than all the rest and it makes haggis sing!


Yet another example of how East meets West and ends up tasty!

The Point Grey Road beach walk – one of Vancouver's hidden secrets


The Point Grey Road beach walk
  
– one of Vancouver's hidden secrets

Vancouver has an incredible shoreline creating a watery border for more
than 80% of the city's circumference.  On the North and West side
there is Burrard Inlet, English Bay and the Georgia Strait. 
Vancouver's South shore is the mighty Fraser River's North Arm. 
Today we walked along some of Vancouver's most expensive real estate
along Point Grey Road. 

It was a two heron day, as we spied a heron first along the water
front, then on top of a house – something I  had never seen
before.  Many of the houses look unassuming from along the roadway
as the many cars quickly drive past, but from the beach walk you can
private swimming pools, enormous glass windows, reflecting pools,
incredible verandas.

Along the walk we met a 9 week old black lab puppy, and an older dog
who was born on the beach 6 years ago.  We met Claude, a
transplanted Quebecois who had just set up a balancing stone
sculpture.  Claude looks for incredible and interesting shaped
rocks that appear to defy gravity, as he balances them on top of each
other.  He said that he taught some people how to balance rocks
over on the Stanley Park side of English Bay, but he doesn't like the
rocks over there as much as the South shore. 

“The rocks speak to me, and tell me what to do,” he says.  Claude
appreciated my comments that he seemed to give a presence to the rocks
and allow them to express their spirit, and asked if I was a philosphy
teacher or artist.  He picked up a two-fist sized rock, put it on
a large sandstone boulder and encouraged me to find the balance point.

We walk past Hastings Mill House,
the oldest house in Vancouver which was built in 1865 and was the last
remaining building left after the fire of 1886.  Threatened in
1929 with demolition due to redevelopment at its Main Street
site,  it was moved to its present site and opened as a museum and
heritage site in 1932.  I hope we can manage to do the same for
the 1915 Kogawa House and save it from demolition and turn it into a literary and historic site as the childhood home of Joy Kogawa which was confiscated during the internment of Japanese Canadians during WW2.

More Chinese Canadian Head Tax news… reported in Hong Kong

image
More Chinese Canadian Head Tax news… reported in Hong Kong

The Standard – Hong Kong

… During the country's recent federal elections, the Chinese
community mobilized to make an election issue out of the head tax which
Canada
imposed on Chinese …

http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=11&art_id=11220&sid=6472226&con_type=1

 

 

Sex in Vancouver – the Final Episode: Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre does it again

image
Sex in Vancouver – the Final Episode:
 
Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre does it again



Asian actors playing ordinary people and not stereotyped
as kung fu experts, dragon ladies, Chinese gang members, China dolls,
new immigrants?  What gives?

Oh, it's just Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre
creating new works to showcase the talents and abilities of Vancouver's
Asian Canadian actors.  Sex in Vancouver has been an interesting
journey.  I think it is Vancouver's first long running theatrical
soap opera, spanning 5 episodes over 3 years.  During this time I
have met many members of the cast, attending their after show cast
parties, seen the actor who plays “Jorge” wearing a kilt, invited VACT
to do the play by play commentating for the inaugural Taiwanese Dragon
Boat races, and even volunteered to help the reception staff lead a
singles night ice-breaker exercise.

I have seen all the episodes except the last one (and not because I
didn't want to!).  The acting and production have increasingly
gotten better with each episode, and so has the media response.  I
am definitely getting ready to book my time to see this final episode.
 


FINAL
EPISODE!

Destiny is Revealed!


image

Tickets are
now on sale for Sex In
Vancouver
s
finale episode: Doin
It
Again,
premiering
at the Waterfront Theatre on Granville Island, February 23rd to March 5th.Tell
all your friends and mark your calendars!

 
The alluring
female foursome of
Elizabeth,
Shari,
Jenna and Tess are back – hotter, funnier, and more conflicted than
ever.

 
In previous
episodes, you
ve seen them
struggle with fidelity, betrayal, catfights, pregnancy woes, disapproving
in-laws and bi-curious affairs. What if they traveled back in time to re-live
their lives? Knowing everything they know now, would they do anything
differently?

 
Dont
miss this final episode that reveals their destiny. Purchase your tickets now
online to avoid disappointment.

 
For more information, visit: www.vact.ca
 
Place:
The
Waterfront Theatre on
Granville
Island

1412
Cartwright Street
,
Vancouver

 
Dates:
February 23

March 5,
2006


(no show on February 27)
 
Show Times:
Nightly: 8 pm
Matinees: 2 pm
 
Tickets:

 

 

Showtime

Advance

At
Door

Tuesday,
Wednesday, Thursday,

 

8
pm

 

$21
 

$25

Friday,
Saturday

8
pm

$23
 

$28

Sunday
Matinee

2
pm

$21

$25
 
SPECIAL SNEAK PEEK on Thursday, Feb 23,
2006, 8pm – tickets $12 in advance/ $15 cash at
door

 
All prices include service charge fees
 
Tickets online at www.vact.ca

 
Group tickets available
For more info, call:
778.885.1973



Check out these past reviews!

 
Sex Exploits A Success In Vancouver (The Source Review)

Sex in Vancouver Ends on August 20! (ricepaper Review)

 

Sex in the City, Asian style
(Metro article) [PDF 102kb]

Joann Liu plays an outspoken young woman in the urban soap opera Sex in Vancouver (Vancouver Sun article)


[PDF 184kb]