Category Archives: Upcoming Events

Generations: The Chan Legacy documentary to be shown Oct 28 at Heart of the City Festival

Great news for BC history and genealogy buffs.  The CBC documentary about the Rev. Chan Family descendants is being shown at Heart of the City Festival on Oct 28.

photo


http://www.heartofthecityfestival.com/program/thursday-october-28/
Film & Conversation
THE
REV. CHAN FAMILY LEGACY: Five Generations of Vancouver

Chinese
History 1888 to 2007

Thursday October 28, 7:30pm
Chinese Cultural
Centre Museum & Archives, 555 Columbia

The Chan family
first came to Canada to help start the Chinese Methodist Church and
every generation since has made contributions to Canadian society. In
2007, filmmaker Halya Kuchmij interviewed members of one of the oldest
families on the West Coast and made a documentary about the stories and
achievements of Reverend & Mrs. Chan, their sons Luke Chan
(Hollywood actor) and Jack Chan (golfer); grandchildren Helen Lee and
Victor Wong (WW2 veteran); great-grandchildren Gary Lee (entertainer)
and Janice Wong (artist); and great-great grandchildren Todd Wong
(community and cultural activist) and Tracey Hinder (high school
student). The many turns of the Chan family reflect the challenges of
exclusion, the fight for rights, the strength of family and citizenship,
and the right to vote. The festival is pleased to show The Chan
Legacy
, directed by Halya Kuchmij, from the CBC Learning
Generations Series (2007, 43:37) and we are fortunate to have Todd Wong
moderate the conversation afterwards. Todd is a descendent of Reverend
Chan and the creator of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, the annual celebration of
Chinese New Year and Robbie Burns Day (www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com) –
an event that marries two cultures that once lived completely separate
in the early days of British Columbia. Everyone welcome. Free

This was the lead show in the CBC Generations series that aired
on July 4th 2007.  The purpose was to interview multigenerational families across Canada, and help tell the story of Canada through the lives of that family.

I am a 5th generation great-great-grand son of Rev. Chan Yu Tan, and one of the featured stories.  My grandmother's sister Helen Lee and cousin Victor Wong are both interviewed and tell stories about their grandparents Rev. & Mrs. Chan Yu Tan, whom they respectively lived with and visited as children.  

Victor Wong is a WW2 veteran and shares stories about becoming a soldier for Special Forces operations with his cousins Howard and Leonard Lee, while Dan Lee was one of the first Chinese Canadians in the Airforce.  All this happened at a time when Canadians of Chinese ancestry were not allowed to vote in Canada, until after the Chinese-Canadian veterans returned from WW2 and lobbied the Canadian government to repeal the 1925 Chinese Exclusion Act.

Gary Lee, also tells stories about Rev. Chan's sons Luke Chan, who became an actor in Hollywood, and Jack Chan – an avid golfer and the first Chinese Canadian to serve on jury duty.

Artist Janice Wong is shown working and attending book launches for her recipe/memoir book “Chow: From China to Canada: Memories of Food + Family”
– which shares the history of the Rev. Chan family through her father Dennis Wong, chef of Chinese restaurants in Sasketchewan, son of the Rev's daughter Rose, and Victor's brother.

13 year old Tracey Hinder is seen winning the inaugural Vancouver area Canspell contest.  Tracey goes on to compete at the National Canspell in Ottawa and the Scripps in Washington DC.  Tracey is interviewed as a high school student, dedicated to learning about her community and family histoy.

Todd Wong is a community and cultural activist, known for creating Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.  Excerpts from the CBC produced television performance special “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” are shown along with Todd's community commitments including the saving of the Historic Joy Kogawa House, Terry Fox Run, and dragon boat racing.

5 of the 7 part series are available for for sale through the CBC Learning Division
The
Chan Legacy

The
McCurdy Birthright

The
Crowfoot Dynasty

100
Years in Alberta

100
Years in Saskatchewan

http://www.heartofthecityfestival.com/program/thursday-october-28/

Brendan Uegama's “Henry's Glasses” + new Ann Marie Fleming film show at VIFF

VIFF… Henry's
Glasses (about a young boy in a Japanese-Canadian Internment Camp)
+ I
Was a Child of Holocaust Survivors (directed by Ann Marie Fleming
creator of the The Magical Life of Long Tack Sam)
Monday 3:30pm Pacific
Cinemateque.

Henry's Glasses
Henry's Glasses

[ACQUR]
(Short)

plays in Acquired Trait

Canadian Images

(Canada, 2010, 20 mins, HDCAM)


Directed By: Brendan Uegama

PRODS: Brendan Uegama, Nicole leier
SCR/CAM: Brendan Uegama
ED: Corey Ogilvie
MUS: Crispin Hands
CAST: Matthew Nomura, Walter Uegama, Marie Shimizu, Moe Yang, Miyou Shimoshige, Kevan Ohtsji
In a Japanese-Canadian internment camp a young boy must use the power
of his imagination to escape reality and help his elderly new friend.

I Was a Child of Holocaust Survivors
I Was a Child of Holocaust Survivors

 
(Short)


plays with Henry's Glasses

Canadian Images

(Canada, 2010, 16 mins, 35mm)


Directed By: Ann Marie Fleming

PROD: Gerry Flahive, Michael Fukushima
SCR: Ann Marie Fleming
EDS: Ileana Pietrobruno, Ann Marie Fleming
MUS: Normand Roger, Denis Chartrand, Pierre Yves Drapeau

An adaptation of the acclaimed memoir of the same name, this inventive
animation weaves together a political and personal history using the
healing power of humour

Ann-Marie Fleming's new movie plays at VIFF

Ann-Marie Fleming is the brilliant animator/film
maker and graphic artist of “The Magical Life of Long Tack Sam” – which
we featured at the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year
Dinner a few years ago….

Ann-Marie's great-grandfather was the legendary vaudeville magician, Long Tack Sam.  Her great-grandmother was his Austrian wife.  Her family ancestry comes from around the world, and she describes herself as hybrid – both DNA-wise, historically and culturally.

Check out the link to the Vancouver Courier article:
http://www.vancourier.com/entertainment/movie-guide/Eclectic+filmmaker+gets+animated/3596650/story.html

Ann Marie Fleming strums her uke prior to the Vancouver 
International Film Festival, which screens her animated short I Was A 
Child of Holocaust Survivors Oct. 11.
 

Ann Marie Fleming strums her uke
prior to the Vancouver International Film Festival, which screens her
animated short I Was A Child of Holocaust Survivors Oct. 11.

Photograph by: Dan Toulgoet, Vancouver courier

Ann Marie Fleming is no stranger to the Vancouver
International Film Festival both as a past volunteer and a filmmaker
whose works have included feature films (The French Guy), documentaries
(The Magical Life of Long Tack Sam) and animated shorts such as this
year's I Was a Child of Holocaust Survivors. The talented artist and
aspiring ukulele player talked to the Courier about her latest film,
her eclectic background and why “tongue on a hot rock” is not a
metaphor.

1. What about Bernice Eisenstein's memoir I Was a Child of Holocaust
Survivors made you want to adapt it into an animated short?

a)
It's an amazing book. b) I was asked to. c) I thought I could bring
something to it.

2. Was there anything about the subject matter
you related to?

There is something everyone can relate to: it's
about family. For me, I'm constantly interested in the continuing
legacy of WWII, the burden of the history, cross-over immigration
patterns and cultural diaspora, older generations not telling their
stories-but-somehow-you're-still-living-in-them, trying to find your
own way. I think it has universal relevance and resonance.

3.
Your background is quite diverse (born in Okinawa, of Chinese and
Australian parentage, your great grandfather was a travelling Chinese
vaudevillian acrobat and magician). How does this inform or influence
your work?

Well, I'm kind of a hybrid, and so is the work I
do–thematically and technically. And I am very curious about people's
histories and backgrounds and what that represents in geopolitical
terms. I'm such a cultural mash-up that I can relate to just about
anybody's story. Six degrees of Kevin Bacon.

Read the rest of the article at the Vancouver Courier article:
http://www.vancourier.com/entertainment/movie-guide/Eclectic+filmmaker+gets+animated/3596650/story.html

Gung Haggis paddlers preparing for Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta

One more Paddle Race – Gung Haggis paddlers preparing for Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta


Gung Haggis is NOT racing this Sunday for UBC Day of the Long Boats...
but if you want to check it out – go to Jericho Beach / Sailing &
Paddling Centre and watch the 10 person voyageur canoes going out on
Saturday and Sunday.  Community Teams (non-UBC) race on Sunday morning
early around 8-8:30am then again around 12-12:30pm

PRACTICE on SUNDAY – Oct 3
11am
– as usual – we take out two 10 person boats, for race simulations and
working on our turns.  It's been real exciting as the two boats race
through the turns together.

PRACTICE on TUESDAY – Oct 5
6pm
– same as above – but we have to take lights out on the boat.  Dusk arrives early and it gets dark quicker now.

OCT 9TH SATURDAY – Thanksgiving Weekend
FT. LANGLEY CRANBERRY FESTIVAL CANOE REGATTA

Arrive about 8:30am for the pancake breakfast – set up tents
first race is 10am – marshall at 9:30am.  more details to come.

We have 24 people for two 10 person boats
We
always carry spare paddlers and rotate everybody, so that we will not
be short on race day, and we can be inclusive and have more fun with
friends.  this means 2 people will sit out each race.

3 years
ago, we helped to invent the Chili contest at the race.  Hillary and
Deb have been our chili chefs in the past – Hillary has won Best
Vegetarian.
We need a new
Chili chef for this year – who will volunteer.

This year – there is a costume contest for all the teams – I have offered to donate a prize.

Karen Ranalletta and Dave Samis are team captains.

Traditionally – we organize the two teams into A and B teams.
One team encourages veteran paddlers to race to their best potential and push it.
One team encourages newer paddlers to have fun, and veteran paddlers to support them.

2009_Oct_Ft_Langley_cranberry_canoe_race 111 Lead stroke Tzhe Lam pulls the Gung team away from the beach after picking up the beach runner.

2009 saw our A team make it to the A Final – with 10 men + 1 women

Gung Haggis paddlers compete at Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta: 1st in B Final 5th in A Final

2008_Oct 035 Boats go head to head around a turn with Alissa Fletcher in lead stroke for Gung Haggis team in 2008.

2008 saw 2 boats miss the pumpkins, and finish last and 3rd last in the B final – but have lots of fun.

Sun shines on Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta – Gung Haggis places 2 teams in A Final

Cran Fest final 0927 Martin

2007 saw the B boat beat the A boat

Gung Haggis paddlers place 1st and 3rd in B Final for Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta

Nancy Lee at Joy Kogawa House, final event of the writing for Social Change reading series and Kogawa House writer-in-residence program

Nancy Lee reading and interview at Joy Kogawa House on Monday, June 28

Please RSVP at kogawahouse@yahoo.ca

The time with Nancy and her husband John has been a great experience, as she has brought her insightful thought, probing questions, and wonderful wit to Joy Kogawa House.  Additionally, she hosted a memoir writing workshop on Saturday June 26th.

Please join us for the in the intimate living room at Historic Joy Kogawa
House for the final event of a successful series of small salon gatherings with five writers who use
literature to call for social change and justice and as a tool for
social transformation.

Five Mondays (and a Sunday) This Spring

  1. Joan Macleod, Monday, April 19
  2. Anosh Irani, Sunday, May 2
  3. Steven Galloway, Monday, May 17
  4. Karen Connelly, Monday, June 14
  5. Nancy Lee, Monday, June 28
  • All conversations begin at 7:30 p.m. on a Monday, except the one
    with Anosh Irani, which begins at 3:30 p.m. on a Sunday.
  • Historic Joy Kogawa House is located in the Marpole
    neighbourhood of Vancouver at 1450 West 64th Avenue (two blocks east of
    Granville)
  • Admission by donation
  • Books will be available for sale and signing by the authors
  • Please RSVP at kogawahouse@yahoo.ca
  • Thanks to the Canada Council Author Reading and Author Residencies
    programs for funds to host these writers at Joy House

    BC Highland Games this Saturday June 26 in Coquitlam

    BC Highland Games this Saturday June 26 in Coquitlam

    Here is the Scottish Express message, that has taken the
    torch from Ron MacLeod, to send out news emails about events in the Scottish-Canadian diaspora in the Vancouver area.  

    —————
    This
    Saturday, June 26, 2010 marks the gathering of everyone that loves
    anything
    Scottish at the BC Highland Games.   It’s a day to come and listen to
    the
    best piping and drumming, marvel at the dancing, stroll through the
    exhibits,
    have a bite to eat and immerse yourself in Scottish charm, goodwill and
    fun!!  more details below

    The BC Highland Games

    Saturday June 26, 2010,  Percy Perry Stadium, Coquitlam

    http://www.bchighlandgames.com

    15 Piping
    bands including the World Champion Simon Fraser University Band

    220
    Highland Dancing Competitors

    30 Heavy
    Event Competitors (these are the caber tossers)

    30 Venders
    (with all sorts of food and items galore with a Scottish twist)

    21 Scottish
    Clans and Societies

    Plenty of
    rides and activities for the children

    And 16
    Haggis

    Yes, again
    this year those mythical Haggis will be hiding throughout the stadium
    grounds
    for the wildest hunt you have ever seen. 
    Spot enough and you become an Official Haggis Hunter!  They are elusive,
    fast, and can usually
    be found lurking around Tartan.

    Highland
    Games are about competition and we are happy to report some of the best
    dancers, drummers, pipers and throwers are back to defend their titles. 
    The caliber of sport is exhilarating!

    Our
    entertainment this year includes the Jocelyn Petit Band and Blackthorn. 
    Both will be playing on the main
    stage.  They are the best of our
    local talent and showcase our deep talent pool here in BC.

    The Beer
    Tent, British Car Show, Whisky Tasting, Sword Dancing, Cultural Tent and
    even a
    second Beer Tent are back!!

    Funny Asians from LA are performing for Asian Comedy Night by VACT

    11th Annual Asian Comedy Night features
    18 Mighty Mountain Warriors “HOOT CAMP”

    Here's a message from Joyce Lam of Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre.  Joyce was just presented in April with the BC Community Achievement Award for all her good work in founding and developing Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre.  Come see what the fuss is all about!

     

    HURRY! Tickets
    only available for 2 remaining performances!

    2 evenings:
    Saturday June 5th & Sunday June 6th

    Only 2 hilarious
    performances

    remaining at the Roundhouse Performance Centre
    181 Roundhouse Mews (corner of Davie & Pacific Blvd)
    Vancouver, BC

    • $20
      in advance – general admission
    • $25
      in advance – reserved section (first 2 rows in raised centre
      section
      )
    • $25
      at the door – general admission only
    • $108
      in advance – SAVE! – group rate for 6 tickets (general
      admissions)

    Buy on-line at www.vact.ca or at the
    Roundhouse at 604.713.1800

    poster

    Back by popular demand from 2009 for their very own show are: The 18
    Mighty
    Mountain Warriors (18mmw) from Los Angeles!  This group has garnered
    three
    awards including the 2007 Emmy Award “Mighty Warriors of Comedy”,
    the 2006 International Sketch Comedy Championships, and the 2005 Bay
    Area’s Best Comedy Troupe award. They continue to rock the San Francisco
    Bay Area and San Jose with their unique blend of Asian and political
    themed
    sketches.

    Visit
    www.18mmw.com or www.vact.ca for more
    information.

    VACT's Etch-YOUR-SketchOFF2?#$% now features friendly rivalries

    Asians are talented in sketch comedy too!

    I chatted with VACT's founding creator Joyce Lam last week.  There is big drama for this year's Etch-YOUR-SketchOFF2!#$%.  One of last year's comedy sketch teams has split into two new teams for 2010.  That's right… dramedy is happening!  Members of last year's Darin' Joes, have formed new teams.  Fane Tse has helped to form new team Angry Asian Men. Josette Jorge was also with Darin' Joes last year but has returned to SFUU Man Chu.

    Will there be a comedic show down?

    Other teams competing are: Beef Noodle Soup, Laughing Make Mind Dangerous, Banana Drama, Asians Bleed Red, The Yangzters.

    Of special note: Tricia Collins is performing with SFUU MAN CHU.  Tricia co-hosted the 2010 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner with me.  She is one of my favorite Vancouver actresses – having performed in her solo show Gravity, as well as Firehall Theatre's Ecstasy of Rita Joe and Urban Ink Production's Hunted.  She is also a writer, contributing to Ricepaper Magazine and Completely Mixed Up: An Asian North American Mixed Race Anthology.

    35 performers will be on stage.  Mostly Asians with some members of non-Asian minority groups, representing token inclusivity and plain old friendship between races.

    Check out the VACT website:  www.vact.ca

    Etch Your SketchOff 2 Logo

    Wednesday, April 28, 2010 – Vancouver Rice Bowl Competition
    Thursday, April 29, 2010 – People’s CHOYS Award
    Nightly at 7:30 PM

    Buy your tickets online now!

    NEW GROUP RATE! BUY 8 TICKETS FOR $120!
    Tickets are $15 each!

    Buy Group Rate tickets online now!

    Be a Friend of VACT

    Wed Apr 21, 03:15 PM by editor

    For
    those who have enjoyed our shows and want to support us financially –
    we are recognizing our fans with special benefits.  Depending on your
    friendship level, you will receive premium reserved seating upgrades,
    recognition in the programs, opening night tickets and invitations to
    cast parties, signed productions posters and special concierge
    ticketing services & privileges.  Our way of saying thank you to
    you.

    For more details, click here.

    Ali & Ali 7: RCMP, Immigration and tasers – Oh My!

    Ali & Ali 7 Return to the stage for another outrageous skewering of Canadian Multiculturalism

    WORLD PREMIERE of Ali & Ali
    Created and performed by Camyar Chai, Guillermo Verdecchia and Marcus Youssef
    Co-starring Laara Sadiq and Raugi Yu
    Directed by Guillermo Verdecchia

    at the Cultch’s Historic Theatre
    Apr 14–24
    Tickets for Cultch Performances available at 604-251-1363 or https://tickets.thecultch.com/

    at the Shadbolt Centre for the Arts’ Studio Theatre
    April 28 – May 1
    Tickets for Shadbolt performances at 604-205-3000 or boxoffice@burnaby.ca

    Ali & Ali are to Canadian multiculturalism what Wayne & Shuster
    are to Canadian culture.  They poke fun at ourselves, to help us laugh
    at the absurdity of our history and culture.

    But in today's world, Wayne & Shuster, comedy kings of the 1960's and 1970's, have given way to Kids from the Hall, and Russell Peters.  Canadian culture is no longer white and red, our cultural diversity includes black and yellow and pink and especially brown.  Canadians also come from Iran, Iraq, Lebanon and Azerbaijian.  Wayne & Shuster used to make fun of foreign accents.  Camyar Chai and Marcus Youssef as brown immigrant refugees from the fictional country of Agraba, take ethnic jokes to a whole different level – but with some very serious political commentary.

    This
    was my first time at Ali & Ali. I really enjoyed reading the
    published play Ali & Ali and the Axes of Evil.  I couldn't stop laughing at some of the bits about Asian Heritage Month, and the Scottish stage manager.  For the 2010 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, I had invited Marcus Youssef to read/perform an excerpt with comedian Charles Demers.  So I wasn't going to miss them.

    The show opens with a montage of  current world leaders from Libya, USA, and Canada.  It's a tribute rap to Moammar Gadhafi.  Wow… we are definitely in a different cultural perspective here.  The play is interactive with the audience, asking questions, getting responses.  Surprise!  They are spoofing and utilizing experimental theatre audience participation as well as Bertolt Brecht's agitprop theatre.

    Ali & Ali are presenting a show to the audience.  They introduce their assistant as Yogi Ru, in actuality Vancouver actor Raugi Yu.  Raugi is the straight man to this zany duo, even dressing up as Obama's Portuguese Water Dog. 

    Along the way, an ethnic South Asian RCMP officer (Laara Sadiq) appears, to charge
    Ali & Ali with illegal immigration to Canada.  A kangaroo court (or
    would it be a “moose court” in Canada?) ensues and Ali & Ali must
    defend and explain themselves. This is where the character of Raugi steps up as an interpreter to
    explain the actions of Ali & Ali to the RCMP officer.  But true to
    Ali & Ali interpretation and misinterpretion, as Canadian
    sacred institutions
    such as the RCMP are poked with scenarios including tasers and cultural sensitivity
    training. Broad outrageous humour got loud laffs from the audience –
    especially the puppet show!

    Ali & Ali poke some fun at Barak Obama's New
    World Order. The puppet show took on a weird outrageous vibe, as talking heads of Afro-American movement cultural icons, criticize Obama policies in the White House.  It would have been nice if they had been able to identify who their “Jiminy Cricket” conscience guides were, as many audience members are probably not versed in Afro-American revolutionaries such as Malcolm X and Angela Davis.  

    Some serious topics are addressed such as
    prison detention & torture, illegal immigration and deportation.  This show uses the slap stick humour to set up and explain the underlying social commentary.  How does a normal human being cope with being detained in prison on unspecific charges?  The balance between the serious and absurdist swings back and forth, eliciting emotional reactions from the audience.  Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.  There are many in-jokes, dependent upon the audience's knowledge of many things.  It is like a television channel-flipping barrage of issues.  But the play succeeds in informing the audience about our country's detention of prisoners, and it creating new cultural perspectives of multiculturalism.  Sometimes, how you see the world really does depend on what colour your eyes are.

    Definitely not for everybody – but neither was Monty Python or Wayne & Shuster.

    Check out the Neworld website:
    http://www.neworldtheatre.com/productions-ali-and-ali-7.html

    “CHINESE VANCOUVER THEN AND NOW: 1972-2010” – Vancouver Opera Speaks





    “CHINESE VANCOUVER THEN AND NOW: 1972-2010”


    Tuesday, March 9, 2010


    7-9 pm



    Alice MacKay Room, Vancouver Public Library, Central Branch



    OPERA SPEAKS @ VPL –

    Admission is free.

    An eminent panel explores the history of Chinese in Vancouver, with
    emphasis on the Chinese communities' emergence and development since
    1972, the year of Nixon's momentous trip to China. Discover how our
    city has been shaped and transformed by Chinese culture over the past
    38 years. This will be a fascinating evening. Speakers include eminent
    architect Bing Thom, UBC historian Henry Yu, and filmmaker and writer Colleen Leung.

    Presented in partnership with the Vancouver Public Library.
    Opera Speaks @ VPL is sponsored by Omni BC Diversity Television.

    http://www.vancouveropera.ca/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=255&Itemid=15