Category Archives: Literary Events

I join Janice Wong for CHOW book launch at West Vancouver Library Oct 18,2005

I join Janice Wong for CHOW book launch at West Vancouver Library Oct 18, 2005

Tuesday

October 18th

7pm – 9pm

West Vancouver Memorial Library

I will be joining Janice Wong as a panelist for the West Vancouver
launch of her book, CHOW From China to Canada: Memories of Food +
Family.  Jeannie Mah is unable to attend from Regina.

This will be lots of fun.  Janice and I only discovered each other
about 2 months ago, when she e-mailed me and identified herself as a
relative from the Rev. Chan Family.  We have enjoyed sharing our
mutual love for family history, and discoveries about who we know and
what stories about relatives we know.

I will be talkign about discovering Chinese restaurants on my travels
throughout North America, stories about Chinese restaurants, and how I
have integrated Chinese food into my Robbie Burns Chinese New Year
dinner, aptly named…. “Gung Haggis Fat Choy!”

Earlier on Tuesday she will be taping a tv segment for CityTV's
CityCooks with host Simi Sara.  I have appeared two times on the
show with restauranteur/chef Joseph Lee to prepare haggis wun-tun, and
lettuce wrap.

Janice Wong book launch at West Vancouver Library

7pm
October 18, 2005

Todd Wong replaces Jeannie Mah on the panel.
Todd will share his experiences of visiting chinese restaurants on
travels in North America, and how he has integrated chinese food into
his annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner
event.

Todd is a resident of North Vancouver, and is second cousin, once
removed, to author Janice Wong.  They are both descendents of Rev.
Chan Yu Tan, who arrived in Canada in 1896.

Donna Yoshitake Wuest book launch: Coldstream: the ranch where it all began

Donna Yoshitake Wuest book launch:  Coldstream: the ranch where it all began



I have actually walked through
the old Coldstream Ranch lands, because my girlfriend's parents' house
in Coldstream is on the edge of Kalamalka Lake Park, and we often walk
in the park.




She tells me that the NDP government
turned the old ranch into parkland in the late 1970's, saving it from
becoming a resort complex located at Cousins Bay, on Kalamalka Lake.


Here is a message from the Japanese Canadian National Museum:

We invite you to attend the upcoming book launch for “Coldstream: The
Ranch Where It All Began”, and to share this information with any
friends or colleagues who might be interested.

———-

The Japanese Canadian National Museum Speakers Series presents:



Coldstream: The Ranch Where It All Began

by Donna Yoshitake Wuest

Book Launch

Thursday, October 20, 2005 7:00 PM
National Nikkei Museum & Heritage Centre
6688 Southoaks Crescent (Kingsway & Sperling), Burnaby

The Japanese Canadian National Museum is proud to present the launch of
the new publication, “Coldstream: The Ranch Where It All
Began”   ($28.95. ISBN 1-55017-343-X).

Author Donna Yoshitake Wuest will share her experiences chronicling the fascinating history of Coldstream Ranch,
located on the outskirts of Vernon, BC. Wuest grew up on the ranch,
which was home to a tight-knit Japanese Canadian community at the time.

In addition to stories of Japanese Canadians at Coldstream Ranch, Wuest
explores the role of the ranch in the history of the British Columbia
orchard and cattle industries. Join us for exciting tales of life at
one of the oldest continually operating ranches in Canada.

Admission is free.

Japanese Canadian National Museum
Tel: 604-777-7000 Fax: 604-777-7001
120 – 6688 Southoaks Crescent, Burnaby, BC, V5E 4M7
E-mail: jcnm@nikkeiplace.org Web: www.jcnm.ca

Scripting Aloud Monday Oct 17

Scripting Aloud

Monday Oct 17,
6:30pm
243 West Broadway



Animated reading of scripts – photo courtesy of Kathy Leung

Who: Scriptwriters,
performers, creative media
         industry types

When: Writer/Performer
participant sign-up/lineup @
6 pm

            Event/Audience admission @
6:30
pm

What: Event runs no later than
9 pm.

            No registration/admission
charge.

            Café stays open; participants are
encouraged
            to support our co-sponsors by purchasing
            refreshments.

            Basic audio/video equipment (if
needed)
            available.


Joyce Lam, Charlie Cho, and others reading scripts – photo courtesy of Kathy Leung
 

Scripting Aloud
is a monthly scriptreading and networking event for scriptwriters and
actors that began a limited twelve-month run August 15, 2005 at “Behind
the Scenes” (www.performingartsbooks.ca) performing arts bookstore and
coffee shop in Vancouver. The next reading is Monday, October 17, 2005.

The event generates production-ready film, television, stage and radio
scripts by or about pan-Asian Canadians. Whether you have a
script-in-hand you want to hear read; want to exercise your
interpretive performance skills through reading scripts; or have a
motivated interest in being part of a creative vibe, Scripting Aloud is
a forum for you.
 
Scripting Aloud is an initiative of Sparked, a Vancouver-based,
non-affiliated networking group of pan-Asian Canadian performing
artists and creative professionals. The current event venue is
co-sponsored by the Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre (VACT;
www.vact.ca) group and “Behind the Scenes.” VACT is interested in producing suitable scripts workshopped through this series for its 2006 lineup.

More information and submission
guidelines below, and at

http://www.vact.ca/scriptingAloud.asp


 

Contacts

Script submissions: scriptingaloud@gmail.com

Kathy
Leung: kathy.leung@gmail.com

Grace
Chin:
intelligentlotus@gmail.com

 

Grace Chin – organizer of Scripting Aloud – photo courtesy of Kathy Leung

Below are scripts for the Oct 17th readings….


“A Matter of Truth” by Matt Yoshikazu Gates (approx. 25 p)
2 males (1 late twenties; 1 late teens/early twenties)
2 females (mid twenties)

———————————-


“Baggage”
by Jim Tallman (pp. 27-60 of 120p)
4 males (1 early thirties; 1 late thirties; 1 early forties; 1 late fifties)
5 females (1 early thirties; 2 mid thirties; 1 late thirties; 1 late fifties)

———————————–

“Blue” by Adam Mars and Azumi Ohara (11 p) * CASTING IN NOVEMBER
1 male (mid forties-mid fifties)
3 females (1 mid teens; 1 mid forties; 1 sixties-mid seventies)

———————————–


“Cheque Please”
by Kathy Leung (approx. 15 p)
3 males (thirties)
2 females (1 mid thirties; 1 fifties upward)

———————————–

“That Subtle Knot” by Mario Sasso (approx. pp. 1-25 of 50p)
4 males (1 thirties; 2 forties; 1 mid fifties)
6 females (twenties-thirties)

———————————–


“Twisting Fortunes”
by Grace Chin & Charlie Cho (approx. pp. 85-100 of 100 p)
1 male (late twenties-early thirties)
1 female (late twenties-early thirties)


A Writers Literary Landmark and Writers-in-Residence Centre for Vancouver


A Writers Literary Landmark and Writers-in-Residence Centre for Vancouver



The following is a message from Anton Wagner, of the Save the Kogawa Homestead Committee:

Dear Todd,

Thank you for the great article “How important is saving Kogawa House?
What other literary landmarks are in Vancouver?” on the
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com website.

I totally agree with Alan Twigg's suggestion to Ann-Marie that we also
focus our campaign to save Joy's former home on Margaret Atwood's
recognition of Vancouver's cultural desert of literary landmarks. As
Alan writes in his entry on Pauline Johnson in the BC Bookworld Author
Bank, “The Pauline
Johnson memorial in Stanley Park, above Third Beach, is the only
literary monument erected in Vancouver for a Canadian writer during the
20th century.”

Johnson died in 1913.

Other provinces and much smaller towns have established and supported
such literary landmarks and a few writers-in-residence programs:

The Manitoba Department of Culture, Heritage and Tourism maintains the
Margaret Laurence House in Neepawa as the Manitoba Provincial Heritage
Site No. 25
http://www.gov.mb.ca/chc/hrb/prov/p025.html

In St. Boniface the non-profit corporation La Maison Gabrielle Roy Inc.
operates the Gabrielle Roy House as a museum for the Franco-Manitoban
writer with project grants from the federal, provincial and municipal
governments and corporate, foundation and individual donor support. To
date 105 women and 37 men have donated $1,000 each to the House.
http://www.maisongabrielleroy.mb.ca

In Eastend, Saskatchewan, the Eastend Arts Council owns and operates
the Wallace Stegner House as a writer/artist's residence. Rent is $250
a month, including all utilities. The furnished house, built in 1916,
contains a kitchen, dining, living room, study, two bedrooms and a bath
and can accommodate two adults and one child. The house is funded in
part by the Saskatchewan Heritage Foundation, the Writers' Development
Trust, provincial, federal and civic government grants, and individual
donations.
http://www.dinocountry.com/stegner_house.html

In Dawson City, the Yukon Arts Council and the Klondike Visitor's
Association and the Dawson City Libraries Association operate the
Berton House Writer's Residence Retreat. Initiated by Pierre Burton in
his former boyhood home, the Writer's Residence Retreat enables
professional Canadian writers to
write in the remote Northern community free of charge.

One item of great interest in your

http://users.yknet.yk.ca/dcpages/bertonhouse/story.html link
is the
last April 2001 item on that page, “Canada Council to support Berton
House writers.” It reports a grant of $100,000 from the Canada Council
over a three-year period to the Berton House Writer's Retreat Society
to enable four Canadian or
international writers to be in residence in the house for three months
each, with a monthly fellowship of $2,000 and travel cost assistance.
This would be a great precendent for us in seeking financial operating
assistance from the Canada Council.

But again, no such writing centre and literary landmark exists in
Vancouver.The Federation of BC Writers operates a small writing cabin,
gifted by George Fetherling, the Horsefly Manor Writers Retreat on
Quesnel Lake in the Cariboo.
http://www.bcwriters.com/horsefly/

Lorna Crozier has informed us that the Haig-Brown House in Campbell
River, operated by the non-profit conservation organization, the
Haig-Brown Institute, has just opened its doors to writers, with Don
McKay being the first writer-in-residence.
http://www.haigbrowninstitute.org
 
Vancouver, one of Canada's most dynamic cities and our gateway to the
East, needs a writers-in-residence centre as has been proposed for the
Joy Kogawa House so that Canadian and international writers can observe
and write about the unique evolving multi and intercultural society
that is developing
in Canada.

Anton Wagner

How important is saving Kogawa House? What other literary landmarks are in Vancouver?


How important is saving Kogawa House?  What other literary landmarks are in Vancouver?


Alan Twigg
, author and publisher of BC Book World, says that Vancouver
only really has one literary landmark, and that one was controversial
and created under protest – the gravesite of poet
Pauline Johnson. Ann-Marie Metten, was talking with the
author of First Invaders: the literary origins of British Columbia and Aborginality which detail the first
writings about British Columbia. 

If we can save and preserve the Kogawa Homestead, then we have the real
life equivalent of the fictional Anne of Green Gables House
http://greengables.tripod.com/locations.html
With the new Vancouver Opera creation of Naomi's Road, then we now have
the West Coast equivalent of the ever popular Anne of Green Gables
musical.

The Save the Kogawa Homestead Committee would like to preserve the
former Kogawa House as a writer's retreat, where the house could serve
as a temporary home for visiting writers, immersing themselves in
multicultural Vancouver, while providing a historic landmark to the
thousands of Japanese Canadians who once made up the fishing community
of Marpole neighborhood, but were uprooted from their homes, branded as
enemy aliens, and interened at re-location camps away from the Pacific
Coast.

There are few historic houses preserved in BC.  Our history is
still young, and many of our residents are immigrants with little
knowledge of BC's history.

Only a small handful of the homes of Canada's greatest Canadians or
writers are preserved or acknowledged.  Pierre Berton was born in
a cottage in Dawson City, Yukon.  Berton spent $50,000 to buy the
house to donate it to the Dawson City community where it is now a
historic landmark known as Berton House.
http://users.yknet.yk.ca/dcpages/bertonhouse/story.html

Other BC homes have been turned into historic landmarks or
museums.  But none that I know of are by writers, nor homes that
were confiscated from Japanese Canadians during World War 2.  In
addition to becoming a writers' retreat, Kogawa
House would also represent the tragedy of the upheaval and internment
of the
Japanese-Canadian community and how we overcome our prejudices by
recognizing it and turning it into an important community landmark.


Haig-Brown House Education Centre

2250 Campbell River Road,
Campbell River
B.C. V9W 4N7
http://www.britishcolumbia.com/attractions/?id=67


Rodde House Preservation Society

1415 Barclay Street
Vancouver, B.C.
Canada
V6G 1J6
(604) 684-7040
http://www.roeddehouse.org/


Emily Carr House

207 Government Street
Victoria
B.C. V8V 2K3
Telephone: (250) 383-5843
Fax: (250) 356-7796
http://www.britishcolumbia.com/attractions/?id=63


Irving House

302 Royal Avenue,
New Westminster
(604) 521-7656
URL: http://www.city.new-westminster.bc.ca/cityhall/museum/
http://www.discovervancouver.com/articles/irving-house.asp

CBC Radio: BC Almanac live interview with Todd Wong for Save the Kogawa Homestead update

CBC Radio: BC Almanac live interview with Todd Wong for Save the Kogawa Homestead update

12:45 pm CBC Radio's BC Almanac will do a live
interview with me about the Save the Kogawa Homestead movement. 
Joy Kogawa will also be featured in taped interviews BC Almanac did 2
months ago.

This great! The media is rolling on our story.  It will be
wonderful to share with the rest of BC, as Joy Kogawa's novels Obasan
and the children's story Naomi's Road are really stories about BC.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
After the interview:
 
The CBC radio BC Almanac interview went okay…
Funny thing is I bumped into former CBC radio host Hal Wake downtown,
and when I called out to him he said “I heard you on the radio today –
good job!”  I wished him luck for the upcoming Vancouver Writers'
Festival, which he will soon be taking over from Alma Lee.  He
said they were worried about all the school programs as it looks like
the schools will still be out.  I think he said that 5,000
students were otherwise expected to attend.

Anyways… for the CBC Radio interview:
 
I got all the main points in such as:
 
a) Margaret Atwood's statement of support
b) New Cultural Classification for the Heritage status
c) Imminent Demolition of the house – surveryors tape and paint
    markings present

d) Only real known house of Japanese Canadian origin with
    literary/historical value

e) Need to raise funds – to buy house $600,000 to $700,000
    needed – we only have about $7,0000 so far.

f) Important for all Canadians and BCers and Vancouverites
g) Visit www.kogawa.homestead.com to sign petition and make
    donation through the Vancouver Heritage Foundation

h) Jim Green's quote that “To demolish a heritage house, you
    really have to want to do it.” (Jim is on the Vancouver
    Heritage Foundation Board)

 
I forgot to mention that:
a) I walked by the house last week and could imagine a 6 year
    old Joy playing in the cherry tree

b) Obasan is studied all across Canada in highschools and
    universities

c) The Opera Naomi's Road is now touring across BC at
    schools and is inspiring people to read both Obasan and
    Naomi's Road

d) Watching the opera brought tears to my eyes
e) Obasan was really the first works by Asian Canadian authors,
    inspiring many others to share our “Canadian stories” of a
    diverse Canada

f) Did not get in Margaret Atwood's actual quote of Vancouver
    being ranked high on the livability scale – but woefully short
    on the heritage and cultural scales.

 

CHOW: Janice Wong book launch at Sylvia Hotel

CHOW: Janice Wong has successful book launch at Sylvia Hotel

Janice Wong
wrote some stories about her father and his Chinese restaurant a few years ago as a gift for her family, and  paired them with his recipes that she had found.   Before she knew it, she had created a new genre of cookbooks.

“Janice knows a lot of people,” smiled Alicia Schlagg, Marketing coordinator for Whitecap Books. She was very pleased as author Janice Wong signed autographs and posed for pictures with family and friends.  It was a busy crowd at the Sylvia Hotel on Wednesday evening, Oct 12th.  Whitecap Books had taken over the restaurant, wine was served along with mandarin oranges, and many bouquets of unique flowers had been brought by admirers to mark this special
occasion.

I walked in and quickly spotted my grandmother, and her younger brother Dan Lee.  I greeted her cousin Josie (Janice Wong’s aunt), and Janice’s cousin Rick Lum.  These are all relatives that I had known and grown up with since I was a little boy.  At the same table sat Janice’s mother
Mary, who had flown in from Saskatoon.  I find it hard to believe that I only met Janice two months ago, when she e-mailed me looking for an e-mail list for the Rev. Chan family  descendants.

Who else did I see?  Larry Wong, now president of the Chinese Canadian Historical Association of BC.  Larry has arranged to have Janice present her book, along with Paul Yee at the Vancouver Museum on ???.  Larry will also be part of a panel discussion on growing up with chinese restaurants at the West Vancouver Memorial Library on Oct 18, where Janice Wong will present a slide show.  I will also be part of the presentation sharing my experiences of Chinese Restaurants, and the importance of Chinese food, as I have developed haggis wun-tun
and the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners.

Janice’s book, CHOW, really is amazing.  It is filled with pictures and stories about her father, her family, the restaurant where she grew up in Prince Albert Saskatchewan.  Recipes alternate with
pictures and stories, giving a context to how and when certain dishes would be created and served, as well as eaten.  The recipes come alive, as you can read the stories and imagine all the family members sitting around you, or her father Dennis Wong in the kitchen.

I opened the book and found stories about Great-grand uncle Luke who went to Hollywood and became an actor, starring and supporting in movies with Clark Gable and Gary Cooper.  A story about Rev. Chan Yu Tan, reveals the name of his wife Wong Chiu Lin, whom nobody in my
family could remember except as “Tai-poh” (great-grandmother) or as Mrs. Chan.

Harvey Lowe the Yo-Yo King, is a friend of Dennis Wong, inviting Janice’s father to go to England with him, but Dennis’s parents forbade him, never imagining that Harvey Lowe will go on to tour the world and perform yo-yo tricks on the Smothers Brothers TV show, for Nat King
Cole, and for royalty.

At the end of the evening, Janice is still beaming widely.  She is still signing autographs when I pull her away to take a family picture, because Aunt Josie and my grandmother – both in the 90’s have to leave. 

“Have you met Toddish McWong, yet?” Janice asks a friend.  She introduces me to her friends and says, “My friend Robin has wanted to meet you for years.”  She adds later, “We will have to get a table and attend the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner this time.” 

I think to myself, that there will be ways to feature CHOW at the dinner – maybe as a raffle prize or silent auction prize.  Imagine winning a private Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner in your home with chefs Toddish McWong and Janice Wong, along with a copy of CHOW.

CHOW is an accessible recipe book, that is sure to be a Christmas gift for many people as it will be at home on the coffee table, next to the photo albums, or the kitchen.

pictures from the book launch and book review of chow to come….