Author Archives: Todd

Win a pair of tickets to Gung Haggis Fat Choy on CBC Radio's Early Edition


Win a pair of tickets to Gung Haggis Fat Choy on CBC Radio's Early Edition Friday show

Listen on Friday, January 28th, somewhere between 7am and 9am on 690
AM CBC Radio One for co-host Margaret Gallagher to give away tix as
part of “690 to Go
as she gives away tickets to the “city's hottest events.”  This
will be the third year Margaret has given away tickets to CBC
listeners.  We must be hot!  We think Margaret is hot. 
Margaret has both performed and co-hosted for Gung Haggis Fat Choy in
past years.  We always sing “When Chi-rish Eyes Are Smiling” –
only for Margaret.

Margaret will also be interviewing Shelagh Rogers,
co-host for Sunday night's dinner about the event.  The radio host
of “Sounds Like Canada” is really looking forward to the
dinner.  This is going to be fun!  Gung Haggis Fat Choy
Canadian cultural fusion – Sounds like Canada to me!

– More raffle prizes coming….

Just picked up gift certificate from Wild Rice restaurant, specializing in fusion cuisine.

Bear Kilts is offering a $300 kilt – made to order

Vancouver Opera has a pair of tickets for Cosi Fan Tutte

Tickets for a special upcoming show at the Centre in Vancouver for Performing Arts

tickets for Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre's next installment of Sex in Vancouver.

tickets for Firehall Arts Centre

tickets for Storyeum

lots of books on Asian Canadians and Asian Canadian culture from Harbour Publishing, and Association of Book Publishers of BC

more to be announced.

Ashok Bhargava – Poetry at the library January 31

Check out my friend Ashok Bhargava at the
Library.  He has been featured at World Poetry and Asian Heritage
Month Readings.  I played accordion for his first book launch at
the library two years ago.  A wonderful man with a gentle heart,
he brings a compassionate insight to everything he touches.

City Poets series

Presentation  Ashok Bhargava
Program highlights  Ashok Bhargava reads from his newest collection, Mirror of Dreams,
about the infinite possibilities of dreams and cultures converging to
surprising consequences. He writes about simple sentiments that
memorialize his experiences as a tourist and recalls the story of a
sixteen year old princess of Ayodhya (India) who sailed to Korea to
marry King Kim Suro, two thousand years ago.
Date  Monday, January 31st 2005
Time  7:30pm
Location 

Central Library
Alice MacKay room – Lower Level
350 W. Georgia St.
Phone: (604) 331-3603

Admission  Free

Valerie Sing Turner performs in William Butler Yeats' “Beggars at the Waters of Immortality”

My friend Valerie Sing Turner is in a play…
 
…and thought you might like
to know about it! It's a really cool piece of theatre
called BEGGARS AT THE WATERS OF IMMORTALITY – three
one-act plays by the celebrated Irish poet/playwright William Butler
Yeats – and in addition to acting, I do movement, sing and play my
flute! The likelihood of you ever seeing Yeats' work staged again in
Vancouver is pretty slim, so I hope you can take in a performance.
Details below…
 
Hope you're well!
 
Cheers, Valerie

************************************
BEGGARS AT THE WATERS OF IMMORTALITY
Three one-act plays by William Butler Yeats.

A
son discovers his father's bitter past, two irreverent beggars search
for a miracle, and the siren call of immortality beckons from an
enchanted spring. Three unconventional stories fusing myth, music and
dance from the celebrated father of Irish poetry and theatre: “At the
Hawk's Well”,”The Cat and the Moon”, and “Purgatory”.

Directed
by Anthony F. Ingram, featuring Donnard MacKenzie, Bill Moysey, Kyle
Rideout, Varya Rubin and Valerie Sing Turner, with stage management by
Lynnette Candy.

January 14-29, 2005
Tuesday – Saturday at 8:00, Saturday matinees at 2:00

Tickets: $24-28, matinees $14; Tuesdays Pay-What-You-Will; Equity price $14 any show

Pacific Theatre, 1420 West 12th Avenue (at Hemlock)
Tickets/info: 604/731-5518

Presented by Dumb Prophet Equity Co-op, an Equity-approved co-op.

Haggis Won Ton taste-testing 2005 for Gung Haggis Fat Choy�dinner


Tonight we did a taste-test for
Gung Haggis Fat Choy™ Haggis Won Ton,
Haggis Spring Rolls, and Haggis Lettuce Wrap.  Too much
haggis?  Never too much haggis!  Everybody was amazed at how
good it tasted.  I invited some of the performers and organizers,
dragon boat team members for this special treat.  I ordered some
of the food that we were planning for the menu and my dragon boat
coaching buddy Bob Brinson joined me, tired from a day of finishing
work on the Dragon boat go-carts that I had just delivered up to Simon
Fraser University.  First up was special chow mein and shrimp
balls with crab claws.  Bob, comedian Tom Chin, and my girlfriend
Deb all pronounced this dish a delicious winner.

Also joining us for the taste testing was Opera Soprano Heather Pawsey and her husband Tim Pawsey,
who just happens to be a food critic for the Vancouver Courier. 
Due to a communication mistake, the first batch of haggis won ton and
haggis spring rolls came up with only haggis filling.  Ugh,
thought my girlfriend and me.  But Tim and Heather ate it up,
remarking “This is really good, especially for somebody who likes
haggis.” 

Next came the haggis and vegetarian lettuce wrap.  Again some
confusion and the haggis came already mixed up with the
vegetables…  For the dinner, the two dishes will be served side
by side, so vegetarians can enjoy the lettuce wrap, and haggis lovers
can try the haggis in its traditional state… and then the
fusionista-foodies can choose to mix haggis into their lettuce
wrap.  But it tasted very good… the haggis from Peter Black
& Sons is mixed with savoury spices and very smooth, like a nice
liver pate.  “A very good haggis,” remarked Tim, the renowned
restaurant and food critic.  “Kind of an refined upper class
haggis,” somebody said, “if you can say such a thing,” as we all
reflected on the humble origins of Scotland's national dish.

“It's a West Vancoooouver haggis,” I cooed in my imitation of a BBC
Scottish Brogue, “from Park Royal South, didn't you know,” 
affecting a rather stodgy air, learned from watching too many episodes
of Upstairs Downstairs.  Next came the imitations of British
accents from Monty Python and Benny Hill, as comedian and co-host for
the dinner Tom Chin joined into the fray.

The re-done dishes of Haggis won ton and haggis spring rolls came back
with the proper mixture of vegetables and water chestnuts.  “This
is crunchy,” exclaimed Heather.  “This is really very good,” said
Tim when they both tried the new won tons.

“What is haggis?” asked Nick Khystov, dragon boat paddler and volunteer
for the dinner.  He and fellow dragon boater Tom Janiewicz had
just arrived as Tim and Heather were leaving for concert rehearsal for
her.  Haggis is the lungs, heart, liver of a sheep mixed with
oatmeal and spices. 

“This one is like a nice liver pate,” I informed him.  Our Russian
and Polish dragon boaters tried it and liked it.  Nick and Tom
really brought a wonderful multicultural mix to our Gung Haggis Fat Choy™ dragon boat team over the past two years.  They willingly try
new cultural food dishes.  Introducing Nick to sangria was a
wonderful experience shared by everybody.  As well, they have also
recruited a number of people to the dragon boat team by telling of
their wonderful multicultural experiences learned through both dragon
boating and team social bonding.  I don' know any other team
willing eating haggis and hosting a Robbie Burns Day dinner.  The
team that eats haggis together stays together…  

Dragonboat Go-Carts arrive at SFU for intramural “Canadian Games”

The first ever Dragon-carts or dragon boat go-carts, arrived at Simon
Fraser University today.  These are proto-types created by Bob
Brinson, a coach with the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team, and a
former carpenter with CBC TV.  Bob also recently re-finished the
original teak dragon boats donated to Vancouver during Expo 86.

The Dragon-carts sit on 3 wheels and are built on top of a 4'x8'
plywood base, 3/4 inch thick.  The sides are slightly curved like
a boats hull.  They will seat 6 paddlers + steersperson. 
Presently they look like a wooden bathtub – but once we paint them and
build heads and tails – they will be beautiful!

Our first experience “paddling” them was lots of fun.  Bob and I
used aluminum crutches as “paddles” and got some good speed in the
warehouse.  Up at SFU with 5 or 7 people the go-cart was much
slower as all the weight puts much more pressure on the rubber inflated
tires.  This will not be an easy push in the park for the neophyte
racers, as it took a lot of effort to move the 1200 pounds of people we
were carrying.

SFU intramural hopes that the Dragon-Cart races will become a unique
marquee event for the SFU Gung Haggis Fat Choy “Canadian Games.” 
Each year we can add another “sporting event” and build up the games as
a multicultural event, while encouraging students and faculty to
participate in both fun and physical exercise oriented activities.

photos to follow soon…

Vancouver Chinatown Lions' 45 Year old traditional Robbie Burns Dinner

Here's a Vancouver Courier newstory about another famous Chinatown
tradition
, the Chinatown Lion's Club annual Robbie Burns Dinner. 
It has been going on for many many years, since the late 50's.  I
remember the Bamboo Terrace Restaurant in the early 1960's.  We
ate there a lot, as well as at the Marco Polo or Ho Ho
Restaurant.  Auntie Winnie worked reception then, and she always
used to give us a package of gum.  I have fond memories of the old
Chinatown, when all of Vancouver used to come down at night time, and
cruise the streets, for for late night snacks, or to the Marco Polo
Nightclub.

I have never attended the Chinatown Lion's Robbie Burns Day, but those
who have tell me it is much more traditional then the dinner I organize
known as Gung Haggis Fat Choy or Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese
New Year Dinner.  The Chinatown Lion's dinner more closely follows
the book on the “how-to's” of staging a Burns Dinner.  The Toddish
McWong dinner bends the rules, alters them, transforms them… always
giving the audience a surprise.  I mean… who would ever expect
to sing a chorus of “When Asian Eyes Are Smiling,” or “My Chow Mein
Lies Over the Ocean?”

Hats off to the keepers of the Chinatown Lions Club and their 45 year
traditional Robbie Burns Dinner.  I may just take it in this
year.  If you can't attend Gung Haggis Fat Choy on Sunday, try the
Lions
Club dinner on the Friday.  It's a fundraiser for tsunami relief,
while GHFC is a fundraiser for Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop and the
Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.  About 200 people are
expected and you
still get a 10 course Chinese bangquet + haggis served with sweet and
sour sauce + a pipe band and special guest Vancouver Mayor Larry
Campbell.
Gung Haggis Fat Choy offers up 500+ guests an 12 courses in total
including traditional haggis, haggis won ton, and haggis spring rolls,
+ two bagpipers, (one Scots-Canadian, one Chinese) + two opera singers
(one Scots-Canadian, one Indo-Canadia),  co-host Shelagh
Rogers and Mayor Larry Campbell.

Both dinners are unique in their own ways, and while older one is a
traditional legend, the newer one is becoming a legendary tradition.

Chinatown hosting haggis of a night

By Naoibh O'Connor-Staff writer

Haggis with plum sauce may
seem like an improbable combination, but it's one of the dishes on the
menu when the Vancouver Chinatown Lions Club hosts its 45th annual
Robbie Burns night dinner.

The Friday night
event-which will also raise money for victims of December's tsunami in
southeast Asia-is being held a few days after the official Jan. 25
celebration for convenience sake. It's one of many events organized
across the city honouring the famed poet.

Burns, born in 1759 to a
peasant farmer, was known for his touching poems and songs that are
recognized around the world. He died in 1796, after which friends
initiated an annual dinner in his honour on his birthday.

Although membership of the
Chinatown Lions Club is 90 per cent Chinese, members from Chinese
backgrounds did not always dominate, said past president Chuck Lew.

Charter members of the
group, formed in 1953, included a wide range of ethnicities and
cultures found in Chinatown at the time including Scottish, Chinese,
Irish, Jewish, Italian, Japanese and aboriginal people.

Back in the 1950s, Kenny
Campbell, a Scot from the Outer Hebrides, pitched the idea of holding a
Burns dinner. But George Wong, another original member, and owner of
the Bamboo Terrace where the club met, thought haggis-a dish in which
the heart, liver and lungs of a sheep are mixed with oats and herbs and
stuffed into the stomach of a sheep or cow before cooking-could use
improvement. A wee bit of plum or sweet and sour sauce seemed like the
right touch.

“We still serve it with different types of sauces,” said Lew. “Have you ever had haggis? It's quite dry.”

It's not the only liberty
the group takes with the meal. Rather than cooking up a traditional
Scottish feast, diners enjoy a 10-course Chinese spread. Other customs
are followed, however.

“We'll do [Scottish]
singing, we'll do dancing, Mayor [Larry] Campbell will be there and
we'll do the address 'To a Haggis,'” Lew said, referring to the Burns
poem. “It'll be traditional in every aspect, except for the Chinese
aspect of it.”

The Sir John A. MacDonald Pipe Band will perform and the event will end with “Auld Lang Syne.”

Lew, a graduate of King
Edward high school, is well versed in all things Scottish. “I had a lot
of Scottish friends there,” said the 74-year-old. “They taught me a lot
of songs. They called me McLew back in the '40s.”

The Chinatown Lions Club's
goal is to raise $15,000 for tsunami relief. The event is at the Floata
Seafood Restaurant, 180 Keefer St., Jan. 28. Contact Lew at
604-688-3601 to buy tickets.

posted on 01/26/2005

Here are some recent and archival Vancouver Courier stories about Gung Haggis Fat Choy and “Toddish McWong”:

January 5, 2005 Welcome to the Vancouver Courier – On Line – Entertainment
“Toddish McWong” (R) and cohorts Heather Pawsey and Adrienne
Wong (L) vamp it up at last year's Gung Haggis Fat Choy. Photo-Tim Pawsey.

Welcome to the Vancouver Courier – On Line – Entertainment
Organizer Toddish McWong (aka Todd Wong) led in his first haggis whilst a tour guide at Simon Fraser University some 10 years ago and never looked back.

Welcome to the Vancouver Courier – On Line – News
Todd Wong, who sometimes goes under the alias Toddish McWong, has been hosting
a Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner for four years.


Shelagh Rogers loves Gung Haggis Fat Choy� looking forward to the BIG EVENT!



Shelagh Rogers loves
Gung Haggis Fat Choy™ – special dinner auction item!

My telephone chat with Shelagh Rogers this morning was about how we will co-host the Gung Haggis Fat Choy™ dinner.  “Todd, I just think what you are
doing is so wonderful,” Shelagh tells me.  “When we had you on the
show at the Roundhouse in 2003, I had no idea…”  It is such a
joy having Shelagh Rogers come to be a co-host with me so that this
esteemed host for CBC Radio's “Sounds Like Canada,” can now experience
what she missed out on back in 2003, when she first listened with such
interest about how I was bringing together Robbie Burns Day and Chinese
New Year through music, food and poetry.

Shelagh loves that our co-hosting and the show itself will be very
spontaneous. “The beauty of live performance,” she called it.
Performers will interact with other performers that they have never…
up to this point… met before.  Definitely a once in a lifetime –
never to be reproduced experience.  Along with Tom Chin, we will
rotate our co-hosts to introduce various topics such as Chinese New
Year, Scottish Hogmanay, Robbie Burns and cultural fusion.  We
will then maybe read a poem, or introduce the next performers.  We
will at times interact with the audience to create a wonderful intimate
dinner for 500.  “I want that line,” exclaims Shelagh enthusiastically.

It was back in September 2003, that Haggis Wun Tun came into
being.  I was invited by senior producer Anne Penman at “Sounds
Like Canada” to be one of 4 people asked to present Shelagh with
“Welcome to Vancouver” gifts to celebrate the show's move from
Toronto.  The other guests were James Delgado of the Vancouver
Maritime Museum, Chief Wendy Grant of the Musqueam Band, and Manpreet
Grewal, Indo-Canadian writer.  I was chosen as a member of many
communities, because of my work with Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop,
Dragon boat races, etc etc. 

My gift to Shelagh recognized the history of Chinese Canadians in BC,
as I paid respect to my ancestral lineage of Rev. Chan Yu Tan who
arrived in Canada in 1896.  A ceramic statue of “Gwang Goong, the
Chinese patron saint of Sojourners, surrounded by Lo Bok Goh  –
turnip cake that my Great Grandmother Kate Lee would make for me, Apple
Tarts from Chinatown like those my father would always bring home from
Chinatown when I was a child, and the first creations of Haggis Wun
Tun, to represent the 5th,6th and 7th generations of our famility that
are born of dual and multiple heritages in this country.

“Your haggis wun-tun and plum sauce go together like Bogart and Bacall,
what a wonderful marriage of cultures,” said Shelagh.  She was
thrilled with the invention of Haggis Wun Tun.  She even took the
rest home with her.

Still thrilled with the ideas of Gung Haggis Fat Choy™,
At what price do we now start the bidding?

Check out these stories about me & Shelagh or Christmas Eve Morning on Sounds Like Canada.

Win tickets for Gung Haggis Fat Choy, by naming the dragonboat go-cart for SFU's Gung Haggis Fat Choy “Canadian Games”

Win Tickets to
attend Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Dinner –
January 30th, 2005, at Floata Restaurant in Vancouver's Chinatown
.

image

We need help naming our Dragoncarts for the First Annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy Canadian Games.  Read more to find out details on this exciting contest or check out the whole event.

Gung Haggis Fat Choy

Canadian Games

Friday January 28, 2005

NOON Convocation Mall

 


EXCITING “Name the Dragoncarts” CONTEST
 
An
additional perk to being participants in the First Annual Gung Haggis
Fat Choy Canadian Games is the chance to name the Dragoncarts.

 
SFU
Recreation has had two Dragoncarts built for the inaugural Gung Haggis
Fat Choy Canadian Games. These two dragon carts will be used for years
to come as part of the annual Gung Haggis festivities here at SFU.


Goal:
To have one cart named after a prominent Scottish-Canadian pioneer in
BC, and the other named after a prominent Chinese-Canadian pioneer. A
name for each must be submitted!  Submissions must be received at
ghfc-teams@sfu.ca by midnight on Thursday, January 27th, 2005.

Award: One pair of tickets to the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner at the Floata Restaurant in Vancouver,
valued at $120.00 to the best pair of names. Prizes will be awarded
during the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Canadian Games in Convocation Mall on
Friday January 28th, 2005.



Here are some suggested names for you to nominate or vote for:


Possible suggestions:

Sir James Douglas, known as the "father of British Columbia" as governor, he was reluctant to give up
power and hold elections as ordered.

Amelia Douglas, the mixed-blood wife of Sir James, who most certainly tempered his treatment to First Nations
people, and had to put up with his airs and haughtiness. "Definitely the more interesting one," according to
Joan Siedl, history curator for Vancouver Museum.

Alexander Mackenzie, explorer of Mackenzie River.

Simon Fraser, explorer of the Fraser River - a university even got named after this guy, and
he was born in Vemont - a yankee!

Alexander Won Cumyow, first Chinese born in BC (1861), first Chinese Canadian court interpreter, liason
between First Nations and White communities.

Chan Sing Kai (1854-1952) and his younger brother Rev. Chan Yu Tan (1863-1948), first Chinese ministers ordained in
Canada. Helped to found the Chinese Methodist Church in Vancouver. Helped to teach english to Chinese.
Also Todd Wong's great great granduncle, and great great grandfather.

Yip Sang, one of the first and most successful and influential merchants in Chinatown. Chinese agent for the
Canadian Pacific Railway.

Hok Tak Louie, one of Chinatown's successful merchants, patriarch of the Louie Clan that developed
H.Y. Louie, which bought IGA franchises in BC, and later London Drugs under son Tong's presidency.
Grandson Brandt is currently Chair of SFU's Board of Govenors and nominated to be the next SFU Chancellor.

a typical Toddish McWong Robbie Burns Day in Vancouver

Robbie Burns Day in Vancouver…
I answered a phone call from Toronto, where somebody wants to engage my
Gung Haggis Fat Choy presenting/consulting skills and help develop a project that will remain secret
for now.  I spend lots of time on the computer and on the
telephone.

I go to work at the library… and I wear my kilt, at the request of my
co-workers.  People like it, they recognize it is Robbie Burns
Day.  After work, I rehearse with LaLa on a special surprise piece that will
twist people's minds about a specific Robbie Burns Day tradition. 
People who witnessed our 10pm show for First Night Vancouver all got
the sneak preview and enjoyed it immensely.

Bob Brinson reports that the Dragon Boat go-carts he is making for the
SFU Gung Haggis Fat Choy “Canadian Games” are now finished… except
the seats.  Bob is also coaches with me for the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.  We will inspect in the morning and figure out how to
make “paddling” work as a propelling device.

I go to Doolin's Irish Pub, where all the waitresses wear plaid. 
The manager has ordered 15 kilts for the waiters now from Bear Kilts
-the maker of my Maple Leaf Tartan.  Doolin's is now the site of Kilt Night – the 1st Saturday of each month.  Bear, Raphael and I
brainstorm ideas for a Scottish Highland Games type event for July
7th.  City TV arrives at Doolin's and films people having a toast
for Robbie Burns and the Address to the Haggis – They even have a
haggis there…


Bear says that he will donate a Bear kilt
for the raffle at the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner on January
30th.  Great!  Come to the dinner, buy raffle tickets and win
a great looking kilt, in the tartan of your choice, upon availability.

A pretty woman wearing a kilt taps me on the shoulder and says,
“Hey, we are the only Asians here who are
wearing kilts!”  Karen says she is half Chinese and half Swedish,
with a
lovely tartan, she loves the idea of Gung Haggis Fat Choy and is
excited by the 12 course dinner with haggis and all the
performers.  I will post our picture when Bear sends it to
me.  I meet the promotions manager for Doolin's, Ms. Christine
Fan,
who tells us she is Malaysian-Vietnamese-Chinese, and gives us all a
round of Scotch to toast a Happy Robbie Burns Day.  You can't beat
it – it's a wonderful informal Rabbie Burns Nicht!  Next kilt night is at Doolin's, February 5th.  The 1st
Saturday of each month.

Haggis Lettuce Wrap and Dragonboat Go-Carts celebrate Gung Haggis Fat Choy in 2005


– For immediate release –
January 25th, 2005
Vancouver BC

Haggis Lettuce Wrap and Dragonboat Go-Carts celebrate Gung Haggis Fat Choy in 2005

Haggis lettuce wrap and dragon boat go-carts are the birthday presents
to Robbie Burns created by Todd Wong to celebrate Robbie Burns Day (Jan
25) and Chinese New Year (Feb 9). What would Burns think? Would he roll
over in his grave if he knew that an annual dinner that pays tribute to
his birthday had been taken over by heathen Chinese?

Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong’s Robbie Burns Chinese New Year
Dinner has now inspired both the Leo Award nominated CBC television
special titled “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” to be re-broadcast on February
9th, and the SFU Gung Haggis Fat Choy “Canadian Games” an intramural
event that brings together the large SFU Asian population with SFU’s
Scottish heritage on January 28th.

“Burns would approve,” say numerous people including Robert Barr,
president of the Burns Club of Vancouver and Harry McGrath, coordinator
of SFU Centre for Scottish Studies. “It’s really good.,” said McGrath
of the Haggis Wun Tun that Wong presented him with last year, “I would
have eaten half the bunch if nobody else was standing there.”

Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWong” is actually the 5th generation
descendent of Rev. Chan Yu Tan, one of Vancouver’s first Chinese
ministers, arriving in 1896. Each generation has married non-Chinese.
Many have married Scots descendents and the 6th and 7th generation is
now only ¼ Chinese. First Nations Chief Rhonda Larrabee, is a Rev. Chan
great granddaughter and brings her family to her “cousin’s” annual
dinner to celebrate her diverse heritage and that of her children. This
dinner is also the result of asking “How do we create an inclusive
celebration for our families of mixed and cultural diversity?”

“You have identified Vancouver’s two solitudes,” Joan Seidl, Vancouver
Museum History Curator. McWong blends together traditions, poetry, song
and costume in this unique and quirky dinner event that has grown from
a private party of sixteen to an incredible event expecting up to 600
people at Floata Restaurant in Vancouver’s Chinatown – the largest
Chinese restaurant in North America.

Vancouver's Mayor Larry Campbell is attending as a special guest, but
will he will his formal kilt or his Chinese outfit? Rumour has it that
MLA's Jenny Kwan and Joy McPhail are swapping costumes.

Shelagh Rogers, host of CBC Radio's “Sounds Like Canada”and comedian
Tom Chin of Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre will co-host with
Wong.  Performers include a Chinese bagpiper and two opera
singers, Fred Wah winner of the Governor General's Award for Poetry and

Joe McDonald & Brave Waves, musical fusion band.

Opera Soprano Heather Pawsey, will perform songs in Mandarin and
Gaelic, Dr. Jan Walls performs his clapper tales, Karen Wong &
Zhongxi Wu perform with celtic musician friends Alex Chisolm &
Carmen Rosen. Theatre.
LaLa is a contemporary East-West hip hop artist. Veera devi Khare is a
cSouth Asian lassically trained Soprano crossover singer. Vincent and
Cameron Collins, are the incredible high-stepping Highland Dancing
brothers that have won awards everywhere they go. Cameron this year
alone, won the US Western Open, Canadian Western Open, and BC Closed
Championships.

January 30th, 2005, Sunday

Floata Restaurant, #400, 180 Keefer St., Vancouver's Chinatown.

Show starts at 6pm, doors open at 5:15

For Tickets contact Firehall Arts Centre Box Office: 604-689-0926  $60 adult, $55 student, $45 children 12 & under.

For more information contact Todd Wong 604-987-7124