Category Archives: Main Page

Gung HAGGIS Fat Choy – Thank yous… + this week's events!

GHFC2008 VF2_1896.JPG
Catherine Barr + “Toast to the Lassies” kilted male chorus

Gung Hay Fat Choy!!
Year of the Rat

Gung HAGGIS Fat Choy!!

Thank you to everybody for supporting Gung
Haggis Fat Choy fundraising dinner.

I am even now already planning for next year's dinner to
celebrate both: 250th Anniversary of Robbie Burns' birth + Chinese New
Year Eve… all on the same night!

Please
feel welcome to join our future events for Joy Kogawa House, Gung
Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team or Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop.

– Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWong”


Thank you for coming to the 10th Anniversary Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner at the Floata Restaurant.

Thank you for supporting our fundraiser event benefitting: Historic Joy Kogawa House
Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop & Ricepaper Magazine
Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

It
was our best event yet, the show flowed smoothly, the food was good
with Ginger crab, deep-fried haggis wonton appetizers + Scotch tastings
from Johnny Walker.

GHFC2008 VF2_1858.JPG
Ji-Rong Huang on erhu + Todd Wong on accordion

Please check out www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com for links to pictures for GHFC Dinner 2008 and upcoming events.

Big Big thank you to our performers:
Catherine Barr
Blackthorn – purchase their new cd here
Brave Waves
Ji-Rong Huang
Grace Chin & Emily Chow – The Quickie
Jim Wong-Chu
Shirley Chan and Bob Sung – Chinese Canadian Historical Society
Ann Marie Fleming – The Magical Life of Long Tack Sam
Charlie Cho – stage manager
Carl Schmidt – sound technician

Big big thank you to our sponsors and gift donors:
Diageo � distributors of Johnny Walker scotch
Firehall Arts Centre's Banana Boys
Vancouver Opera � Italian Girl in Algiers
Vancouver Opera – Voices of the Pacific Rim
Uzume Taiko

Arsenal Pulp Press
Harbour Publishing
Tradewind Books
Ann Marie Fleming – The Magical Life of Long Tack Sam
Janice Wong – Chow: From China to Canada
The Quickie – by TF Productions
Ricepaper Magazine subscriptions
Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop

North American Produce Sales � gift baskets

GHFC2008 VF2_1686.JPG
Joe McDonald, Jim McWilliams and Hareesh
Check out these happening events for
Chinese New Year

TUESDAY to Saturday FEB 5 – 9th
BANANA BOYS
Firehall Theatre
The fun play by Leon Aureas,
based on the Terry Woo novel
Back from a hit run last year… manic comedy and Asian identity… or Asian confusion.

FRIDAY Feb 7 – 16
THE QUICKIE
– Playwrights theatre centre on Granville Island
– this is the play excerpted at Gung Haggis dinner
– this is by the same group that did Twisting Fortunes last year

Friday and Saturday Feb 8 & 9
OOZOOMAY! UZUME TAIKO
with special guest Ben
Rogalsky
Japanese Taiko drums with a multi-instrumentalist who plays accordion along with mandolin, tenor banjo and Javanese gamelan

Norman Rothstein Theatre
950 West 41st Ave.

SUNDAY  FEBRUARY 10,
CHINATOWN NEW YEAR PARADE
12 noon

Place: Parade starts from the Millennium Gate (Pender and Taylor St.), winds through Pender, Gore and Keefer.
Remember to bring your camera along with family and friends!
Visit www.cbavancouver.ca for more info.
Poster

Flyer front / back


Sunday February 10

CHINESE NEW YEAR CONCERT
Dr. Sun Yat Sen Garden Courtyard
(part of the 2010 Cultural Olympiad)
10:30 -11:30
1:30 – 3:30

– featuring Silk Road Music
+ Uzume Taiko
+ Loretta Leung Dancers
+ many many more!!!

download the program: click here

http://www.silkroadmusic.ca/sitefiles/olympiad.htm

Tuesday February 12, 2008 at 10pm ET/PT on CBC Newsworld
TAILOR MADE

This is the CBC documentary about  Modernize Tailors (1903) brothers Bill and Jack Wong took over from their father in 1953.

Bill
Wong attended our Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner.  His son Steven Wong
paddles on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.  This is a
wonderful documentary that received a standing ovation at the Whistler
Film Festival

Bill and Jack's younger brother Milton Wong is one of Vancouver's
important figures, and former chancellor of SFU, and known as the
“grandfather of dragon boat racing” in Vancouver.

Thursday February 15th
FLAG DAY / ORDER of CANADA LUNCHEON
– featuring keynote speaker Dr. Sid Katz C.M,

Canadian Club Vancouver
Join
us for a special luncheon ceremony acknowledging Metro Vancouver's news
recipients of the Order of Canada, and celebrating the 43rd birthday of
the Maple Leaf flag.

Westin Bayshore
11:30 – 1:30pm
$65 for members and Order of Canada members
$80
info@canadianclubvancouver.ca
or call 604-601-5101

Dr. Sid Katz is the special speaker for the Canadian Club Vancouver's annual Flag Day / Order of Canada luncheon

I like Sid Katz…  He LOVES Gung Haggis Fat Choy!
Sid is the director and connector of many things….


Sid will be the key note speaker for the Canadian Club Vancouver's annual Flag Day / Order of Canada luncheon that will acknowledge all of Metro Vancouver's newest recipients of the Order of Canada.

Sid was appointed a member of the Order of Canada for his contributions to science awareness and education in Canada.  He also serves at the Excutive Director Community Affairs of the University of BC and the Chaiman of the Education Committee of Genome B.C.  Sid has served as Executive Director of Science World in BC and Director General and CEP of the Ontario Science Centre…

But my experience meeting Sid has been in his role of Director of the Chan Centre at UBC.  He loves arts and culture.  He once came to Gung Haggis Fat Choy, and read a verse of Burns with a yiddish accent. Yes… he has Jewish DNA.

The Flag Day / Order of Canada luncheon celebrates the newest appointees in Metro Vancouver, to the Order of Canada.  Margaret Gallagher of CBC Radio will host.  We like Margaret… it will be her third year hosting this event. 

First Nations welcome will be by Wes Nahannee.  Vancouver Bach Children's chorus will also perform.  This is the 43rd Birthday of the Canadian Maple Leaf Flag.

Thursday February 15th
FLAG DAY / ORDER of CANADA LUNCHEON
– featuring keynote speaker Dr. Sid Katz C.M,

Canadian Club Vancouver
Join
us for a special luncheon ceremony acknowledging Metro Vancouver's news
recipients of the Order of Canada, and celebrating the 43rd birthday of
the Maple Leaf flag.

Westin Bayshore
11:30 – 1:30pm
$65 for members and Order of Canada members
$80
info@canadianclubvancouver.ca
or call 604-601-5101

Tailor Made: cbc documentary about Chinatown's Modernize Tailors featuring brothers Bill and Jack Wong

Chinatown History is happening in front of our eyes!

Tuesday February 12, 2008 at 10pm ET/PT on CBC Newsworld

W
atch this CBC documentary about  Modernize Tailors (1903) – the last Chinese tailor shop in Vancouver Chinatown.

Bill Wong the tailor attended our 2008 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner.  His son Steven
paddles on our Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.  This is a
wonderful documentary that received a standing ovation at the Whistler
Film Festival.

Bill
and Jack's younger brother Milton Wong is one of Vancouver's important
figures, and former chancellor of SFU, and known as the “grandfather of
dragon boat racing” in Vancouver.  Both Milton and Steven were interviewed for a German public television documentary addressing multiculturalism in Vancouver.  The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team was featured too!
Check out: http://wstreaming.zdf.de/zdf/veryhigh/071219_toronto_vancouver.asx

My own family has known the Wongs for many year, my aunts and uncles went to school with many of the Wong family members.  My uncle Laddie works as a tailor at Modernize Tailors.

In 2004, both the “Wong Way” dragon boat team and the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team participated in a workshop to carve dragon boat heads at the Round House Community Centre.



Check the Modernize Tailors Website:
http://www.modernizetailors.blogspot.com/

Tuesday February 12, 2008 at 10pm ET/PT on CBC Newsworld
TAILOR MADE
A naïve apprentice and a hot, young master tailor are both interested in taking over a legendary tailor shop in Vancouver's Chinatown, but they'll have a hard time convincing the hard-working Wong brothers to retire.

Modernize Tailors opened in 1913, and in the 1950s Bill and Jack Wong
took over from their father. Over the years, they've created suits for
all occasions and for customers from all walks of life-from lumberjacks
and new immigrants to movie stars like Sean Connery and politicians
like Sam Sullivan, the Mayor of Vancouver.

Now, a newer
generation is looking to make their mark and take over the Modernize
Tailors legacy. But will the 85-year-old Wong Brothers ever stop
working?

Tailor Made was directed by Len Lee and Marsha
Newbery, and produced by Marsha Newbery of Realize Entertainment Inc.
It was commissioned by CBC Newsworld.

Banana Boys: everything you never wanted to know about Canadian born Asians

Theatre review: Banana Boys jabs and pokes fun at Asian-Canadian inferiority complex… 

Banana Boys
Firehall Arts Centre
directed by Donna Spencer
until February 9th.

Bananas are everywhere in Canada.  They are the Canadianized Asians that are yellow on the outside and white on the inside.  Terry Woo wrote the novel, and Leon Aureas turned it into the play being performed at the Firehall Arts Centre.

Everybody knows a Banana.  They straddle in between the Mother tongue culture trying to distance themselves from the FOB (Fresh Off the Boat) new immigrants who still speak with an accent, and they don't quite fit in with the Mainstream White-Canadian dominant culture – because everywhere they go, people still refer to them as Chinese because of their skin colour.

In a negative perspective, Bananas are sometimes accused of denying their racial and cultural heritage, by trying to be mainstream.  Former Governor General of Canada, Adrienne Clarkson, could be considered a Banana, even though she was born in Hong Kong and came to Canada at age three.  She doesn't even use her maiden name Poy anymore, keeping the name of her ex-husband political scientist Stephen Clarkson.

In a positive perspective, Bananas emphasize Canadian values, and the integration (or assimilation) of Chinese culture into becoming good Canadians of Chinese ancestry.  My friend David Wong calls himself a Banana, and like myself, is proud of his multigenerational Chinese-Canadian pioneer ancestry.

But in both the book and play, Banana Boys are college friends at the University of Waterloo.  They are called losers by one of their girlfriends.  And the most successful of them, is at odds with trying to distance himself from them and fit into the rising corporate class of new Chinese-Canadian immigrants.  They are 5 friends that each  represent many of the Asian-Canadian male stereotypes: unassertive romantically delusioned male, family values dominated number one son that goes to medical school, computer/math/tech geek, commerce faculty BMW or Accura Integra driving Chuppie (Chinese yuppie).

What is wrong with being a Banana?

Nothing… and everything!

The play opens with the 5 friends declaring their friendship in a prologue.  The real action starts when we discover that main character Rick Wong (Victor Mariano) has died by self-impalement of a piece of mirror into his heart.  The rest of the play explores each of the character's relationship to their “Banana-ness” and how they relate to each other.  Simon Hayakawa plays Michael Chow, the medical student who is in charge of documenting Rick Wong's life, struggling between following his bliss of becoming a writer or his family expectations of becoming a doctor.

It is a manic romp through many issues of being Asian-Canadian such as: dating white women or Chinese Women; following parental expectations for academic achievement; facing racial discrimination and cultural stereotypes; and trying to blend in with the mainstream or immigrant cultures.  Simon Hayama, Victor Mariano, Parnelli Parnes, and Vincent Tong, are all back for this return engagement after closing the 2007 Western Canada premiere with sold out shows.

The first act is fast paced with some brilliantly insightful and funny scenes. A scene addressing why Banana Boys are at the bottom of the relationship desirability ladder, begins as a mock battle scene with the boys playing soldiers fighting with machine guns, but transitions into a description of Venn diagrams explaining the intersections of Asian women with White men, but not White women or Asian women with Banana Boys.  It's a hilarious tribute to the mathematical geek stereotype of Asian males.

But this play goes beyond mere racial issues, it also tackles the tough issues of identity, drug addiction, friendship and learning to love oneself. 

Kudo's to Firehall Arts Centre for premiering this wonderful play to the West Coast, and having the strong belief in it to re-launch it a year later, in the wake of Firehall's remount of Urine Town.  Director Donna Spencer has tightened up the production, and the actors seem much more comfortable with the material.  The actors are all  amazing, as this play pushes them to over the top performances that exaggerate the issues to extremes.  Highlights include two of the actors dressing up with blonde wigs, as go-go dancing game show hostesses with Chinese accents, or dressed up in a big Sumo Wrestler outfit as Michael Chow's mother wrestling his personal ambitions against family expectations.  Metaphor is big in this play, and it hits you with big outrageous scenes and imagery.

When the play premiered last year, Terry Woo the Banana Boys author, came out for the opening and was happily amazed by the production.  The play had originally been workshopped in Toronto, but still translated well to Vancouver.  While the original material was written with a Chinese-Canadian specific culture in mind,
the actors come from a diverse Asian ancestry including Filipino, Chinese, Japanese and Hapa-Canadian.  The issues are universal enough to relate to all Asian-Canadian and Canadian immigrant community groups.

I was amazed by all the pop-cultural references and Asian Banana Boy cultural specifics such as dragon boat racing, driving Acura Integras, and drinking Coca-cola – which I do personally in my life.  As a 5th generational Chinese Canadian, am I that much of a Banana Boy?  Or are some of these issues relatable to all Canadians?  Judging from the laughter in the audience, lots of people, White or Asian, were enjoying the play.

Gung Haggis Fat Choy in Province Newspaper today for Chinese New Year

Happy Chinese New Year – Gung Hay Fat Choy!

…or should that be Gung Haggis Fat Choy ?

Province
Newspaper reporter Cheryl Chan interviewed me about the multiculturalism of Chinese Lunar
New Year, and about my recent Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese
New Year dinner.  I told her about how I have been asked to speak at Elementary schools to help them express the Lunar New Year as a multicultural event, that all cultures can share in – not just Chinese New Year, Tibetan Losar, or Vietnamese Tet celebrations.

Gee… like everybody can be Irish for St. Patrick's Day, or everybody
can be Scottish for Robbie Burns Day, or all Canadians can celebrate
Chinese New Year…. definitely!!!

Then she asked what I was up to for Chinese New Year's Day…  I told her going to see Banana Boys Play… and Kilts Night at Doolin's Irish Pub. The writer included it in a list of events for Chinese New Year.

But darn… she didn't use any of my quotes about inter-culturalism expressed in a dragon boat team!

I am going to spend some time with my Hapa-Canadian niece and nephew today, then go see bagpiper friend Joe McDonald, who has survived 9 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinners, and a dragboat float in the 1st Vancouver St. Patrick's Day parade. 

Some of our Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team members and Kilts Night clan will be having Chinese New Year dinner at Hon's before they head over to Doolin's Irish Pub, Nelson and Granville for Kilts Night and to watch the hockey game before the Halifax Wharf Rats start playing.   I am going to see the 7:30pm Banana Boys show at the Firehall Arts Centre- but should make Kilts Night around 9:30 to 10pm. 

Slainte, Todd

Chinese New Year joins Canadian mainstream

Communities come together in parade

Cheryl Chan, The Province

Published: Thursday, February 07, 2008

The Year of the Rat kicks off today — not with a squeak but with a mighty cross-cultural roar.
Chinese
New Year, the most important holiday on the Chinese lunar calendar, has
become a reason for many Canadians, including those of non-Chinese
heritage, to eat, drink and make merry.
“It's becoming, in
that great way, a Canadian tradition,” said Todd Wong, a
fifth-generation Chinese-Canadian. “It's for all cultures to celebrate,
not just Chinese or Asians.”
Join the Rat Pack: It'll be a good year for Rats, especially if you're looking for a job. Roosters? Well, you could be facing problems.Sherman Tai predicts the year ahead, B6-7 n The changing taste of Chinese food, B8-9View Larger Image View Larger Image

Join
the Rat Pack: It'll be a good year for Rats, especially if you're
looking for a job. Roosters? Well, you could be facing problems.Sherman
Tai predicts the year ahead, B6-7 n The changing taste of Chinese food,
B8-9

Illustration, Nick Murphy — the Province

More pictures:


Wong,
47, recently hosted Gung Haggis Fat Choy, an annual salute to Chinese
New Year and Robbie Burns Day, where bagpipes serenaded banquet diners
munching on hybrid delicacies such as a haggis lettuce wrap.
He
said Chinese New Year's popularity is due not only to the large number
of Chinese immigrants but the interracial friendships and marriages
that have introduced the family-oriented holiday to mainstream
Canadians.
“There's a heck of a
lot of white people out there learning about Chinese New Year because
their grandkids are half-Chinese,” said Wong, whose maternal cousins
all married non-Chinese.
Even
traditional offerings have taken on a cross-cultural flavour. The
annual Chinese New Year parade, expected to draw more than 600,000
spectators from across Metro Vancouver, is an example of
multiculturalism at work.
More
than 2,000 participants, including bhangra dancers, marching bands,
bagpipers, traditional dragon- and lion-dance teams and a unicorn-dance
team, will make their way on foot and floats through Chinatown starting
at the Millennium Gate at noon on Sunday.
“At
the parade, you see multiculturalism when the fabric of communities in
Vancouver come together,” said Kenneth Tung, head of Success, one of
the event's organizers.
“It's a multicultural
parade in a culture-specific setting,” adds Wong, who says he'll be attending the festivities.
Other celebrations:
– Thursday: The Vancouver Police Department's lion-dance team performs at Vancouver City Hall at noon.
– Thursday night: Kilts Night at Doolin's Irish Pub. Free pint of Guinness if you wear a kilt.
– Friday through Sunday: Chinese New Year celebration at International Village, 88 West Pender St.

Chinese New Year week… Gung Haggis Fat Choy style

It's Chinese New Year week….

here are some FUN events this week…. after recovery from Gung Haggis Fat Choy Chinese Robbie Burns Dinner recovery….

Tuesday February 5, 2008 – 6:00 PM

CITY COOKS with Simi Sara

Channel 13 in Metro Vancouver
Our cooking dragon boat chef Dan Seto (Chinese Canadian Historical Society of B.C.)

  1. Lotus Root Soup
  2. Steamed Pork with Salt Fish
  3. Green Beans with Fooyi Bean Cake

Check out
TUESDAY to Saturday FEB 5 – 9th
BANANA BOYS
Firehall Theatre
The fun play by Leon Aureas, based on the Terry Woo novel
Back from a hit run last year… manic comedy and Asian identity… or Asian confusion.

THURSDAY Feb 7
CHINESE NEW YEAR DAY
– Kilts Night at Doolin's Irish Pub
FREE pint of Guinness if you wear a kilt.
8:00pm – Raphael to greet you.
Hockey game starts a 7:00 pm – expect music by Halifax Wharf Rats to begin afterwards around 9:30

FRIDAY Feb 7 – 16
THE QUICKIE
– Playwrights theatre centre on Granville Island
– this is the play excerpted at Gung Haggis dinner
– this is by the same group that did Twisting Fortunes last year

purchase tickets online via PayPal at www.scriptingaloud.ca/quickie.

Tickets
are selling fast, especially for the Friday, February 8 show.  Don't
miss it. Last year, seats sold out 36 hours in advance.

Friday and Saturday Feb 9 & 10
OOZOOMAY! UZUME TAIKO
with special guest Ben Rogalsky
Japanese Taiko drums with a multi-instrumentalist who plays accordion along with mandolin, tenor banjo and Javanese gamelan  – how can Gung Haggis not resist???

Norman Rothstein Theatre
950 West 41st Ave.

SUNDAY  FEBRUARY 10,
CHINATOWN
NEW YEAR PARADE

12 noon

Place: Parade starts from the Millennium Gate (Pender
and Taylor St.), winds through Pender, Gore and Keefer.


Remember to bring your camera along with family and friends!


Visit
www.cbavancouver.ca
for more info.

Poster


Flyer front
/ back


Sunday February 10

CHINESE NEW YEAR CONCERT
Dr. Sun Yat Sen Garden Courtyard
(part of the 2010 Cultural Olympiad)
10:30 -11:30
1:30 – 3:30

– featuring Silk Road Music
+ Uzume Taiko
+ Loretta Leung Dancers
+ many many more!!!

download the program: click here

http://www.silkroadmusic.ca/sitefiles/olympiad.htm

DEAD SERIOUS
at CHAPEL ARTS
(CANCELLED due to illness)

2:30pm
featuring soprano Heather Pawsey and pianist Rachel Iwassa

but see them:

Friday, February 15 concert of DEAD Serious 
7:30 p.m. at Vancouver Memorial Services and Crematorium / Hamilton-Harron Funeral
Home, 5390 Fraser Street) will TAKE PLACE AS SCHEDULED.
If you would like to make reservations,
please call 604-325-7441.

Burnaby Newsleader: We are the Qayqayt – interview with Rhonda Larrabee

This is a wonderful story about my mother's cousin, Rhonda Larrabee.  Rhonda is both Chinese and First Nations. Her father was my grandmother's elder brother.  Rhonda has been the subject of the NFB documentary “Tribe of One” and the recent CTV documentary

http://www.bclocalnews.com/greater_vancouver/burnabynewsleader/news/14442982.html


We are the Qayqayt

By Michael McQuillan –
January 25, 2008


BE0119_NativeHuge_3C_080126.jpg


Rhonda Larabee is the
chief of the New Westminster band, which now has about 50 members. They
hope to get back some of their ancestoral lands which were taken almost
100 years ago. MARIO BARTEL NEWSLEADER

Rhonda
Larrabee was researching at the New Westminster Public Library when she
came across a book describing the history of New Westminster.

Published early in the 19th Century, it showed its age—not just the dusty old cover but the words inside.

“Dirty heathen cur dogs” read a passage describing New Westminster’s native population.

Larrabee was furious as she read the words.

She
slammed the book down then flung it across the room. A librarian,
hearing the outburst, threatened to throw her out of the library.

“I’m not leaving,” Larrabee replied.

Larrabee had been exploring her roots, trying to understand where she came from.

For the first 24 years of her life, she didn’t even know she was First Nations.

But
once she found out, it became her quest to put together the past and
assemble the pieces for a better future for herself—and for her people.

She
was in the library researching the history of New Westminster’s native
band, the Qayqayt (KEE-Kite). She discovered few details, because
little information is available—it’s almost as if they never existed.

read more of the article, click here:  We are the Qayqayt

Italian Girl delights opera audience – but BC's best kept secret is bass Randall Jakobsh as Mustafa


Italian Girl in Algiers

Vancouver Opera


Queen Elizabeth Theatre


January 26, 29. 31 and February 2nd 2008

An Italian girl in a Muslim harem?  A Korean soprano wife singing in
Italian to her German-Canadian bass husband?  Opera is so very
multicultural, and Vancouver Opera's new production of Rossini's
“Italian Girl in Algiers” is a delight!

Can you imagine anything crazier than one of the opera's stars, Randall Jakobsh playing Mustafa, dancing around “naked” behind a towel, or being “powdered” by his servants while singing to a beautiful Rossini score?

I have always loved Rossini's music.  Many generations have grown up
identifying Rossini's “William Tell Overture” as “The Lone Ranger
Theme” – the musicality burned into our brains.  The Italian
Girl in Algiers also has many memorable passages that dusted off my
early memories of listening to one of the essential classical music
collections – Rossini Overtures.

Vancouver Opera's new production of “Italian Girl In Algiers”
originally presented in 1813, is now set during the roaring '20's, a
time of mad-cap comedy described as Emily Earhart meets the Marx
Brothers.  This sets the stage for the audience to accept the absurd
comedic plots and situations that are to come, and all accompanied by a
gorgeous Rossini musical score.

Now imagine sitting in the audience, when a 1920's bi-plane flies over
your head, then sputters, crash landing on stage of the Queen Elizabeth
Theatre.  It actually happens… and the audience claps enthusiastically!

The opera opens with a super huge gigantic book on stage, that opens up to reveal the set design – the palace of the Governor of Algiers.  Just like a bedtime story,  the message is this: don't take this opera seriously… sit back and enjoy the story.

The Governor Mustafa has grown tired of  his wife Elvira, and thinks that an exotic Italian girl will bring him happiness.  He decides to send his wife off with Lindoro, an Italian slave at his court captured only 3 months earlier by Mustafa's pirates.  Suddenly, an airplane crashes, Isabella is looking for her lost love Lindoro.  The pirates take this “Italian Girl” to Mustafa who is instantly infatuated with Isabella, who is shocked to see her beloved Lindoro, who is supposedly being married off to Elvira, who is still in love with Mustafa. This is a comedy of love infatuations and a battle of the sexes begins.  Oh… and then there is Taddeo, the would-be Italian suitor of Isabella, during Lindor's absence. He accompanied Isabella in her search for Lindoro… what a stand up guy! Not!

Soprano Sandra Piques Eddy is perfect as a Katherine Hepburnish, pants wearing, independent woman named Isabella looking for her lost love Lindora, played by lyric tenor John Tessier, who was captured by pirates. Their voices are wonderful.  But despite this ensemble cast, Eddy clearly shines the brightest, as she loves her role as an Isabella who can tame men with a look or a wave.

Randall Jakobsh plays Mustafa, the governor of Algiers, who is instantly smitten by the vivaciously exotic Isabella. This is his debut performance with the Vancouver Opera, and his first appearance as Mustafa.  It's a perfect fit, and expect Jakobsh to be getting calls from around the world for this Rossini play as he brings so much life into a this hilarious role.

Sookhyung Park, plays Elvira the Governor's wife that he is handing her over to Lindora, to make way for this new “Italian Girl” to be added to his harem.  The Korean born Park, balances both her anger and love for Mustafa, and learns from Isabella what it takes to properly “train a husband.”

Rounding out the cast is Hugh Russell as Taddeo, who brings additional comic relief.  Mustafa wants to impress Isabella, and so he names Taddeo as Grand Kaimakan (a lieutenant position amongst his followers).  Taddeo meanwhile does everything he can to thwart Mustafa's advances on Isabella.

But who is Randall Jakobsh, and why should BC opera goers be proud of him?

Imagine a younger, sexier, slimmer Ben Heppner singing Bass – and born and rasied in Vernon BC.  This is Randall.

If there ever was a role made for Randall Jakobsh to demonstrate his abilities, this might be it.  It allows Randall to be charming and sexy, but this also pushes him in his first bufo-comedy role.  He shared with me that this is the hardest role he has ever done, and he was quite anxious about his Vancouver Opera debut when I talked with him on Boxing Day in Vernon. 

But after watching Jakobsh on stage in not much more than a “towel” while singing in a “bath” while the audience laughed at the unexpected rubber ducky, we can all be assured that Randall's star is rising.  He was calm, and looked to be having fun in his role, even when not singing.  He asked what we thought of his “dancing bear” as he hammed it up on stage singing about his infatuation with the Italian Girl, while his slaves powdered him and washed him “behind the towel.”  I had to laugh because when Randall had come over to the house to visit in Vernon, it had been us sitting in the hot tub, and inviting him to come join us.

Pictures from 2008 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner

Our Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner always great for incredible images and memorable moments.  Joe McDonald and Todd Wong perform the “Haggis Rap”, Catherine Barr leads a kilted male chorus in a “Toast to the Lassies”, celtic band Blackthorn perfrom on stage…

GHFC2008 VF2_1709.JPGJoe McDonald “raps” and slices the haggis

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner 2008 is
Vancouver's 10th annual East/West
multicultural Fusion banquet for 400
people.

Photos are from 27 Jan 2008.

GHFC2008 VF2_1253.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1309.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1387.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1420.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1542.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1620.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1638.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1686.JPG
GHFC2008 VF2_1688.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1709.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1792.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1829.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1858.JPGGHFC2008 VF2_1896.JPG

a) Children's lion head mask
b) Host and creator of Gung Haggis Fat Choy – Todd Wong aka “Toddish McWong”
c) Co-host Catherine Barr and Todd auction off bottles of Johnny Walker Red Label scotch
d) All the performers sing O Canada
e) Hot & Sour soup – vegetarian style
f) Ginger crab
g) Blackthorn celtic band
h) Joe McDonald + Jim McWilliams bagpipe the haggis, while Hareesh drums the dohl drum.
i) Hareesh drums for Vancouver mayor Sam Sullivan
j) Joe Mcdonald “raps” and slices the haggis.
k) some of the many tasty and savoury dishes including the haggis lettuce wrap.
l) Grace Chin and Jim Wong-Chu read his poem “Recipe for Tea” – a Gung Haggis favorite
m) Ji-Rong Huang and Todd Wong perform “The Horse Race” on erhu and accordion
n) Catherine Barr poses with her kilted male chorus from the “Toast to the Lassies”

Metro News posts story and picture of Gung Haggis Fat Choy


Metro News – Rafe Arnott

Metro News Vancouver posts a story Mixing it up with haggis won tons by Andrea Woo, and a picture by Rafe Arnott.

Andrea and Rafe showed up at Floata Restaurant, as I was up to my eyeballs in challenges as we prepared the 2008 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner for a 5:00 opening.  They were very patient waiting for me to give some direction to our volunteers from the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team, then change into my kilt, and my red vest with chinese dragons. 

Andre is Chinese… and maybe Rafe is Scottish… 

Rafe took an amazing picture with the Scottish flag in the background, and me holding a small Chinese lion head mask.  And… I am sporting a goatee beard and moustache.  One of the few times I have ever had a goattee/moustache and dared to wear it in public.  I think it makes me look more Scottish d'ya ken?