Category Archives: Upcoming Events

VAFF on Saturday: DISTANT RELATIONS features Karin Lee film “Comrade Dad”

VAFF on Saturday:

DISTANT RELATIONGS features Karin Lee film “Comrade Dad”

More at the Vancouver Asian Film Festival:

Check out Saturay's programming at VAFF. 

My
friend Karin Lee is featured for the program Distant Relations, with
her film Comrade Dad.  Karin is an amazing person, winning a
Canadian Academy (Genie) Award for Made in Canada (2000), a story about
adopted babies from China in Canada.  She also made  Canadian Steel, Chinese Grit
(1998) a historical documentary about the Chinese who helped build the Canadian Pacific Railway.

Sat. Nov. 4th, 1:30 PM

Families
shape who we are—and how we exist in time and space. This collection of
films looks at women and men, children and parents, and the way in
which these relations are configured by generation, geography,
politics, and custom.


Father And Son

Director/Writer/Producer: Joe Chang
Animation | Beta | Colour | 2006 | 5 minutes | Canada

Joe Chang’s animated short film draws inspiration from his 6-year old
son and his perceptions of the process of bonding between parent and
child. With humour and sentiment, it hopes to draw people’s attention
to the extraordinary moments in our otherwise ordinary lives.

Canadian Premiere


Comrade Dad

Director/Writer/Producer: Karin Lee
Documentary | Beta | Colour | 2005 | 26 minutes | Canada

Karin Lee’s father ran a Communist bookstore on Vancouver’s Skid Row
from the mid-1960’s until the early 1980’s. Her experimental
documentary twists the memories of a socialist-raised child into the
reflections of an adult who is conflicted over the schism between
idealism and capitalism.

Director in Attendance


62 Years And 6,500 Miles

Director/Writer/Producer: Anita Wen-Shin Chang
Documentary | Beta | Color | 2005 | 52 minutes | USA

Anita Chang’s grandmother was an award-winning writer and an activist
with the Taipei Women’s Rights Organization. This biographical
documentary looks at the challenges of constructing history, both the
personal history of Ama and the political history of post-colonial,
globalized Taiwan.

Canadian Premiere


The Women’s Kingdom

Director/Writer/Producer: Xialoi Zhou
Documentary | Beta | Colour | 2005 | 21 minutes | USA

The Mosuo are a minority tribe who live by a beautiful lake in
Southwestern China. They are known as the last matriarchal society in
China because of their 1,000 year old practice of “walking marriage”.
Mosuo men walk into the rooms of women at night, and leave at daybreak.
In Mosuo, women don’t depend on men for money, and fathers don’t live
with their children. Many tourists have started to visit the Mosuo
because they believe it is a “free love” society. Tourism has brought
the Mosuo wealth, but it has also changed their culture. What kinds of
dilemmas are the Mosuo now struggling with, and how do they feel about
the future?

Canadian Premiere


Celebrity Host for this program:

Kameron Louangxay

A graduate of the UBC Theatre Department, Kaeron has spent the past 2
years in Toronto and currently calls Vancouver home. Past and recent
work includes 16 Blocks, Mayday, the Canadian film short, Comrade Mine, and Mina Shum’s Long Life, Happiness, and Prosperity.


We So Funny: Asian Canadian comedy at VAFF – how to have fun with steotypes

We So Funny:  Asian Canadian comedy at VAFF
– how to have fun with stereotypes


Friday night should be real good at the Vancouver Asian Film Festival.  It is the We So Funny program about Asian Canadian humor.

Friday, Nov. 3rd at 9:30pm. 
 The event will explore how comedy is a
powerful vehicle by which we can comment on social issues of race and
culture. Gee… sounds like a perfect setting for Gung Haggis Fat Choy.  Below is from the VAFF website for We So Funny

We So Funny

Fri. Nov. 3rd, 9:30 PM


Mighty Warriors Of Comedy

Director/Writer: Sung H. Kim | Producers: Kibi Anderson, Sung H. Kim
Documentary | Beta | Colour | 2006 | 65 minutes | USA

MIGHTY WARRIORS OF COMEDY is a unique documentary about the 18 Mighty
Mountain Warriors, an audacious sketch comedy troupe of Asian-Pacific
Islanders hailing from San Francisco that you’ve never heard of. Formed
in 1994, they tackle socio-political issues with a hilarious
combination of irreverence and seriousness, taking their audiences on a
wild ride as they showcase the cultural activism behind the humor. The
film explores whether or not, after 10 years of performing the group
will make it big. Using a combination of personal interviews and live
concert footage, the film traces the struggle that Asian-heritage
artists face, and how that battle is complicated further by cultural
identification.

Canadian Premiere


preceded by:

Assaulted Fish (A live performance)

Writers/Performers: Diana Bang, Marlene Dong, Kuan Foo, Darcy Johnson, Yumi Ogawa, Nelson Wong
Live performance | 20 minutes | In person | Canada

In a scant three years, the 83% Pan-Asian Canadian comedy collective
known as ASSAULTED FISH has established itself as one of Vancouver’s
funniest acts with intelligent, edgy writing and energetic, polished
performances. Everything from birth to reincarnation is fair game for
comedy sketches that range from well-observed character studies to
absurdist slapstick.


Ruckus!

Director: Dean Ishida | Producers: Dean Ishida, Matt Steverson | Writers: Dean Ishida, Eric Bronson
Narrative | Beta | Colour | 2006 | 18 minutes | USA

It’s now or never as 32-year-old Clint sets out to fulfill his noble
yet misguided boy band dream. As the group leader and choreographer of
RUCKUS! Clint must prepare his out-of-touch group of 30-something men –
prickly prep school drama teacher Stan, hefty hip-hop wannabe Vern, and
rhythmless cat groomer J.D. – for the music video shoot of their debut
song She’s Online (And I’m Outta My Mind).

Director in Attendance


Celebrity Host for this program:

Rick Tae

2006 Gemini nominee and Leo Award winner for Godiva’s, Rick can now be seen on CBC’s new hit, Chris Haddock’s Intelligence. Writer and co-creator of TV series Sasha, Brie and Me,
currently in development, Rick and partner, Selena Paskalidis, are now
working with the National Screen Institute’s Totally Television
Program, which is designed to guide Canada’s top emerging showrunners.


Mina Shum at the Vancouver Asian Film Festival + Special filmmakers karaoke

Mina Shum at the Vancouver Asian Film Festival

Mina Shum: A Writer’s Journey

Wed. Nov. 1st, 7:00 PM

It was an inquistive audience at the Mina Shum presentation for the Vancouver Asian Film Festival. They had come a special event  Shum first showed a clip from her first film “Mom, Ramona and Me,” and talked about her experiences developing the films, and how the themes were developed for her subsequent films. 

She also showed clips from “Double Happiness” and “Long Life, Happiness and Prosperity which featured award winning actor Sandra Oh – currently part of the television acting ensemble of “Grey's Anatomy.  Shum explained her recipes for story arcs and feature films. 

“Present the main ideas and characters in the opening, so the audience has an idea where the film is going.  Create 5 to 6 segments that rise and fall, each with a climax.

Shum demonstrated how the characters created the story lines.  “For Double Happiness, we had the character Jade Li in the middle of the poster, with her boyfriend on one side, and her parents on the other. This summed up the movie.

“People are intested in cross-cultural stories… but that alone doesn't sell movies.  My movies are billed as romantic comedy.”

She also shared that this was her first big outing in a while, “I just had a baby seven weeks ago, so this is the first big event I've been out to.

Sharing her screenwriting tools and tips,
and using clips from her films, Shum will examine what it takes to turn
an idea into a successful screenplay.

Shum took a number of questions from the audience and gave good advice to people asking how to develop screen plays and how to get involved in the movie industry.


Todd Wong with film makers Julia Kwan and Ham Tran at VAFF Karaoke party – photo Ray Shum

At the conclusion of the event, the audience was invited to come to a party event at Hoko's Sushi on Powell Street.  At the restaurant I talked with VAFF executive director Peter Leung, who said “This is incredible!  People coming out on a Wednesday evening,” as we watched actors and directors and writers all performing karaoke, singing along and dancing together. 

“After the event ended for the Mighty Asian Moviemaking Marathon, we couldn't get them to leave the place.  They all kept wanting to talk.  This event tonight is a great ice-breaker.  So now, when they are on a panel discussion or see each other at the screening events, they can say 'I liked that song you sang, or that costume you had.'”

Costumes and songs?  There was an tickle trunk full of costumes and accessories that the VAFF crowd dressed up in, full of day-after-Halloween spirit.  Leung was wearing a McDonald's happy day apron going around asking people “Would you like fries with that.”  Videographer Kathy Leung was given long evening gloves to wear, then later was handed a crinoline style skirt to complete the elegant ensemble.  Actor Rick Tae had little cat ears on his head.  Director of the opening night film, Journey From the Fall, Ham was wearing a viking helmet with horns.  Julia Kwan (director of Eve and the Fire Horse) was wearing a jester hat.  I found a witch's hat and gown and pronounced myself a wizard.

Actor Taylaa Markwell won a prize for her duet with Rick Tae for “Summer Nights.” Lucas Walker sang a great version of Doobie Brothers' “Listen to the Music,” Ham and Julia were part of an ensemble singing Dan Hill's “Sometimes When We Touch.”  And me in my wizard/witch costume?  I sang Frank Sinatra's “Witchcraft.” 

It was a great event with lots of great food.  VAFF puts on some of the BEST parties!  Opening Night on Thursday followed by Opening Night reception for their 10th Anniversary! 

ASIAN stand up comedy? check out the A-list comedy tourr 2006

ASIAN stand up comedy? 
check out the A-list comedy tour 2006

This message comes to me courtesy of Joyce Lam, president of Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre:

Hey
Everyone…   here is a national Asian Canadian Standup Comedy
show that you can't miss coming to Vancouver!  Let your friends and family
know and see how funny Asian Canadians can be!  Hope to see you there
supporting this special event and my favourite Asian Canadian standup comedian,
local Jeffery Yu.  For those who need a discount… here is a way to
get $10 off a ticket.  Now that's too good to pass up.
 

go to ticketweb it will
 
Now pick which show you’d like, and where
it says access code you type in
“asianinvasion” (one word) and you will
get 10 dollars off each ticket you purchase.

Pass this
on….
 
Joyce (I'm
going to the Sat. Nov 4 @ 8pm – hope to see of you there!)
 

Vancouver's Funny Bone is
proud to present…


Canada's Asian Sensation


SPECIAL CONCERT
SERIES

Thursday, Nov 02, 2006 8:30 PM PST
(7:30 PM Doors) 
Friday, Nov 03, 2006 8:00 PM PST (7:00 PM
Doors) 
Friday, Nov 03, 2006 10:30 PM PST (9:30 PM Doors) 

Saturday, Nov 04, 2006
8:00 PM PST (7:00 PM Doors) 
Saturday, Nov 04, 2006 10:30 PM PST (9:30
PM Doors)  



Yes, the ¡§A¡¨ stands for Asian.
The A-List show characterizes the next generation of comedy indigenous to North
America. The show represents the changing demographics in North America and
cultural _expression – no matter what your background is, audiences can relate.
All of the comedians draw on their heritage but they do it with differing points
of view. This makes for a cutting-edge show.

Witness Video On
Trial
's Ron Josol and his Filipino wise-cracks. Gilson Lubin's
smooth story-telling style will keep you glued to the stage. Sugar Sammy
lends a non-traditional East Indian flavour to the mix. High-school teacher
turned comedian, Paul Bae, brings a fresh outlook on life. And the calm
demeanour of Jeffery Yu will keep you guessing and laughing at the same
time!

The A-List comedy tour is the first of its kind to tour in Canada.
It's a must-see show that will bring the laughs to everyone.

For more
comic profiles and tour info visit the link,
www.asiancomedytour.com

Tickets at Ticketweb.ca (31.80 + tax) and at the door ($40+ tax)
subject to availability

Vancouver's Funny Bone is
Vancouver's Newest Comedy Club, located in a theatre inside of the Edge
Water Casino at the Plaza of Nations.


 

Learn more about Vancouver's Funny Bone
at
www.vfb.ca
 
-30-
 
Media Contact:
 
Kelly Phelan
Phone: 778-885-3559

Gonzo: A Japanese soldier at a prison-of-war camp in WW2 Shanghai shows compassion to a young boy

Gonzo: A Japanese soldier at a prison-of-war camp in WW2 Shanghai shows compassion to a young boy

image

    A Bryher Music / Lyonesse Theatre
production

          

 Coming to the
Norman Rothstein
Theatre

imageNov. 1st – 12th., 2006   
(Preview – October 31st, pwyc)


This
sounds interesting….   very intercultural betwen Chinese /
Japanese issues…  It was just sent to me from Lisl Jauk….



There is currently lots of stuff about people wanting apology from
Japanese for redress of WW2,
Chinese for Nanjing, Koreans for comfort women.  And the issues
continue to resonate in Canada too.  This might be something along
the lines of “Life is Beautiful”

– Todd


Lyonesse Theatre presents the Vancouver premiere of

GONZO

Written by and Directed by Gordon Pascoe

An award-winning play set in a war-time Japanese prison camp in Shanghai, 1942-45. Gonzo is a tribute to one Japanese guard whose compassion and humanity enabled a young boy to survive more than 1,000 days of captivity.

“Gonzo took the audience on an emotional roller coaster and offered a nice blend of humour and pathos. A poignant reminder that our lives here are as safe and comfortable as they are because of the sacrifices of others.” The Harbour City Star, Nanaimo

Performances at the Norman Rothstein theatre, 41st & Oak

Evenings at 8 p.m., Nov. 1-4, 8-11

Matinees at 2 p.m., Nov. 2, 4-5, 9, 11-12

Pay-What-You-Can Preview Oct. 31 and Nov. 7

For tickets, call NRT: 604-257-5111 or Lyonesse Theatre: 778-230-7671
or visit www.bryher.ca

Tickets:

Matinees: $23 ($20 for seniors & students)

Evenings: $26 ($23 for seniors & students)

For group prices, please call 778-230-7671.

Photos: archival photo of Ash Camp, 1945 | Riley Sondergaard (child) and
Simon Hayama (Gonzo); photo by Pink Monkey Studios.

Vancouver Asian Film Festival Nov 1 to 4 with Mina Shum for opening night

Vancouver Asian Film Festival Nov 1 to 4 with Mina Shum for opening night

There will be lots of intercultural goodies at the 10th Anniversary Vancouver Asian Film Festival. 
I always particularly enjoy the opening night and the panel discussions.

Check out the Festival events including great programs such as:

Wed. Nov. 1st, 7:00 PM  

Mina Shum: A Writer’s Journey

A
quick look inside the creative and professional process of Mina Shum,
award-winning screenwriter. Sharing her screenwriting tools and tips,
and using clips from her films, Shum will examine what it takes to turn
an idea into a successful screenplay.  This session will also include a half hour Q & A.

Thur. Nov. 2nd, 7:30 PM – OPENING NIGHT


PUBLIC BATH directed by Tak Hoon Kim and In Pyo Hong.  A precocious
toddler’s joyful visit to the bathhouse with his father is saddened by
a glimpse into the inevitable future.


JOURNEY FROM THE FALL  – directed by Ham Tran. A
young son recreates his favorite story through drawings as a means to
will his father to survive the tortures of prison camp.

Saturday Nov. 4th 11am
canadianasian “Canadian Asian vs. Asian Canadian”
Featuring:

– Canadian-Chinese by Director/Writer/Producer: Felix Cheng

– Between: Living In The Hyphen by director/writer Anne-Marie Nakagawa (42 minutes)
– panel discussion
Part 1:
Canadian Asian vs. Asian Canadian
: Politically Correct Labels with panelists Glenn Deer, Alexis Kienlen, Chris Lee, Craig Takeuchi 

Canadian-Chinese by Director/Writer/Producer: Felix Cheng


Between: Living In The Hyphen

Head Tax Compilation video on Shaw Cable: Watch EarthSeen

Head Tax Compilation video on Shaw Cable: Watch EarthSeen

Sid Tan has put together a compilation video with a “head tax” theme for the “Earth Seen” time slot on Shaw cable 4.  It's a one hour show.  Set your video machine!

EarthSeen: Head Tax Compilation

Wednesday, November 1 @ 8-9pm
Saturday, November 4 @ 3-4am
Saturday, November 11 @ 3-4am
Sunday, November 12 @ 4-5pm

1) Our Story: Chinese Head Tax Mash Up music video by no luck club (NLC). Very impressive presentation with profound message from youths” .to the world.

2) Gim Wong music video with words and music by Sean Gunn performed by the Running Dog lackeys. Celebrates Gim Wong's cross Canada motorcycle Ride for Redress in 2005.

3) A Paper Son by producer Gein Wong. A video from the Re/Present series of the Chinese Canadian Nation Council youth online project in 2005.

3) November 26, 2005 information line at closed redress conference at Chinese Cultural Centre and subsequent phto-op of then Prime Minister Paul Martin to SUCCESS.

4) Karen Cho's highlights of June 22, 2005 apology in Ottawa by Prime Minister Stephen Harper/Govn of Canada. Karen is director of In the Shadow of Gold Mountain.

(5) Head Tax Blues music video with words and music by Sean Gunn and performed by Sean Gunn and Ula Shine. Excepts of the this video have been on nation televison three times and also in Karen Cho's ITSOGM.

6) Mouseland (1992) animated short of speech by Tommy Douglas, founding leader of the CCF (later became the New Democratic Party). Introduction by Keifer Sutherland, Tommy Douglas's grandson.


ACCESS community television on Shaw cable 4, the cable community channel in Greater Vancouver and Fraser Valley.

Saltwater City Television and EarthSeen are regularly scheduled volunteer-produced community television programs produced by the not-for-profits ACCESS Association of Chinese Canadians for Equality and Solidarity Society with assistance from ICTV Independent Community Television Co-operative.

Thanks to Community Media Education Society (CMES), the Chinese Canadian National Council (CCNC), the National Anti-Racism Council of Canada (NARCC) and the Status Through Action Towards Unity and Solidarity (STATUS) Coalition for their human and morale resources.

Please do not ask me for copies unless you can pay for or barter an hour of time. We do this so people can record our programs off-the-air. If you don't have cable, ask a friend. No friends with cable becomes a special situation if you really need copy. Better yet, join us and you can make all the copies you want and even produce some television.

Take care.    anon    Sid.

SUNDAY – January 28: New Date for Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Dinner

SUNDAY – January 28, 2007:

2008 date is January 27th – SUNDAY

the following is information for the 2007 dinner.
New information for 2008 dinner soon.
Thank you for your patience.


New Date for
Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner

   
It's Sunday…. Sunday, Sunday, Sunday!
January 28th.

The 1st Sunday following Robbie Burns Birthday on January 25th.

Gung Haggis Fat Choy –
The infamous Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.
The “little dinner that could” and did:



Advanced price now until January 22nd, 2007 is:
$60 + $5 service charge for regular seating
$70 + $5 service charge for premium seating (closer seating + 2 bottles wine at the table)
see our 

Seating Plan for 2007 GHFC Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner

After January 22nd, 2007
$75 including service ticket charge
$85 PREMIUM SEATING (closer seating + 2 bottles wine at the table and service ticket charge)
see our 

Seating Plan for 2007 GHFC Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner


To celebrate our 10th Annual Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.

Look for the return of:


Silk Road Music


Joe McDonald and Brave Waves



New for 2007:

co-host Priya Ramu – host of CBC Radio's “On the Coast

Priya Ramu


Author Lensey Namioka – author of Half and Half

Half and Half


Leora Cashe


No Luck Club
instrumental hip hop band
no luck club

+ many more musical and literary surprises!

This is a fundraiser event for
Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat team


and Joy Kogawa House

For Tickets:
Contact
Firehall Arts Centre   Monday to Friday 9-6pm
 604-689-0926

Credit cards can be used.  Visa or Mastercard.
There is an additional service charge and tickets can be mailed out to you.

Cafe de Chinitas: when Flamenco and Chinese music meet

Get your tickets hereCafe de Chinitas: when Flamenco and Chinese music meet

Saturday October 28
8pm

Norman Rothstein Theatre,
Mozaico Flamenco Company
+ Orchid Ensemble

I love Flamenco Music… so I was happily surprised when Lan from the Orchid Ensemble handed me this flyer for the latest project that she will be involved in. 

The Orchid Ensemble has been involved with both traditional and fusion forms of Chinese music in Vancouver for many years, as well as jazz and contemporary.  Lan Tung is the innovative erhu (Chinese violin) player whose influences cross classical, celtic, middle-eastern, folk and blues.  Gelina Jiang is a multi-instrumentalist who can play zheng, ruan, yuetqin, pipa, jinhu and jin-erhu. Jonathan Bernard is a percussionist who also loves the marimba.

Combine these fine musicians with flamenco dancers and musicians, mix them up, light a fire, and watch them go! (or listen!)

Oscar Nieto
and Kasandra founded the Al Mozaico Flamenco Dance Academy in 2002. “Mozaico,” refers to the diversity of the ensemble, a mosaic
of students from different ethnic backgrounds, ages, and various diversities who love flamenco at the academy. 

It's hard for me to play flamenco on my accordion… I have tried to play Al di Meola's “Mediterranean Sundance” but I think I have to stick to my tangos, and other latin tunes like El Choclo, Espana and Two Guitars.  I have seen flamenco greats, Paco de Lucia and Paco Pena in concert here in Vancouver.  And twice… I attended dinner with Paco after his Misa Flamenco concerts… wow… what a treat to have such an attentive cousin who was friends with Paco back in London in the early 1970's.

Theatre Review: Griffin and Sabine – an infinite world of love and possibilities

Theatre Review: 
Griffin and Sabine – an infinite world of love and possibilities


review written by Todd Wong and Deb Martin

October 5th to November 4th
Arts Club Theatre
Granville Island

Surreal is a good way to explain sitting through the innovative Griffin and Sabine
play which began life as the  hit trilogy of books by author Nick
Bantock
.  
This was followed by the sequel trilogy “The
Morning Star” in which new characters Isabella and Matthew are
introduced through a
correspondence of their own, and also with Griffin and Sabine. 
The play at the Arts Club includes all six books, each separate trilogy
forming Act 1 or act 2.

The books are unique. The readers are eavesdropping on the private
correspondence of two lovers who have not yet met.  I fell in love
with the books for their sheer beauty and intrigue, as did millions of people around
the world.  With each page I turned, I anxiously looked forward to
the next postcard or letter that they wrote to each other.  

Bantock began his own career as a graphic artist. The books are
exquisitely illustrated, and the book’s narrative is the correspondence
contained on postcards or letters written between the two characters.
The books are filled with envelopes that the reader opens to take out a
letter. The fonts were created to resemble handwriting. His postcards
were elaborate paintings or artistic photographs.  It's wonderful
that Bantock's paintings are used a projections which serve as both a
linkage to the book, and to illustrate the postcards that the
characters are reading.

The characters write to each other between London, England and a
possibly mythical island in the South Pacific.  They travel to
each other’s home but they never meet up… maybe because they live in
different dimensions?  It is like a pop-up book for adults that is
tactile and involving.  And this made it magical.

And now it has been turned into a theatre play.  Not just a
didactic narrative play, or a memory play… but an incredibly innovative play
that takes place as much in the mind as it does on the stage. 
There is no dialogue.  Only monologues as each letter or post card
arrives.

The action begins with the character of Griffin, played by Colin Legge,
holding up an imaginary postcard, as the writer of the card, Sabine,
speaks as if she was writing it. Images from the book are projected in
the background to create scenery on an undecorated stage with few sets.
They help to draw the viewer into the story. Sabine is in a sunken
circle on the right side of the stage that represents the island of
Katie, and there is a chasm at the back of the stage that moves closer
and farther apart depending on how close the characters are at any
moment.

Lois Anderson is superb in the role of Sabine, a girl of unknown
heritage who is found and adopted by her exploring parents on the island of Katie.
She has the gift of telepathic perception and can see Griffin  as he
creates his postcards in London England. She is enchanted by his
artwork, and finally writes to him. Griffin, of course, believes he is
hallucinating when he receives a letter from a woman from a far off
land claiming to know him. Sabine is able to describe details that she
could only know by seeing Griffin, and Griffin is so lonely in his life
that he welcomes the company, even in its unusual form.

The play requires a suspension of belief and a willingness to escape to
a bit of fanastical fantasy where visions of wonder become real, and
voyages between far off lands just happen, and people fall in love
without having met.

And that’s just the first act.

The second act is based on the second trilogy of books where Isabella
is a student , and her boyfriend Matthew is an archeologist working in
Egypt.  Soon, Sabine writes to Matthew, and Griffin begins his
correspondence to Isabella.  Rather than a repeat of the first
act, with four characters the interaction is exponentially
multiplied.  When a character recalls a dream, the other three
characters stand together, then sway and hum and sing.  Very weird
– but very cool.

To create a play from the books presents the challenge of taking the
tangible where so much depends on visual impact, and translating it to
the verbal medium.  Dramaturg Rachel Ditor writes in the program
that “experimentation is at the heart of play development – oftentimes,
we find out what the play is by finding out first what it isn’t.”

What they found is that the story is a beautiful series of monologues
held together by themes of love, fear, hope and compassion.  It
allows the actors to really play with their words, and to accentuate
with subtle or sustained physical movements.  

While the first act emphasized the physical and emotional separation of
strangers getting to know each other, the second act builds upon an
already realized intimacy between Isabella and Matthew. Actor Andrew
McNee is wonderful to watch as Matthew, an expressive yin to the
inwardly focused Griffin.  Megan Leitch as Isabella is similarly
brilliant as they must demonstrate their deep love  without
conversing, or touching – but through their words and actions. 
This allows the action to move to a more sensually heightened tension,
that is threatened by the mysterious Mr. Frolatti, who threatens Sabine
and Isabella to turn over the correspondence.  

Marco Soriano plays both Frolatti as well as the Griffin’s cat,
Minalouche, bringing both a convincing menace as well as gentle yet
humourous presence to the stage.   We think that Soriano must
really enjoy playing Minalouce the cat.  He does such a great job,
and probably really likes having his stomach rubbed onstage by Isabella

Griffin and Sabine, is an exciting play to watch – the actors make good
use of the stage, the set moves, the artwork of Nick Bantock is
projected on the back screen, and a live musical score is provided by a
double bass, and marimba/tabla drums.

It may not be all
understandable on a first sitting.  The play, like interculturalism,
demands the audience to be open-minded, which brings an appreciation of
new ideas and experiences. 
And like a good film, this play
will beg another reading of the books and a return.  Think of
going on talk back Tuesdays when the cast and crew answer questions from the audience.