Category Archives: Upcoming Events

LIFE of PAPER – Origami storytelling raised to a new level

Imagine if all sets, costumes and props were made of paper! 

Imagine if giant origami creations were made by Joseph Wu – internationally renowned Origrami master!
Imagine if the music was created live on stage by the wonderful Orchid ensemble!

Come down to the Roundhouse theatre for an exciting and amazing show about the history of paper and paperfolding.  Created by Pangaea Arts – “an intercultural, interdisciplinary world arts organization based in
Vancouver. Pangaea Arts was formed to promote cultural interaction and
the exchange of ideas between diverse communities and to introduce
Canadian audiences to performance traditions from around the world.”

This theatrical event blends together many different forms of theatre and storytelling.  It opens with a monologue on origami paperfolding –  about paper and a square, and how everything begins from the square. 

The next scene is set during the Han dynasty and is told with Chinese opera comic style.  The invention of paper is revealed.

Paper travels eastward through Asia from China to Korea to Japan, and westward through the Middle East to Europe.   Paper puppets are used to tell story.  And Paper Shadow puppets are also used.

A hilarious scene is set in Victorian England, with all the costumes and props such as glasses and tea pot made of paper.

But the two most fascinating elements are the wonderful paper creations used in each scene and the accompanying music by Orchid Ensemble.  This intercultural music ensemble can play the style of music from everywhere in the world that paper has had an impact.  From ancicent China and Japan, to the Middle East, to Africa, Spain, Germany, England, and North America.  Watching the Orchid Ensemble provide  the many sound effects in additional to the rich musical tapestry is amazing.  There are really an important part of the show.

But the real “Wow” factor are the giant size origami figures revealed at the end of the show.  They are left on stage for the audience to come down and take their pictures beside them.

This was a very challenging concept to pull together.  I talked briefly with Origami Master Joseph Wu prior to the show, while he was putting the finishing touches on origami cranes that were to be used in the show.  He said that while everybody agreed on the concepts – they all had their own language: Theatre language, music language and origami language.  Not to mention that the performance itself uses English, Chinese, Japanese, a middle Eastern language, plus a very thick German accented English.  Or that Japanese Noh theatre finds itself right beside puppetry, and Western theatre styles.

THE LIFE OF PAPER – LIVE THEATRE

Life of PaperMay 23 – Jun 1, Tue – Sat: 8:00pm

2:00pm Matinees: Sun, May 25; Wed, May 28;


and Sun, June 1


2-for-1 Preview Fri, May 23


Performance Centre


Click for Tickets: $22, students/seniors $18

Breathtaking origami sculptures, costumes, props, set, masks, puppets,
and musical instruments all will be made of paper. Pangaea Arts
combines Eastern and Western theatre styles as they collaborate with
world-renowned origami artist Joseph Wu, composer Judy Specht,
world-music group Orchid Ensemble, performers Yayoi Hirano, Ling He,
Lenard Stanga and Tomoko Hanawa, set and light designer John Webber,
and director Heidi Specht.

LIFE OF PAPER

Life of Paper PosterAn exhibition and performance that celebrate the creative potential of paper.
A Roundhouse Partnership

Exhibition Hall and Performance Centre


THE LIFE OF PAPER – ORIGAMI EXHIBITION


Wed, May 21 – Sun, Jun 1


11:00am – 9:00pm weekdays


11:00am-4:30pm weekends


Exhibition Hall


All ages, FREE

Join us for an exhibition of the amazing possibilities of paper,
featuring the work of world-renowned origami artist Joseph Wu. The
public is also invited to contribute to two enormous paper works of
art. This is an opportunity to collaborate with Joseph and other
origami experts as they create a massive interactive origami display,
which will grow throughout the week as the public adds their
contributions, with help from members of PALM (Paperfolders Around the
Lower Mainland). Whether you’re a complete beginner, or an origami
expert, you are welcome to contribute your own artwork, made on-site,
as you learn about origami, paper-making, and recycling. All ages are
welcome.

LIFE OF PAPER EVENTS

LIVE PAPER ORCHESTRA “HAPPENING”

Sun, May 25, 4:00pm – 5:00pm


Performance Centre


Adults and Teens, FREE

The general public is invited to participate in this amazing musical
event. Join our artistic team in the performance centre and become part
of a large “paper orchestra”, using instruments made entirely of paper,
and perform an orchestral piece written for this event by Life of Paper
composer Judy Specht. This “happening” will be recorded for later
broadcast. Send an email to admin@pangaea-arts.com to reserve your spot. www.ticketstonight.com or at the door.

STORIGAMI/ORIGAMI TIME WORKSHOPS

Sat May 24 or Sun. May 25, 1:00pm – 2:00pm


Exhibition Hall


For families, ages 6 to adult.


FREE but please register.

Come to one of these workshops and learn to create origami pieces
step-by-step, and through ‘storigami’, a form of storytelling that uses
paper folding. Featuring origami storyteller Yukiko Tosa and origami
artist Lisa David, members of PALM (Paperfolders Around the Lower
Mainland).

CLOSING RECEPTION: LIFE OF PAPER – ORIGAMI EXHIBITION

Sat. May 31, 1:00pm – 4:00pm

Bring the family for a celebration of community spirit and your
contribution to the Life of Paper. See how the installation has grown
as the public has added origami over ten days!

Asian Comedy Night returns – May 9 & 10 at the Roundhouse


9th Annual Asian Comedy Night:

Etch-YOUR-Sketch 2!
MAY 9 - Friday - 8pm

SKETCHOFF!#$%!! People's Choys Award
MAY 10 - Saturday - 8pm


Roundhouse Community Theatre
181 Roundhouse Mews, Vancouver
www.roundhouse.ca

Asian Comedy Night is always funny. Lots of stereotype bashing, lots of Asian-type jokes you
can relate to, or grew up with.

Host Tom
Chin has also performed at the 2005 Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner event.


From the explorASIAN website:
Come CHEER the Etch-Your-Sketchers 2 on!
Wild, ZANY, Gut-aching, peeing in pants – FUNNY! Ask anyone from the 2007 competition.
Celebrity Judges award the coveted Vancouver Rice Bowl to one team only – Winner takes all!
The second night, teams are judged by the audience – measured by YOUR applause.
The highest decibel readings take 1st, 2nd and 3rd prize.
We have 9 teams entered this year to battle it out for the coveted Vancouver Rice Bowl
and PEOPLE's CHOYS Award. 3 brand new teams with 6 returning teams promise an evening
of hilarity, camaraderie and just plain ol' fun and laughter!

Celebrity judges include: Ms. Lainey Lui, eTalk Entertainment Reporter and founder
of laineygossip.com; Ms. Lauren Toyota, Host and Segment Producer with MuchMusic's Going Coastal;
and Edmond Wong, local actor “The Professor” on CBC’s Dragon Boys.
This is an event – you don't want to miss!

Tickets: $15 in advance, $20 at door – plus service charges.
Tickets at the Roundhouse Community Centre or by phone at 604.713.1800 or online at www.vact.ca
Group rates, please call 778.885.1973





Good Asian Drivers Tour comes to Vancouver and Richmond

There are good Asian drivers and bad Asian drivers…. just like good and bad non-Asian drivers.

Vancouver is known for its large Asian population, and Richmond even has more Asians, and lots of “Rice Rocket” drag racing. 

But what happens when you mix social commentary with busting stereotypes of Asian drivers?

Melissa Li and Kit Yan's “The Good Asian Drivers Tour” is one of the featured performances for the 2008 explorASIAN festival, celebrating Asian Heritage Month in Metro Vancouver.

The following is from the explorASIAN website:


CANADIAN PREMIERE

“If
you’re gay, bisexual, transgendered, Asian, queer, an artist, a poet, a
performer, or if you’re just a supporting ally, then come out and enjoy
our show!” – Melissa & Kit

Melissa Li is a singer-songwriter
who has been performing in the Boston area in the United States for
over 8 years. She and her tour partner, nationally recognized
transgendered slam poet Kit Yan, are going on a cross-country road tour
this spring and summer, lovingly dubbed “The Good Asian Drivers Tour”.

Together,
this radical duo will traverse the United States and cut across four
different time zones, at least 30 states and over 20 major cities,
including two cities in Canada.

They deliver honest and personal
stories through their music and poetry about being queer
Asian-Americans, while proving to the nation that they are indeed good,
if not excellent, drivers. They’re so cute you might just want to adopt
them.

The social impact will be tremendous, especially in areas
of the United States where the voices of these under-represented groups
are not often heard. In addition, the tour strives to inspire youth and
provoke dialogue on gay rights, transgendered issues, feminism, and the
marginalization of minorities.

Richmond and Vancouver are the only two Canadian stops on their North American tour. Don't miss this show!

Q&A after the show.

http://www.goodasiandrivers.com/

Raymond Louie hosts Wayson Choy reading

Wayson Choy Reads for Raymond Louie

Raymond Louie is hosting celebrated author Wayson Choy for a special reading in support of Raymond’s campaign for mayor.

When: April 28, 7-9PM
Where: Mekong Restaurant, 1414 Commercial Dr.
Admission: Free

I have known both Wayson Choy and Raymond Louie for a number of years.  I find them both very genuine people, dedicated to their communities.  I first met Wayson while I was on the inaugural One Book One Vancouver committee.  I first met Raymond while his wife was on the Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Society.  And we all worked wonderfully together.

The Mekong Restaurant plays a special role in Wayson's forthcoming new book, “Not Yet.”  It will be the sequel to his first critically acclaimed memoirs book “Paper Shadows.”

Wayson says this about Raymond Louie:

“Raymond emerges from the world I’ve described in my stories. His
parents came here with next to nothing, and he worked his way up and
proved himself again and again. He understands the struggles immigrants
face because he’s been there. His success is an amazing Canadian story.
Fortunately, there are still chapters yet to be written, and I would
trust Raymond to invest his integrity and his wisdom of the past to
secure in those pages a just and equal future for all.

Wayson Choy, author of “The Jade Peony”

Music for a New World special concert April 20 at Centennial Theatre in North Vancouver

This sounds like an incredible concert!  World Music in a bottle marked Vancouver World Music Collective.

And I know and have performed with many of the featured musicians.  Silk Road Music's Qiu Xia He and Andre Thibault have performed at Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner & First Night events since 2004.  In the past few years I have become a big fan or Orchid Ensemble's Lan Tung, as she plays her erhu.

Pepe Danza plays with Andre and Qiu Xia in the group Joutou which mixes French Canadian and Celtic with Chinese music styles.  I love Amy Stephen's accordion playing with Mad Pudding. And then add in all the other brilliant performers and styles from all over the world such as Khac Chi's Vietnamese stylings or the latin and african rhythms of their fellow World Music Collective musicians.

Too bad, I can't skip dragon boat practice on Sunday to attend.  I'd be there otherwise!

newworld.jpg

Music for a New World


Sunday, April 20


2 pm

From the Centennial Theatre website

This incredible collaboration brings together 17 of Vancouver’s best
world music artists in a one of a kind partnership in which influences
from around the world mix into a melting pot of sights and sounds.
Centred on a spirit of cooperation and collaboration, Music for a New World celebrates the diversity of world music.

Members include Amir Haghighi, Jou Tou, Khac Chi, the Masabo Culture
Company, Orchid Ensemble, Silk Road and Tzimmes. Together their music
draws from Quebecois, Uruguayan, Irish, Chinese, Vietnamese, West
African and Jewish roots. Performances include everything from ancient
traditional music, to jazz, Celtic, several Latin styles, contemporary
songs, as well as new music. It is an astounding collection of
experience and ability.

Join the celebration and experience the diversity and excitement of this unique musical event!

www.vancouverworldmusic.org

Music for a New World is presented in cooperation with the Vancouver International Children's Festival  http://www.childrensfestival.ca/

Music for a New World is presented in association with the
North Shore Multicultural Society    www.nsms.ca

Check out the Vancouver Sun Article:

Eclectic offering lets kids hear world music

Sunday afternoon's Music for A New World project, spearheaded by the Vancouver World Music Collective at North Vancouver's Centennial Theatre,

Tonight: Joy Kogawa reads her new book “Naomi’s Tree”

TONIGHT
Joy Kogawa is reading her new book “Naomi’s Tree” at Vancouver Kidsbooks

Naomissm.jpgDate:  Thursday April 10th, 2008
Time:  7:00pm

Kidsbooks: Author and Illustrator Events

Place: Vancouver Kidsbooks – 3083 West Broadway, Vancouver Please Note: Tickets are fully redeemable toward Joy Kogawa’s books on the night of the event
www.kidsbooks.ca/kidsbooksevents.htm – 38kCachedSimilar pages

 

A Musical Evening with Joy Kogawa and Friends
Friday Apr 25, 2008

Tickets: To secure a seat, please email kogawahouse@yahoo.ca.
Vancouver composer Leslie Uyeda presents two song cycles written to accompany five of Joy Kogawa’s most exquisite poems. “Stations of Angels” will be performed by soprano Heather Pawsey and flutist Kathryn Cernauskas, and “Offerings” by Heather Pawsey and pianist Rachel Kiyo Iwaasa. These performances are the world premiere of both song cycles, which were composed especially for these three artists. To complement the musical performance, poets Joy Kogawa, Heidi Greco, Marion Quednau, and Vancouver’s poet laureate George McWhirter will read.

Set
in the Historic Joy Kogawa House, this National Poetry Month event takes place in Joy Kogawa’s childhood home—a place that commemorates both the brightest hopes and the darkest hours of Canadian history. The house, representative of many properties owned by Canadians of Japanese descent, was confiscated during the Second World War when its occupants and 20,000 other Japanese-Canadians were interned. After a hard-fought effort by The Land Conservancy and the Kogawa House Committee to save the house from demolition, it is being restored, and beginning in the spring of 2009, will host a writer-in-residence program.

Event supported by the Canada Council for the Arts and the League of Canadian Poets.

Tartan Day proclamation for City of Vancouver

Tartan Day will be proclaimed in the City of Vancouver sometime this week

I solicited SFU Scottish Cultural Studies to created a proclaimation, which I passed to city councilor Raymond Louie.

Kilts Night “Tartan Day” celebration happening at Doolin's Irish Pub – after the hockey game… or between periods?!?!
details TBA

Sunday – official Tartan Day.
Vancouver Tartan Army is planning something details TBA
Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team will wear the tartan to dragon boat practice 1:30pm at Science World dragon boat docks.

Ron MacLeod Chair V of the SFU Scottish Studies program writes:

Greetings, Tartan Day will soon be upon us – April 6th –  so
don’t forget to wear a bit of tartan in memory of an historic occasion
– the Declaration of Arbroath, 1320 A.D. This declaration was
Scotland’s Declaration of Independence. It has been hailed as a
significant step on a winding, tortuous and long road towards the
blossoming of democracy. If you want a copy of the Declaration, just
email me and it shall be delivered. Regards, the other Ron
 
Two messages from the Gaelic Society:
 
1. What: a reminder about the next Ceilidh:
Where: at the Scottish Cultural Centre, 8886 Hudson Street (at 73rd Avenue)
When: Saturday, April 5th, 2008
Time: entertainment begins at 8 P.M.
Tickets: at the door
Entertainment: accordianist
Sandy Black; musician Seumas Gagne; singer Doug Barr; Highland Dancers
from Angus MacKenzie’s School of Highland Dancing.
Other: coffee, tea, scones, oatcakes and other delights. Wet bar.
All welcome.
 
2.  What: the Vancouver Gaelic Society’s 100th Anniversary Celebration
Where: Scottish Centre, 8886 Hudson Street (at 73rd Avenue)
When: Saturday, May 3rd, 2008
Time: doors open 5:00 P.M.; Dinner 6:00 P.M.
Tickets: $50.00 for adults & $25.00 for students. Order tickets from Murdo & Linda MacIver (604) 929-4781.
Entertainment: an array of talent including the
Royal National Mòd gold medal soloist Paul McCallum; Scottish
accordionist and entertainer John Carmichael; and, the Vancouver Gaelic
Choir.
Other: dancing to follow the entertainment program.
All welcome as long as there is space available.
 
The following courtesy James Russell:
 
A Scots Toast:
May the best you’ve ever seen
Be the worst you’ll ever see;
May the mouse ne’er leave your girnal                 (pantry)
Wi’ a tear drap in his e’e;
May your lum be blithely reekin…………………..(chimney, smoking)
Till ye’re auld enough to dee;…………………….(die)
May you aye be just as happy
As we wish you now to be!

Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival is happening! The city is turning pink!

Pink petals are sprouting on cherry trees all over Vancouver.  It's time for Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival!

Scan4.jpg

http://www.vancouvercherryblossomfestival.com/2008/event

Last Tuesday, March 25th, the Vancouver Cherry Jam kicked of the official start of the Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival at the Burrard Sky Train station. 

The free noon-time
concert  Chibi Taiko and Tera Taiko Drumming and
Dueling, the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra Brass Quintet with Blossom
Brass, Suzka Gypsy Jazz Violin and was emceed by Bramwell Tovey.

This festival celebrates the blossoming of the city’s 36,000 Japanese
flowering cherry trees and is the brainchild of Linda Poole.  I guess it was a sign of times to come when I first met Linda at a special cherry tree planting at Vancouver City Hall in Novemember 2005.  That was the symbolic planting of a graft from the cherry tree at Joy Kogawa House, the very tree that has now inspired Joy's new children's book “Naomi's Tree”

Check out the many events programmed for Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival.  There are photography workshops, cherry trolley tours, picnic lunches and more!

Key events

April 1/2 Haiku Garden event

April 2 Pink Tie Affair Gala @ Pair Bistro featuring Cherry Blossom martini + tasting menu


April 3 Sakura Tree Planting @ Van Dusen Gardens.  All day events celebrating the planting of a new Sakura Cherry Tree grove.

April 10 7pm Joy Kogawa Reading of “Naomi's Tree” @ Vancouver Kidsbooks

April 19th Bike the Blossoms – meet 9am at Van Dusen Gardens, then bike the city underneath falling cherry blossom petals.

Recommended Robert Burns poems for Celtic Fest “Battle of the Bards”

image

Modeled after the Dublin Literary Pub Crawl, but with a “Vancouver Twist”… Battle of the Bards is a unique Steve Duncan creation for the Vancouver Celtic Fest.  Three actors will play poets W.B. Yeats, Dylan Thomas and Robert Burns (with me – Toddish McWong as Burns). 

We will go on a pub crawl reciting poetry to (un)suspecting patrons starting at Doolin's Irish Pub at 5:30pm.  Then we will go to Atlantic Trap and Gill for 6:05.  Johnny Fox's Irish Snug at 6:45.  Then the finale at Ceili's Irish Pub and Restaurant for 8pm, where we will be accompanied by a DJ and a celtic fiddler.

The judging will be done by Audience members holding up numbers, and I hope an applause meter.

Robert Burns
Last week on Wednesday, I went to visit the Robert Burns statue in Stanley Park.  It was my first visit since visiting as a child, when my father used to take me and my younger brother for regular outings to Stanley Park.  This stature is located near the park entrance, across from the Vancouver Rowing Club.

Not being a complete expert or scholar on Robert Burns, I asked my friends in the Burns Club of Vancouver, as well as Ron MacLeod, Chair of the Scottish Cultural Studies program at Simon Fraser University for advice.  They readily obliged:

The mind boggles at the thought of this event. Celtic poets could cause
a fight on the moon. Watch out for Celtic passions. Burns had many
poems of a nature pertinent to this event . If you wish to concentrate
on wine and women, then  give consideration to “Ae fond kiss”, “The
Belles of Mauchline”, “O’ a’ the airts the wind can blaw” “Mary
Morrison”, “Willie Wastle”( completely NPC), “Scotch drink”




Good Crawlin”




Bob. 

From Dr. Ian Mason

“Willie
brewed a peck of maut” would be one of the more famous of his drinking songs but
it so replete with Lalland words (i.e. the old language of the Scottish borders)
that it might be nigh near impenetrable to your average
Canuck.

 “John Barleycorn. A Ballad” a fifteen
verse parable of the invention of Scotch would be much more accessible but
might be a bit long.

As a compromise I have attached the peroration from
his cantata “Love and Liberty” as being both brief, stirring and to your
point.  'Budgets, Bags and Wallets' are all alternate
names for purses or cases. “Brats' are offspring while 'Callets' and
'doxies' can both be read as wenches.  Those, I think, are the only
unusual words

From Ron MacLeod:

Todd, my hope and expectation is that you will be in good 
singing voice, well lubricated with the precious dew.
Here are three songs that you might consider:
The Deil's Awa' W' Th' Excise Man (first choice)
Rantin' Rovin' Robin
Guide Ale Keeps the Heart Aboon
or perhaps, 

There’s cauld kail in Aberdeen

An’ custocks in Stra’bogie

Where ilka lad main hae his lass,

But I main hae my coggie.

For I main hae my coggie, sirs,

I canna want my coggie;

I wadna gie my three-girred cog

For a’ the wives in Bogie.

BC Book Prizes short list announced: features Rita Wong and George McWhirter for poetry

It's wonderful to see how many people you know who are nominated for the BC Book Prizes.  Rita Wong, Forage (Nightwood Editions) and George McWhirter The Incorrection (Oolichan Books) are both nominated for the Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize.  I am just going to list some of the people I know, or what I think are some Chinese-Canadian and Scottish-Canadian highlights.  See www.bcbookprizes.ca for the full list.

I've known Rita for years, since she won the Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop Emerging Writer Award for her first poetry collection Monkey Puzzle.  I only met George last year, but quickly invited him to be the featured writer for the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, and the Gung Haggis Fat Choy World Poetry reading at the Vancouver Public Library.

Shaena Lambert, is nominated for the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, for her novel Radiance (Random House of Canada).  Shaena read an excerpt at a special November reading at the Joy Kogawa House.  see blog article: Ruth Ozeki and Shaena Lambert read at Historic Joy Kogawa House.

Nominated for the Hubert Evans Non-fiction Prize is Patricia Roy, for The Triumph of Citizenship: The Japanese and Chinese in Canada, 1941-67 (UBC Press).  It's interesting that both the anniversaries of achieving citizenship in 1947, and the changes in immigration in 1967 were both celebrated by the Anniversaries of Change'07 committee, and wrapped up at the Sep 7 Reconciliation Dinner. Also nominated is Scots-Canadian J.B. MacKinnon and Alisa Smith for The 100-Mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating (Random House Canada).

I am guessing that both J. B. Mackinnon and Ian McAllister of of Scottish ancestry.  The Roderick Haig-Brown Regional Prize nominees for the book that contributes most to the enjoyment and understanding of BC and nominees include:  J.B. Mackinnon and Alisa Smith, The 100-Mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating (Random House Canada) and Ian McAllister, The Last Wild Wolves: Ghosts of the Rain Forest (Greystone Books).

Former actor Meg Tilly shares Chinese ancestry, and she is nominated for the Sheila A. Egoff Children's Literature Prize for her book Porcupine (Tundra Books).

All the nominees are celebrated at the BC Book Prize Soiree, April 19th at the Metropolitan Hotel (7-9pm).  It's a free party with great silent auction prizes, and kicks off the beginning of BC Book and Magazine Week (April 19-26, 2008).  The highlight and end piece is the Lieutenant Governor's BC Book Prizes Gala on Saturday April 26, 2008 at the Fairmont Waterfront Hotel in Vancouver, hosted by broadcaster Fanny Kiefer.  BC's newest and first First Nations Lt. Gov. the Honourable Steven L.Point, OBC, will be in attendance.

I really enjoy both events.  If you love BC authors and BC books, this is the place to be!