Yearly Archives: 2006

VOICES FOR THE FRONTLINES: My friends Leore Cashe and The Shirleys create a Benefit Concert For HIV/Aids in Africa

VOICES FOR THE FRONTLINES: My friends Leore Cashe and The Shirleys create a Benefit Concert For HIV/Aids in Africa

 

Leore
Cashe is an incredible singer of jazz, blues, gospel and inspirational
music.  I often listen to her when she performs a the Centre for
Spiritual Living on Sunday mornings, where she is music director. 
She is also performing the Motown Meltdown benefit for Shooting Stars Foundation.
She sent me this note:

I’m working with a group of Vancouver women musicians and vocalists who
have rallied together to celebrate International Women’s Day by producing
a benefit concert in support of women and children with HIV/AIDS in
Africa. 
After reading Stephen Lewis's book Race
Against Time
we felt compelled to put our good gifts to good work in
support of these brave women and children who desperately need our help. 
As written in ELLE magazine December 2005, “The story of AIDS in Africa is
one of the devastation of its women- but also of their incredible courage and
the depth of resilience they show in the face of total indifference from the
rest of the world.”
   The concert is now listed on the Stephen
Lewis Foundation website under Upcoming Events www.stephenlewisfoundation.og  


The Shirleys
are 7 sassy soulful acapella singing women, who can knock you dead with
a look and a harmony.  Karen Lee-Morlang is one of them, and a
friend. 

The Shirleys performed at Gung
Haggis Fat Choy dinner this year for 2006, and Leore Cashe has teased
me why she hasn't been invited yet…  okay Leore – mark next year
on your calendar.


In Celebration of International
Women's Day
Voices For The
Frontlines
 A Benefit Concert for HIV/Aids in Africa

Friday March
10th

St. Andrews-Wesley
Church

100% of proceeds will be donated to
The Stephen Lewis Foundation allocated to SWAPOL

Mother of
Pearl
, Leora Cashe, The Shirleys and St.
Andrews
Wesley United Church are inviting you to join them in
celebration of International Women’s Day with a Benefit Concert For
HIV/Aids in Africa with all proceeds donated to the Stephen Lewis
Foundation. This inspirational evening of
music will be filled with rousing rhythms and glorious harmonies by some of
Vancouver’s best women musicians and vocalists.  You’ll hear the stunning acappella
sounds of the Shirleys, the swingin’
groove of jazz and blues by Mother of
Pearl
 and the rich resounding voice of jazz and gospel
vocalist Leora Cashe as well as members of
Drum Prayers, modern dancer Jessica
Fletcher
and special guest African dancer Jackie
Essombe
.  These dedicated and talented women are
donating their time, talent and treasure and offering a message of solidarity to
their sisters and children who are living with the devastating effects
of
HIV and Aids in Swaziland.


Tickets can be purchased through Festival Box Office
604-257-0366 sales@festivalboxoffice.com 
or through me. leora@leoracashe.com   For more information visit www.standrewswesleyunitedchurch.bc.ca    www.leoracashe.com  Thank
You!


Saturday night at the Opera: Naomi's Road at West Vancouver Public Library

Saturday night at the Opera: Naomi's Road at West Vancouver Public Library

I didn't attend the Saturday opening of Faust by the Vancouver Opera, but instead I went to see Naomi's Road
presented at the West Vancouver Memorial Library.  Joy Kogawa and
Ellen Crowe-Swords had seen the spring touring production at the
Vancouver Academy of Music, and said that Gene Woo was really
good.  Gene had workshopped the production along with Grace Chan,
but they weren't able to be part of the Vancouver Opera Touring
Ensemble for the fall of 2005.

It was a different setting set in the cramped atrium of the West
Vancouver Public Library.  There were seats up on the catwalk
upstairs creating “opera balcony seats.”  This was the third time
I watched Naomi's Road, and again I found myself moved to tears. 
My original review
was written for the opening weekend on Sept 30/Oct 1, 2005. 
Naomi's Road next plays in the public community, Saturday night, March
11th at the Japanese Language School as a benefit for Powell St.
Festival.

Gene Woo does perform well, bringing a strong baritone voice for the
production, complimenting very well the voices of Jessica Cheung, Gina
Oh and Sam Chung. 

After the production, Tamsin Baker of The Land Conservancy and I, stood
by the display of the Joy Kogawa novels, with pamphlets for the Save
Kogawa House campaign.  There was some good interest as people
asked about both the house and the campaign.  I shared some
insight on Joy Kogawa's thoughts about the house and the opera. 

It was great to “bump”into friends Tony and Lori Breen, as well as
Donna Wong-Juliani.  I asked Donna about growing up one of the few
Chinese families in West Vancouver during her childhood.  We
discovered connections with the Shuens and the Cumyows, whom I had
grown up with in High School.  Very interesting… 

Afterwards, Tony and Lori took me to dinner with them at their favorite
Chinese restaurant in West Vancouver: VIP's Chinese Restaurant. 
It had been Lori that had written to the Georgia Straight recommending
the restaurant.  We had some of the house specialties… Roast
Duck with vinegar sauce, Oyster omelette and Prawns with rock
salt.  Very good… I am going back with my parents.

CBC Radio: Th?nk Vancouver – Working for a Living – meet my friend James Yu, at the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens

CBC Radio: Th?nk Vancouver -Working for a Living –
 
– meet my friend James Yu at the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens!

CBC Radio is doing their two week extravaganza Th?nk Vancouver again.  This year's theme is “Working for a Living, discussing some of the real interesting jobs around Vancouver.

Imagine having a job being surrounded by beauty and culture everyday.  Imagine having a job that provides inspiration to many people, and is also a major tourist site in Vancouver.

Last week, I was very surprised to hear my friend James Yu on the “On the Coast” radio program hosted by Priya Ramu.  James is the chief restorer at the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Chinese Classical Gardens in Vancouver's Chinatown.  He started as a volunteer, but has been full-time since 1988.  James loves his job.  He repairs and maintains not only the garden and its buildings, but also the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Park immediately beside the gardens.


Todd Wong with friendJames Yu, the restorer for the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Chinese Classical Gardens – photo Deb Martin.

James and I first met while dragonboating back in 1993.  He mentored me as a steersperson, and we have enjoyed a friendship ever since, that has also included Tai Chi lessons from him.  I was inspired to bring my dragon boat teams to the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens for tours and Tai Chi lessons to help explore the balance of harmony, power and force.  We apply it to dragon boat paddling instruction and I blend it with sport psychology for the Gung Hagggis Fat Choy dragon boat teams.

James has helped me learn more about traditional Chinese culture on many occasions.  He has not only taught me stories about the Gardens, and dragon boating, but also Chinese tea ceremony. It was in 1997 that I invited James to a Chinese New Year dinner that I cooked for 12 friends.   It was the following year, that I created the first legendary Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.

REVIEW: Playwright C.E. Gatchalian's BROKEN, explores the broken tangents in relationships

REVIEW:  Playwright C.E. Gatchalian's BROKEN,
  
explores the broken tangents in relationships



 

 
image
Meta.for Theatre Society and Broken
Whisper

in association with the
Firehall Arts Centre

present
 
BROKEN
Five Plays by C. E. Gatchalian

Directed by Sean
Cummings

Starring Tanja Dixon-Warren, Michael Fera, Ntsikie Kheswa, Thrasso Petras, and Nelson
Wong

March 2-11, 2006 (Preview March
1)

The Firehall Arts
Centre

280 East
Cordova Street
,
Vancouver


Tickets:
Tuesday to Saturday, 8 pm:
$18/14

Friday to Saturday, 8 pm:
$22/18

Wednesday, March 1 (preview), 8 pm:
half price

Wednesday, March 8, 1 pm:
pay-what-can-matinee

Sunday, March 5, 2
pm
 matinee:
$18/14


Tickets and info: (604)
689-0926


February 21,
2006




Broken, currently playing at the Firehall Arts Centre,
is a suite of five separately written one act plays, brought together
by overlapping themes of dysfunctional  relationships that explore
alienation, love, repression, denial, and sexual identity.  Motifs
and Repetitions is C.E. Gatchalian's first play, and was initially
performed for the Bravo! channel in 1997, and also on the Knowledge
Network in 1998.  For Broken, it is combined with the single act plays Diamond, Ticks, Hands and Star
Combined together, it is strong, hard hitting and sometimes confusing
journey into a world of sexual identity, and its effects on the personal and
the interpersonal.  He is the first Filipino-Canadian to be
nominated for major literary award, the Lambda award in 2004, for the play collection Motifs and Repetitions and Other Plays.





To
witness a Gatchalian play, is to be moved by the lyricism and the
poetics of the language.  It is a constructed creature with themes
and
characters juxtapositioned to create dynamic lines of
tension.   Special attention is placed on the rhythm and
repetition of words, more like lines of music, combined with themes and
variations.  One is
equally aware of what is not being spoken, as what is being
spoken.  The stories unfold like crumpled pieces of paper,
revealing complex spontaneous confessionals, not simple gift-wrapped
pretty linear stories. 

Motifs and Repetitions, explores a love triangle with unexpected twists.  The dialogue starts off tentative and hesitant,
as a couple gets to know each other on a first date.  It shifts
gears as a third person is revealed to be already involved.  The
language becomes short and terse, short syllables alternating between
the actors like a rotating word play game.  Actors
Ntsikie
Kheswa, Thrasso Petras

and Nelson Wong, do a splendid job conveying the tensions between the
relationships bringing subtle body language cues to interplay with
their words.

In Hands, actors Tanja
Dixon-Warren and Michael Fera exchange a series of monologues, that
reveal the spoken and unspoken issues in their relationship.  At
first tender, then explosive, emotions touch on the uncomfortable ways
that people repress and hide their feelings, rationalizing them away in
organized boxes that allow them to survive their disappointments and
failures.  The tension in the audience is thick, like being caught
in the ugly moment of somebody else's family secret… which it
is.  A third person, actor Thrasso Petras, enters the scene,
unspeaking…  but “speaking” volumes about the family secret and
the family dynamics.  Tanja Dixon-Warren's monologues and acting
are strong enough to carry all the action and unfolding storyline.
 
Diamond, Star, and Ticks, are one person vehicles where Ntsikie
Kheswa,
Nelson Wong, and
Thrasso Petras, each explore different aspects of alternative sexual identities.  Ticks
is the most interesting, where Petras plays a fast talking gigolo who
brings a plague upon a city.  Petras creates a strong stage
presence, his voice filling his performance with an nervous urgency, as
his character describes his environment and his relationship to
it.  Wong and Kheswa are also both interesting to watch but Wong
and displays good confidence and watchability.  All moved easily in and out of their roles.

Sean Cummings directed C.E. Gatchalian's Crossings,in
2004, and performs the honours for Broken as well.  Throughout
most
of the work, the attention is riveting.  The performers bring
voice and dynamic tension to the works.  However there were
noticeable lags in Diamond, where
actor Ntsikie
Kheswa moves between different locations on stage, with different
lighting cues, meant to reveal different aspects of a character and the
demands on an actor.


Playwright Gatchalian has achieved the ability to be thought provoking,
while creating a inside view and commentary on social conditions. 
The works of Samuel Beckett came to mind for me, expecially

with the examples of unspoken thoughts between the spoken words. 
Very
exciting.  Good thing I loved “Waiting for Godot” and studied both
music, modern art and drama.  Maybe it is in this juxtaposition of
music, modern art and drama where Gatchalian is most comfortable
pushing the boundaries of unconventional  storytelling.  This
should play well to lovers of European modern drama, such as Checkov
and Brecht, and maybe even local fans of Vancouver playwright Morris
Panych, whose work “My Aunt, Your Aunt” was recently booked into the
Firehall Arts Centre by Theatre Around the Corner, a Czech and Slovak community theatre in Vancouver..


BROKEN is not for the easily offended or the unwilling to explore
personal challenges.  It is a showcase for writing and
acting.  There are mostly powerful and interesting moments. 
Sometimes “comfort buttons” are pushed beyond comfort zones, but
otherwise there are brillian use of themes and repetitions, just like
in musical composistions.  Upon learning that Gatchalian was once
a musical prodigy, whose path later found itself graduating from the
UBC Creative Writing Program, I wonder what it will be like if C.E.
Gatchalian at some point writes an opera.  Or maybe it will be a
suite of 5 one act separate operas.  No doubt, it will be
inventive in form and brilliant in language and rhythm.


Georgia Straight: Heritage Vancouver tour of top ten threatened heritage sites including Kogawa House

Georgia Straight: Heritage Vancouver tour of top ten threatened heritage sites including Kogawa House

This week's Georgia Straight went on the Heritage Vancouver's tour of Vancouver's top ten threatened heritage sites,
including Kogawa House at 1450 West 64th Ave.  The list also
includes Burrard Street Bridge, Arthur Erikson designed Evergreen
Building and Salisbury Garden.

Matthew Burrows went on the tour and wrote this article Tour Highlights City's History, and interviews Heritage Vancouver's Donald Luxton.

A side bar story is What does heritage mean to you? and includes quotes
from David Kogawa, and Tamsin Baker – my friends and compatriots in the
Save Kogawa House campaign.

What does heritage mean to you?

Publish Date: 2-Mar-2006

David Kogawa
Joy Kogawa’s ex-husband and a member of the Save Kogawa House committee

“Heritage
is a lot to do with history. I feel if we don’t understand history, we
don’t really understand ourselves. We are molded by history.”

 

Donald Luxton
President of Heritage Vancouver Society

“The
big H. I think it’s things that we value from the past. Buildings and
sites are, of course, very evocative. But there are landscapes, ships,
trains, and cars. These are all aspects of our shared memory and
collective consciousness of the past. It’s very important to preserve a
range of things that speak to the representation of our history.”

Tamsin Baker
Lower
Mainland regional manager of the Land Conservancy, an independent
protector of B.C.’s important habitats and properties, including the
1913 Kogawa House in Marpole

“Protecting areas that mean something to a culture, to a people, that can be enjoyed forever.”

 

BROKEN by C.E. Gatchalian @ The Firehall Arts Centre

BROKEN by C.E. Gatchalian @ The Firehall Arts Centre


I have known playwright C.E. Gatchalian
for a few years now, when I featured him at an Asian Heritage Month
event at the Vancouver Public Library in 2003.  He always seems
quiet and softspoken but with a underlying smouldering intensity. 
That intensity gets explored in his latest theatrical exploration
titled BROKEN.  I am reviewing Broken tonight, Friday, March 3.

Gatchalian's first book,
Motifs & Repetitions & Other Plays (2003), was named a finalist
for the Lambda Literary Award, which honours the best in gay, lesbian,
bisexual and transgendered literature in English.
 
Chris attended the 2006 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner and enjoyed it
tremendously.  We gave out tickets to Broken as raffle
prizes.  All part of promoting Asian Canada arts and talent.

BROKEN by C.E. Gatchalian

March 1 – 11, 2006

A project of Meta.for and Broken Whisper in association with the Firehall Arts Centre

Broken is a suite of five one-act plays linked
by common themes: repression, alienation, obsession, sexual identity,
and love. From a ménage a trois involving a trio of twentysomethings to
a middle-aged couple dealing with the truth about their estranged son,
to a fast-talking gigolo who brings a plague upon the city, Broken is
marked by the intensity, starkness, bleak humour and lyricism that have
made C. E. Gatchalian one of Canada’s most acclaimed and controversial
young playwrights.

Directed by Sean Cummings, who
directed the critically lauded world premiere of C. E. Gatchalian’s
Crossing in June 2004, the show features a high-powered mixture of both
established and emerging professionals. The husband-and-wife team of
Tanja Dixon-Warren and Michael Fera, co-artistic directors of Hoarse
Raven Theatre (Tony and Tina’s Wedding, Corpus Christi), will be making
a rare appearance together onstage. Rounding out the talented cast is
Thrasso Petras (Corpus Christi, Never Swim Alone), Ntsikie Kheswa (The
Tempest), and Nelson Wong (Beyond Therapy, Sex in Vancouver). The set
design is nine-time Jessie nominee Yvan Morissette (Hosanna, The
Merchant of Venice).

For Tickets:
Call the Firehall Arts Centre Box Office
or go on-line

For more information please visit

Meta.for Theatre

March 1 Preview
March 2 – 11 at 8pm (excluding Monday)
March 5 at 2pm
Wednesday, March 8 – 1pm pay what you can

Naomi's Road / Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble at West Vancouver Library this Saturday Night

Naomi's Road / Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble
 
at West Vancouver Library this Saturday Night


Naomi's Road performers Jessica Cheung, Gina Oh and Gene, in a reflective moment prior to a February rehearsal – photo Todd Wong

Naomi's Road is the wonderful opera adaptation of Joy Kogawa's
children's novel Naomi's Road, based on her adult novel
Obasan.   I wrote a review
for the opening weekend back on September 30, Oct 1, 2005.  It is
an incredible production that is designed to tour schools throughout
BC.  Last week I spoke to Vancouver Opera general manager Jamese
Wright, who told me enthusiastically that Naomi's Road is travelling to
Seattle, and hopefully to Ottawa.

Saturday, March 4, 2006 7:00 pm
West Vancouver Memorial Library
1950 Marine Drive
West Vancouver, BC
Admission: Free
www.westvanlib.org/

Saturday, March 11, 2006, 7:30pm
Powell Street Festival Society presents Naomi's Road
Vancouver Japanese Language School Hall
487 Alexander Street
Vancouver, BC
Admission: $10 (general) / $8 (students, seniors) / $5 (children 12 and under)
Tickets and Information: (604) 683 8240 /
www.powellstreetfestival.com

ORIGAMI: huge folded paper figures at Holt Renfrew in Vancouver, by Joseph Wu

ORIGAMI:  huge folded paper figures at Holt Renfrew by Joseph Wu

I love origami. I would spend hours and hours folding paper eagles, dragons, fish etc.
When I was recovering my cancer in 1989, I folded lots of paper cranes. I was inspired
by the story of Sadako when she attempted to fold 1000 cranes after developing
leukemia following the WW2 bombing of Hiroshima.

But today... go see the wonderful window display at Holt Renfrew.

Joseph Wu has taken over their shop windows inside and one facing Granville Street.

He has said it's a "filler" for them and he'll load some pictures up
on his website soon but here's a preview from another website showing two
samples:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/lanrui/tags/origami/


Thomsett Elementary School Children visit Kogawa House with Joy

Thomsett Elementary School Children visit Kogawa House with Joy

On
Tuesday, February 21st, Grade 3 and 4 students from Tomsett Elementary
in Richmond went to visit Kogawa House.  The students had been
reading Naomi's Road, which is touring BC schools as a production by
Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble.

Joy Kogawa met with teacher
Joan Young and students at the house, which resulted in the students
being inspired to write letters for Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan,
pleading to help save the treasured house. Here are the pictures from
the event and thank you letters between author Joy Kogawa and teacher
Joan Young.

image
“Save
Kogawa House” banner made by Thomsett Elementary school children,
cheering for the camera  with author Joy Kogawa – photo Joan Young

The following is written by teacher Joan Young, of Tomsett Elementary School in Richmond, BC.


Our Visit to Historic Joy Kogawa House




On Tuesday February 21st, an excited group of 23 boys and girls ages 8
to 10 from Tomsett Elementary School in Richmond arrived at 1450 West
64th Avenue in Vancouver.  The students and their teacher, Mrs. Joan
Young and their principal, Ms Sabina Harpe were here to meet Joy Kogawa
and to tour her childhood home.  This was a much anticipated day for
the children since they had been engaged in many learning experiences
in the classroom before arriving.




This adventure began last fall when the students first read the novel, Naomi’s Road by Joy Kogawa.  After the students read the novel, they attended a performance of the Vancouver Opera’s production of Naomi’s Road.
 Through the story, the students learned about the experiences of the
Japanese Canadians during the Second World War and  about the life of
the author.  Through their research, the students learned about Joy
Kogawa’s childhood home in Vancouver and of the campaign to save it.
 The class felt that this was an important project and decided to
support it by making a donation to the  Save Kogawa House campaign.
 The students also wrote letters to Joy Kogawa expressing their
feelings about the novel and the opera.




In January, 2006 the class was thrilled and surprised to hear from Joy
Kogawa herself!  Mrs. Kogawa invited the class to become actively
involved in the campaign to save her childhood home.  The class eagerly
took up the challenge.  The children thought of dozens of ideas for how
they might be able to make a meaningful contribution to the campaign.
 In the end, it was decided that they would do two things:  make a
large banner which would draw attention to the cause and they would
 write letters to the mayor of Vancouver, appealing to the city to
preserve the home as a valuable historic landmark.




The banner was constructed during a busy week at school.  Every student
in the class  made a contribution.  On February 21st It was with great
pride that the students unfurled the banner in front of the house and
showed Mrs. Kogawa the results of their efforts.  The banner depicts
the house surrounded by details from the past which the children had
learned  from the story such as the cherry tree, the peach tree, birds,
butterflies, and children playing.  The banner also contains images of
the future.  The children envision a welcoming happy place where
friends can come together.




The students thoroughly enjoyed their morning with Mrs. Kogawa.  They
listened intently as she recalled her memories of her life at  the
house as a young girl.   They embraced the spiritual significance of
the cherry tree, the tree of friendship and each one of them touched
the tree and felt empowered by it.  Mrs. Kogawa read to the children
from her book and taught the children a Japanese song, “ The Farewell
Song”.  Everyone who shared this time at the house that morning  was
touched in a special way.  At the end, the students presented Mrs.
Kogawa with some stories that they had written about her cherry tree.




We would  like to thank Joy Kogawa for spending this special time with
us. Thank you for helping us to learn about the power of love and
understanding.  We will never forget this experience.




Joan Young


Teacher, Division 4, Grade 3/4


Tomsett Elementary School,


Richmond, BC

image

Joy Kogawa signs books and autographs for Thomsett Elementary school children  – photo Joan Young

image

Thomsett Elementary school children pose at cherry tree with author Joy Kogawa – photo Joan Young


Hello Joy,
Thank you so much for spending the time with my class today.   It was
a  very special time  for the  children as well as for myself.

Your
recollections of your childhood were precious and brought to mind
some of my own memories as well.  I know that the students loved the
experience, and that they learned so many valuable lessons from you. Many
said that the house was better than anything that they had imagined.  
Being in the house  has made the  campaign so real to the
students and has helped to lay the foundation for the letters which they will write to the mayor.

The children have
developed a very genuine affection for you and the house which will allow them  to
write and speak from their  hearts.  I  am looking  forward
 to seeing the results of their efforts during  the next phase of  this
 project.


Again, thank you for being so generous with your time and for taking such
interest in the children.  This will be an  experience that we will
never forget.

Sincerely,
Joan

Dear Joan,

My thanks go to you, spectacular teacher that you
are, for a special time for me too. I also will never forget this day. I just
wished so much that my granddaughter who is the same age, could have been
there. The little books the children made are wonderful treasures. And the
banner!  Can’t wait for everyone to see it! Good luck for us all
when you see the mayor.

Joy

image

Teacher Joan Young with author Joy Kogawa – both share Japanese Canadian Heritage – photo courtesy of Joan Young.