Author Archives: Todd

Bangkok Ladyboyz: Review Oct 20 – Plush @ Plaza of Nations, Vancouver Bc

Bangkok Ladyboyz: Plush @ Plaza of Nations

Oct 20-21, 2004 Vancouver BC
www.bkladyboyz.com

“You will enjoy the show for sure,” my friends who had seen ladyboyz
shows in Thailand assured me. So when, the announcer invited the
audience to come down from their seats to the front of the stage to
create a concert atmosphere, my friends and I went down to floor to get
the best view of transgendered male bodies in scanty costumes
lip-synching to techno dance songs.

“What are ladyboyz shows like in Thailand?” I asked my friend
Laura who had once taught ESL in Thailand and Korea. “A lot of fun…
they have the shows in theatre halls with 500 people. All the tourists
go.”

Opening the show were 5 local male dancers, dancing a choreographed performance to The Village People’s Macho Man.
What struck me is that very often, we don’t get to see Asian males as
sexy dancers or in positive roles, on my mind since the Vancouver Asian
Film Festival will be sponsoring a forum on profiles of Asian Males in
film on November 6th. But here were 5 males doing their best to engage
the audience to sing and dance, and it seemed perfectly natural in a
dance club filled with mostly Asians, curious middle aged White men,
and the few white younger females.

Then the hype got higher… and the Bangkok Ladyboyz took the stage
one by one, in scanty Las Vegas type show costumes, as four performed,
each taking turns lip-synching on a verse and performing together on
the chorus. Women or men? Beautiful and graceful? Which one had the
operation? Who is your favorite? These are the important questions the
audience is asking itself!

The fifth ladyboy came out with a blonde wig looking like a cross
between Tina Turna and Debbie Harry, lip-synching to Blondie’s One Way Or Another.
And the music continued: Kylie Minogue, Britney Spears, Jennifer Lopez.
And the costumes continued: bustiers, fishnet stockings, leather,
see-through lace…

East meets West cultural fusion? Well maybe if you understand the
Thai creation mythology behind the ancient traditional dance moves
being co-opted into a blend of Western contemporary hip hop music. The
ladyboy Cindy creates a mesmerizing dance routine starting by holding
tea candles in the palms of her hand in a scene remniscent of an
ancient temple ritual, progressing to belly dancing type moves, all
dressed in elaborate jewelry laden costume. Other scenarios portrayed
included school girl turned naughty, leather cat fight, revealing
evening gowns – all standard stuff of traditional male sex fantasies.
Except these performers are transgendered males!

Despite the occasional wardrobe malfunction that revealed ample
displays and peeks of silicon enhanced bosom, this was not a strip show
or even burlesque nor was it a female impersonator show. It is a
lip-synch show that highlights the beauty and performing talents of the
best of these trangendered performers that in Thai tradition are known
as the “kathoey” or “third sex”, an accepted part of South East Asian
culture that lives integrated with the mainstream.

But what kind of people came to see Bangkok Ladyboyz? I was
expecting to see Vancouver’s transexual community out in full force,
but maybe the $45 price tag was too high for a show that tourists in
Bangkok or Pattaya that would cost about $15 Cdn. Well it certainly
wasn’t the crowd from the Dufferin Hotel Pub where the gay waiters all
dress in drag for special events.

In the audience were Chinese grandmothers! And they lined up for
pictures with the Bangkok Ladyboyz after the show. Middle aged Asian
men showed up with their wives. Middle aged White heterosexual men
showed up with their Thai girlfriends. Young Asian men and women showed
up looking like couples on a date. Omigod… it was a normal Asian crowd,
leading me to think that this kind of entertainment is the norm in
Thailand and Asia. And why wouldn’t it be? It’s an entertaining show…
with an enthusiastic audience that all the exotic dancers at Brandi’s
and the Cecil would love to have… plus they wouldn’t have to take their
clothes off.

The next time I am in Thailand, I will definitely take in a ladyboy
show. Not only is the show entertaining – but the cultural intrigue
persists… How do these ladyboyz manage to keep such figures that boast
35-26-36 measurements? Is there something in the Asian male physique
that allows them to look so feminine? What would happen if the Bangkok
Ladyboyz invaded a Hell’s Angel Club meeting… probably end up sitting
on the bikers’ laps, flirting and encouraging multicultural East Meets
West fusion.

And which ladyboy was my personal favorite? That’s my own secret…
but he/she was standing beside me when I had my picture taken with them
after the show.

check out the website for pictures and more at www.bkkladyboyz.com

Paul Yee's “The Bone Collector's Son” is runner up for Vancouver Book Award

Paul Yee's “The Bone Collector's Son” was a finalist for the 2004 City of Vancouver Book Award.  Paul was the winner of the inaugural 1989 City of Vancouver Book Award for his nonfiction work “Saltwater City: An Illustrated history of Vancouver's Chinatown.

I remember going to the award dinner at Flamingo Chinese Restaurant in 1989 with the committe for the Saltwater City exhibition, that Paul had chaired.  In 1986, we had created a museum exhibit celebrating 100 years of Chinese history in Vancouver.

2004 Vancouver Book Award Finalists are:

Daniel Francis  WINNERL.D.: Mayor Louis Taylor and the Rise of Vancouver | Arsenal Pulp Press
A lively, though serious, history of Vancouver from the city’s near beginnings presented in a biography of our most persistent mayor who matched this rowdy and growing city step for step. [more information]

Annabel LyonThe Best Thing for You | McClelland & Stewart
Three subtle but evocative novellas about Vancouver in different eras, each with their own temper and mood, but all deftly handled with discipline, richness and economy of form. [more information]

Paul YeeThe Bone Collector’s SonTradewind Books
A great ghost story, assembled with masterful prose and a sense of history that draws you into 1907 Chinatown and the journey of this fantastic young hero. [more information]
 

The short list for the 2004 City of Vancouver Book Award was chosen by an independent jury. The works range from a biography, to a compilation of three novellas, to juvenile fiction.

Mayor Larry Campbell will present the award to the winning author in Council Chamber at City Hall on Tuesday, October 19, 2004.

For more information see: http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/commsvcs/oca/Awards/2004.htm

Bangkok Ladyboyz are coming Oct 20/21

 
This sounds very interesting… Transgendered Thai female impersonators?  Check out the article in the Vancouver Sun.
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 
M  E  D  I  A     R  E  L  E  A  S  E
10.01.04
Tropika Canada Group Presents
Bangkok Ladyboyz: An East-Meets-West Experience
As Contemporary As Hip-Hop  ~  As Ancient As Thai Creation Mythology
 Dates: October 20 & 21, 2004   Venue: Plush @ Plaza of Nations
Times: Doors at 9 pm / Showtime 10:00 pm
Tickets: $45  / Online at www.supertickets.ca
and in person at Tropika on Robson (1128 Robson Street)
& Gyu Japanese Teppanyaki Restaurant (219 – 755 Burrard – enter on Alberni)
Information: www.bkkladyboyz.com
Gender-bending is everywhere these days in our metro-sexual, poly-sexual, omni-sexual world, and fresh from the hottest nightclubs and showrooms of Bangkok comes a new twist to the confusion, Bangkok Ladyboyz!
Bangkok Ladyboyz, presented in Vancouver by the Tropika Canada Group of fine restaurants, will showcase their unique take on east-meets-west cultural fusion October 20 and 21, 2004 at Vancouver's Plush @ Plaza of Nations.  In two evenings of wild glitz and glamour, with classic lip-synch to contemporary hip-hop pop music infused with the famed sexuality of Thailand, five celebrated performers from the most famous nightclubs of Bangkok will raise temperatures and pique curiosity in a show that can scarcely be compared to anything else on stage anywhere.
Covering pop-culture icons as varied as Blondie, Jennifer Lopez, Fire Inc. and the Britney Spears, Holly Vallance and Kylie Minoque, the ensemble reaches new levels of tongue-in-cheek irony with a bring-down-the-house take on The Village People's Macho Man!  Also featured are Dhoom Dhoom and Sexy Naughty Bitchy Me by Tata Young, the hottest English pop singer in Asia today.
The Bangkok Ladyboyz will be joined on stage by ten local dancers in a show created by noted Vancouver choreographer Didi Kwok.  With five male and five female dancers and five ladyboys on stage, all three genders will be well represented!  Dance music will keep the crowds on their feet before and after the main show courtesy of the talents of one of Vancouver's favourite DJs, Marlon English.
Thailand's ladyboys are a world-famous phenomenon and a 'must see' on every tourist's itinerary.  Their grace and beauty inspire amazement and awe among the thousands who attend the large stage shows in Pattaya and Bangkok.  By day many of them live mainstream lives, acknowledged in Thai tradition as the “kathoey” or “third sex”, with a cultural heritage that can be traced back to the creation myths of northern Thailand. By night they are a glittering part of the big-city nightlife, melding ancient temple dance techniques with the heart-pounding rhythms of contemporary club music. 
With an evening featuring white-hot dance music from one of Vancouver's best-known DJs before and after the show, the Vancouver appearance of Bangkok Ladyboyz promises to be the most exciting sizzle of the season!,
Whether packing the clubs and show lounges of Bangkok, Tokyo and Hong Kong, thrilling audiences in New York and Los Angeles or bringing a taste of the exotic to the Edinburgh Festival or Octoberfest celebrations in Germany, Thailand's ladyboys are an entertainment force to be reckoned with.
Vancouver will experience the Canadian debut of this international sensation October 20 and 21 when Tropika Canada Group presents Bangkok Ladyboyz to Plush @ Plaza of Nations for two exclusive performances.  Doors open at 9 pm and showtime is 10:30 pm. 
Tickets are now available online at www.supertickets.ca or in person at two downtown locations, Tropika on Robson (1128 Robson Street) and Gyu Japanese Teppanyaki Restaurant (219 – 755 Burrard Street). For further information and some colourful footage of the Bangkok Ladyboyz, visit www.bkkladyboyz.com
 – end –

Gung Haggis Fat Chili – served and eaten

“Haggis in Chili?” many people asked disbelievingly…

“It's like nothing you have ever tried before”

“Our Chili has lots of heart!”

Standing like a market hawker, I served up chili to people lined up with their plates.  While my co-chefs took their turns serving up our creation, I played tunes on my accordion or went around and sampled other chili creations at the 9th Annual City of Vancouver Employee's United Way Chili Cook-Off.

It was an act of serendipity that brought me together with my fellow Vancouver Library workers Dawn and Alison for the act of creating a haggis chili.  The week before I had picked up my leftover haggis from the Flamingo Chinese Restaurant where 20 one-pounders had been in deep freeze since the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners in January.  What does one do with left over haggis?  Make Chili?  Sounded good enough for us and we were on a mission!

We each arrived soon after 10am, at the City Councillor parking lot which was decked out with a large tent, lots of festiva balloons to resemble a carnival site.  We quickly found our table complete with poster and our name: Gung Haggis Fat Chili. 

While Alison set to work dicing the onions and opening the tomato cans, Dawn and I set about to decorate our 2 yards of turf.  All around us the experienced chili cook-off contestants were wearing costumes and had elaborate display backdrops trumpeting their team theme.

There was “The Chili that Shagged Me,” with the team dressed up as Austin Powers Movie wannabees – although I saw nobody vaguely resembling Elizabeth Hurley.  There was somebody dressed up as a buffalo, since their team was serving up a buffalo chili.  There was somebody dressed up as a cow.  And the team that won the display prize – Firefighters! they brought city fire-fighting equipment such as hoses, helmets, fire extinguishers to creat a booth that could serve as a recruiting display.

Many different city departments were all represented.  Judy Rogers, city manager was dressed in a cowboy hat with her team name “Texas in the City.”  There were teams from Human Resources, Parks, Sewers, Outside Workers, etc etc… and us? We were the Library team – promoting our multi-cultural collection and heritage.

Mayor Larry Campbell was there with councilor Jim Green.  They had a stuffed turkey (by a taxidermist not a chef) on display, while Mayor Larry would mix up Margarita Mix and pass out non-alcoholic drinks “for atmosphere!” he would exclaim.  At one point, Mayor Larry dropped his portable gas powered blender spilling the contents and ice cubes across the blacktop.  “You're cut-off!” somebody yelled.  Later on balancing the frivolity of the chili cook-off, Mayor Larry walked by our booth with a platefull of beefy chili.  At first, I thought it had disagreed with him, and he was going to dump it behind the bushes – but as he sat on a bench and gave it to a homeless person, I realized his words had been “There's somebody that needs this beef chili more than us.”

 

Gung Haggis Fat Chili….yeah Chili!

Gung Haggis Fat Chili will make its debut at Vancouver City Hall on Oct 13, 2004.

It is the annual City of Vancouver Employees' United Way kickoff
campain.  Our team is representing Vancouver Public Library
employees.  My team members are Dawn and Alison. 

Dawn is shopping for the ingredients, is our VPL United Way
committee chair and has done a splendid job of bringing our team
together.  Alison is bringing her oven roasted chili spices and a
lamb chili recipe.  I am bringing the haggis, propane cooking
stove and my accordion.

We believe that Alison's ingredients and recipes are SO GOOD, that
despite the haggis, we will win the cook-off!  Honestly… we use
a very nice haggis, already tendered with many spices from Peter Black
& Sons secret recipe.

10am is set up in the Councillor's Parking lot at City Hall, 12th Ave. and Cambie St. in Vancouver.

11am we start cooking Chili – competing against other City of Vancouver employee teams, including the Fire Fighters – reknown for their skills mastering the hot stuff.

12pm we dish up a bowl for the judges including
Mayor Larry Campbell.  I will “pipe” in our chili, on my
accordion, playing “Scotland the Brave.”

People then line up for tastings of all the different chilis – they
each get a spoonful. Over 300 people lined up for tastings last year.

Already there is a buzz at City Hall about “the Haggis Chili.” 
Kate Lekas at City Hall helped us refine the name – suggesting
we substitute “Choy” with “Chili.” – thus “Gung Haggis Fat Chili.

Mayor Larry Campbell is known to wear his Campbell tartan kilt
at black tie events… although I doubt he will have it for the chili
cook-off.  I may wear the Fraser of Lovat kilt – currently in my
care, and I promised Dawn that I would bring some of the tartan sashes
that our Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.  Maybe I will will
my stetson and cowbody boots with the kilt!

Cheers all, Todd

Vancouver Asian Film Festival Wine & Dine @ Opus Hotel

Here's a fun event fundraiser for Vancouver Asian Film Festival.  Their annual Wine & Dine wine tasting and networking event.


Date:  Wednesday, October 13, 2004
Time:  7:00pm  to 9:00pm
Location:  OPUS BAR, located in OPUS Hotel, 350 Davie Street
Ticket Price:  $30 (wine, beer and canapes)

Purchase tickets on-line at www.vaff.org
Limited tickets available

The Vancouver Asian Film Festival will be unveiling its new Festival  Guide that evening, hot off the presses — a lineup of this year's 37  most intriguing films by North America's top emerging Asian film  talents. With over one third of the films directed by women, “Year  Number Eight” will be the largest Festival to date! Come and be the  first to pick up a Festival Guide.

The Festival runs November 5 to 8, 2004 at Tinseltown.

(Special 3 Course Dinner Menus for $30/$40 for our patrons at Opus' Elixar restaurant to follow. Call 604.642.0557 to make reservations and let them know you are with VAFF to get the dinner specials.)

The Asian Canadian Writers’ Workshop 3rd annual Community Builders Awards – Joy Kogawa and Scott McIntyre

MEDIA RELEASE

For Immediate Release: October 1, 2004

The Asian Canadian Writers’ Workshop presents its 3rd annual Community Builders Awards

Dinner on November 6, 2004 in recognition of the continued success and influence of Asian Canadian writers and publishers in Canada. The 2004 ACWW Community Builders Awards recipients are pioneer Asian Canadian writer Joy Kogawa and publisher Scott McIntyre of the Douglas & McIntyre Publishing Group.

Margaret Gallagher (CBC Radio) will be our special host for the evening.

This year’s event also includes a special publishing information Workshop at 4:00pm (on the same day at the restaurant) entitled “After signing on the dotted line: The editing process from the publisher's point of view” led by Douglas & McIntyre’s Senior Editor, Saeko Usukawa. The topic “What happens after your manuscript is accepted by a publisher?” will be examined and explained. This workshop is free to all ACWW members and all dinner guests. There is a $10 charge for non-members and those not attending the dinner.

Joy Kogawa, born in Vancouver in 1935, is one of Canada’s most significant writers. Her novel, Obasan tells the story of the Japanese Canadian internment through the eyes of a child. Obasan has been named the eleventh most influential novel of the twentieth century by “Quill and Quire”. Joy Kogawa was awarded the Order of Canada in 1998. The clarity of her poetry and prose continues to influence a new generation of young minds.

Scott McIntyre, born in 1944 and raised in Vancouver, graduated from the University of British Columbia with an honours fine arts degree in 1965. He entered publishing at McClelland & Stewart in Toronto in 1967, returning to Vancouver early in 1970 to join Jim Douglas and to co-found the next year what has become Douglas & McIntyre. He is Douglas & McIntyre Publishing Group’s current President and CEO. Douglas & McIntyre has had a long-standing and continuing commitment to publishing the voices of Asian Canadian writers.

The Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Society/explorASIAN is a Community Partner for this special celebration.

When: Saturday – November 6, 2004

Workshop from 4:00 to 6:00pm Cash Bar Reception at 6:00pm – Dinner starts at 6:30pm

Where: Fraser Flamingo Restaurant – 3469 Fraser Street, Vancouver Phone: 604.877.1231

What: Publishing Workshop, 10 Course Chinese Banquet Style Dinner, Book Signing, Door Prizes

Tickets: $50/person. Bonus offer – Receive a one year gift subscription to Ricepaper Magazine

$10/person for the Publishing Workshop only.

Advance Tickets can be purchased from ACWW, Ricepaper Magazine, and the Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Society. Limited number of tickets available at the door. Last year’s dinner was a sold out event so get your tickets early. Groups of 10 can reserve tables in advance for priority seating. Payment in advance for group tables is required. No refunds. VISA accepted. Please call 604.488.0119 to pay by VISA. For more detailed information, please visit our website: www.asiancanadianwritersworkshop.com

– 30 –

Contacts:

Sid Tan 604.433.6169 sidtan@vcn.bc.ca

Jim Wong-Chu 604.322.6616 jwongchu@shaw.ca

Don Montgomery 604.488.0119 don@explorasian.org

Day of the Longboat: voyageur canoe race

The UBC Day of the Longboat  http://www.legacygames.ubc.ca/events/longboat/index.cfm is a fun paddling race.  250 ten person teams compete.  It is organized by the UBC Recreation deparment and is designed to promote fitness and fun amongst UBC students and faculty.  Community (non-UBC) teams compete on Sunday.  There were 32 non UBC teams altogether and I paddled for both the Tacoma Destiny Dragons Mixed and Mens' teams.

Teams race 8 boats at a time, traversing through a “one of kind” 2 km course.  The beach start has all 8 boats with loaded crews ready to go while the steers person sits in a chair on the beach.  At the start, the steerspeople all jump out of their chairs, and climb into their team's canoe… sometimes the canoes leave too soon, and the steerspeople must climb in from the water. 

The teams then paddle about 100 m away from the beach to turn right at a big float.  Up to this point, the 8 teams are jockeying for position trying to get to the front while steering in a straight line.  Imagine bumper cars for canoes.  Imagine paddles clashing.  Imagine boats bumping into each other and sometimes tipping over.  That's what the start is like – a mad scramble to see who can turn the corner first. 

Nex you must paddle about 700 m down the beach to a designated area.  Saftey cones are located under a tent.  The designated runner must climb out of the boat, grab the cone, then climb back in.  So the boat usually comes up to the beach parallel ready for a quick drop off and take-off.  Sometimes it doesn't happen – if a boat comes up beside another.

 Leave with the cone, paddle like mad away from the beach, make another turn at a float – then paddle the next 700m stretch down to a final turn.  This is where good teams put their technique to the test. We had teams try to pass us here, but none could.  We actually started catching up on the race leaders here too.

Making the final turn – we sprint the final 100m to the beach.  We gohard all the way, beaching the boat.  Our designated runner then climbs out of the boat,  runs up the beach and hits the gong.  We saw some boats come from behind, hit the sand with lots of momentuum, and have a real fast runner fly up the sand and hit the gong before the runners from boats who have hit the beach sooner.

This is a real fun exciting race.  I will do it again!

Dragon boat – 2 races per day X 500m = 1000m.

Day of Longboat – 4 races per day X 2000m = 8000m!

That is the equivalent of 16 dragon boat races within 5 hours!

Well my lower back aches… my calves ache… my triceps ache… the trapezoids are sore!   Gee… so I must have been paddling with good technique because it hurts in all the right places!

Gotta remember to practice paddling more… gotta be prepared for when my Washington team calls on me…

I really enjoy working with good people. Good-hearted and well-knowledged are how I would describe Tacoma Dragon Boat Association – led by Clem, Rives, Lee and Merri.

Nah… they are great people. The whole team of 'em!

It’s a fun thing we can say, that everytime I have raced with TDBA – we came first in something. 1st overall in Kent 2002, Seattle 2002, Penticton 2004, and now UBC Longboat 2004 (Mens). Craig and Kristine also did Seattle 2002, Tom, Susan and Mary also did Penticton 2004. We look forward to Stuart, Cristina, Dave and Caroline having more fun with “their Washington team” for the future.

As Clem pointed out – we worked well as a group, bringing together a number of paddling styles and people from different teams. Craig now paddles outrigger with Lotus Sports Club, Cristina is with Pacific Reach, Caroline is with Scotiabank Dragons, Dave Samis is with GVRD/Gung Haggis, Tom is with Gung Haggis, Kristina splits her time between Gung Haggis and Scaly Justice, Stuart is from Scaly Justice, Susan and Mary from Saints Preserve Us. That is 7 different Vancouver teams + Tacoma Destiny Dragons. Sunday was the first time really meeting Caroline and Stuart! Thank you for coming on board with us!

We had 16 people go for lunch after the races to Milestones on 4th Ave. That was fun! We must plan a BBQ for TDBA when they come to Vancouver for races in 2005. And there will be plenty of races in Vancouver and Seattle/Tacoma next year! Caroline Soo and I will help plan the SFU Dragon Boat Races for Simon Fraser University's 40th Anniversary for 2005. We hope to involve the Lotus Sports Club and also help support Lotus' dragon boat regatta in May 2005, then have the SFU dragon boat race possibly the weekend before or after the UBC Day of the Longboat. Yesterday we were planning and plotting and came up with an idea of a challenge cup that could take combined times of UBC vs SFU teams…

The bottom line is it was great to see old friends, paddle with former team mates, and make new friends.

CBC Radio's Musical Fusion cabaret: featuring VISHWA, Veera Devi Khare, Paul Pahal + more!

ADMISSION FREE!

FROM THE INDIAN OCEAN TO THE PACIFIC SHORE

A FINE CABARET CELEBRATES THE MUSIC, POETRY AND STORIES OF SOUTH ASIAN ARTISTS AT THE SURREY ARTS CENTRE

FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 17 AT 7:30 PM

Vancouver, B.C. September 9, 2004: A sitar and a Scottish fiddle. Saris and hip-hop dance moves. Shadow puppets and story telling. Old and new blend Friday September 17 at 7:30 pm at the Surrey Arts Centre when CBC Radio presents From the Indian Ocean To The Pacific Shore, an evening celebrating artists of South Asian heritage. Admission is free, but tickets must be picked up in advance. For information call 604-501-5566. The Surrey Arts Centre is located at 13750 – 88 Street.

Imagine opera mixed with hip-hop and traditional chants from India. Add in jazz dance movements, silken costumes and a love of art that crosses the barriers between stage and audience. Meet Veera devi Khare, a classically trained singer, songwriter and producer. Born in Prince George, her versatility is legendary encompassing all areas of music and performance. She divides her time between Vancouver, New York and soon will be in Las Vegas developing new projects.

Vishwa’s three young musicians fuse Indian classical music with Celtic styles. Sunny Mathara, Neetu Mathara and Max Ngai play sitar, tabala and violin. They performed the original music that threads its way behind the radio drama A Fine Balance, which airs at 10 pm October 3 on CBC Radio One 690. The group has just released their first CD called Vishwa, which has been getting airplay across Canada.

The Maharaja’s Daughter is a fabulous true story based on the meeting between the daughter of an Indian Maharaja and a village girl in Gujarat, India at the turn of the 20th century. This meeting resulted in all the village women being taught to read at a time when very few peasants could even dream of being literate. Using shadow puppets, one of South Asia’s oldest form of entertainment and storytelling, a collaboration of Vancouver artists has created an inspiring piece. Composer and musician Joelysa Pankanea is the great-granddaughter of the village girl.

“CyberRAJ” is the collaboration of Paul Pahal and Stefan Cilhelka. Their interest in writing, producing and performing has evolved around the ideas of both western based electronic music and the classical traditional elements of Indian music. Their philosophy is simple, to blend, connect and intermingle many aspects of music into one. CyberRaj incorporates modern 'CYBER' technology with the traditional “RAJ” culture where Computers and Drum Machines share the stage with live musicians.

Actor Raahul Singh reads from The Cripple and his Talismans, a novel by Vancouver author Anosh Irani.

Two very funny characters from A Fine Balance play host to our evening of entertainment. Actors Seth Ranaweera and Parm Soor in the guise of Ishvar and Omprakash make lighthearted fun of the proceedings as they lead us from act to act.

For more information:

Joan Athey, Program marketing Coordinator

CBC Radio British Columbia 604-662-6605 joan_athey@cbc.ca

 

Pictures of Vancouver Intl Taiwanese Dragon Boat Races – Sep 4 & 5

There are some great pictures of the Vancouver International Taiwanese Dragon Boat Race on the Web.
Check out: http://www.dragonboatwest.net/viewtopic.php?t=1848&highlight=taiwanese
http://www.carsonau.com/photos/thumbnails.php?album=21&page=9
If you want to know how close the race with Nancy Lord Momentuum?
check out:
pic # 7 & 8  our drummer doug is sitting calmly – while Leah Nagano,
the drummer for Nancy Lord Momentuum is leaning agrresivey into each 
call she makes!
http://www.carsonau.com/photos/displayimage.php?album=21&pos=7
Here’s a picture of me:
calling for Spirit of Vancouver
#26  http://www.carsonau.com/photos/displayimage.php?album=21&pos=25
# 30  http://www.carsonau.com/photos/displayimage.php?album=21&pos=29
Check out
pic #36,37 & 38 of Tom, Nick and Naoko paddling with a winning Spirit 
of
Vancouver team – really pumped after winning their semi-final heat to
make the medal round for Division C.
http://www.carsonau.com/photos/thumbnails.php?album=21&page=3
Check out photographer Ray Shum
http://www.carsonau.com/photos/thumbnails.php?album=21&page=4
pic # 57-60, 62-70,
http://www.carsonau.com/photos/thumbnails.php?album=21&page=8
pic 124 for a great shot of Bob Brinson
http://www.carsonau.com/photos/thumbnails.php?album=21&page=10
pic 146 of Francis Lee