Category Archives: Asian Canadian Cultural Events

FREE fun-raiser for Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre

We like Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre… Tom Chin has been a past co-host for Gung Haggis Fat Choy.  VACT created Asian Comedy Night, and Sex in Vancouver.  VACT specializes in being funny and creating fun.  Hope you can attend their January 26th event.  Check it out:


T’s FiRst-evEr Fund-raisEr is now a FREE FUN-raiser!

Gung Hay Fat Choy! Year of the Rat good fortune comes early to VACT – and you.

With tremendous support from our friends at ExplorASIAN, VACT is thrilled to announce that admission to this weekend’s incredible VACT Fundraiser event is now FREE*!

The Rat signals new beginnings so this is a great way to introduce VACT to your FRiEnds, old and nEw, and your family. Come to the Norman Rothstein Theatre on Saturday January 26 at 7:30 PM to jumpstart 2008 with us with an evening of guaranteed good laffs!

* However, we do suggest a donation at the door if you can… We’re always very appreciative of your support and we prove it with every show we produce!

WHAT?     VACT’S FUN-RAISER
WHEN?    Saturday, January 26, 2008, @ 7:30pm
WHERE?    Norman Rothstein Theatre, 950 West 41st Avenue (at Oak), Van.

HOW MUCH?    FREE! Or with a suggested donation $10
WHO?     Funny Man, Tom Chin
                Beautiful and Talented Actor, Olivia Cheng
                Standup Comedian, Jeffery Yu
                Elvis Tribute Artist, Aaron Elvis Wong
                Sketch Comedy Groups:
                5-Spice Girls
                Lick the Wax Tadpole
                SFUU MAN CHU
                The Yangtzers
                Caricature Artist, Geoffery Wong

WHY?        To See a FREE show and party with VACT performers, volunteers to help raise funds for VACT’s 2008 season! Here’s your chance to find out what VACT is all about!

Hurry! This event is free – and tickets are first-come-first-served at the door. So come early to avoid disappointment.

But you can reserve a seat by signing up for our free newsletter of VACT events – one name and working email address per ticket. Email your info to FUNraiser@vact.ca

All reserved tickets are held up to 7:15 PM, after which, they will be released to the public at the door.  For more information, visit www.vact.ca

Banana Boys back again at the Firehall Arts Centre

Banana Boys
Firehall Arts Centre

January 17 – February 9 , 2008


Last year Firehall Arts Centre brought back Urine Town the following year, after a smash initial run.  This year, they have brought back Banana Boys.  I saw the play last year and found it a hysterical, fast-paced, action-packed with both ideas and physical comedy.

Some of our female dragon boat team members said “Hey what about the Banana Girls?”  This play hits the nerves about Asian-Canadian identity.  What is it like to be considered a banana? Yellow on the outside but White on the inside.  No doubt many Canadian-born Asian Canadians are considered more and more banana with each passing generation, as they lose their mother tongue language, and traditional customs. 

But can you lose something you never really had? Often times this 5th generation Chinese-Canadian bristles at being asked “Where are you from?” 

On the other hand, the Asian traditionalists and new immigrants have often asked me “Are you Chinese?  You look Chinese… You should speak Chinese!”

This play addresses all these issues… the push and pull of living between cultures, while trying to establish your own identity.

This Leon Aureus play is based on the original book by Terry Woo.  Terry came to Vancouver last year for the rehearsals and the opening night performance, and was really pleased with the Firehall's production.  No wonder the play sold out its final nights and has been brought back for 2008.

The Quickie – New Asian Canadian play sneak preview excerpt featured at 2008 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner event



Another Gung Haggis Fat Choy exclusive!!!

TF Productions' playwright Grace Chin is back with another “set in Vancouver” play that resonates sexual and racial intercultural politics and social customs.   Last year  Grace and her writing partner Charlie Cho previewed their first play Twisting Fortunes at the 2007 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner which I reviewed Twisting Fortunes is just like “real dating.

This
time the writing is all Grace… and she will be performing a sneak
preview excerpt onstage with fellow actor Emily Chow, as characters
Susan Fan and Regina Cho.

What do women really want?  Did Robbie Burns have the answer?  We know that Robbie Burns LOVED the fair sex and wrote many many poems dedicated to them – the most famous being “My Luv is Like a Red Red Rose.”  But does a rose smell as sweet whether it is red, or white, or yellow?  And what about men and women…. do they smell as sweet whether they are white or yellow? 

Check out this spicy excerpt that will be presented January 27th at the 2008 Gung Haggis Fat Choy : Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.

Can you really know someone in five minutes? And is speed
dating a shortcut to happiness, or a slippery slope to heartache? TF
Productions, the team that brought the city its first “accidentally
Asian” romantic dramedy, Twisting Fortunes—which played to a sold-out
house at the Playwrights Theatre Centre on Granville Island last
year—presents The Quickie, a Vancouver-based, contemporary romantic
comedy that rips a strip out of speed dating, making whoopee, and
cultural collision. In all the wrong places.

The Quickie is directed by Ross Bragg (Producer, CBC) with
lighting design by Darren Boquist (Walking Fish Festival) from a script
by Grace Chin (Event Producer, Scripting Aloud), one half of the TF
Productions writing/producing team that includes Charlie Cho (Associate
Producer, CBC). TF Productions is grateful to receive in-kind support
from the CBC, Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre (VACT) and Scripting
Aloud. “A 'quickie' can mean a lot of things. This is a fun play about
dating in Vancouver, but it's not only about sex; it's about how
readily we judge people before we know who they are, about love at
first sight,” says Bragg.

In this take-out love story, Richard “The Rich” Gupta (Raahul
Singh) wants everything, while his buddy Darryl Chu (Alex Chu) just
wants the right woman. Susan Fan (Grace Chin) is willing to settle for
a man she can put up with, while her best friend Regina Cho (Emily
Chow) won't settle at all. The four meet their matches quickly enough
at the same speed dating event, yet find the follow-through far from
tidy. An amorous woman (Allison Riley), a party girl (Kit Koon), a
pretty boy (Phil Gurney) and a toothsome dentist (Victor Khong) further
complicate the “girl meets boy” dynamic.

The
Quickie is the second theatrical production, after 2007's Twisting
Fortunes, to be staged after being workshopped at Scripting Aloud, a
monthly pan-Asian Canadian scriptreading series active since 2005. A
short excerpt from The Quickie will be read live at the Tenth
Anniversary Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner event on January 27, 2008 at
Floata Chinese Restaurant, 400-180 Keefer Street, downtown Vancouver.

Performances:
Thurs. Feb. 7, Fri. Feb. 8, Sat. Feb. 9, 8 p.m.
Sun. Feb. 10, 2 p.m.
Fri. Feb. 15, Sat. Feb. 16, 8 p.m.
Venue: Playwrights Theatre Centre
(1398 Cartwright Street), Granville Island
Tickets: $15 at the door, $13 online via PayPal at www.scriptingaloud.ca/quickie

Media:
Charlie Cho
Co-Producer, TF Productions
778-288-5933

quickieplay@gmail.com

Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre Needs Your Support

Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre is hosting a GALA on Saturday. January 26. 
That's Gung Haggis Fat Choy eve!!!

I LOVE VACT… and have supported and attended many of their events over the years including Asian Comedy Night, Sex in Vancouver,  Exit the Dragon, Cowboy Versus Samaurai, and Bondage.

The line-up is incredible with actress Olivia Cheng as co-host with funnyman Tom Chin – who co-hosted Gung Haggis Fat Choy in 2005.  Then there is Jeffery Yu + Aaron Elvis Wong + sketch comedy troupes Lick the Wax Tadpole, 5-Spice, SFUU MAN CHU and The Yangtzers.

Check out the VACT press release:

For Immediate Release
MEDIA RELEASE

Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre
Needs Your Support
*FUNdraising GALA on Saturday, January 26, 2008

VANCOUVER, BC (January 7, 2008) – Buying tickets and telling your friends about the upcoming Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre FUNdraising Gala is a great way to support this incredible organization.  VACT has entertained this city's Asian Canadian community for over 9 years now with last summer’s hit of Cowboy Versus Samurai, its annual comedy nights to the unforgettable Sex in Vancouver Serial.  All funds raised will continue to help VACT produce its 2008 line-up of shows.

This year's entertaining FUNdraising Gala coming to the NORMAN ROTHSTEIN THEATRE on Saturday, January 26th, 2008 will feature:

* Standup Jeffery Yu, voted 2003's funniest comic with a day job
* Singer Aaron Elvis Wong, 2007 Elvis Tribute Artist winner at the Penticton Festival
* 4 sketch comedy groups from last year's Etch-YOUR-Sketch     SKETCHOFF!#$%!! –
    The Yangtzers, 5-Spice (formerly Slant Eyed Peas), SFUU MAN CHU, and
    Lick the Wax Tadpole.

Support Asian Canadian theatre! Come kick off the 2008 season! Door Prizes! Silent Auction! Desserts! Wine! Laughs! And more!

Hosted by the talented and beautiful Olivia Cheng, recently seen as controversial New York Times best selling author Iris Chang in the film Iris Chang:The Rape of Nanking and the very funny Tom Chin, MC for VACT’s annual Asian Comedy Night for the last 8 years.

For more information please visit http://www.vact.ca.

Event Details
VACT’s FUNdraising GALA
Norman Rothstein Theatre
950 West 41st Avenue, Vancouver

Performance Date and Showtime
Saturday, January 26, 2008
Show @ 7:30pm
Gala Reception to follow

Ticket prices In Advance  (include service charges)
$40 VIP Ticket:
     Reserved Section for VIP Seating
     VIP reception after the show
     Drink ticket
     Refreshments
     Special door prizes draw ticket
$25 Regular Ticket – Show only

TICKETS CAN BE PURCHASED in person at the Norman Rothstein Theatre, by phone (604) 257 -5111, or online at www.vact.ca

Ticket prices At Door  (cash only at door)
$45 – VIP Ticket
$30 – Regular Ticket
$20 – Reception Ticket

Please call for group rates 778.885.1973

For media access please contact Joyce Lam at the e-mail address or phone number listed below, no later than January 21, 2008.

VACT (Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre) aims to produce quality plays in which Asian-Canadians take on culturally or artistically significant roles. VACT works to dispel Asian stereotypes by producing leading and/or supporting roles where Asian-Canadians are depicted realistically in the performing arts.

-30-

For photos, interviews with cast and crew, and media passes, please contact:
Joyce Lam, Producer, Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre
T:  778-885-1973    E:  joyla@shaw.ca     W:  vact.ca

Vancouver Irish-Indo fusion music: Delhi2Dublin releases cd

Delhi2Dublin is having a cd release party!

Thursday December 13th, doors 9pm
The Red Room (398 Richards)

If you have ever seen spritely violinist Kytami perform with Delhi2Dublin's tabla drums and hip hop turntables – then you already now how much fun this Vancouver secret is!

I can say that I loved this group at their very first event for Vancouver's Celtic Fest.
Here's my review of that first event St. Paddy's Eve in Vancouver – What is a man in a kilt to do?

Organizer Tarun Nayar has set up a wonderful cd release party tonight.  He writes:

It should be a ridiculously good time. Come
check out this global fusion band, with a host of special guests, DJs
and dancers (http://www.delhi2dublin.com).
If you absolutely can't make the party tomorrow, CDs are now available
at Highlife, and will soon be available on line. A perfect x-mas gift
for those bhangra loving leprechauns in your life…

————————————————————————————

Beats Without Borders + A-Town
in association with Turner Music present:

The Delhi 2 Dublin CD Release Party

Thursday December 13th, doors 9pm
The Red Room (398 Richards)
tix 10$ advance @ Highlife, Zulu, Kamal; 15$ @ the door

http://www.beatswithoutborders.com

Eating Stories with the Chinese Canadian Historical Society – book launch

Tonight is the night I get to see my contributions in print for the book: Eating Stories A Chinese-Canadian and Aboriginal Potluck.

Brandy
will be on CBC Radio Friday morning with Rick Cluff, Morning Edition, at about
7:50AM.

Also some hot news from
Henry. 
Jerry Kwok has done a
wonderful job with the 8 min. teaser film on the workshop. It's downloadable at
http://www.instrcc.ubc.ca/CCHS/CCHS_workshop.wmv
.  

We are having an author's book launch tonight at the Rhizome Cafe on Broadway, before the official book launch at the Vancouver Museum Sunday Nov. 25th at the Vancouver Museum.

It was a wonderful pleasure to meet so many people interested in the writing process, and how to improve their own writing skills.  People were so interested in food, our workshop discussions often took forays into Chinese-Canadian history, memories of food and family, as well as cultural traditions and differences.

The first book, Tracing Roots, by the CCHS is especially memorable for me because my cousin Hayne Wai contributed stories about his mother and our uncles.  It was great to be able to take the book home as a gift to my parents, and show them the paragraphs featuring “Uncle James,” “Auntie Rose,” and my father  – “Uncle Bill” to my cousin or “Bok-Sook” (#8 Uncle).

Tonight all the writing workshop participants get to take home copies of the book.  I will get to show my parents my published contributions of photographs and paragraphs, which introduce the stories of how I developed my love for salmon, my creation of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, and how our dragon boat team cooks up it's own haggis won ton.  This anthology features 2 current (Dan Seto and myself – Todd Wong) and two past paddlers (Grace Chow and Meena Wong) from the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

Brandy
Lien-Worrall, our workshop leader and anthology editor, will be on CBC Radio Friday morning with Rick Cluff, Morning Edition, at about
7:50AM.

Also some hot news from
Henry. 
Jerry Kwok has done a
wonderful job with the 8 min. teaser film on the workshop. It's downloadable at
http://www.instrcc.ubc.ca/CCHS/CCHS_workshop.wmv
.  

FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact:  info@cchsbc.ca

http://www.cchsbc.ca

 

Meals and Memories Come
Alive in New Collection of Chinese Canadian and Aboriginal Food and Family
Stories

Groundbreaking work
captures authors’ personal stories of family and community

 

VANCOUVER – The
Chinese Canadian Historical Society (CCHS) is pleased to announce the
publication of Eating Stories: A Chinese
Canadian and Aboriginal Potluck
, edited by Brandy Liên Worrall and with
Foreword by Margaret Gallagher.

Following the
success of the first workshop and the resulting book publication, Finding Memories, Tracing Routes
(English and bilingual English-Chinese editions), CCHS held a second writing
workshop with the theme of “Food and Family”, which had nearly tripled in
size.  Twenty-three participants of
Chinese Canadian or Aboriginal backgrounds researched, discussed, and wrote
their memories of family gatherings, home cooking, restaurant outings, and
other stories cooked up by the smells, tastes, sounds, sights, and textures
that bring families and communities together. 
Together with their stories, 37 family recipes and over 170 images
complete the collection.  Additional
contributors include Imogene Lim, Lisa Moore, Janice Wong, and Henry Yu.

George
McWhirter, Vancouver’s Poet Laureate, says of this groundbreaking collection:
“I want one of those meals and to be in one of those families.  If I can’t be that in actuality, these
stories make me a guest of all, complete with recipes for me to try out on my
own, after.  These are more than
literate tellings of family food rituals and recipes; they are elegantly and
pungently related. . .In the process, these pieces become evocative literature
and unforgettable history.”

“This
collection is amazing in terms of the scope of experiences in these Canadian
communities, from the 1930s all the way to present day,” states editor and
workshop facilitator Brandy Liên Worrall. 
“Reading these stories is just like sitting in a Chinatown café eating
apple tarts in the 1960s or going to a barbecue at the reservation, catching
salmon and having a good time. This is really history you can eat.”

Writers include
Jacquie Adams, Jennifer Chan, Shirley Chan, Allan Cho, Grace Chow, Lilly Chow,
Betty Ho, George Jung, Jackie Lee-Son, Roy Mah, Gordy Mark, Amy Perrault, Dan
Seto, Bob Sung, Hayne Wai, Evelyn Wong, Larry Wong, Todd Wong, Harley A. Wylie,
May Yan-Mountain, Candace Yip, Gail Yip, and Ken Yip.  The Chinese Canadian Historical Society of BC would like to
acknowledge the support from the Provincial Capital Commission for the
participation of two First Nations authors in the writing workshop.

An “authors
reception” will be held at Rhizome Café (317 East Broadway) on Thursday, November 22, 2007, at 7:00 PM.  This intimate event will have a short
presentation and author readings.  Media
interest in this event, including requests for interviews with the authors,
should be directed to Nancy Fong, nancy.wy.fong@gmail.com.  Media attendance to this event is by RSVP
only.

The “Eating
Stories: A Chinese Canadian and Aboriginal Potluck” book launch, hosted by
CBC’s Margaret Gallagher, will be held at the Vancouver Museum on Sunday, November 25, 2007, at 4:00 PM.  Authors will read from the book, as well as
answer questions from the audience. 
In addition, New Voices: Chinese Canadian Narratives of
Post-1967 Diaspora,
a post-secondary student-initiated anthology of
literary and artistic works by Chinese Canadians living in the Lower Mainland,
will be also launched that day. This book is now available at http://www.newvoicesproject.org/
.

Copies of Eating
Stories
can be purchased at the authors reception and the launch.  For more information, bulk and educational
orders, and press kits, email nancy.wy.fong@gmail.com.  Copies may also be purchased online at http://www.lulu.com/cchsbc.  Proceeds go toward the “Edgar Wickberg
Scholarship for Chinese Canadian History.”

ABOUT the CHINESE CANADIAN
HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA

The
Chinese Canadian Historical Society of British Columbia (CCHSBC) is a broadly
based membership society with educational goals.  Our main objective is to bring out the untold history of ethnic
Chinese within the history of British Columbia.  We achieve this through sustained efforts at document
preservation, research, family and oral history promotion, public education
programmes, an active website, and many other initiatives.

MEDIA
CONTACT-ENGLISH AND CHINESE
[interviews &
press kits]: nancy.wy.fong@gmail.com

Eating Stories, a Chinese Canadian and Aboriginal Potluck: book launch Nov 25th at Vancouver Museum


Mayor Larry Campbell, Toddish McWong, Enid Campbell – photo Naoko Watanabe at the 2005 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.

Everybody loves stories about food.  Recipes or restaurants, people will reminisce over their favorite memories of food… how it was made… who made it… what their favorite dish is…

In January I took a writing workshop with the Chinese Historical Society of BC.  The theme was “Food and Family” and taught by Brandy Lien-Worrall. 

23
participants in a writing workshop wrote their memories of family
gatherings, home cooking, restaurant outings and other stories cooked
up by the smells, sounds, sights, and textures that bring families and
communities together.

The writers include myself – Todd Wong, the
creator of Gung Haggis Haggis Fat Choy, Dan Seto current Gung Haggis
dragonboat paddler, my cousin Hayne Wai – president of CCHS, + many friends such as: Meena Wong, George Jung and Gordie Mark – who were active during the Chinese head tax campaign, community activist Shirley Chan, Chinese-Canadian Military Museum curator Larry Wong and ex-Gung Haggis paddler Grace Chow and myself.

 

Dan Seto signing books at the CCHS 2006 book launch for Tracing Family Roots.
Dan Seto with noodles at Sha Lin Noodle House.

         

November, 25, Sunday, 4-6 PM. CCHS Book Launch,
Eating Stories, a Chinese Canadian and Aboriginal Potluck.

Vancouver Museum, 1110 Chestnut Street, Vancouver

CCHS is pleased to welcome everyone to the book launch for Eating
Stories: A Chinese Canadian and Aboriginal Potluck, edited by Brandy
Liên Worrall and with Foreword by Margaret Gallagher. Following the
success of the first workshop and the resulting book publication,
Finding Memories, Tracing Routes (English and bilingual English-Chinese
editions), CCHS held a second writing workshop with the theme of “Food
and Family.”

Twenty-three participants of Chinese Canadian or
Aboriginal backgrounds researched, discussed, and wrote their memories
of family gatherings, home cooking, restaurant outings, and other
stories cooked up by the smells, tastes, sounds, sights, and textures
that bring families and communities together. In addition to their
stories, there are 37 recipes and over 170 images. Writers include
Jacquie Adams, Jennifer Chan, Shirley Chan, Allan Cho, Grace Chow,
Lilly Chow, Betty Ho, George Jung, Jackie Lee-Son, Roy Mah, Gordy Mark,
Amy Perrault, Dan Seto, Bob Sung, Hayne Wai, Evelyn Wong, Larry Wong,
Todd Wong, Harley A. Wylie, May Yan-Mountain, Candace Yip, Gail Yip,
and Ken Yip. Additional contributors include Imogene Lim, Lisa Moore,
Janice Wong, and Henry Yu.  

Please join us for the official launch of this unique book and meet the authors! 

Bagpipes and Taiko drums… Look out for Uzume Taiko & Mearingstone Nov 23

Four bagpipers… four taiko drums… What could possibly happen?

I have seen Uzume Taiko perform with one bagpiper before.  When we were creating the CBC “Gung Haggis Fat Choy” television performance special, one of my ideas was to have a helicopter shoot of Burnaby Mountain with the SFU Bagpipe Band playing with the Uzume Taiko band.  But the show had a small budget, and the producer decided to keep the cultural fusion between Chinese and Scottish musicians. So, our culture-clash-fusion happened in the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens where Chinese flute player Jian Ming Pan bumped into the celtic band The Paperboys, accompanied by bagpiper Tim Fanning.

Uzume Taiko & Mearingstone's performance together should be a musically adventurous evening.  I am looking forward to it.  There is a long history of Japanese-Canadians and Scottish-Canadians mixing in Vancouver.  I have seen a picture of a little Japanese girl dressed up in kilt circa 1923.  Ron Macleod, Chair of SFU Scottish Studies program, tells me that he knew many Japanese-Canadians growing up in Tofino.  But then they disappeared in the 1942 internment.

Taiko drums and bagpipes?  Very Vancouver!

An Uzume Taiko Drum
Group Society presentation:


Uzume Taiko
& Mearingstone


Friday,
November 23, 2007 / 8:00pm


Norman Rothstein Theatre, 950 West 41st Avenue


************************************************************************************
Uzume_Mearingstone_Nov23_ecard.jpg

On Friday, November 23, two
amazing musical ensembles, Mearingstone and Uzume Taiko,
and guest shakuhachi and didgeridoo musician Alcvin Ramos, come
together in this concert at the Rothstein to perform individually and
collaboratively. This spectacular program, featuring highland pipes,
taiko drums, percussion, melodic instruments and choreographed movement,
will make for a mesmerizing evening played with passion and grace ­
guaranteed to stir emotions!


 


Mearingstone, a Vancouver-based ensemble of four highland pipers,
concocts an intense, formally intricate music, a world music analogue of
the Philip Glass Ensemble or Bang On a Can’s explorations of musical
density, variation, time, and ecstasy. Formed in 1988 to perform Michael
O’Neill’s Ur Og and Aji, Mearingstone is often augmented by other
instruments ­such as Japanese taiko and shakuhachi, Indian tabla, bass
clarinet, or even…pipe band drums. Mearingstone members are Sylvia
DeTar, Micah Babinski, Damien Burleigh
, and Michael O'Neill.
Together, within the apparently restricted expressive range of the
bagpipes, they bring forth a wide variety of moods ­ the results of a
passionate response to the unrealized potential of a deep tradition.


 


“…sheer sonic power of the four bagpipes …” Georgia
Straight


 


Since 1988, Uzume Taiko (Bonnie Soon, Jason Overy, Boyd Seiichi
Grealy, Naomi Kajiwara
, all on taiko and percussion) has enthralled
audiences at festivals, schools, concerts and special events across
Canada, the United States, Europe and Japan with its dynamic synthesis of
music, movement and theatre. Using a diverse collection of percussive and
melodic instruments as well as taiko drums, Uzume Taiko has developed a
dynamic fusion of old and new styles of drumming ­ bringing a vibrant,
contemporary sensibility to an ancient art. With the choreographed
physicality of martial arts, the heart-stopping pulse of the O-Daiko and
the rhythmic sensitivity of a jazz ensemble, the drummers of Uzume Taiko
create an exhilarating sensual experience.


 


[Uzume Taiko is] One of the most remarkable percussion ensembles ever to
hit the UK …


hugely inventive, ingenious and dangerously mesmerizing. Press and
Journal, Scotland


Diane Kadota Arts Management

tel: 604.683.8240 / fax: 604.683.7911


Mailing Address:

Suite 310 – 425 Carrall Street
Vancouver, BC V6B 6E3

Street/Courier Address:

Suite 310 – 23 West Pender Street
Vancouver, BC  V6B 1R3

www.dkam.ca

Falling for Grace: Chinese American Girl meets White-American Boy in New York City – Movie opens in Vancouver

Falling for Grace: Chinese-American Girl meets White-American Boy in New York City – Movie opens in Vancouver

The image “http://web.mac.com/fallingforgrace/FALLING_FOR_GRACE/Screenings_files/fFINALGRACE.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

I met Fay Ann Lee, director of Falling for Grace, at the Vancouver Asian Film Festival.  It was Sunday, the final day of VAFF, and Fay had premiered Falling for Grace the night before.  Fay is a stunning woman, and very articulate, telling me about how she made the film. 

She tells me that across the USA, they have been slowly building the audience market by market.  We talked about how Falling for Grace is really a romantic comedgy, not limited only to an Asian audience, likening it to the success that Joy Luck Club had playing to White audiences across America.

Fay was excited by the Vancouver audience, and was looking forward to it's Vancouver general release.  And hey – Margaret Cho is in the movie!  Vancouver audiences like Margaret Cho.

The following is from the Falling for Grace press package:

CANADIAN PREMIERE – Falling for Grace

THE CINEMARK TINSELTOWN
88 WEST PENDER, VANCOUVER, BC
604-806-0799

“THIS YEAR’S MOST CHARMING, FEEL-GOOD MOVIE” Elisa Parker, KVMR-FM

“THE NEXT MY BIG FAT GREEK WEDDING!” Scott Hoffman, MoviePictureFilm.com

“A CINEMATIC TAPESTRY OF ROMANCE AND LAUGHTER” Tim Plant, Metro Weekly, Washington, D.C.

featuring
Gale
Harold, Fay Ann Lee, Christine Baranski, Roger Rees, Stephanie March,
Ken Leung, Clem Cheung, Elizabeth Sung, Ato Essandoh, Lewis Black and
Margaret Cho

ASIAN AMERICAN FILM DIRECTOR DEFIES HOLLYWOOD RULES AND INSPIRES ANYONE WHO DARES TO DREAM

FAY ANN LEE – DEFYING ALL ODDS

Fay
Ann Lee has managed to not only write/direct/produce and star in a film
that's getting theatrical distribution across the U.S. but also
internationally. Lee's film, Falling For Grace, will have its Canadian
and International premiere at Cinemark's Tinseltown on Friday, November
16th. This would not be an extraordinary story if Falling For Grace has
Paramount or Focus Features behind it, but it becomes a remarkable
story when the distributor in this case is Fay Ann Lee herself.

According
to a NY Times article written in 2005, getting distribution for a film
for a first time filmmaker is about a 0.3% chance. So, getting into
Harvard, deemed one of the most competitive universities in the world
to enter, is far easier (10.8% acceptance rate for 2007). So what
exactly does it take for an Asian American woman to write, direct,
produce, act and now distribute a film not just in her own city, but
across the U.S. and internationally…on her own? It takes every ounce of
drive, tenacity, vision, talent and most of all, a heck of a lot of
courage.

MISS SAIGON ACTRESS WRITES/DIRECTS/PRODUCES AND STARS IN TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL'S SOLD OUT HIT

Lee
started her career as a Broadway actress in Miss Saigon which led to
principal roles in regional theaters all across the U.S. As she
ventured into the world of television and film, she quickly realized
how few good roles there were for Asian Americans. Instead of playing
victim and whining about how unfair things were for Asian actors, Lee
decided to do something about it . Her goal was to write a classic
romantic comedy that happens to feature an Asian female protagonist.

With
a plot that's inspired by Lee's random encounters with John F. Kennedy,
Jr. in the mid 1990's, Falling For Grace premiered at the 2006 Tribeca
Film Festival and was a sold out hit. The word of mouth was so good
that the festival actually added an extra screening. But a dose of
reality hit when studios did not pick it up. Word on the street –
studios did not know how to market a mainstream film without mainstream
stars – and having an Asian American protagonist certainly did not
help.

A UNIVERSAL STORY THAT'S GAINING INTEREST FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD

So
Lee's journey took a new turn – as Distributor. Instead of giving up
hope, Lee decided to test the film in two different cities, San
Francisco and Washington, D.C. The film tested so well with a
mainstream audience that theaters in nearby smaller cities started to
open up Falling For Grace (Sausalito, Grass Valley, Bryn Mawr,
Pennsylvania). And now other markets in the U.S. are requesting the
film – Florida, Arizona, Oregon, Maine, Texas etc. What's even more
unusual, is that other countries are hearing about this film from fans
who have seen the film and now want to open the film theatrically –
Austria, Ireland England are just a few that will most likely be
opening the film in 2008. The Falling For Grace website now receives
requests from as far as Australia, China, India, Japan, Hungary,
Germany, Italy and even Finland. Audiences all over the world are
starting to get the buzz on this little film that truly could.

UNIVERSITIES, INCLUDING UBC, ARE TAKING NOTE:
LEE AS ROLE MODEL FOR ANYONE WHO DARES TO DREAM

Lee's
achievement has been noted by some of the top colleges in the world.
Invitations have been extended by Yale, Johns Hopkins, Wharton, Temple,
Boston University, Columbia, Stanford and Berkeley for Lee to share her
remarkable story with future artists and leaders of America. Lee was
even invited to Tsinghua University in Beijing (the top university in
China) to screen the movie and speak to students. That the character in
the film, Grace Tang, achieves her goals is a comfort viewers return to
again and again. That Fay Ann Lee does could be the revelation that
forever changes the way students envision their own future. Fay Ann Lee
was a guest in Vancouver's own University of British Columbia, Simon
Fraser University and at the Emily Carr Institute.

AN ORDINARY PERSON WITH EXTRAORDINARY GOALS:
HEAR LEE'S STORY ON HOW IT'S ALL POSSIBLE

Fay
Ann Lee is a wonderful speaker with a dynamic personality. Perhaps the
President of the Yale Film Society sums it up the best:

“To
label Ms. Lee as an independent filmmaker is misleading. She does not
fit the mold of the starving artist, instead thriving as an ambitious,
Wharton-educated entrepreneur whose unorthodox approach to independent
filmmaking – one that has yielded a product with all the gloss of a big
studio flick – affords a rare angle on the world of filmmaking and what
it means to pursue your goals on your own terms.

On the one
hand, Ms. Lee and her film exude a comforting sense of optimism and
good humor; on the other hand, they speak to the importance of grit,
pragmatism, and hard-nosed determination. The balance of these values
is, essentially, what recommends Ms. Lee as a valuable guest.”

Like
so many people around the U.S. that have heard her speak, your guests
will not only find her charming, funny and intelligent, but most
importantly, she will inspire them to believe in themselves and go for
their dreams!

FAY ANN LEE WILL BE IN VANCOUVER
FROM THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15th TO SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18TH

TO REQUEST AN INTERVIEW OR INQUIRY, PLEASE CONTACT:
Sarah Elmaleh
Promotions Director
Falling For Grace
e-mail: fallingforgracepublicity@gmail.com
Phone: 609-439-6430

Official Website: http://fallingforgrace.com
Electronic Press Kit: http://web.mac.com/fallingforgrace

Iris Chang The Rape of Nanking: movie screenings are a benefit to BC Alpha

Iris Chang The Rape of Nanking: movie screenings are a benefit to BC Alpha

BC Alpha is an organization that has been a strong advocate both for the WW2 Korean comfort women, and the atrocities of the Japanese Army in China – including the rape of 80,000 Chinese women in Nanking.

Thekla Lit is president of BC Alpha.  I met her when she joined the Chinese Head Tax Redress campaign.  Thekla played an important role in speaking to Chinese Language media.  She is an avid human rights activist and respected by many people in the community.  Now she is continuing her campaign to raise awareness about “comfort women” and the “rape of Nanking.”

Check out Theckla's 2000 talk The Path to the Reconcilation and Peace for the New Millenium.

Iris Chang The Rape of Nanking is being shown in Vancouver as a series of benefit screenings for BC Alpha, at the Ridge Theatre, 3131 Arbutus St. (at 15th Avenue).


A film by Bill Spahic and Anne Pick

Iris Chang The Rape of Nanking is a moving and powerful
film on the story of Iris Chang who almost single-handedly brought this
forgotten Holocaust in Asia during WWII to the
awareness of the western world. Her book The
Rape of Nanking- the Forgotten Holocaust of WWII
made the best
seller list of New York Times for over 5 months when it was published in 1997. 
Until her untimely death in 2004, Iris had continued to be voice for the
voiceless victims, despite vicious vilifications from revisionists. 
Iris’ legacy for us all is the ray of hope, justice and peace.  This new
feature docudrama (105 min) in HD is a produced by Real sot Reel Productions
based in Toronto .

 

“You are going to find that we live in a world in
which international law has much less to do with actual justice than
international politics and money.  A world in which those who have power often
believe they are above the truth.  My greatest hope is that a few of you in
this auditorium today would actually serve as crusaders for truth, beauty and
justice in future.  People like that are needed to create a better world for
the next generations of humankind on this planet and to ensure the survival of
our civilization”
—- Quote of Iris Chang from the Movie

Venue: Ridge
Theatre – 3131 Arbutus
Street (at
15th Avenue )

Benefit Screenings:

November 15, 2007 (Thu)*
           7:15 pm $15  &
 VIP$50

November 17, 2007 (Sat)
*            4:00 pm
$15  &  VIP$50

November 22, 2007 (Thu)
            7:15 pm $15

November 25, 2007 (Sun)
            4:00 pm $15

November 25, 2007 (Sun)
            7:15 pm $15

*Iris
Chang
’s parents and actress Olivia Cheng
will be present for Q&A from the audience following the screenings on Nov
15 & 17.

Tickets
are available at Ridge Theatre &
www.alpha-canada.org/fundraiser
or call 604-247-0738

Let your friends know about this wonderful movie.  Attached please find the leaflets for more information. 
Proceeds from the benefit screenings of the movie go to support the works of
ALPHA such as:-

˙      Peace and
Reconciliation Study Tour for Canadian Teachers to Asia to learn about the
history and issues related to atrocities committed during WWII in
Asia

Working to get the
“Comfort Women” Motion 291 passed in the Canadian House of
Commons.  This Motion supports redress for former “comfort women”. 
Four survivors of Japan ’s
military sexual slavery from 4 different countries have been invited to bear
witness in Canada
in late November 2007.

Come to see a good movie and support ALPHA’s work! 
Please circulate this email to your contacts as broadly as possible.  Thank
you.

Thekla Lit
President of
B.C. ALPHA
Co-chair of Canada
ALPHA
(Association
for
Learning & Preserving the History of WWII in Asia)
www.alpha-canada.org
Phone:
604-436-3002 or 604-313-6000 (Cell)
Fax: 604-439-7738

P.S. For World Premiere of this movie in
Toronto , please visit
http://www.irischangstory.com/index.htm

image
Check out Motion 291 – a Canadian Parliamentary motion asking Japan to apologize to “comfort women” and provide redress.