Category Archives: Literary Events

Janice Wong on City Cooks & Vancouver Museum Tuesday… + reflections of Sounds Like Canada…


Janice Wong continues to make the rounds with her book Chow. 



Monday: City Cooks


Tuesday: Vancouver Museum




City Cooks airs on
Monday morning at 9:30am and 12 Noon, as Janice tells her stories with
Simi Sara.  Janice reports that Simi was great to work with. 
There will be a skill testing question to win a copy of the book. 
Hint, the question has something to do with Janice's father, Dennis.

I heard Janice's radio interview with Shelagh Rogers on CBC Radio's Sounds Like Canada
on Friday.  It was a very warm and friendly interview, with
Shelagh asking many questions about Janice's family ancestors and how
they came to Canada, and how her parents settled in Prince Albert,
Sasketchewan.   I particularly enjoyed hearing about Janice's
first ancestor in Canada, Rev. Chan Yu Tan,
who arrived in 1896, as a Methodist lay preacher for the Chinese
Methodist Church (especially since he is my great-great-grandfather).

Janice
also brought some chicken wings, steamed sable fish and beans with dow
see (bean curd) and presented the food in a laquerware box, and Shelagh
complimented Janice
on the presentation, and also upon tasting the food.  Shelagh was
also particularly interested in hearing the stories about how Janice's
father was born premature, and his mother wrapped him up in blankets
and put him in the oven to keep him warm.

Another fascinating story was how Janice had started the book as a gift
for her family, after her father died.  A friend encouraged her to
turn it into a book, and Whitecap Books appreciated her  creative
in the book design, recognizing Janice as an accomplished and
professional visual artist- Janice Wong Studio.

Janice also told stories about how her parents met in Nanaimo
Chinatown, and seeing her grand-Uncle Luke Chan in Hollywood movies
that her father would point out, such as “The Mysterious Mr. Wong,” as
well he was

in movies with Clark Gable, Bela Lugosi and Katherine
Hepburn.



Afterwards, Janice sent me this e-mail:
“The interview with Shelagh was
fun.  She's such a warm person.  I met Philip (Ditchburn) and
he mentioned your geneology connection.  I don't think the
producer told Shelagh about you and me as Philip mentioned it after the interview and she was pleasantly surprised.



Vancouver Opera's Turandot: a Canadian production of an Italian Opera of a Persian fable set in Peking China

Vancouver Opera's Turandot: a Canadian production of an Italian Opera of a Persian fable set in Peking China

October 22,25,27,29, November 1,3, 2005
Queen Elizabeth Theatre
Vancouver, BC



Sally Dibblee and
Renzo Zulian, as Liu and Prince Calaf in Vancouver Opera's Turandot –
photo Tim Matheson, courtesy of Vancouver Opera

It was a night to wear your chinoiserie to the Vancouver Opera
to celebrate the Vancouver Opera's season opener of Turandot.  So
many people were wearing Chinese influenced outfits as well as
cheong-sams and jackets from Chinatown, that I could have mistaken myself at a Chinese New Year Dinner.  Turandot is an opera
based on a fable about a Chinese princess who challenges every royal
suitor to answer three riddles correctly, or else they are be-headed.

I was intrigued by how an Italian opera based on a Persian fable set in
Peking would play.  Would the characters be stereotyped Asians
such as many old and current Hollywood movies?  Would the music be
pale imitations of Asian music, reduced to catchy hooks?  Would it
be Chinese egg noodles dressed up with tomato sauce and called
spaghetti.

Puccini’s opera Turandot (first performed 1926), sets him up as one of
the pioneers of World Music, incorporating not only actual Chinese folk
melodies into the music score but also traditional percussive
instruments.  Chinese tam tams (gongs) were visible in the
Vancouver Opera orchestra pit.

“The main musical theme, which is associated with the Emperor and
Princess Turandot herself, is the chinese folk meloday Mo Li Hua
(Jasmine Flower),” says Opera chorus member Heather Pawsey,
who has performed the song in Mandarin at Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner
events.  “Apparently Puccini had a music box on his desk which
someone had brought him from China, and that was one of the songs it
played.”

Renzo Zulian is outstanding as Calaf, the Prince of Tartary.  His 3rd Act performance of Nessun Dorma rocked the house to thunderous
applause.  Of course, everybody knows Nessun Dorma from the Three
Tenors performance at the 1990 World Soccer Championships now, and forever associated with Pavorotti.  In
the 1st act Calaf falls in love with the princess Turandot, and answers
the three riddles in the 2nd act, setting up a stand-off with a
resistant princess determined not to take a husband.

Audrey Stottler made her Vancouver performance as Princess
Turandot.  This is her signature role, which she has even
performed at Bejing’s Forbidden City, the Imperial Palace for
generations of Chinese emperors.  Stottler sang brilliantly and
was a very convincing ice princess, confident that no prince would ever
solve the riddles, and she would continue in her solo quest of
dictatorial absolute power forever.  

The libretti is based on the 1762 play Turandot, by Carlo Gozzi, 
Puccini wanted his version to give Princess Turandot a warmer and more
developed role than the shallower ice princess of the Gozzi play.  

“God it’s great, I love it!” exclaimed Vancouver Opera concert master
Mark Ferris about the Puccini score for Turandot.  “I’ve been
practicing it all week, it’s so rich.  Mozart operas can be so
finicky, but Puccini is very deep.”

“Lots of pentatonic scales, “he confirmed about Puccini incorporating
Chinese folk melodies into Turandot,” Ferris himself is familiar with
Chinese music having performed Tandun’s “Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon” score last year with the CBC Orchestra, as well as having a
written a violin caprice based on Chinese structures (that was first
performed publicly at the 2004 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner event).



Court bureaucrats
Ping, Pang and Pong played by Michel Corbeil, Peter Blanchet and
Gregory Dahl, dwarfing Renzo Zulian as Calaf, Prince of Tartary – photo
by Tim Matheson, courtesy of Vancouver Opera.

The characters of Ping, Pang and Pong are pure “commedia dell’arte,” commented culture and food critic Tim Pawsey, also husband of Heather Pawsey.  The three court bureaucrats are
performed brilliantly by Gregory Dahl, Peter Blanchet and Michel
Corbeil.  They provide an intellectual foil to the cold-hearted
princess, questioning amongst themselves the role they have become as
an executioners’ committee, as each of her suitors is put to death.

“Never should two character tenors be on stage at the same time” said
General Director James Wright, as he introduced the performers at the
after party, commenting on their wonderful ensemble work.  All three actors
provided wonderful physical acting both on stage and in the
bigger-than-life costumes on wheels they wear for the public square
scenes, which seem to heighten the both the comedy and the fairy tale
setting.

Ninety-four people are on stage for the execution and public square
scenes including the main characters (4), supporting characters (5),
chorus (55), children’s chorus(17) and supernumeraries (13 non-singing
roles).  With an additional sixty-four orchestra members in the
orchestra pit, and led by conductor Tyrone Paterson, a spectacular wall of sound and sight was created, as
both the emperor and Princess Turandot stood tall on moving scaffolds,
filling the large stage.

This is opera at it’s grandest. It’s a perfect introduction if you have
never seen an opera before.  Everything is just as it should be –
over the top in spectacle, drama, and singing, and the orchestra’s
performance was exquisite. We chatted with some of the orchestra
members after the show, and they were having a great time, and wishing
they could see the action on the stage.

And in the end, it didn’t matter how accurately reflective of Chinese
culture, the opera really was.  This was in fact an Italian
version of a Persian fable, and was perfect in its context.  The
costumes, backdrops and projected images taken from actual Chinese
motifs were accurate enough to portray a realistic sense, as well as a
fairy tale atmosphere.

But still I wonder what Turandot would be like if it were sung in
Mandarin, since most people in the audience are not fluent in Italian
and read the sur-title translations anyways.  Vancouver Opera has
featured Asians playing the lead roles in past productions, such as Liping Zhang in last
year’s production Madama Butterfly, Jianyi Zhang in 1999’s La Traviata, Zheng Zhou in 2000’s Lucia de Lammermoor, or local Vancouverite Grace Chan

who performed in Lucia di Lammermoor, Romeo et Juliette, and Pirates of Penzance

One can only wonder
what will happen when Vancouver Opera attempts the Canadian Opera Iron Road about the Chinese labourers building the Canadian railway, or fully reflects onstage
Vancouver’s growing Asian population, and its reputation as gateway to
the Asian Pacific.


See also the Vancouver Opera “Insight” articles:
East Meets West and Falls in Love
by Gin-Chung Chan

Turandot: Innovative and Traditional by David Shefsiek

Fabled Singer – Audrey Stottler interviewed by Doug Tuck

Nikkei Voice asks Japanese Canadian community for support to preserve Kogawa House

Nikkei Voice asks Japanese Canadian community for support to preserve Kogawa House


Joy Kogawa at Kogawa House, the house she left at age 6, never to return. 

Katherine Mika Fukuma, the English Editor of the Nikkei Voice, has come
out strongly in favor of the effort to save the Joy Kogawa House in her
October 2005 “Editor's File” column. The Nikkei Voice is the national
forum for Japanese Canadians.

Katherine's editorial, “The JC community is again in need of your support,” is nearly half a page long. It reads in part:

“As you may have already read in the Globe and Mail (Sept.24) or in the Vancouver Courier (Sept. 28), the house of Obasan (Joy Kogawa homestead)
is currently in danger of being demolished. According to sources, the
owner of the Marpole, West 64th Avenue house–in which Joy Kogawa lived
until her family was relocated to Slocan Valley when she was six years
old–applied to the city of Vancouver for a demolition permit in
late-September.

The news came as a disappointment and a shock despite the fact that the
city of Vancouver will be planting a cutting of the cherry tree from
the backyard of the Marpole home on city hall grounds this fall as a
way to commemorate the experience of Japanese Canadians during the
Second World War.

Other joyous news for Kogawa this year included her book Obasan chosen as the Vancouver Public Library's One Book, One Vancouver selection for 2005, as well as the premiere of the Vancouver Opera's World Premiere production of the opera for young audiences and their family, Naomi's Road.
The Vancouver Opera presented four public performances before the
production embarks on a province-wide tour, visiting more than 140
schools and community venues throughout B.C. between October 25 and May
2006.  

Furthermore, there was discussion at the September 19, 2005 meeting of
the City of Vancouver Board of Parks and Recreation of the possibility
of naming the new Park for Marpole (at West 72nd Avenue and Osler
Street and Selkirk Street) “Joy Kogawa Park.” This park will be a
neighbourhood park, with a design element representing a Japanese theme
to reflect the history of the area.

Now, wouldn't all these events create more than enough meaning to
declare the property, or the house as a historical landmark? If it is
impossible to purchase the entire property, at least the house itself
should be saved, before it is too late.

The house represents more than just a literary icon's childhood home.
It is packed with a historical essence of the kind of lifestyle of the
prewar Japanese Canadians and may be the last of its kind. Once it is
declared a historical landmark much can be done. (Of course, it
shouldn't end up as just a museum!)

I surely hope that Vancouver councillors are smarter than those in Toronto…Preserve our nikkei history and heritage and help educate our future generations.”

Nikkei Voice, 6 Garamound Court, Toronto, ON, M3C 1Z5
Phone: 416-386-0287
FAX: 416-386-0136
E-Mail: nikkei1@bellnetc.ca

Publisher: Frank Moritsugu
Owner: Nikkei Research and Education Project of Ontario
Circulation: 3000  Subscription: $35.00  Frequency: 10/year

Yusuke Tanaka, Japanese Editor/Advertising Manager
E-Mail: nikvoice@interlog.com

Free Performance of Naomi's Road

Free Performance of Naomi's Road

Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble

Mon Oct 24th, 2005
3:30 pm
Vancouver Public Library
Central Branch, Alice Mackay Room

Admission is free and all are welcome.

This performance has come about as a result of the ongoing teacher's
strike so the library apologizes for the short notice. They ask people
to please pass this information on to anyone whom you think may be
interested in attended, including day camp groups.

I talked with soprano Jessica Cheung, who plays Naomi,  tonight at
the Vancouver Opera  reception/cast party following the openining
night of Turandot.  Jessica says that the children in the schools
are really recieving the opera well.

In particular, the children really respond to “the bully” scene, and
when Naomi is trying to decide whether or not to give Mitzi her doll
back.  Jessica reports that she is really enjoying the
performances and is looking forward to taking the production to
Vancouver Island next week.

For further information contact:

Barbara Edwards
Community Relations Librarian
Vancouver Public Library
programs@vpl.ca
604.331.4041

Paul Yee in Vancouver for Writers Festival and new book launch for Chinatowns

Paul Yee was featured at the Vancouver Writers and Readers Festival on
Tuesday and Wednesday.  He will be sticking around town, as he
will be launching his new book Chinatowns, published by Lorimer, at the
Vancouver Museum on Oct 25th.  Janice Wong's book Chow will also
be featured.

Paul's new book is a pictorial history of Chinatowns across
Canada.  Paul's first illustrated history book was Saltwater City:
an Illustrated History of Vancouver's Chinatown.  This book won
the inaugural Vancouver City Book Award, and will be revised next
spring by Douglas McIntyre.

I first met Paul in 1986, when he chaired the Saltwater City exhibition
at the Chinese Cultural Centre.  This was a wonderful celebration
of 100 years of Vancouver chinese history for Vancouver's
Centennial.  I will look for some old pictures of Paul from the
project.

“Photo-Dan Toulgoet, Vancouver Courier” – used by permission

20 Reasons to Save Kogawa House from Demolition

 

20 Reasons to save Joy Kogawa’s childhood home from impending demolition.

The house is on 64th Avenue in Vancouver, just East of Granville St.  The family was removed from the house in February 1942 due to the War Measures Act.  “National security” was the reason given for the internment of Japanese-Canadians, and the government of Canada sold their property and possessions without the owner’s permission.

Joy Kogawa is a novelist born and raised in Vancouver that has received the Order of Canada in 1986.  Obasan is widely considered to be one of Canada’s most important and influential works ever created.

I present to you 20 reasons for saving the childhood home of one of Canada’s most influential writers.

1. “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?” – Margaret Atwood, Oct 13, 2005.

2. “Obasan, a novel that I believe is the most important literary work of the past 30 years for understanding Canadian history.”  – Roy Miki – SFU University Professor and 2003 Governor General’s Award Winner for Poetry.

3. The only literary landmark in Vancouver, named for a Canadian author is the Pauline Johnson memorial in Stanley Park according to BC Bookworld publisher Alan Twigg.  Johnson died in 1913.

4. Joy named Order of Canada in 1986

5. Vancouver born and raised author, up until age 5 – when the family was removed by the Canadian Government and put Japanese-Canadian families in internment camps during WW2.

6. Kogawa House is one of the few houses left in in Vancouver, that is identified as having been confiscated by the Canadian Government and sold without permission by the owners.  It is the only such house with cultural and literary value, because of Kogawa’s literary works.

7. Kogawa House would be considered Heritage classification A, because of its cultural value.  This is a new heritage designation in the city of Vancouver.

8. Writing and literary associations across Canada are joining in support of Kogawa House.  This includes: Canadian Authors Association, Writers Union of Canada, BC Federation of Writers, Asian Canadian Writers Workshop

9. Obasan is studied in universities and colleges – It is this important that literary critiques about the book itself are published.

10. Vancouver Opera commissioned a touring production of “Naomi’s Road” – that premiered September 30, 2005, with composer Ramona Leungen and librettist Ann Hodges.

11. New edition of Naomi’s Road is re-published and expanded in May 2005. This followed the translation and expanding of the story in Japanese.

12. Movement to save the Kogawa Homestead is nationl.  http://kogawa.homestead.com/

13. Book is historically relevant as it helped to support the Japanese redress movement, with redress resulting in 1988.

14. Asian Canadian Writers’ Workshop awarded Joy Kogawa on September 24th.005 with the ACWW Community Builder’s Award.

15. Obasan was named 11th most influential novel by Quill & Quire.

16. Obasan was the 2005 choice for One Book One Vancouver, the Vancouver Public Library’s award winning program that encourages everybody to read the same book, and makes the book come alive with programming. 

17.  People are already making pilgrimages to Kogawa House… just like Anne of Green Gables cottage in P.E.I.

18.  Vancouver City Council voted to plant a cherry tree graft from Kogawa House on City Hall grounds – planting will take place on November 1st, 2005 designated “Obasan Cherry Tree Day.”

19. “Reparations to Japanese-Canadians was an important action in an attempt to undo some of the grevious wrong that Canadians had carried out against a fellow group of citizens.  As important as reparations were, however, there is a need for a more permanent symbol of the regret that all Canadians feel and share over denying a group of fellow Canadians their civil rights.  The Kogawa House would magnificently represent that symbol.”
– Richard Hopkins, Professor, University of British Columbia.

20.  Because it is just the “Right Thing” to do….

 

Kogawa House: Can we save the house? Do we move the house?


Kogawa House: Can we save the house? Can we move the house?

Lots of developments happening…

Monday, we met with Vancouver Heritage Foundation, and discussed
strategies to save the house, and create a way for the present owner to
donate the house to the VFH.  To preserve  the house at its
present location will mean a purchase price of around $700,000. 
To move the house will mean $50,000 + building a $200,000 foundation
later.  What is cheaper?

The owner has not been willing to sell, so trying to save the house
from demolition and move it seems the best idea.  There is a
proposed park that will commemorate the Japanese Canadian community at
Selkirk and 72nd Ave.

To avoid the demolition of the house, we have planned to go to City
Council to ask for a stay of demolition, due to the Heritage quality of
the house.
Initially that would have been Oct 20 – but the demolition application has not been submitted yet.

But yesterday, the owner may have had a change of heart…  Gerry
McGeough, senior planner for City of Vancouver, may have brokered a
deal where the owner will delay demolition for 120 days, allowing us to
raise funds to purchase the house. 

This is great news.  The house may not be destroyed yet… and it gives us time to raise monies.

Because of these latest developments, Joy will not be interviewed for
CBC Radio Early Edition on Thursday morning. CBC wants to wait and see
what happens next!