Seaforth Highlanders posed with Christine Chin and Todd Wong, – photo Sean for Todd
Monthly Archives: November 2006
Play about British internees in Japanese POW camp finds humanity in the middle of WW2
Play about British internees in Japanese POW camp finds humanity in the middle of WW2
Gonzo
written and directed by Gordon Pascoe
November 1-12, 2006
Norman Rothstein
Theatre
World
War II was a terrible time in history. Our Canadian perspective
is torn between the wars in Europe and Pacific. But WW2 was also
fought in Asia, Northern Africa, the Australasia archipelago, the
Alaskan Islands. It was the first war where non-combat citizens
were devastatingly affected – from the rape of Naking by Japanese
soldiers, the Nazi concentration camps of ethnic European Jews, the
atomic bombs on Nagasaki and Hiroshima by the USA, and the massive
internment of ethnic Japanese descendants in both Canada and the USA.
British
internees are housed in a Japanese prison of war camp in Shanghai,
China, and cared for a Japanese soldier named Gonzo. Written and
directed by Gordon Pascoe, who grew up in the Ash prison of war camp in
Shanghai. This play was based on his memories of actual
events.
It is a lovely play that celebrates human kindness amongst the horrific
circumstances of WW2. Pascoe finds a way to intertwine the
evacuation of Jews from Europe to China, the internment of
Japanese-Canadians in British Columbia, the pivotal war battles in
Africa, Europe and the Pacific into the tiny confines of a camp housing
British women and children.
The play opens with an elderly man saluting a Remembrance Day
service. Next we see him hooked up to an IV tube, after surviving
a heart health crisis. He states that he must tell a story that
he should have told a long time ago. The events of this play are
based on the true life accounts of writer/director Gordon Pascoe, as he
grew up in the Ash Camp in Shanghai.
Now the play's real action begins, as young mother Evelyn Pascoe and
young son Gordon arrive at Hut D, at Ash camp. They soon meet
other camp residents who inspect the belongings that they have brought
with them. Basic requirements are sparse, and the mirror that
Eveleyn has brought is treated as precious. Evelyn is in dispair
at the tiny one-room hut that she has been assigned to. She soon
learns from the others that while conditions are tough, they are
thankful of the Japanese soldier nicknamed “Gonzo” that cares for them.
Throughout the play, the audience learns what the residents must do to
survive through the internment. They scrounge and trade for
food. They put on Gilbert & Sullivan light opera to raise
morale. They intereact with other women, mothers and
children. They even befriend the Japanese Camp guard named
Gonzo. He shows them pictures of his wife and daughter, back home
in Nagasaki, where he used to be a school teacher. This segment
emphasisizes the commonalities and family values that all cultures
share, while only the audience really knows that Nagasaki will
eventually be the victim of an atomic bomb.
The children play games, and even mimic playing camp commandant, making
fun of the Japanese commandant's penchant for Japanese
propaganda. The camp residents have secretly managed to build a
wireless radio, so they are already knowledgable about what is actually
happening during the war's events. They hear about the liberation
of Paris, and the battle of Midway.
The play's darkest moments come when some of the women are allowed to
visit their husbands at a Men-Only work camp. Allusions are made
to the terrible conditions, poor food, and extremely hard physical
labour that the men must endure. The actors do a nice job of
sharing the stories, and convey the hardships. But somehow all
the costumes look a bit too clean, and the set is still too nice to be
a horrible prison of war camp. But for the melodrama and the
Pollyannish presentations, this play touches the heart, as it recreates
and imagines the emotions that the characters must go through.
Gonzo is soon re-nicknamed “Robert Taylor” because of his kind acts,
and good features. Actor Simon Hayama does a good job
demonstrating the caringness that Gonzo treats his charges. He
plays with the children, gives them treats and learns to speak English
from them.
Despite being set during a terrible time in WW2, Pascoe has incredibly
weaved together the elements that we value as human beings: Compassion
and Love. Yes, there is war and death in this play. It is
unavoidable for WW2 subject matter. He takes the Big World
issues of internment, and the evacuation of Jews, and contrasts them
with the Little Word issues of surviving in a prison of war camp, on a
day to day basis. We can understand the fear that mother Evelyn
Pascoe has when young Gordon goes missing at camp one day. We can
feel the pathos, when camp matron Geraldine Conway-Smythe learns that
her husband has died. We recognize that war was… and is
terrible…. that terrible things happen. And because of it, we
are more grateful when humane deeds are revealed against this setting.
Globe & Mail: “Head-tax Hip Hop” features Trevor Chan in Toronto
Globe & Mail: “Head-tax Hip Hop” features Trevor Chan and No Luck Club in Toronto Head-tax hip hop
Trevor Chan and the No Luck Club created a hip hop / mash up, titled “Our Story” that
addresses the head tax issue, using actual historic sound bites that
were racist descriptions about keeping Canada “White” and about the
threat of the “Yellow Peril.” It is the 2006 equivalent version
of a protest song.
Earlier this year on January 14, I wrote about their musical/oratoria montage: “Our Story” head tax sound bites and turn table hip hop by No Luck Club
Now the Globe & Mail is writing about them, as they invade Toronto,
bringing the head tax issue to the ears of Toronto's hip hop and just
plain head tax hip culture.
Head-Tax Hip Hop
Special to the Globe and Mail
November 3, 2006
'We don't want Chinamen in Canada. This is a white man's country and white men will keep it so." The speaker's voice, sampled from our not-so-distant past, is but one of many shocking historic sound bites that Vancouver instrumental hip-hop trio No Luck Club spread throughout the cinematic beatscape of Our Story on their just-released album Prosperity.
Using found sound from old educational records and documentaries, No Luck Club's founding brothers Matt and Trevor Chan assembled a politicized "head-tax mash-up" about Canada's former anti-Chinese immigration policies.
"It's us. It's what we're about. It's our history. No one talks about it, but it happened," Trevor Chan explains. "[Our parents] have got their heads down -- they're just working, working, working. But we grew up in a multicultural society, so we're of the mind that you have to say something. What the hell? We're the only race this has happened to."
The Chan family was personally affected by the Chinese head tax and subsequent Exclusion Act. Beginning in 1885 -- after the completion of the railway, of course -- about 82,000 Chinese immigrants were charged up to $500, roughly two years wages, to enter Canada. Then, from 1923 to 1947, the government banned Chinese immigration altogether.
"Our family was separated by the Exclusion Act. Our great-grandfather was to come over and then bring his wife and kids, but you weren't allowed to bring your spouse over for decades," Chan says.
He notes that his parents didn't really "get" their hip-hop take on the topic: "They said "Oh, that's kind of interesting.' But what they did get was the press that surrounded it -- we actually had a lot of coverage in the Chinese media."
Head-tax redress has been a hot-button issue, especially in Vancouver, after two decades of protests finally earned an apology from Prime Minister Stephen Harper during the summer. The first three $20,000 compensation cheques went out on Oct. 20, but with the "symbolic" payments available only to the estimated 400 survivors and widows, rather than their descendants, the redress campaign continues.
When not providing the soundtrack for petition-signing parties, the Chan brothers and third member Paul Belen, a champion turntablist also known as DJ Pluskratch, have been struggling to get their music careers off the ground after their band name proved too apt.
While in high school back in 1989, the Chan brothers started their still-going-strong hip-hop radio show Straight No Chaser on Simon Fraser University's CJSF FM. Inspired by the cut 'n' paste sound collages of artists such as Coldcut and DJ Shadow, they eventually started recording their own music with Matt providing turntable cuts and scratches and Trevor working the laptop beats and samples. In 2000, they sent a demo to 75Ark, a well-respected American indie hip-hop label run by Dan (The Automator) Nakamura, best known for producing the first Gorillaz record.
"They got back to us a week later and said, 'Let's do something,' " Chan recalls. After signing a three-album contract, the brothers began working on a planned trilogy loosely based around the Chinese deities of good fortune.
But their luck proved fleeting when 75Ark folded the following year, just before their debut Happiness was set to drop. They found a new home with Ill Boogie Records, but soon after No Luck Club's first album finally came out in the fall of 2003, that label also closed its doors.
After adding DJ Paul Belen to their lineup in 2004, they got back to work on a follow-up album. But after so many label snafus, they decided to release Prosperity independently, although "it was a decision we made kicking and screaming, my friend."
This scratch-laden and beat-based sophomore opus further advances their virtuosic widescreen sound, bolstering their already eclectic retinue of jazz, funk, techno, classical and spy soundtrack samples with new Bollywood and Latin flavours.
Speaking of widening their geographic scope, the night after No Luck Club's CD release party at Toronto's Supermarket on Nov. 8, the trio will appear at the Rivoli to perform a world music show originally commissioned for the Vancouver Folk Festival.
"They probably thought we were going to take old folk records, throw on a drumbeat and start scratching over top," Chan says. "But we thought, 'Let's take our collage approach and expand it.' Usually we draw from funk and rock and electronic music, so we apply the same methods but take percussion from North Africa, combined with Indonesian gamelan music and throw in some Indian string instruments.
You create this crazy mess."
But though their album revels in Chinese culture through political sound bites and kung fu samples -- "people who watch Hong Kong films and know Cantonese might recognize some and be like, 'Oh my God, that's so badass' -- there's no Chinese instrumentation to be heard.
"This is something I really want to do, but I don't want to mess it up," Chan says. "Our grandfather and uncles do play traditional Chinese instruments so we did grow up listening to that. But I want to improve my production chops so that when we do create music using those elements, we're doing it a service rather than taking away from it," he says.
"We've got to represent."
No Luck Club plays a CD release party Nov. 8, 9 p.m., $6. Supermarket 268 Augusta Ave., 416-840-0501. The group plays a CBC Radio 3 taping Nov. 9, 8:30 p.m., $6. The Rivoli, 334 Queen St. W., 416-596-1908.
Jeff Chiba Stearns LIVE on MTV Canada starting Nov. 9th
Jeff Chiba Stearns LIVE on MTV Canada starting Nov. 9th
Jeff Chiba Stearns, film animator and creator of “What Are You Anyways?”, will be appearing on MTV Canada on Nov. 9th, Thursday 3:30pm PST, or 6:30pm EST.
Jeff recently won the inaugural award for Best Animated Short for the first annual Canadian Awards for Electronic and Animated Arts (CAEAA). We recently chatted when we bumped into each other at the Vancouver Asian Film Festival on last Saturday morning.
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2006/9/18/2338517.html
Here is Jeff's message:
Hi Everyone,
I just wanted
to let you know that I will be in Toronto appearing live as a guest on
MTV Canada's show MTV LIVE this Thursday, Nov. 9th.
I will be discussing mixed-race and Hapa identity with a possible
focus on my animated film, “What Are You Anyways?” The inteview, which
will be around 3-5 minutes, airs nationally on MTV Canada at 3:30pm in
the west and 6:30pm in the east this Thursday. The show is an hour
long and I will appear sometime within that hour. The episode I am on
is repeated countless times throughout the night and on the weekend.
If you miss the first broadcast it will broadcast again later. The
show's topic is “Mash-ups” and if you're interested check it out.
Now, I just hope I don't get cut by some rapper.