Category Archives: Cultural Fusion

HAPPY 150th BIRTHDAY B.C. Douglas Day 2008 at Ft. Langley

HAPPY 150th BIRTHDAY B.C.    
Douglas Day 2008 at Ft. Langley

2008_Nov15 133 by you.

This is the birthday cake given out at the Ft. Langley Community Library.  I sneaked a peek, while everybody else was having the cupcakes following the opening of Spirit Square. – photo Todd Wong

2008_Nov15 157 by you.

 James Douglas and his wife Amelia, follow a bagpiper from the newly opened “Spirit Square” to historic Ft. Langley – photo Todd Wong

2008_Nov15 244 Royal Engineer greets visitors to Historic Ft. Langley – photo Todd Wong

2008_Nov15 241 Todd Wong with Jean Barman, author of British Columbia: Spirit of the People, and Judy, president of the Friends of Historic Ft. Langley.


All proceeds of the book sales went to Friends of Fort Langley National Historic Site.  I've known Jean for a number of years, she is one of BC's most prolific authors of history.  It's always great to see her.  Yes, I finally bought a copy of the book, British Columbia: Spirit of the People, published by Howard White's Harbour Publishing.  It's a beautiful coffee table book, filled with incredible pictures and stories.

2008_Nov15 212  Lisa Pepin volunteers at Fort Langley, and counts her ancestors back 160 years back to the Fort's beginnings. – photo Todd Wong

Lisa is part of the Royal Engineers.  I first met her when they took part in the ill-fated SeaVancouver Festival in 2005.  She tells fascinating stories about Fort Langley's history which includes her own ancestors.  Check out the webpage

2008_Nov15 276 Kwantlen drummers perform on stage for the evening concert – photo Todd Wong

2008_Nov15 301 The Higgins performed during the evening concert

2008_Nov15 305 I really liked this picture.  It was evening, the concert was going, the stars were out. You can see the old style Union Jack flag on top of the flag pole, The banner tells the event for Douglas Day and BC 150 Celebrations.  You can see the Big House behind the banner and the flag. – photo Todd Wong

See more photos:

BC 150 at Ft. Langley

BC 150 at Ft. Langley

Ping Pong Playa opens in Vancouver: imagine a hip hop speaking basketball playing NBA wannabe – but he is Chinese?

Ping Pong Player: Imagine a Chinese Will Smith playing table tennis with attitude

pingpong_cdub2 by you.

“C-Dub Wang” – the hippest hoppest ping pong player ever to wear a basketball jersey – in the movie Ping Pong Playa.

I just checked out the on-line preview of Ping Pong Playa.

Forget James Bond and Quantuum of Solace – I want to see THIS movie now!!!
http://www.pingpongplaya.com/us/index.html

pingpong_cdub_jennifer by you.

Girl meets Boy, doesn't like Boy – Boy finds a way to win Girl.  Smith Cho plays Jennifer and Jimmy Tsai plays C-Dub Wang.

Here's a message from my friend Joyce Lam of Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre

Dear Friends

I saw this movie at the Vancouver Asian Film
Festival and it is the BEST movie I've seen all year… if I could
nominate this movie for Best Picture and Best Male Lead Actor, I would.
Check it out yourself and Enjoy.


Joyce

Here is a message from Jimmy Tsai and Jessica Wu, members of the PING PONG PLAYA Production….

We
are extremely thrilled to write to you about the upcoming release of
our movie PING PONG PLAYA beginning November 14th! It's an exciting
time–but here's where we need your help. We'll let the movie speak for
itself (if the reactions of people who have seen the movie is any
indication, we firmly believe you won't be disappointed), but we need
your help to spread the word about the release of the movie.
Independent movies don't have the marketing budget to compete against
the mammoth studio movies, but what we do have is intense, strong
word-of-mouth (just check out any of a number of our reviews–from
outlets large and small, from critics, bloggers, and chat room posters
alike).

Please help us continue to spread the word and come
check out the movie opening weekend (Nov. 14th at the CINEMARK
TINSELTOWN VANCOUVER. 88 West Pender, V6B6N9).

Our website: www.pingpongplaya.com

See you at the theaters soon,

Jimmy Tsai – Writer/Co-Producer/2nd Assistant Production Accountant
Jessica Yu – Director-Writer
Joan Huang – Producer
Anne Clements – Producer
Jeffrey Gou – Executive Producer

Barack Obama is the 1st “Aloha Spirit” Hawaiian US President – not just Black & White!

Barack Obama is now president-elect for the United States.  The media keeps saying that he is the first Black-American president.  But is this true?


Barack Obama, third from left at rear, in 1972 with his fifth-grade
class in a photograph from Na Opio, the yearbook of the Punahou School.

The AFP printed this story  History as Obama elected America's first black president

If Barack Obama's mother was a White American woman from Kansas, and his father was
a Black man from Africa – doesn't this make him a
Black&White-American?

If American speed skater Apolo Ohno became U.S. president, would they
say he was the first Eurasian president?  Or the first Asian-American
President? Or the first President of Japanese ancestry?

Since Obama was raised in Hawaii, isn't he really the first Hawaiian
President?  ….The way that George Bush was a Texan president, Jimmy
Carter was a Georgian president, and Bill Clinton was an Alabaman
president?

I think it is so fitting, that Barack was raised in Hawaii.  I have
always found Hawaii to be a very inclusive multi-cultural society.  So
many people from all around the world have settled in Hawaii, including
Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Samoans, Portuguese, Caucasians… and
Americans…. and Canadians too!

In Hawaii, if you are half-white, you are called a “Hapa Haole.”  The
term “Hapa” is now used to describe people who are of mixed Asian
ethnicity. 

In Hawaii, there is the “Aloha Spirit.”  “Aloha” is the Hawaiian word for “hello.”  And it also means “Love.”

Obama has a half-sister who is half-Asian.  In a March 17, 2007 New York Times story Charisma and a Search for Self in Obama’s Hawaii Childhood, she says:

“I think Hawaii gave him a sense that a lot of different
voices and textures can sort of live together, however imperfectly, and
he would walk in many worlds and feel a level of comfort.”
said Ms. Soetoro-Ng, the child of Mr. Obama’s mother from another
marriage, who remains close to him. 
“People from very far-away places collide here, and cultures collide,
and there is a blending and negotiation that is constant.”

Media commentators on CNN said that Obama did not make this election a
race issue.  Instead he emphasized inclusiveness.  He spoke about hope,
instead of fear.  He talked about working together.

It is now a time when people from all races must work together.  When
people from all countries, and all continents must work together. 

To me… I think the issue is not that Obama is Black-American or
Half-White American… but he is All-American.  Barack Obama is 
striving to inspire all Americans, and all humans to be the best that
we can be, and to work together by helping each other.

Barack Obama is bringing the Aloha spirit to the American presidency and hopefully to the world.

Heart of the City Festival: Stories of Chinese food from “Eating Stories” read at Chinese Benevolent Association historical building

The Heart of the City Festival celebrates Chinese food and Chinese buildings – with stories of pioneers and their descendants


CHINESE CANADIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY WRITERS

Sunday November 2, 1:30pm – 2:30pm
Chinese Benevolent Association of Vancouver, 108 E. Pender 3rd floor

2008_Nov2 002

Readings from the book “Eating Stories: A Chinese Canadian & Aboriginal Potluck” were featured at the at the Chinese
Benevolent Association on Sunday.  The book was published by the Chinese Canadian Historical Society last year and quickly sold out its first printing.  I was part of the writing workshops that helped to create this anthology of stories about food, culture and history.

Scheduled to read were moderator George Jung, Dan Seto, Larry Wong and Bob Sung. Also scheduled was Shirley Chan, but she asked me to fill in for her late Saturday…. so I was a surprise reader.

The reading started off with a welcome and an historical explanation of the Chinatown heritage buildings such as the Chinese Benevolent Association, and how the many clan associations served to help the pioneer Chinese in Vancouver and Canada.

2008_Nov2 007

Dan Seto was the first reader.  He read his short story “Fong Luen Tong New Year Banquet” about the society set up for people with the names “Seto” or “Sit.”

2008_Nov2 009

Bob Sung read second.  He read the story “A Lesson in Communication” about trying to impress a White Girl on a date in a Chinese restaurant, and how he kept mispronouncing the Chinese words so much that the waiter was laughing at him.

2008_Nov2 013

Larry Wong read third.  He read the story “Evening With Pop (1949)” about how his father would always bring food home late at night to share with him and his sister.

2008_Nov2 014

I read fourth.  I explained that my contributions were a blend of pictures and their descriptions.  The first picture I showed was me with my grandmother and girlfriend at Mother's Day 2007.

The second picture was me when I was 16 years old, holding two freshly caught salmon.  I explained how my mother's favorite way to cook fish was steamed with hot oil.

The third picture was the first picture ever taken of me wearing a kilt, back in 1993.  I was a tour guide at Simon Fraser University, and volunteers were needed to help with the university's traditional Robbie Burns ceremony.  This was when I first coined the phrase “Gung Haggis Fat Choy.”

The final picture was taken at the 2005 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner with me holding a large haggis on a plate, while then Mayor Larry Campbell stabbed it with a knife.  I explained the origins of the dinner, and how it grew into a famous mix of cultural fusion of Chinese and Scottish food and culture.

2008_Nov2 005

George Jung was the final reader.  George read his story “Applesauce” which described how 102 year old Mrs. Der had climbed two steep flights of stairs to demand “Where is the money, the frefund for the head tax that my husband paid?”  He describes how Mrs. Der met Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and how the redress ex-gratia payment arrived too late after she dies.

 I counted 18
current and past Gung Haggis paddlers + Hillary's mom – in the audience
– enough for a dragon boat team in competition! and 1/3 of the audience
..  Former paddler Elwin Xie had earlier in the day conducted his
Chinese Laundry Boy tour of Chinatown for the Heart of the City
Festival.

I acknowledged Savanah Walling in the audience – she is the
co-founder of the Heart of the City Festival.  I met her in April when
we both received the BC Community Achievement Award.

Sunday Night, CCHS writer Shirley Chan gave a reading of some of her
writings from the Eating Stories book, following the presentation of
the documentary Mary Lee Chan Takes on City Hall.  The film is about
how Shirley's mother helped to stop the demolition of Strathcona
neighborhood for freeway development.  Shirley's daughter Emma paddled
on the Gung Haggis dragon boat team last summer.

See more pictures at:

Heart of the City Festival: Eating Stories at CBA historical building

Andrea Nann and Alvin Tolentino perform Nov 1 for Project Mabuhay

Project Mabuhay, is an annual free Eye Ear and Nose Clinic
staffed by volunteer Canadian medical personnel for the indigent in the
Philippines.


Saturday, Nov. 1st
8pm

at the
Vancouver Playhouse 

All the artists are volunteering their time and
talents for this worthwhile project. Andrea Nann and Alvin Tolentino have been
invited to create a dance for a 2 piano tango piece being
performed by international concert pianist Dorothy Uytengsu and
Lester Soo.

Andrea and Alvin are two of Canada's top dance choreographers.  I have reviewed some of their past performances.

Here's what I have found on Cherelle Jardine's website: http://www.cherellejardine.com/

You are cordially invited
to attend a fundraising concert benefitting Dr.Hugh Parsons, and his
charity, Project Mabuhay.  This medical mission is to
help the indigent people of the Philippines who are suffering from
various diseases that have little or no access to medical help by
conducting free eye and ear, nose & throat treatment clinics.  The
doctors, nurses & team
and all artists have all donated their time, talent and money to pay
for their OWN expenses (including hotel, airfare and food) to help
those less fortunate.

The evening is entitled “Project Mabuhay – An Evening of Song and Dance at the Queen Elizabeth Playhouse
                       
 
Classical pianists Lester Soo with his duo partner Dorothy Uytengsu,
will be performing piano duo arrangements of music by Gershwin,
Rachmaninov, & Piazolla.  Several other noted artists will also be
performing  including
Joey Albert; singer; Andrea Nann; Dancer from Toronto, Cherelle Jardine
; pop/rock singer with Ricky Francisco, Dr. Malcolm Hayes; flautist,
and many more…..All in aid to raise funds for purchasing medical
equipment and supplies.
 
So come get your dose of culture and while doing so, knowing that you
are helping those less fortunate.  Tickets can only be purchased
directly from Debbie Mah for $20, $35 or $150 for the VIP catered
reception/after party.  I
encourage those who need a charitable donation tax receipt to attend
the VIP reception.  A tax receipt will be issued for $100 for VIP
ticket holders. Space limited to 150 people.  debbymah@shaw.ca

 

Orchid Ensemble shares Ghost stories from around the world with multi-media

8pm, October 25-26

THE GHOST PROJECT

The Orchid Ensemble is one of Vancouver's most creative musical
collaborators.  Over the past few years I have seen them bring their
sensitive musical stylings to projects involving dance, origami and
Chinese-Canadian history.  Ghost stories are very much alive in Chinese
culture.  I remember watching the moving “A Chinese Ghost Story” in the
mid-1980's, and reading about Chinese ghosts in Paul Yee's books, such Ghost Train or Dead Man's Gold & Other Stories.  To compare ghosts stories and after-life stories from around the world sounds like something out of Joseph Campbell's mythology work.  Cool….

Check this out:

Music/interactive media/dance
Inspired by a shared curiosity of the after-life in different cultures
Performance Centre, Roundhouse, Vancouver, BC

video

01:04

A partnership with the Roundhouse Community Arts & Recreation Centre
Tickets are $18 regular, $15 students/children/seniors
Tickets: http://www.ticketweb.ca/snl/EventListings.action?orgId=27152
toll free number 1-888-222-6608
or at the door from 7pm on the days of the shows

Collaborators:
Aleksandra Dulic -animation/media arts/scenography
Kenneth Newby – media arts/ multi-instruments
Sutrisno Hartana – Javanese dancer/multi-instruments

The JUNO nominated Orchid Ensemble’s 2008 production “Ghost Project”
will transform the Roundhouse into a world where mystical creatures and
spirits from Taiwan, China, Indonesia, Europe and Canada roam across
the stage. Inspired by a shared curiosity of the after-life in
different cultures, the artists search for a common ground through the
practices of music, mask dance, media arts, shadow puppets, and
scenographic installations.

Guest performers:
Madrigal Singers of Vancouver Community College,
directed by Gerald van Wyck and conducted by Jin Zhang;
Kaori Otake – harp

Composers –Sutrisno Hartana, Kenneth Newby, Farshid Samandari, Barry Truax, Lan Tung, Jin Zhang, Ya-wen V. Wang.
Lighting designer – Kim Plough
Producer – Lan Tung

Tanya Tagaq comes to Vancouver and transforms Inuit throat singing to new art form

Tanya Tagaq is the “Jimi Hendrix of Inuit throat singing”

2008_Oct23 032 Todd Wong and Tanya Tagaq – photo Deb Martin

I had the pleasure of meeing Tanya Tagaq on Thursday night, after she performed at the Music on Main series. Tanya has been called the “Jimi Hendrix of Inuit throat singing” by David Harrington, Kronos Quartet. 

In August, I received her sophomore album titled “Tagaq.”  It is a strange album.  It is earthy.  It is primordial.  It is ethereal.  It is unlike anything you have ever heard before.  It is transformative.

It was Vancouver's Chan Centre that had commissioned Kronos Quartet to create a new work with Tanya, I learned from Chan Centre Programning Director Joy Hinton.  Watch the video on you tube:

Nunavut (Kronos Quartet and Tanya Tagaq)

07:14 


I found some other you tube videos of Tanya.  Listen to them.  Watch them.  You will be amazed, by both her traditional performances and her contemporary performances.

Here is her Canada Day Performance in Ottawa with cellist Rebecca Foon:


Tanya was in Vancouver in August, and she performed her contemporary work.




Silk Road Music performing with Victoria Symphony Oct 17 Friday

Silk Road Music performing with Victoria Symphony Oct 17 Friday

If you are in Victoria – check out this wonderful concert.  I really like Silk Road Music.  I met Qiu Xia and Andre when they were featured in the CBC television performance special “Gung Haggis Fat Choy.”  They have performed with me at many Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner events since.

Andre is French Canadian, born in Montreal, and Qui Xia was born in Xian, China.  They truly bring world music together in cultural fusion that is naturally accessible.

Silk Road Music with Victoria Symphony
Odyssey Series 
University Centre Farquhar Auditorium
www.victoriasymphony.ca
boxoffice@victoriasymphony.ca
Tel: (250)385-6515 
www.auditorium.uvic.ca 
phone. (250) 721-6561



Silk Road Music is
one of the few Chinese touring ensembles in North  America to have
performed at all the major festivals in  Canada  and many concerts
around the globe. Its  music has been featured on CBC’s Asian music
compilation, BBC International recital, Edmonton Folk Festival and
Winspear Center, with the Symphonies in Whitefish Theatre Montana,
Orpheum Theatre with the Vancouver Symphony, Chan Center UBC, Calgary
Symphony and many festivals in Canada, USA and France.


With the Victoria Symphony Orchestra, Silk Road Music
presents a variety of repertoire:  from Han Ya Xi Shui- a classic Pipa
(Chinese lute) solo piece with Tabla and symphony arranged by
Mark Armanini, to a new Canada Council commission for Pipa, Erhu(Chinese violin), Guitar and orchestra piece by Jin Zhang, from a fiery original composition with Pipa, Guitar and orchestra composed by Qiu Xia He and arranged by Moshe Denburg,
to many exciting Silk Road favorites that leave audiences mesmerized,
joyed and romanced. As the Canadian Folk Music Awards in 2006
nomination said: for the Best Ensemble and Pushing the Boundaries.The
world truly becomes one!
 
Performers and its instruments:
Qiu Xia He on Pipa
a four-stringed tear drop shaped lute with over seventy playing
techniques using 5 plastic fingernails attached to the right hand,the
result is a wide range of sounds likened to a mini-symphony. It is a
key classical Chinese instrument dating back 2000 years.Qiu Xia He was
born in  Baoji   China .  At the age of thirteen, she became a
professional pipa player.  At twenty four, she was an instructor at
the  Xian Music   Academy . Since arriving in  Canada  in 1989, she has
been actively pursuing her career world-wide as a performer, composer,
producer and teacher.  She is the creator and artistic director of Silk
Road Music for the last 18 years. There are 3 CDs produced under the
group and many collaborations with top artists from the world. She has
been a featured soloist with Symphony orchestras like  Vancouver , 
Montana  and  Calgary . 
 
Andre Thibault  on guitar, flute and percussion.
He
was born in  Montreal . He is a brilliant guitarist and
multi-instrumentalist whose fiery rhythms and stunning music is created
from a unique blend of Flamenco, jazz, classical, and world music. His
musicianship has led him to share the stage with many world class
musicians from  Malaysia  to  Cuba , South Africa , India  to North
America and  Asia . He is a well respected world music performer who
has six releases under his name. 
 
Stefan Cihelka on Tabla
is an ancient percussion instrument from  India . it is a cloth covered
double drum consisting of one cylindrical and one conical bowl tuned to
different pitches,it is played with both hands and involves a highly
complicated combination of finger movements.
 
Born
in  Montreal , Stefan has studied Tabla in  India  with the great
maestro Ustad Allarakha and his sons Ustad Zakir Hussain and Ustad
Fazal Qureshi. He has given numerous performances at home and abroad
during his career with the likes of Ustad Zakir Hussain, Iranian Tar
player and composer Amir Koushkani,, Tabla Beat Scientist Karsh Kale,
Psych-Rock band “The Tea Party”, the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra,
& the Vancouver Inter-Cultural Orchestra. Currently working as a
free-lance musician in  Vancouver ,
 
Rong Jun on Erhu
is a Chinese two-stringed violin played vertical on the lap,with the
bow hairs running between the 2 strings.I has a snake skin bowl as a
sound box and is famous for its expressive vocal quality suggesting its
Mongolian roots.Jun is a graduate of the  China   Music   Academy  in 
Beijing  where she performed with the China Opera & Dance
Orchestra. In  Vancouver , Jun is performing as a soloist with many
musical projects like  Silk Road  and lately Koan a jazz fusion
ensemble featuring her outstanding technique. She was chosen by the
Chinese Cultural Centre to play with internationally recognized string
quartet Vega Strings as erhu soloist. Her performance was marked as
“brilliant erhu playing” in the  Vancouver  Sun. 
 
Composers:
Mark Armanini is
a leading composer in  Canada , noted for his extraordinary works on
Asian instruments. His broad understanding of Western and Asian music
has made him in demand among the Asian community. His pipa concerto “Of
Wind and Water” was featured on  Silk Road 's new release Autumn Cloud.  
 
Jin Zhang  was
born in  Beijing   China . His musical education includes the Central
Conservatory of Music in  Beijing , Toho Gakuen School of Music in 
Tokyo ,  Japan , studying conducting with Professor Morihiro Okabe and
maestro Kazuyoshi Akiyama and Seiji Ozawa. He has composed for the
Calgary Philharmonic Orchestra, the Vancouver Symphony  and received
many awards for his excellent work. 
 
Moshe Denburg was
born in  Montreal . His musical career has spanned over three decades
and his accomplishments encompass a wide range of musical
activities,including Composition,,Performance and Jewish Music
Education. He has travelled worldwide,living and studying music in  New
York , Israel , Montreal , Toronto , India  and  Japan . From 1986-90
he studied composition with John Celona at the  University  of 
Victoria . 

Silk Road Music

Qiu Xia He

Canada

Tel: 604-434-9316

e-mail: qxcloud@telus.net

www.silkroadmusic.ca

www.myspace.com/silkroadtocanada  

www.cdbaby.com

Joy in Cambodia: Postcard #2 What does a Canadian do?

Gung Haggis dragon boat paddler Joy Singbeil (Celtic name) is in Cambodia for 2 years:

This is Postcard #2

HPIM2336 by bunnybears.Joy Singbeil (far right) back in June at the Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival with team mates Joe Easton (left) and Marion Hoy (centre).  But now she is in Cambodia… teaching drama?!?!? photo courtesy of Marion Hoy.


Postcard #2
by Joy Singbeil
special to www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com

Aug 28th
 
Hey Everybody,
 
Well I got my first paycheque so I feel I am really a  bonafide
Ëxpat”,  And as always here geting things done is not so simple.  It
took 3 weeks to get a bankcard (they have our photos on) but getting a
chequing account is so difficult and requires stamping each and every
cheque so I didn't bother.  There is no limit on what cash you can draw
out in either US dollars or Cambodian Riels.  Each US dollar is worth
4000 riels and you use riels for small transactions.  As a result you
pockets are full of thousands of riels and really it's only worth about
$4.00 bu the locals flip back and forth from one currency to another.
 
A good description of traffic in Cambodia…..a bit like that opening
scene of Starwars with all the meteorites coming towards you……..I
don't think I will ever stop wincing as the tuktuk driver turns directly
into the oncoming traffic.    So what did I see on  moto this
week……well there are always the balloon merchants who sell down by
the river and pump up all these amazing animals and tie them to poles
and gently waft down the street.  There are the two huge leather
sofas.  There is the framework strapped on to the bike extending all
around the rider and festooned with bananas.  There was one that was
breathtaking………wickerwork shelves piled high and tied one to
another and all around the driver so you could barely see him.  The
winner this week so far has to be the slaughtered pig.  A pretty big
one hanging down on either side of the driver.  I must be getting used
to this dead pig thing as I didn't hear or ignored the pigs being
delivered to the butcher all week.  I tell a lie I saw one thing that
took my breath away.  Little lad on the front then dad driving then Mum
holding the baby and casually nursing it as they whizzed along beside
our tuktuk………very few people have helmets. 
 
Last weekend I joined my compatriot and went out into the country while
some of the young guys went rock climbing.  Pretty difficult to find a
rock big enough to climb here as it is so flat.  But we did!!” I have
no head for heights so I just watched and we were entertained by all
the local children who came to visit us and helped us cook on our BBQ. 
This was an old part of a bumper, charcoal, and a lovely set
of kebabs(squid,huge shrimp and meat and Veggie) prepared by the girls
who look after our apartment.  They all run out and welcome us home and
try out their English on us.   Sometimes they give us Khmer food which
I can't eat but for the most part food here is great and very cheap.
 
So what is a usual day.  This morning I woke up to the sounds of the
city waking up and looked over at the breakfast being cooked below me. 
One day I'm going to try that.  A big wok full of boiling oil cooking
on the sidewalk filled with a pastry puffing up golden brown.  A man
has thrown a table top on two saw horses and is busy rolling out the
dough beside it.  When I come home he is the tailor and is measuring
pants.   The driver picks me  and the other 4 from the same building
and drives us to school, thank goodness.  I get to look at all the
sights from relative safety.  At school I like to go over to the
poolside club and get a coffee for a 20 minutes.  Then it is
Homeroom(Gr 9) for 10 minutes and then classes.  One  day I teach 3
classes and one day 1 class(I should each 2 but they forgot to schedule
me in).  I have a Gr 12  AP Lit class of 9 students, a Gr 9 Lit class of
22, a Gr 9/10 Language class of 23 and a Gr 12 Drama Class of 15.  The
students are very ESL but very bright and willing for the most part. 
At the end of the day I try to get a swim and this week I am trying to
jog……I'll see how it goes as it is up in the 30's most of the
time.  It does pour most days and the power goes out more often than
not.  The evening is taken up with errands/sightseeing/food and hanging
out.  Tonight I'm off to see John Mayall playing (on DVD) at a place
called the Meta House which is an Art Galley and a rooftop bar with a
big screen.  It is right beside a Wat(temple)  Happy Hour is incredibly
cheap and you get used to the cascading rain pouring over electrical
things.
 
Found a great restaurant by accident last night.  I went to phone my mum
from an internet cafe as the skype drops so often.  Across the street
was a Korean restaurant.  Jo, the Australian girl I am sharing with
had been enticed over by being given free treats(again from the bbq on
the sidewalk )and by the time I had finished my phome call she had
ordered dinner.  No one spoke any English but the place was spotless and
they had pictures of the food around the walls.  We had a dish of deep
fried pork bits covered with fresh veggies in a delicious sauce and
then dumplings with chicken and onion.  there were sauces on the side
to dip.  All this and a beer came to $6.00 which was expensive for here
but it was so good.
 
This weekend I'm off to the beach.  We are all going together(well some
are) and we have a 3 day weekend so I'm looking forward to that.  Did I
mention I have lilac nails with silver sprinkles.  You can get your
nails and toes done here for $8.  So far the reaction I've got is “Oh
lovely” or………..”Well I suppose you are the drama teacher.”  I intend
to get all the colours of the rainbow done before I leave.
 
If anyone wants to visit us come soon as we may not be in our Penthouse
forever.  As rents go here it is expensive and we may just be forced to
look for another lovely(cheaper) place.
 
Love to all……….please pass this along to any other interested soul.
 
Love Joy
 

“Toddish McWong” installed at the “Free Spirit” exhibition at Royal BC Museum

Take
150 years of BC history, search through the historical, cultural,
athletic and social events to find 150 of the most interesting people…




Who would you invite to the Royal BC Museum for a party?


Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWong” is now an “artifact” in the Royal BC Museum display for “The Party.”


How did this happen?

Photo Library - 2899 by you.

– photo Todd Wong

Every year, the Royal BC Museum has an interactive display that
visiting tourists can have their picture taken with.  Last year it was
for their Titanic display.  This is a great place for tourists.  It
sits kitty corner to Victoria's Inner Harbour, and is on south side of
The Empress Hotel, and the East side of the BC Legislature buildings.

This year, you can stand next to some of BC's most interesting people.  All of these figures are featured in the exhibit “The Party.” 
In this picture above are some of my cultural heroes including Rick
Hansen, Chief Dan George, Emily Carr and my friend Joy Kogawa.  My
girlfrend Deb Martin is standing right behind Joy (in red).  We first
learned about “The Party” exhibit last summer, when Joy needed a full
length picture of her to give to the Royal BC Museum.  We took this
picture for Joy, and were glad she was happy.

It's part of the “Free Spirit
exhibition to celebrate the 150th birthday of British Columbia, founded
as a colony in 1858, and joined Canada in 1871 for the promise of a
coast to coast railway. 

P4230222 Joy Kogawa in “The Party” – photo by Todd Wong

Deb and I first visited the exhibit on April 23rd, earlier this year.
It was with great excitement that we went to the Royal BC Museum, and
up the escalator, searching for the picture of our friend Joy Kogawa. 
We visited with writer friend Gary Geddes and David Kogawa, Joy's good
friend and ex-husband.  Read our account of our visit here:
Todd's adventure in Victoria: Traveling to “The Party” at BC Royal
Museum

http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2008/4/25/3659001.html

But this time we had a different reason to visit.  This time, there was
a life-size picture of me, Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWong.”

At the exhibit, they had also asked visitors for nominations to fill
the remaining spots.  I was voted in to “The Party” along with Trevor Linden, Dal Richards, Red Robinson, Ida Chong and Jennie
Butchart.

Deb and I arrived in Victoria after a late start on the 2pm ferry sailing from Tsawwassen
We checked into The Empress Hotel, because we were also attending an
evening event there to celebrate “150 Years in Golden Mountain”, an
awards and dinner gala to celebrate 150 years of Chinese Canadian
history and achievement in Canada, BC and Victoria.  See my account of
the evening here:
Victoria celebrates 150 years of Chinese Canadian History with a grand dinner and awards.

We walked over to the Royal BC Museum, enjoying the lovely sea breeze and the sunshine.  The Empress Hotel, now known as the “Fairmont Empress” was designed 100 years ago by BC architect Frances Rattenbury, who also designed the BC Legislature buildings.

Photo Library - 2905 by you.
Todd stands in front of a modest Kim Campbell – the first female
Canadian Prime Minister and slightly behind Chee-ah-thluc, Chief of the
Songhess people from the 1840's to 1864, aka “King Freezy” (because of
his frizzled hair). – photo Deb Martin


There are video stations containing silouettes of each figure in the
display.  You click on one of the figures, and a short biography pops
up on screen.  This is the display for Todd Wong:

Photo Library - 2909 by you. – photo Deb Martin

This is the video display of the “Todd Wong bio.” The original photograph was taken by my friend Richard Montagna.  Richard specializes in fine art, commercial,  portrait, action, and landscape photography.

It reads: 

Voted in by the visiting public, this person is seen as an important figure in BC history!

Todd Wong (1980- )
Passionate
about intercultural adventures, “Toddish McWong” founded Gung Haggis
Fat Choy, a Robert Burns / Chinese New Year event that has been
celebrating with an annual dinner since 1997.

Corrections:
No – Todd wasn't born in
1980.  That would have made him only 13 years old when he first invited
the phrase “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” while wearing his first kilt for a
Robbie Burns celebration at Simon Fraser University.  Sometimes museums
make typo mistakes too.

Photo Library - 2902

My girlfriend's favorite character in the display (besides me) is the Vancouver Island Marmot – photo Deb Martin