Category Archives: Literary Events

Brigadoon opens Dec 9th at Richmond Gateway Theatre until Jan 1st!

Brigadoon opens Dec 9th at Richmond Gateway Theatre until Jan 1st!

Tonight is opening night at the Richmond Gateway Theatre
for Brigadoon, that wonderful Lerner and Lowe musical that features one
of my favorite songs – Almost Like Being in Love.  Gene Kelly imortalized the mystical Scottish village that only appears once every hundred years in the movie version of Brigadoon.

I will don my kilt and sporran and go join the other Asians in kilts
and tartans – as the Gateway Theatre has a colourblind casting
rule.  General Manager Simon Johnston himself, is half Chinese and also playwright of Gold Mountains Guest, and Running Dog  Paper Tiger.

I'm heading down for the opening night party where scotch tastings will be featured.

The Land Cconservancy joins community efforts to save Joy Kogawa's childhood home


TLC Joins Community Efforts to Save Joy Kogawa's Childhood Home

THE CAMPAIGN IS UNDERWAY: “118 DAYS, AND COUNTING”

December 2, 2005

VANCOUVER, BC – Community efforts to save Joy Kogawa’s
childhood home from the wrecking ball moved into a new phase today as
The Land Conservancy of British Columbia (TLC) has agreed to lead the
campaign to acquire the house and secure its protection.

“The Kogawa house is a very important part of British
Columbia’s heritage,” said TLC’s Executive Director Bill Turner, “and
we are determined to see it protected.  As of today, we have only 118
days to raise the funds needed to achieve this.  We will need to raise
$1.25 million to ensure the future of this site, and we’ll be getting
to work immediately.”

The Kogawa house is located in the Marpole neighbourhood of
Vancouver, and was the childhood home of noted Canadian author Joy
Kogawa.  She and her family were removed from the home in 1942 as part
of the Government’s policy of internment of Canadians of Japanese
ancestry during World War II.” Kogawa’s celebrated novel Obasan
is a powerful and heart-rending story of that internment and features
the house prominently as part of her childhood recollections.  It has
been listed by the Literary Review of Canada as one of the 100 most important Canadian books ever written.

Inspired by the Save Kogawa House Committee, many community
groups such as the Vancouver Heritage Foundation, Heritage Vancouver
and the Vancouver Alliance for Arts and Culture and other cultural
organizations like the Writers’ Union of Canada and the Federation of
BC Writers have come together to support the protection of Kogawa
House.  On November 3 they were able to convince the City of Vancouver
to delay a demolition permit on the house for 120 days (effective
November 30) to give the community time to raise the funds to buy it. 
This followed the symbolic planting at City Hall of a graft from the
cherry tree at Kogawa House, as Mayor Larry Campbell proclaimed Obasan Cherry Tree Day on November 1.

“I am so touched by the way the community has rallied to protect
this house that holds such symbolic importance for me – and for so many
others,” said Joy Kogawa.  “I just wonder when I'm going to wake up
from this dream of miracles.”

Committee spokesperson Ann-Marie Metten said “We are delighted
that The Land Conservancy is taking on this project.  As British
Columbia’s National Trust they have the expertise to know what needs to
be done and the ability to do it.  They have a great record of success
in similar projects around the Province and we all believe that by
working together we will be successful here too.”

TLC’s Turner said that the fundraising campaign is underway. 
“We are calling on everyone who has been moved by Joy Kogawa’s writing
to contribute to saving the house.  Your contribution will not only
recognize and honour Joy’s accomplishments but will also provide the
opportunity for a writers-in-residence program that will enable a new
generation of writers to be inspired by her work.  We are also calling
on everyone who has been touched by Canada’s past treatment of
communities such as the Japanese-Canadian community.  This house will
stand as a symbol of the wrongs that were committed in the past, but
also as a symbol of what a community can achieve when it pulls
together.”

Donations can be made to The Land Conservancy through our website at

www.conservancy.bc.ca, or by calling our Lower Mainland Office at (604) 733-2312 or our Head Office in Victoria at (250) 479-8053.

 

Contacts:   For TLC   Bill Turner   (250) 213-1090
  Tamsin Baker   (604) 722-2313
 
  For the Save Kogawa House Committee
  Anne-Marie Metten   (604) 263-6586
  Todd Wong   (604) 240-7090
  Anton Wagner   (416) 863-1209

Dialogues of the Carmelites: Not your ordinary opera – but extraordinary

Dialogues of the Carmelites: Not your ordinary opera – but extraordinary


By Francis Poulenc


Vancouver Opera


November 26, 29, December 1 & 3, 2005


All performances 7:30 pm  Queen Elizabeth Theatre




Conductor
                Jonathan Darlington


Director   
                Tazewell Thompson   



Blanche de la Force    Kathleen Brett



Prioress   
                Judith Forst



Madame Lidoine        Measha Brueggergosman


Marie
Mere                Claire
Primrose          



Constance                 Nathalie Paulin




I walked out of Vancouver Opera’s 2005 serving of Dialogues of the
Carmelites
simply amazed.  It was a production you either loved or
hated. It pushed buttons. It wasn’t traditional. It was inspiring. It
was beautiful. It made you think. There was no love story between a man
and a woman.




There were no familiar songs that would ever appear on Opera’s greatest
hits.  But it provided extraordinary showcase performances for
Judith Forst, Kathleen Brett, Measha Bruggergosman and Claire
Primrose.  How strange it is to see an opera where all the main
characters are women, and where men play only secondary and supporting
roles. But while there are no sexy tunes between men and women, there
are many arias that deal with the relationship of spirit and to
God. 


It is 1789, the dawn of the French Revolution.  After an incident
in which her carriage is surrounded by The by mobs fin the street, a
young agitated aristocratic woman named Blanch de la Force decides to
join the Carmelite Order seeking refuge from both her family and the
social turmoil happening in France. 

Blanche discovers an inner
journey that is challenged once again by inside forces when she
befriends a fellow initiate named Constance who shares with Blanche
that they will die together.  Blanche is again challenged
when  she is
present at the death of the Pioress, who wails that Death is ugly,
unforgiving and unspiritual. Soon after, outside forces come to play
when the
New French Republic orders that all Religious Orders become outlawed,
and the nuns are forced to leave their home. It is at this point that
Blanche flees the convent to find refuge as a servant in an
aristocratic house.


Judith Forst sings a knock-out performance as the Prioress,
while sitting in her death bed. 
Kathleen Brett readily
captured
the agitated psychological state of Blanche de la Force, although her
voice was weak at points – perhaps due to playing Blanche's weak state
of mind, because in Act 2 & 3, as Blanche matures psychologically
in her convictions, her voice becomes stronger.  Nathalie Paulin
provided a clear and calm
foil as Constance, to Brett’s Blanche.  And when finally
Measha
Bruggergosman
came on stage in the 2nd Act, her voice and movement had
so much presence it was hard not to be enthralled.



This is
not a “pretty opera” despite its beatific moments where the nuns pledge
themselves to martyrdom.  It is indeed a psychological drama that
questions our own relationship to spirit, heroism, totalitarianism,
religious order and self-sacrifice.  While watching I could not
help but compare the exiling of the nuns from their convent to the
internment of the Japanese-Canadians in 1942, which was nicely explored
in Vancouver Opera's production of
Naomi's Road
Nor could I not draw comparison to the Vancouver Opera's past
production of Beethoven's only opera Fidelio, also set during the
French Revolution.

The final climatic scene is difficult to tear one's eyes away
from.  Here is a spoiler – but good to know as the real story was
first published by Marie Mere as a memoir.  Despite first
suggesting martyrdom to her fellow nuns, it is she alone who somehow
survives the imprisionment of the nuns, and their final walk to the
guillotine.  Musically it is very powerful, as the cast sings
Salve Regina, each one walks up, across and finally off-stage,
one  by one, until you hear the metalic sound of a
guilotine.  The choir of voices becomes smaller one by one until
only Constance remains.  It is then that Blanche appears to hold
hands with her friend Constance and to fulfil Constance's vision that
they would die together.



Here was a modern opera written by Francis Poulenc, sung in French, set
during the French revolution, about Carmelite nuns – and directed by
African-American theatre and opera director
Tazewell Thompson.  As
a 9-year old boy, Thompson was sent by his grandparents to live in the
convent of the Sisters of St. Dominic, in Blauvelt, N.Y. where he spent
six years.  He says he learned Gregorian chants before he ever
knew pop, jazz, folk or opera music.  What an extraordinary
experience to learn and develop a relationship with a spiritual diety,
as well as evolving one’s own spiritual development!  It makes
sense that Thompson was asked to help create this particular production
first with Glimmerglass Opera and New York City Opera.

Poulenc's music is indeed both beautiful and spiritual. I was moved by
its thoughtful passages, and found myself humming Stravinsky's Infernal Dance of King Katschei
from the Firebird Suite.  As well, I found myself thinking of
Gershwin's American in Paris, and Porgy and Bess.  It was not a
surprise then to read in the progam notes that Poulenc named Stravinsky
as one of his greatest influences, as well as Gershwin.


Donald Eastman’s set design is beautiful in its simplicity.  A
simple wall, stands halfway back on the stage, creating the interior of
the Church.  Muted light enters through a high window.  At
scence changes the pillars come forward to become walls, and to create
individual rooms.  Later they recede, and the lighting changes to
create
and exterior scene.  The lighting changes again, and it is another
scene in the Church, this time the harsh early light of morning. 
The walls move again, and the nuns are in a prison cell.




Classical music has always been kind to colour-blind casting, as
opposed to theatre or film. Casting New Brunswick born Afro-Canadian
Measha Bruggergosman has absolutely no negative impact.  In fact,
I think it speaks loudly about the multicultural ease that opera moves
with.  The opera audience listens to French, German, Italian
easily, and there has even been an opera now in Cree.  The
settings are from around the world such as China in Vancouver Opera’s
production of
Turandot.  I look forward to the January 2007 production
of Mozart’s Magic Flute
reconstructed with a First Nations theme blending
western and First Nations traditions together and designed with a team of First Nations artists.


In the end, it is the inspiration of the performances that moves us.






check out these reviews and links


Dialogues of the Carmelites

Georgia Straight review by Jessica Werb

Divine inspiration behind Vancouver Opera's latest

Vancouver Courier Review by Louise Phillips


All Praise to the singing nuns

Globe & Mail review by Elissa Poole


Religious Reflections

Georgia Straight interview with director Tazewell Thompson by Colin Thomas




Vancouver Opera Insight Articles

Facing the World Inside the Walls

Notes on the production of Dialogues of the Carmelites
by Stage Director
Tazewell Thompson
Measha!
by Doug Tuck
Francis Poulenc, Graceful Composer

by Doug Tuck

Hearing the voice of Grace, Poulenc's Musical Style

by David Shefsiak

Sexy Black Men: a Vancouver guide to loving women and learning to love themselves

Sexy Black Men: a Vancouver guide to loving women and learning to love themselves

Peter John Prinsloo,  Awaovieyi Agie and Hayden
Thomas hamming it up – photo David Cooper


A Common Man's Guide to Loving Women

Firehall Arts Centre
November 11 to December 3, 2005
written by Andre Moodie
directed by Denis Simpson
starring Awaovieyi Agie, Kwesi Ameyaw, Peter John Prinsloo and Hayden Thomas


Where can you find four sexy black men, who are hip, urbane, and live
in Vancouver's trendy Yaletown neighborhood?  Well… believe it
or not – at the Firehall Arts Centre on the corner of Cordova St. and Gore St. in the Downtown Lower Eastside.

Denis Simpson directs the Andrew Moodie play “A Common Man's Guide to
Loving Women. Set designer Derek Butt has created a beautiful urbane
condominium that every person would want to live in.  A wide
screen tv with a kick-ass sound system, complimented by a very cool
dining set complete with clear acrylic chess set.  This is not
some “gangsta crib in the 'hood.”

Ontario playwright Andrew Moodie has created a wonderful play that
explores the lives of four Afro-Canadians, which Simpson has set in
Yaletown.  It sort of reminded me of a cross between Quebec
Afro-Canadian writer Dany Laferriere “How to Make Love to a Negro” and the Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre's productions of “Sex in Vancouver.”

Yes, the black men talk about large penis size and basketball – but
their characters are developed into real sensitive people.  You
could almost substitute any ethnicity into this play, and the issues of
male bonding, sexual inequality, relationships, and sexual abuse will
still be substantial to carry the play.


Peter John Prinsloo and Hayden Thomas offer up some denial – photo David Cooper

As I watched the play, the characters slowly revealed their inner
secrets, while they talked about women and their relationships with
women.  All men can relate to these conversations, both
insecurities as well as sexual conquests.  Afterall it's a guy
thing.  I think that women will both be intrigued and shocked by
what these four men talk about.  It will be like being a fly on
the wall, as these men talk about what they like about women and how
they reveal both their frustrations and satisfactions about women.

The dialogue is witty and full of surprises.  There are scenes
which lull you into thinking that “this is reflective of black culture”
– the old school music, the basketball hoop, but the play always throws
a curve ball.  Nothing is really as it seems.

Some wonderful acting by Awaovieyu Agie (Chris), Kwesi Ameyaw (Wendle),
Peter John Prinsloo (Greg), and Hayden Thomas (Robin).  The
characters are friendly and real – you can almost imagine hanging out
with them on a weekend night.  They make references about going to
The Roxy and Skybar, as well as other Vancouver landmarks.


Kwesi Amyaw and Awaovieyi Agie “Show me the money or show me the door” on the path to a deeper friendship – photo David Cooper

As an Asian male, I am glad to see VACT's productions of Sex in
Vancouver, and other plays – it is nice to see Asian males protrayed as
simply cool urbane males instead of gang members, computer nerds,
waiters or coolies.  The same must be true for African Canadians
in Vancouver, where Hogan's Alley (Vancouver's original black
neighborhood) was pretty much destroyed to build the Georgia Viaduct.

This play is cool and it will push buttons and make you think about
your own relationships with women and male friends.  I remember
how Vancouver Theatre was all a-buzz when Talking Dirty came out at the
Arts Club. Tell your friends about this one.  Remember – “A Common
Man's Guide to Loving Women” at the Firehall Arts Centre…. who could resist?

Naomi's Road – Community Concert at Nikkei Place Sat Nov 26


Naomi's Road – Community Concert at Nikkei Place Sat Nov 26

This Saturday, Naomi's Road, the Vancouver Opera
Touring Ensemble production of Joy Kogawa's children's story plays at
Nikkei Centre in Burnaby – just off Kingsway.

It's a wonderful production, full of hope and tears, great singing, staging and acting.

Click here to read my review of the opening weekend performance on Oct 1
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/
_archives/2005/10/1/1273898.html

Click here to read my review of the Nov 12 Save Kogawa House special Awareness concert
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/
_archives/2005/11/14/1407019.html


Saturday, November 26, 2005 1:30 pm
Nikkei Place
6688 Southoaks Crescent
Burnaby, BC
Tickets: Youth $10, Adults $15. Festival seating.
Ticket sales: in person at the National Nikkei Heritage Centre after November 1,
book by phone (604-777-7000),
or at the door on the day of the event.

Joy Kogawa is one of Almanc's 100 Greatest British Columbians


Joy Kogawa is listed in

Almanac's 100 Greatest British Columbians

This past week CBC Radio host Mark Forsythe of BC Almanac, has been promoting his new book Almanac's  100 Greatest British Columbians.  This is a BC Version of CBC television's The Greatest Canadian.

The names are all listed by categories with no numerical value.
BC's top ten literary writers include Joy Kogawa, George Bowering, Wayson Choy, Dorothy Livesay.

Other prominent Asian Canadians include Roy Miki, David Suzuki, Milton Wong, Yip Sang, Tong Louie, Wong Foon Sien, David Lam

The book is published by Harbour Publishing.

Fundraising Drive Launched for Joy Kogawa House


Fundraising Drive Launched for Joy Kogawa House

Organizers of the drive to preserve the childhood home of novelist and poet Joy Kogawa
were jubilant after Vancouver City Council voted unanimously on
November 3 to grant a 120-day demolition delay order to preserve the
home and to recognize its historical and cultural heritage. The four
month period will allow the Save Kogawa House
Committee to raise funds to purchase the property and convert it into a
major centre for Canadian and international writers.  

For Kogawa, the West 64th Avenue property became a symbol of lost hope
and happiness after Joy, then six years old, and her family were
removed from their home and interned in the Slocan Valley in 1942 as
part of the forced evacuations and internment of 21,000
Japanese-Canadians during World War II. Joy's family was never
compensated for the confiscation of their property. Their house and
personal belongings, like those of other internees, were auctioned off
at rock bottom prices by the government's “Custodian of Enemy Alien
Property” and the proceeds used to pay for the government's expenses in
running the internment camps.

The loss of the house and the dispersal of the Japanese Canadian
community until their civil rights were restored in 1949 inspired
Kogawa’s best-known novel, Obasan, winner of the Canadian Authors’
Association Book of the Year Award in 1981. Its adaptation for
children, Naomi’s Road, premiered as a Vancouver Opera
production on September 30th and visits more than 140 schools and
community centres from Vancouver Island to the Kootenays until May
2006. Roy Miki, 2003 Governor General's Award Winner for Poetry, has
called Obasan the most important literary work of the past 30 years for
understanding Canadian history.  In 2005 Obasan was selected by
the Vancouver Public Library for its One Book One Vancouver program, encouraging all Vancouverites to read this single book.

In her letter on behalf of the League of Canadian Poets, Mary Ellen
Csamer wrote Mayor Larry Campbell and the Vancouver City Councillors
that “The League of Canadian Poets, representing over 730 professional
poets across Canada, supports the effort to save Joy Kogawa's childhood
home on 1450 West 64th  Avenue in Vancouver from demolition, and
would like to encourage its conversion into a major writers centre for
Canadian and international writers. Just as Emily Carr’s home in
Victoria and Pierre Berton’s in the Yukon provide a unique sense of the
physical space that helped to define those artists, so this building
forms an important part of our collective cultural imagination. To
create a writers’ centre would be an appropriate and timely action,
which would draw national and international writers to the West Coast
for cultural stimulation and peaceful retreat.”

In addition to the League, the other writers’ organizations supporting
converting Kogawa House into a writers-in-residence centre include the
Writers Union of Canada, the Federation of BC Writers, the Playwrights
Guild of Canada, the Canadian Authors Association, the Periodical
Writers Association of Canada, PEN Canada, the Vancouver International
Writers and Readers Festival, the Canadian Society of Children’s
Authors, and the Asian Canadian Writers Workshop. The project has also
been endorsed by the Vancouver Public Library Board, Vancouver Opera,
the Alliance for Arts and Culture, Heritage Vancouver, the Land
Conservancy, the National Nikkei Museum and Heritage Centre, and the
National Association of Japanese Canadians.

The Save Kogawa House Committee is looking for one thousand individuals
to donate $100 each for the Joy Kogawa Writers-in Residence Centre but
would of course greatly welcome donations of all sizes. The Committee
is also targeting corporations, foundations and the federal government
for support.

Donations can be made through the Vancouver Heritage Foundation which
has established a Kogawa house rescue fund and will issue charitable
receipts. All donations to the rescue fund receive a tax receipt for
the full amount of the donation. Cheques should be made out to
“Vancouver Heritage Foundation” and mailed to the Vancouver Heritage
Foundation, 844 West Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C. V6C 1C8. Donors are
asked to indicate on the cheque memo line: “Save Kogawa House.” Donations can also be made on-line on the Vancouver Heritage Foundation’s website

Speaking at the Vancouver International Writers Festival on October 13,
Margaret Atwood declared, “The destruction of the Kogawa home would be
a great loss of cultural heritage for Vancouver, for British Columbia,
and for Canada. Although Canada scored high on the recent all-nations
report card, it scored low on culture, history and heritage. Why
destroy more of this precious asset?”

Ricepaper Magazine on CBC radio: Shelagh Rogers interviews Jim Wong-Chu and Jessica Gin-Jade


Ricepaper Magazine on CBC radio: Shelagh Rogers interviews Jim Wong-Chu and Jessica Gin-Jade

Listen to the interview on CBC's Website!

Shelagh Rogers interviewed Ricepaper Founder & Publisher Jim
Wong-Chu and Editor-in-Chief Jessica Gin-Jade on November 10! Check out http://www.cbc.ca/soundslikecanada/ and tune your dials (or find webcasts) for CBC Radio One's “Sounds
Like Canada” 10:00am (10:30 am NT) – or listen as I do at CBC Radio online.

Maybe it's the great editorial that grabs attention. Maybe it's the
design, which keeps getting better with each issue. Maybe, just maybe
it's the 10 years of publishing, surviving in the Canadian mag industry
(and outlasting some) that caught their eye.

Ten years in the magazine industry is no small feat. More like a
small miracle. So CBC Radio's “Sounds Like Canada” shared Ricepaper
Magazine's successes (and misses) with a national audience of 1.3 million listeners across Canada.

It was a great interview.  Listen to Jessica talk about how
difficult it is to find kimchee in Halifax, and Jim talk about the
“cultural engineers” that are turning Ricepaper into the hip and
happening success that is so exciting.


Ricepaper was first on “Sounds Like Canada” back in January 2003, the same day Toddish McWong made his SLC debut.
Shelagh co-hosted the 2005 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese
New Year dinner that was a fundraiser for Ricepaper Magazine and the
Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.  Ricepaper is published by Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop, for which I am a vice-president.

Ricepaper: the magazine for creative Asian Canadians

Office 604-879-5962
info@ricepaperonline.com
Media contact: Michelle Siu (604) 616-3588 or Jenny Uechi (604) 879-5962

REVIEW: Save Kogawa House Nov 12 Special Concert


REVIEW: Save Kogawa House Nov 12 Special Concert

The concert event went well today.  About 100 people in the Alice
Mackay Room, at the Vancouver Public Library + CTV coverage. 
Pretty good for very short notice.

The event started with Harry Aoki and Alison Nishihara playing
Pachabel's Canon on harmonica and piano. Then I welcomed everybody and
explained what the SAVE KOGAWA HOUSE committee was all about.  I
also told people that we were very grateful for the Vancouver Opera
Touring Ensemble
gifting us with a performance.  I had seen
excerpts at a Roy Miki lecture, the Vancouver Arts Awards, and still I
had tears in my eyes when I saw performances on opening weekend and
just last week at the library.

Harry Aoki next talked about some of his experiences during the war
years, and afterwards at the sugar beet farms in Alberta.  He next
played some pieces on his double bass that he wrote during that
time.  A surprise dance performance by Toronto
choreographer/dancer Andrea Nann brought a spellbinding tone to the
music.  Harry closed with a final piece on his harmonica that he
played while traveling in Romania and they asked for “Canadian music” –
a bit of a hoe-down.

Next up was artist Raymond Chow.  We introduced the acrylic
painting that he has done for limited edition reproduction to help
raise funds for SAVE KOGAWA HOUSE (see
www.kogawahouse.com).   This was the first day Joy had seen
the painting.  Raymond spoke about how he was inspired by “Naomi's
Road” and the pictures to paint the old house with a 6 year old Joy
standing in front.  I told how when Ann-Marie and I went to see
Raymond and the painting on Thursday that he had played us a short
rendition of a song based on the story.  He then played “House of
Joy” for the audience.

Introducing the Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble, I told the audience
that they had just returned from Vancouver Island playing an amazling
show of Naomi's Road in Uculet, and also in Campbell River and other places + a
standing ovation on Denman Island.

The room filled with song from the voices of Jessica Cheung, Gina Oh,
Sam Chung and Sung Chung.  The audience sat rapt in attention, as
the story unfolded.  The singers coming up to their 30th
performance, as fresh and as exhuberant as each time I have seen
them.  I am getting familiar with the songs and story, and still –
I am amazed at the staging, the acting and the performance. 
Everybody does such as good job.

The applause was healthy and the cast was called back for more
bows.  I then told the audience that it was easy to see why if
Obasan was the book every Vancouverite should read, then Naomi's Road
was the book every Vancouverite should see.  The audience
responded very positively when I asked them “Do you  think every Canadian should see Naomi's Road?”  Again, I invited
people to tell all their friends about Naomi's Road, and about Kogawa
House, and that we were accepting donations at the back.

I invited the cast back as well as our earlier performers so that
Ann-Marie could give each person a gift.  I named them each –
Gina, Jessica, Sam, Sung, David, Angus, Harry, Andrea, Raymond and
Alison. Next, I invited Joy to say a few words.  There were tears
in her eyes, as she said “There are no words to describe how happy I am….  

To the Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble, Joy said “Everytime I see you perform,  I am amazed.  It is so wonderful.”

She looked at Jessica, and said “You're e-mail mentioned how the opera
is healing for some people.  You're absolutely right….
Everything that is happening.  It is all so wonderful.”

People lined up to buy books at the back and have them
autographed.  People lined up to talk with the performers. 
One person came up and talked with Ann-Marie and myself about having
Naomi's Road staged at a Heritage Site and splitting 50/50 with the
Save Kogawa House campaign.

It was a good day.

Janice Wong's Book CHOW featured on CBC Radio North By Northwest with host Sheryl Mackay


Janice Wong's Book CHOW featured on CBC Radio North By Northwest with host Sheryl Mackay

This morning Janice Chow was interviewed by Sheryl Mackay on CBC
Radio's
North By Northwest, just after the news about 8:40am to 9am,
Sunday Morning, Novemeber 13th.

CHOW From China to Canada: Tales of Food + Family, has been making all
the local talk show rounds.  It is a unique book that blends
together the recipes of her father's Chinese Restaurant “The Lotus”
together with stories of how her great-grandfather Rev. Chan Yu Tan
came to Canada, his 6 children and their integration into Canadian
life, and growing up with her family in Prince Albert.  The book
is a combination cookbook, family history, Chinese-Canadian history and
memoir.

Janice described giving a book launch at Prince Albert, SK, at the site
of her father's first restaurant called “Wings.” She had never been
there before, but the present owners had found boxes in the storage
area containing menus and items from the original restaurant.
 
Chow is available for sale on Amazon.ca and was #132 of Amazon's top  10,000 selling books yesterday.  You can even flip inside the book for select pictures and quotes

Janice has also let me know that you can hear some of the past CBC radio interviews at archived bits, 20051021 is Shelagh Rogers, Week 43 is Don Genova.