Category Archives: Upcoming Events

Review: Asian Comedy Night – What are the 10 most misunderstood things about Asians?

Review:  Asian Comedy Night – What are the 10 most misunderstood things about Asians?



At the afterparty – OPM with Vancouver's Charlie Cho (Hot Sauce Posse) back row: Charles
Kim, Charlie Cho; front row: Janina Gavankar, Ewan Chung, Vancouver's
Philip Gurney, and Jae-Suh – photo Todd Wong

A man steps into the spotlight with a guitar slung over his
shoulders, and a jet black pompadou hairstyle.  The sound track is
Johnny Cash’s “Ring of Fire,” but the words are strange.  It’s
about being Asian, racing “rice rockets” on “Streets of Fire.” 
It’s comedian Tom Chin, doing yet another karaoke musical send up.

The
7th Annual Asian Comedy night opened on May 26th at the Round House
Community Centre, produced and presented by Vancouver Asian Canadian
Theatre.  Flipping racial stereotypes is the norm, and white
actors are the exotic rarities.  The mostly Asian crowd laughed,
tittered and guffawed.  Even the white folks laughed and had lots
of fun identifying with the humour.

“Vancouver has a lot of inter-racial relationships…” starts Vancouver stand up comic Jeffery Yu,
a former social studies high school teacher. “Everybody thinks that
mixed race people are so exotic-looking,” he says and goes into a joke
about how Asian/White couples always seem to be Asian female / White
male.  Yu has lots of jokes, and the audience gets lots of
laughs.  Yu will be featured in a CTV comedy special later this
year, and was written up in the Georgia Straight last year.

“You’re
just not french enough!” say three Asian casting directors who are
auditioning a white actor in a racial role reversal.  “This is the
first time in a long while that we are casting an all-white cast in a
move.  Try a little more Catherine Deneuve, a little more French
Maid.”  

The female actor is clearly exasperated, trying to
please them, but clearly failing in her attempts to portray what they
“think” is French.  Finally she says, “I really don’t want this
part that badly,” like so many Asian actors who get frustrated trying
to portray what white casting directors and producers “think” is Asian,
or Chinese, or Japanese, etc.

“Maybe we can get Keanu, or Meg
Tilly,” the directors decide.  They’re half-white already, nobody
will know the difference.

OPM (Opening
People’s Minds) is a sketch comedy troupe now based in Los Angeles,
after first originating in Seattle.  Charles Kim and Ewan Chung
are the leaders with Jae-Suh and new kid Janina Gavankar.  They
also individually make the tv acting round in L.A. individually racking
up credits in ER, Strong Medicine, Girlfriends and Las Vegas. 
This is one talented troupe! 

The skits are fast and
furious.  Kim plays a Japanese rapper named “50 Yen,” or was that
Chung who did it?  Sometimes Asians look alike to me.  But
there is no mistaking their abilities to quickly change characters from
one skit to the next.  Omigod, it’s like an Asian version of
Saturday Night Live with an all-Asian cast, presenting stories with
Asian themes, as well as a wonderful skit about a male car mechanic and
a female car owner who (gasp!) took her car to a different mechanic for
a hose job, when he was too busy.  The double entendres and the
acting were spot on!

Some of the better characters involved an
Iron Chef spoof featuring the North Korean leader dictator Kim Jong-Il
with a “Capote” accent,
and Savuri from “Memoirs of a Geisha,” the night’s performance who
tries her best to become an “exotic dancer.”

For
the Vancouver show, they are joined by Hot Sauce Posse member
Philip Gurney, their token white actor.  Gurney was only able to
rehearse for about 40 minutes with OPM, but seemed to fit
beautifully.   Saturday's show promises to be an even tighter
smoother production.


Jeffery Yu, Tom Chin and Kermet Apio – at the afterparty! – photo Todd Wong

Kermet Apio
grew up in Hawaii, a land and culture that I consider to be much more
interculturally and accepting of inter-racial relationships.  He
now does stand up comedy in Seattle and tours nationally.  “You
learn to laugh at yourself when your name is Kermet,” he says. 
Apio spins jokes and stories about growing up named Kermet as well as
growing up Hawaiian.  

“How was school today?” my parents would ask when I would come home.

“How do you think it went. I’m named Kermit,” he replies.

“I
was first born,” starts Apio,  “I was the guinea pig. My parents
learned with me as practice.  My sisters got normal names.”

It’s
a friendly “in the know” crowd at the Roundhouse.  They know what
it’s like to grow up Asian.  But the comedy is universal. 
It’s the situations that we laugh at.  The stereotypes, the
mistaken identities, the misunderstandings.  But Asian Comedy
Night goes beyond the obvious.  This is also a night of social
commentary.  Yes there is racial discrimination, but we don’t have
to get down about it.  If we can laugh at the world and ourselves,
we’ll do okay.  

Thanks to Vancouver Asian Comedy Night,
the world is safer for Asians and their friends, and hopefully the
world will understand better why Asians are such bad drivers, don’t
understand the concept of tipping, think White people all look alike,
and why we speak with funny accents.

Check out the Comedy
workshops at the Roundhouse on Saturday afternoon, as well as the final
show on Saturday night.  It's well worth it.  Take your white
friends… or your Asian friends… even if just to have an excuse to
make fun of each other later.

Asian Comedy Night – This Friday and Saturday – Don't Miss it!

Asian Comedy Night is a tradition in Vancouver – started by Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre, seven years ago.  It is great fun – poking at all the stereotypes of both Asians and White People.

This year, OPM (Opening People's Minds) returns, along with Vancouver
stand up comic, Jeffrey Yu, returning host Tom Chin, and Seattle's
Kermet Apio.

Bring your friends, and see
how they squirm or laugh at the right or wrong places.  Political
correctness?  Asian Comedy Night re-writes it.  Cheers, Todd

Below is from the www.vact.ca website

Get Addicted to OPM !
OPM- Asian Sketch Comedy Troupe – Returns to get “HIGH” lighted
in the 7th Annual Asian Comedy Night

Return of the Chung King – 7th Annual Asian Comedy
May 26 – 27, 2006
8pm nightly
@ The Roundhouse Performance Centre, Vancouver

VANCOUVER,
BC (April 24, 2006) – The coveted Rice Bowl that is awarded to the
funniest Asian Sketch Comedy Troupe at the Vancouver Asian Canadian
Theatre’s highly successful SKETCHOFF!#$%!! – sketch comedy competition, returns with the 3 time winners to Vancouver, to highlight this year’s Asian Comedy Night.  OPM (Opening People‘s Minds)
will get you laughing, rolling in the aisles, and totally high for the 
evening!   It’s 120 minutes of craziness irreverence, as triple-crown
winner OPM present a semi-star studded show with appearances by 50 Yen,
Tyra Banks, Iron Chef Bobby Flay, North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Il,
Savuri from “Memoirs of a Geisha,“ and MORE! 

The event, organized by Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre (VACT), takes place May 26 – 27 at the Roundhouse Performance Centre, hosted by Tom Chin.  This year’s Comedy Night showcases local favourite standup comedian, Jeffery Yu who has a CTV comedy special this Fall, and Seattle’s funniest comic, Kermet Apio.

“If
you’re talking about entertainment value, we’ve got it with this year’s
Return of the Chung King Show,” says Joyce Lam, President for VACT. “We
are highlighting the Kings of Comedy.  Jeffery Yu is my local favourite standup comedian while Kermet Apio from
Seattle had me laughing from the get go when he explained his unusual
name and how he was sent to preschool in green pants.  Match that with
the fast pace hilariousness of OPM, back with new material from their most recent show Get Laughs or Die Tryin‘, and the very funny Tom Chin and you’ve got a wild night of mayhem, madness and hysterics!”

Also as part of this weekend of Asian Comedy, The Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre is hosting a community public forum, Dissection of Comedy, held
on Saturday, May 27th at 2pm at the Roundhouse Community Centre.  This
forum will have the Asian Comedy Night comedians:  OPM, Jeffery Yu, Kermet Apio and Tom Chin provide
insight on what is “comedy“. The audience will have a chance to see a
demonstration, hear a discussion and ask questions.  Admission to this
event is free.

Party On! Join the performers and producers at 2 AFTER PARTIES:

  1. Friday Night at SHIRU-BAY with fighting Chef, Kodai Uno
  2. Saturday Night at THE DINER (both within steps from the theatre)

$5 gets you in. You hang with the comics, have some fun and become an
official OPM groupie. Join us for a good time! Cash Bar. AFTER PARTY Tickets available on-line

Tickets:
online at www.vact.ca
– in person at the Roundhouse Community Centre
– by phone by calling 604.713.1800

$18 plus service charges in advance
$21 cash at door

Group Rate and/or Information 778.885.1973

I meet Bertha Bay-Sa Pan, director of Face – review to come

I meet Bertha Bay-Sa Pan, director of Face – review to come

I saw the movie Face last night at Pacific Cinematheque as part of
explorASIAN's film component celebrating Asian Heritage Month. 
Pan is in town for a few days as the Western Canadian Premiere of Face,
and to give a short film making workshop on Sunday afternoon at
Vancouver Museum, plus Q&A sessions following each screening of her
movie.

It's a nicely crafted movie about 3 generations of Asian women in New
York City.  The characters are each nicely developed and influence
each other directly and indirectly, even though Central character Kim,
left her mother and infant daughter behind to start a new life. 
The story is told in flashbacks and  begins as she is returning to
New York to visit them.

Bertha Bay-Sa Pan answered lots of questions from the audience, and
explained that while the film is “Asian” in characters and story, it is
universal enough that many Jewish people as well as gays, told her that
“It's my story!”  The characters deal with not being able to
communicated and say what they feel to each other, and how they must
deal with the consequences of the actions and their inactions.

My question to Pan, dealt with the Asian-African inter-racial
relationship.  I said that most films dealing with inter-racial
relationships have usually had white-Asian relationships such as Joy
Luck Club and Mina Shum's Double Happiness.

 “It's not the first one on screen,” Pan answered.  There was
also the movie “One Night Stand,” as well as the television show ER –
both with actress Ming Na Wen.  Also Sandra Oh on Gray's Anatomy,
has become involved with a Black American.”

Pan has seen many of the Asian-Canadian and Asian-American films, and
counts Ang Lee's earlier films such as Eat Drink Man Woman as her
influences.  She made her cinematographer watch In the Mood for
Love, to help demonstrate the lighting that she wanted to
capture.  Asian movies do capture different colours as symbolic
metaphors that are important to telling the story she wanted, she
explained to the audience.

see below from the explorASIAN website

BERTHA BAY-SA PAN
Writer/Director/Producer

Face
is the feature film debut for writer-director Bertha Bay-Sa Pan. Born
in New Jersey and raised in Taiwan, Ms. Pan received her MFA in Film
from Columbia University, where her short film “Face” [from which the
feature is adapted] won numerous honors including the Polo Ralph Lauren
Award for “Best Screenplay”, the Director’s Guild Award for “Best Asian
American Student Filmmaker.” The feature film “Face” brought her
various awards including The Best Director Award at Urbanworld Film
Festival, The Critics Award for Best Director at CineVegas, an Open
Palm nomination from the Gotham Awards in 2002, as well as the Premio
Speciale Prize at Torino International Women’s Film Festival 2003.

a Bertha Bay-Sa Pan film starring Bai Ling – Treach – Kristy Wu

“Face”
– Winner of the Best Director Award at Urbanworld Film Festival, The
Critics Award for Best Director at CineVegas, an Open Palm nomination
from the Gotham Awards and the Premio Speciale Prize at Torino
International Women’s Film Festival.

Western Canada Premiere at explorASIAN 2006
Director in Attendance

May 13 – 7:30pm & 9:30pm

May 14 – 7:30pm (followed by explorFILM: Asian Canadian Short Films at 9:30pm)
May 15 – 9:30pm (after explorFILM: Asian Canadian Short Films at 7:30pm)

Special members ticket prices in effect for this event!
Single Bill: $9.00 (students/seniors $7)
Double Bill: $12 (students/seniors $9)

Membership
in Pacific Cinémathèque or the Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Society
required for this event. VAHMS memberships available at the door.

Location: Pacific Cinematheque, 1131 Howe Street, Vancouver
http://www.cinematheque.bc.ca/

Language: English
Some coarse language and brief nudity
Runtime: 89 min

Hip, Hapa and Interculturally Happening – May 11 to May 18

Hip, Hapa and Interculturally Happening – May 11 to May 18

Asian Authors Night – featuring Kevin Chong, Kuldip Gill, Lydia Kwa and Terrie Hamazaki

May 11, Thursday
Alice Mackay Room

Vancouver Public Library, Central Branch

350 West Georgia Street.



Celebrate Asian Heritage Month in a literary
way! Join us for a panel of local Asian authors as they read and
discuss their work, and share their experiences and perspectives on
writing and culture.



Featuring:

  • Lydia Kwa: author of The Walking Boy and This Place Called Absence.
  • Kuldip Gill: Winner of a BC Book Award (2000), she is the author of Dharma Rasa and Kildeer's Dance.
  • Terrie Hamazaki:
    her plays have been produced at the Fringe and Women in View Performing
    Arts Festivals; her fiction and poetry have appeared in several
    anthologies.
  • Kevin Chong: popular columnist and author of Baroque-a-Nova and Neil Young Nation.

DAVID SUZUKI

May 13, 7 pm,
St. Andrew’s Wesley Church.

Tix $10 at www.ticketweb.ca or at People’s Co-op
Bookstore,
 info 1-888-222-6608.

Scientist, environmentalist, and broadcaster launches his
new book, David Suzuki: The Autobiography, with a talk, multimedia
presentation, and book signing; proceeds to the David Suzuki Foundation. May
13, 7 pm, St. Andrew’s Wesley Church. Tix $10 at www.ticketweb.ca or
at People’s Co-op Bookstore, info 1-888-222-6608.

RICE ROCKETS & YACHT PEOPLE

To May 14, Wed.-Sat. at 8 pm (mats. Sat.-Sun. at 2 pm),
Gateway Theatre (6500 Gilbert Rd.,
Richmond)

Tix $24/22, info
www.gatewaytheatre.com/

I
just saw this Simon Johnston’s
new drama about the clash of values between new Canadians and longtime
Caucasian
residents.  It's great! It turns stereotypes on its head, as well
as presenting contemporary issues facing Vancouver area residents
today.  Asian Canadians are no longer low income earners at the
bottom of the immigrant ladder, and sometimes they aren't even
immigrants = hence the term “yacht people.” “Rice rockets” is the term
used for souped up Honda Civics used for street racing in Richmond.

THE GULL: THE STEVESTON NOH PROJECT

To May 14, Wed.-Sat. at 8 pm (mats. Sat.-Sun. at 2 pm),
Plaza at Richmond City Hall (6911 No. 3 Rd.).
Tix $25 at Gateway Theatre box office, 604-270-1812,
info www.pangaea-arts.com/.

Daphne Marlatt is hot! and she's cool! 
Earlier in February she was made a member of the Order of Canada. 
She read in support of Joy Kogawa at Chapters, and she is recently a
contributor of a anthology of Lesbian writing.

Pangaea Arts presents Daphne Marlatt’s new play about
Japanese-Canadian fishermen returning to the coast after the internment.
Featuring Japanese Noh performers and Canadian theatre artists.

What Are You Anyways? Jeff Chiba Stearns - film maker
May 14th, 10:15am to 12:30 pm
Vancouver Museum
Workshop on Hapa Issues and animation

May 15th and 16th Sunday and Monday night 7:30, 9:30pm
at the Pacific Cinematheque with the movie FACE.


Jeff is the award winning animator and film maker of "What Are you Anyways?"
a short film about growing up Hapa or "Half Japanese/Half Caucasian" in Kelowna BC

Filmmakers Workshop
with award winning Director/Producer Bertha Bay-Sa Pan (NY, USA)
12:30pm to 2:30pm

Scriptwriting Workshop with Grace Chin & Kathy Leung (BC)
2:45pm to 4:45pm

Bertha Bay-Sa Pan's FACE - Western Canada Premiere
May 12-15


F A C E
Losing face. Finding soul.

a Bertha Bay-Sa Pan film starring Bai Ling – Treach – Kristy Wu

“Face”
– Winner of the Best Director Award at Urbanworld Film Festival, The
Critics Award for Best Director at CineVegas, an Open Palm nomination
from the Gotham Awards and the Premio Speciale Prize at Torino
International Women’s Film Festival.

Western Canada Premiere at explorASIAN 2006
Director in Attendance

May 12 – 7:30pm & 9:30pm
May 13 – 7:30pm & 9:30pm

May 14 – 7:30pm (followed by explorFILM: Asian Canadian Short Films at 9:30pm)
May 15 – 9:30pm (after explorFILM: Asian Canadian Short Films at 7:30pm)

Special members ticket prices in effect for this event!
Single Bill: $9.00 (students/seniors $7)
Double Bill: $12 (students/seniors $9)

Membership
in Pacific Cinémathèque or the Vancouver Asian Heritage Month Society
required for this event. VAHMS memberships available at the door.


THE MIKADO (OR THE TOWN OF TITIPU)

May 21, 27-28 at 3:30 pm),

Surrey Arts Centre (13750 88th Ave.).
Tix $23.50/19.50 (preview $16.50),
info 604-501-5566.

The Fraser Valley Gilbert & Sullivan Society presents a
traditional version of one of the pair’s best-loved romantic-comedy operettas.
May 18-20 & 24-27 at 8 pm (preview May 17 at 8 pm; mats.

EVENING OF ROSES

May 12, 8 pm,

St. Mark’s-Trinity Church (W. 2nd & Larch).
Tix $15/10, info 604-873-1372.

Okay…. I am including this event because Karen-Lee-Morlang
is a friend of mine.  She accompanies
the the Vancouver City Singers conducted by Tom McPherson for a concert
celebrating love in its many forms.

OCEAN CROSSINGS

May 13, 8 pm,

Orpheum.



Tix and info 604-876-3434.

This sounds interesting…. Lots of Asian Canadian musical
performers, an Asian Canadian conductor with works inspired by Asian
influences.  Alexina Louie is a
Vancouver born composer now living in Toronto.

Ken Hsieh conducts the VSO, with guests Grace Lee (kayagum)
and Gui Lian Liu (pipa), in a concert of Eastern-inspired music by
Vivier/Rea, Simon Holt, Ray Zhuo, Grace Lee, and Alexina Louie.

DRUM ‘N’
DANCE II

May 13, 7:30 pm,

WISE Hall (1882 Adanac).



Tix $22 (plus service charge) at Highlife, Scratch, and Zulu
Records, info 604-408-8582,
www.caravanbc.org/.

Caravan World Rhythms and Vancouver Rhythm and Dance present
performances by Thione Diop’s Senegalese band Yeke Yeke, Pepe Danza’s Drum
Prayers, and dancer Jacky Essombe from Cameroon.

Jean Barman – Vancouver Asians and Stanley Park
 
May 15th, Monday
Alice Mackay Room


Vancouver Public Library, Central Branch

350 West Georgia Street.


 




The author of Stanley Park's Secret
will explore the shared stories of Stanley Park's forgotten past. Early
Vancouver was an inhospitable place with the dominant society using
various means to segregate itself from racial groups it considered
inferior. One of the few locations where everyone could enter on a
basis of rough equality was Stanley Park.

Jean Barman is a founding member of the Chinese Canadian Historical Society of BC and UBC professor emeritis.

NATALIE MACMASTER AND DONNELL LEAHY

May 17-18, 8 pm,

Orpheum Theatre.



Tix $38-60, info 604-876-3434.

Hmmm…. Cape Breton Scottish Canadian fiddlers meet the VSO
with Chinese-Canadian conductor.  I love
MacMaster’s work.
Juno-winning Canadian fiddlers perform with the VSO,
conducted by Ken Hsieh.

OKINAWA CULTURE EXTRAVAGANZA

May 12, 7:30-9:30 pm,
Vancouver Japanese Language School and Japanese Hall
(475 Alexander).


Tix $10 adults/$40 group of five adults/$5 children/$20
group of five children, info 604-254-2551

Oklinawan culture is unique – not Japanese and not Chinese, even
though each country colonized it for periods of time.  The Kogawa family name came from Okinawa, as David
Kogawa has told me.

As part of its centennial celebrations, the Vancouver
Japanese Language School and Japanese Hall hosts a celebration of Okinawan
music and arts, featuring a performance by the traditionally attired Okinawan
Children’s Choir, plus a demonstration and sampling of bukubukuu-cha,
Okinawa’s traditional tea.

KAZUMI TSURUOKA & SAGEEV OORE

May 12-13, 8 pm,

Vancouver Elks Lodge (1–2177 W. 42nd).



Tix from $20 to $50 at the door, info
604-683-8240.
Singer-storyteller
Tsuruoka and pianist Oore use rhythm ‘n’ blues to tell the love story of a man
with cerebral palsy. Hmmm…. Sounds interesting.  Japanese story telling and Blues music?  Very folking… (Did you ever see the movie Mongolian Blues?”

Chinese Restaurants – BEYOND FRONTIERS: Director CHEUK KWAN and Cinematographer KWOI in Attendance

Chinese Restaurants – BEYOND FRONTIERS:
Director CHEUK KWAN and Cinematographer KWOI in Attendance



Cheuk Kwan is a cool guy – so is his cinematogapher (camera man),
Kwoi.  Last year I watched his incredible documentary series
Chinese Restaurants.

Cheuk travels the world checking out Chinese restaurants, and getting
the stories behind them.  He is also an ardent support of Chinese
Canadian head tax redress.

I LOVE his “3 Continents” documentary.  It includes a visit of
“Noisy Jim Cook” at his small restaurant in Outlook Sasketchewan, where
Cook was a beloved town institution and encouraged to run for mayor.

Check out my previous article for thoughts and related reviews:
http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/_archives/2005/5/6/657681.html

MEDIA ADVISORY

for immediate release
 

 
Chinese Restaurants – BEYOND
FRONTIERS

British Columbia Premiere at explorASIAN 2006



Director CHEUK KWAN and Cinematographer KWOI in Attendance
 
Q&A with Cheuk and Kwoi follows each screening

May 9 – 7pm
(followed by Chinese Restaurants – THREE CONTINENTS at 9pm)

Special
members ticket prices in effect for this event!
Single Bill: $9.00
(students/seniors $7)
Double Bill: $12 (students/seniors
$9)

Membership in the Pacific Cinémathèque or the Vancouver Asian
Heritage Month Society required for this event.

Pacific Cinematheque or VAHMS memberships available
at the door.

Location: Pacific Cinematheque, 1131 Howe Street,
Vancouver
http://www.cinematheque.bc.ca/

 
BEYOND FRONTIERS
Filmmaker Cheuk Kwan travel to
India and Brazil delving into Chinese communities who transcend geographical,
political and social frontiers.
 
THREE CONTINENTS
Filmmaker Cheuk Kwan visits
Madagascar, Norway and Canada, exploring the meaning of “home” in Chinese
communities that have established themselves on three
continents.
– 30 –

7th Annual Asian Comedy Night – featuring OPM IV: Return of the Chung King

Here's a message sent to me from my friend Joyce Lam, producer and president of Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre. 

Asian Comedy Night is a great way to celebrate being Asian Canadian, by
sharing a common mind set, poking fun at stereotypes of Asians,
Asian-Canadians, White-Canadians, etc.  I have attended various
incarnations of ACN over the years, and many of VACT's
productions.  They give great insight to the Asian Canadian psyche
and identity.

Your white boyfriend or girfriend, says she just doesn't understand your Asian sense of humor?  Bring her/him down!

Your Asian girlfriend or boyfriend says they want to be more sensitive and supportive of Asian issues?  Bring him/her down!


 

OPM
Part IV: Return of the Chung King

7th
Annual Asian Comedy Night

image           
presented by

 

 

image

The
Show

 

Main
Course

Three-time
winners
of the coveted Rice Bowl, OPM (Open
People
s
Minds)
is back in town for only two
evenings of comedic aphorisms from an Asian slant

Featuring appearances by 50
Yen, Kimora Lee, Iron Chef Bobby Flay, North
Korean dictator Kim Jong-Il, and Savuri from
Memoirs of a
Geisha,
the nights performance will be charged
with new sketches from OPM
s latest show, Get Laughs or Die
Tryin

Side
Dish

Local favourite stand-up
comedian and CTV comedy star, Jeffery
Yu
, along with
Seattles funniest comic, Kermet Apio, will kick-off the night tickling your
funny bones

Hosted by Tom
Chin
, the night will surely have Auntie Mah shouting
Aiya!

Dessert

Party
On!

Join the performers and producers at 2 AFTER
PARTIES
:

è               
Friday
Night at SHIRU-BAY
with fighting Chef, Kodai Uno

è               
Saturday
Night at THE
DINER
(both within steps from the
theatre)

$5
gets you in. You hang with the comics and have a fun night out!
Cash Bar.      AFTER
PARTY Tickets available on-line

Show
Details

 

Location
& Dates

Return
of the Chung King

7th Annual Asian Comedy Night

è               
at
the Roundhouse Performance Centre

è               
181
Roundhouse Mews (
Davie
&
Pacific
Blvd
,
Vancouver)

è               
Friday
May 26 & Saturday May 27

è               
8:00
PM
,
doors open at
7:30
PM

Buy
Tickets

$18 in advance or $21 cash at
the door

Buy
Tickets:

è               
In
person at the Roundhouse,

è               
By
phone at (604) 713-1800 or

è               
Online
at www.vact.ca

Group
Rates

For more information or group
rates, please visit www.vact.ca or call
(778) 885-1973

Note: 14+ years, some coarse
language and suggestive material

Other
Event

 

Public
Forum

Also check out the Dissection of
Comedy
, a free public forum with demonstrations and discussions
on sketch comedy.  OPM, Jeffery
Yu
, and Kermet Apio will share their insights on their
processes and careers

è               
Saturday
May 27:
2pm at
the Roundhouse

 

Hip, Hapa and Interculturally Happening: May 5 – 12 – It's Asian Heritage Month!

Hip, Hapa and Interculturally Happening:  May 5 – 12
It's Asian Heritage Month!

What
to see?  What do do?  Where to go?   With Asian
Heritage Month there will be no shortage of interculturally Asian
events to attend during the explorASIAN festival – check it out!

Think I will start off the week by going to the Musica intima concert
at Ryerson United Church.  They are a wonderful choral group, and
can always be counted on to do something wonderful and absolutely
gorgeous.  Too bad I will have to miss the No Shit Shirleys –
another one of my favorite performers.  They mix and match gospel
songs, lullabies and songs of protests from all over the world. 
Very cool – very intercultural.  

Looks like I will be heading down to Richmond to see two plays that
each deal with how Asian ethnic groups settled in Richmond.  Simon
Johnston's Rice
Rockets and Yacht People addresses recent affluent immigrants from
Shanghai and Daphne Marlatt's the Gull, deals with  the Japanese
community returning to the BC Coast after internment when they had much
of their personal property and homes confiscated including their
fishing boats.

May 11th is my birthday…  Hmmm… what will I do?  Go for a
drive to Whistler?  Go paddle a canoe, or go to the Aquarium to
see my favorite sea otter Nyack?  Maybe go celebrate at Doolin's
Irish Pub, because the Halifax Wharf Rats always put on a good
show.  Always a good excuse to put on the kilt too!

MUSICA INTIMA – The Canadian Concert
www.musicaintima.org


May 5, 8 pm,


Ryerson United Church (Yew St. & 45th Ave.)


May 7, 3pm

Evergreen Cultural Centre, (Coquitlam)

Wonderful 12
person self-conducted choral group sing traditional and classic
Canadian songs, including writers such as Gordon Lightfoot, Joni
Mitchell, Gilles Vigneault, Stan Rogers and many more.



THE NO SHIT SHIRLEYS
www.shirleys.ca


May 5, 8 pm,

St. James Hall (3214 W. 10th).

Local octet
performs a capella versions of Afro-Cuban Orisha music,
African-American spirituals, originals, Native American lullabies, and
Russian folk songs. Tix $16/13, info 604-736-3022.






NO GREAT MISCHIEF

Ends May 6, Mon.-Sat. at 8 pm (mats. Sat., select Wed.-Thurs. at 2 pm),

Vancouver Playhouse (Hamilton & Dunsmuir).

The Playhouse
Theatre Company presents David S. Young’s adaptation of Alistair
MacLeod’s novel that follows three generations of Clan MacDonald from
the shores of Scotland to Cape Breton Island. Starring Allan Morgan and
Duncan Fraser and directed by Dean Paul Gibson. Tix $24 to $51 (plus
service charges and fees) at Ticketmaster, 604-280-3311.




RICE ROCKETS & YACHT PEOPLE 
www.gatewaytheatre.com/whatsons2.html


May 4-13,

Gateway Theatre (6500 Gilbert Rd., Richmond).

The Gateway’s
New Play Series presents Simon Johnston’s drama about the clash of
values between new Canadians and longtime Caucasian residents, focusing
on a well-to-do couple from Shanghai and their street-racing kids. Tix
$24/22, info www.gatewaytheatre.com/.




STRINGS AND STRIKES

May 6, 8 pm,

Scotiabank Dance Centre (677 Davie).

Vancouver New
Music, in association with explorASIAN and Asian Heritage Month,
presents a concert of boundary-crossing musical performance by Mei Han
(zheng), Aiyun Huang (percussion), and Lee Pui Ming (piano). Tix $15/10
(plus service charges and fees) at Ticketmaster, 604-280-3311.

Alcan Dragon Boat Festival COMMUNITY PADDLING
www.adbf.com


May 7 & 14, 1:00 pm,

Dragon Zone @ Creekside Park – just south of Science World
Come learn to paddle a dragon boat – just to say that you've done
it.  It's the Vancouver thing to do.  A 30 minute on-land
introduction to dragon boating with safety and paddle instruction,
followed by a 30 minute paddle on False Creek including 2
mini-races.  Assisted by the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team
with coach Todd Wong.  Lots of Fun – $2 -Please pre-register at 604 688-2382 ext 3, or email Nicole at
nicole@adbf.com with names, phone number and number of participants.



AFRICAN PEACE FESTIVAL

May 7, 7:30 pm,

Unitarian Church of Vancouver (949 W. 49th

The African
Working Group of the World Peace Forum presents performances by local
African artists and musicians, DJs and dancing, and market sales of
African art, food, clothing, and gifts. May 6, 11 am–9 pm, Ukrainian
Cultural Centre (805 E. Pender). Info 604-715-4816,
www.africapeaceforum.com/.




SUSHI-MAKING WORKSHOP

May 7, 12-3 pm,

Silk Purse Arts Centre (1570 Argyle Ave., West Van.).

Learn to make both nigiri and norimaki sushi with Kinuko Hagashio. Fee $10, info 604-925-7292.



GENDER, RACE, ISLAM, AND THE WAR ON TERROR

May 11, 5-9 pm,

Heritage Hall (3102 Main) & May 13, 5-7 pm, Vancouver Public Library (350 W. Georgia).

SFU department
of women’s studies and Researchers and Academics of Colour for
Equality/Equity host a pair of community dialogues on Muslims in Canada
and the promotion of peace, democracy, and human rights, with panelists
set to include Asma Barlas of Ithaca College, Amina Jamal of Concordia
University, and Sunera Thobani of UBC. Free admission, info
rwwchair@sfu.ca.



Adrift on the Nile?

NEW PLAY FESTIVAL

May 8-14, 8 pm,

Playwrights Theatre Centre Studio (Festival House, 1398 Cartwright).

Weeklong
festival offers a preview of new scripts from emerging and established
playwrights, including Marcus Youssef and Camyar Chai’s adaptation of
Naguib Mafhouz’s Adrift on the Nile?;  My friend Adrienne Wong performs with
Marcus.


By donation, info 604-685-6228.



TWELVE MINUTES MAX XXXII

May 9-10, 8 pm,
www.firehallartscentre.ca


Firehall Arts Centre (280 E. Cordova).

Showcase of
interdisciplinary live performance works lasting 12 minutes or less,
featuring 10 works curated by choreographer and Dancers Dancing
artistic director Judith Garay, playwright Jan Derbyshire, and
composer-director Ya-wen Wang. Tix $12, info 604-689-0926.




THE GULL: THE STEVESTON NOH PROJECT

May 10-14, Wed.-Sat. at 8 pm (mats. Sat.-Sun. at 2 pm),

Plaza at Richmond City Hall (6911 No. 3 Rd.).

Pangaea Arts
presents Daphne Marlatt’s new play about Japanese-Canadian fishermen
returning to the coast after the internment. Featuring Japanese Noh
performers and Canadian theatre artists. Tix $25 at Gateway Theatre box
office, 604-270-1812, info www.pangaea-arts.com/.


Paul Yee and his book “Saltwater City” featured for CBC Studio One Book Club

Paul Yee and his book “Saltwater City” featured for CBC Studio One Book Club


I first met Paul Yee back in 1986.  He was a very unassuming man
of quiet intensity.  My older cousin Hayne had invited me to
become involved on a project celebrating 100 years of Chinese Canadian
history in Vancouver.  It was to be the Chinese community's
contribution to the Vancouver centennial celebrations.


It was a
turning point in my life.  I learned lots about Chinese Canadian
history, and it helped my own family history to come more alive for
me.  There were mentions about my Great-great-grandfather's
involvement with the Chinese Methodist Church, Rev. Chan Yu Tan. 
My cousin Joni Mar was mentioned as one of the first Chinese Canadian
television news reporters.  And my Uncle Daniel Lee loaned his
Airforce uniform and medals for the exhibit.

I helped to paint some of the displays, bang nails, hang things up, and
I met some great people.  Rah Mah was a graphic designer who went
on to found his own company, Leap Creative.  Elizabeth Sheffrin
was a textile artist who became the event manager.  Elizabeth
Johnson was a curator at the Museum of Anthropology.  David Wong
was an architectural student who later founded his own company. 
Joyce Lam was volunteer coordinator and later founded Vancouver Asian
Canadian Theatre.

During the exhibit I helped to provide information on the exhibit, and
give people tours.  When nobody came through, I sat and read
Paul's books “Teach Me to Fly Skyfighter,” and “Curse of Third Uncle.”


In 1989,
Douglas McIntyre published Paul Yee's “Saltwater City.”  I
remember attending the book launch at the Chinese Cultural Centre
boardroom.  I have a picture of myself with Paul – my head is bald
due to the chemotherapy treatment I was going through at the time.

Over the years, I have attended many of Paul's readings and book
launches in Vancouver.  He is an amazing presenter with a very
good speaking style.  In September 2002, I was on the board of the
Asian Canadian Writers' Workshop, and we presented Paul with a
Community Achievement award.

On May 17th, Paul Yee will be presenting a newly revised edition of
“Saltwater City” for the CBC Studio One Book Club – see information
below.


Hope to see you there….

See below for informaiton from the CBC Radio website on how to enter.
http://www.cbc.ca/bc/bookclub/paulyee.html


CBC Radio One, The Georgia Straight, The Vancouver Readers &
Writers Festival, The Vancouver Public Library, and explorASIAN are
pleased to present…
Paul Yee - Saltwater City: The Story of Vancouver's Chinese Community
Paul Yee with Saltwater City: The Story of Vancouver’s Chinese Community
Wednesday, May 17, 6:30 to 8:00 p.m.
CBC Radio Studio One
700 Hamilton Street, Vancouver
Paul YeeCome
celebrate the completely redesigned and revised edition of this
best-selling landmark book, first published in 1988, which told the
epic story of Vancouver's Chinese community and its extraordinary
growth from marginal to centre stage in a new world order. The new
edition includes the years 1987 to 2001, when Vancouver’s Chinese
population grew rapidly.
The text
resonates with often painful first-person recollections and includes
200 photographs, most reproduced for the first time, to form a
chronological portrait of the community from its earliest beginnings to
the present. With the assimilation of its people into the mainstream of
Canadian life following World War II, Saltwater City, as early Chinese
immigrants called the community, was threatened, but changes in
attitude, government policy, and the opening of diplomatic relations
with China instead caused a renaissance. Now, Vancouver's Chinese
community enjoys considerable political and financial influence and has
matured beyond recognition into one of Canada's most successful ethnic
enclaves.
Paul Yee, a third-generation
Chinese-Canadian, was born in Saskatchewan, grew up in Vancouver’s
Chinatown, and worked for the Vancouver City Archives before moving to
Toronto in 1988. He has written several fiction, non-fiction, childrens
and young adult books. His latest books include Bamboo, Chinatowns in Canada, and Is This Screwed, Or What?.
The
CBC Studio One Book Club is an intimate gathering of ONLY 120 audience
members. It is hosted by Sheryl MacKay of CBC Radio and John Burns of
the Georgia Straight, and is recorded for broadcast on North by
Northwest and other CBC Radio programs. Microphones are set up for
audience questions. We encourage you to join in, your participation in
the CBC Radio Studio One Book Club is an important part of the
broadcast. This is your chance to talk to Paul Yee about his books,
fiction and non-fiction, his work as an archivist, his history and more!
The only way to get in, is to
win!
For
your chance to win two tickets to be part of this Book Club, tell us
(in 200 words or less) why you would like to be in the audience to meet
Paul Yee.
Or fax: 604-662-6088 *
Or mail: CBC Studio One Book Club *
P.O. Box 4600
Vancouver, B.C.
V6B 4A2
* Don't forget your name and daytime telephone number.
Entries close midnight, Sunday, May 14, 2006

All winners will be notified by email. Each winner will receive two tickets. No tickets available at the door.

Hip, Hapa, Happening and Interculturally Interesting April 28 to May 5

Hip, Hapa, Happening and Interculturally Interesting April 28 to May 5

There is
definitely lots of real cool stuff happening this week, especially with
the explorASIAN festival
celebrating Asian Heritage Month presenting
great stuff.  My weekend is packed.  I can't be down at
Centre A to help register head tax certificates on Saturday because I
am pulling a work shift at the Vancouver Public Library (proudly
wearing my 30 year service pin).  May 1st is Workers Day, and I
also can't be at the April 28th celebration at Capri Hall, which is
boasting lots of great multicultural and intercultural
performers.  And I can't  attend the Scottish stuff happening
on Saturday either.

Saturday
night I attend the
BC Book Prize Gala, where Bill Richardson will be
MC.  I will be at a table with Joy Kogawa, Bill Turner (The Land
Conservancy) and my fellow Save Kogawa House committee coordinator
Ann-Marie Metten, as we toast the saving and purchase of Kogawa House.

Gung Haggis dragon boat
practice on Sunday afternoon 1pm.  It is the last day of the ADBF
public paddling program

Come join us for a 30 minute paddle in a
dragon boat for $2. Ipm – meet at the Green Trailer building in
Creekside Park – just a few paces south of Science World. 
Consider it a waterfront tour of Vancouver's
False Creek – much more interactive than the mini-ferries.

Great plays coming up with Simon Johnston's “Rice Rockets and Yacht People” and “Finding Home” by Welly Yang and Dina Morishita

Liutenant Governor's BC Book Prize Gala
Saturday, April 29
5:30
pm,
Marriott Pinnacle Hotel, 1128 West Hastings Street.
For more information, call the BC Book Prizes at 604-687-2405
www.bcbookprizes.ca
Emceed by
Bill Richardson, this 22nd annual BC Book Prizes gala will recognize our
province’s finest literary achievements in seven categories, as well as celebrate the recipient of
the Lieutenant Governor’s Award for Literary Excellence.
Free post-gala reception at 9:30 pm.
Tickets
must be ordered by April 21.

Join
Broadway Performer/Playwright Welly Yang and Performer/Co-Producer Dina
Morishita from FINDING HOME for an intimate Artist Talk and Q&A
event at Centre A

Saturday - April 29
7pm - 9pm
Doors open at 6:30pm

Admission: FREE
Centre A - Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian Art
2 WEST HASTINGS STREET, VANCOUVER
www.centrea.org
S.T.A.T.U.S. Coalition presents...
MAY DAY 2006**
"Long live International Workers' Day!"

Commemorating the International Workers' Struggle and Migrant Labour & Immigrant workers
Resistance...
SATURDAY APRIL 29 @ 7:30 PM- 1 AM
DINNER WILL BE SERVED. DJ’S AFTER 10 PM.
CAPRI HALL, 3925 Fraser (corner East 23rd Ave)
5-10$ suggested donation- includes dinner
Community performers, poets, and multimedia presentations:
Dhol Nation Academy, Hugo Rojas, Marcus Youssef, Mariam Durrani, Mexican Migrant Workers,
Ndidi Cascade, Michael Franti, Kelis, K-OS, & Kardinal Offishall, Oscar Villalobos, Sinag Bayan,
Filipino cultural collective, Wayde Compton, Yyadzehe Gatica with the Consejo Indigena Popular
de Oaxaca

SPIRIT OF SCOTLAND
April 29, Seaquam Secondary School (11584 Lyon Rd., Delta).
Tix and info 604-463-3421, www.sfupipeband.com/.
Afternoon concert with performances by Robert Malcolm Memorial Pipe
Bands, SFU Pipe Band,and the Heather Jolley Dancers (4 pm); evening
ceilidh and dinner featuring Blackthorn (6:30 pm)


SOUNDS OF SCOTLAND
April 29, 8 pm, Scottish Cultural Centre. Tix $25, info 604-929-1802.

Scottish fiddle champion Paul Anderson and singer-pianist George Donald perform on a program
with the Vancouver Scottish Country Dance Dem Team and local singer Wilma Paton.

RICE ROCKETS & YACHT PEOPLE

May 4-13, Gateway Theatre (6500 Gilbert Rd., Richmond). Tix $24/22,
 info www.gatewaytheatre.com/
The Gateway’s New Play Series presents Simon Johnston’s drama about the clash of values
between new Canadians and longtime Caucasian residents, focusing on a well-to-do couple from
Shanghai and their street-racing kids.

PALESTINE, ISRAEL, AND ME: A POWER PLAY

May 5 & 7, 7:30pm, Unitarian Church of Vancouver, 949 W. 49th

Forum
Theatre piece about the struggle for peace and justice in Palestine and
Israel,and the profound effects of that struggle on people and
communities in Canada. Facilitated by Headlines Theatre with the
participation of local Jewish and Palestinian
organizations.

explorYOUTH 2006: e-race

May 2, 7 pm, Vancouver East Cultural Centre (1895 Venables). Info www.explorasian.org/.

VECC Youth Week, explorASIAN, and MISCELLANEOUS Productions present a screening of clips 
from a DVD of the hip-hop musical e-race, plus a panel discussion featuring four young
writer-performers from Asian backgrounds, moderated by director and writer Elaine Carol.

JAPANESE FAIRYTALE

May 2, 10:30 am, Silk Purse Arts Centre (1570 Argyle Ave., West Van.). 
Tix $10, info 604-925-7292.

UBC Opera members Michael Mori and Teiya Kashahara perform folksongs and arias from
the opera Turandot.


TOMODACHI
May 2, 10:30 am, Silk Purse Arts Centre (1570 Argyle Ave., West Van.). 
Tix $10, info 604-925-7292.
VSO violinist Akira Nagai and his wife, violist Seri, perform Western classical and various
kinds of traditional Japanese music.

FINDING HOME –
Canadian Premiere & Opening Event for explorASIAN 2006
May 5 – 8:00pm
May 6 – 2:00pm & 8:00pm
The Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage 2750 Granville St., Vancouver, BC
Tickets $88, $58, $38

Join Broadway Performer/Playwright Welly Yang, Dina Morishita, and friends in a
Night of Musical Theatre!


In a musical journey about finding home, Yang explores three generations of
family history: stories of leaving home and finding home, of love lost and love
found, and of dreams deferred and dreams realized. The show artfully weaves
together seventeen Broadway classics and contemporary songs by Elton John, Tim
Rice, Dan Hill and Luther Vandross among others.

 

 

Highlights for “Joy of Canadian Words” – fundraiser event for “Save Kogawa House”

Highlights for

“Joy of Canadian Words”

– fundraiser event for

“Save Kogawa House”

image

7:30pm

April 25th, 2006

Christ Church Cathedral

Georgia and Burrard

We
have invited actors and cultural celebrities to help us read some of
Canada's most important literary works. We started with the Literary
Review of Canada's 100 Greatest Canadian Books Ever Written, which
included Obasan and we allowed the presenters to find what moved them.

Introduction by Bill Turner
The Land Conservancy of BC

Sheryl McKay, CBC Radio Host of “North By Northwest”
Anne of Green Gables, Lucy Maud Montgomery

Joy Coghill, actor

Emily Carr’s “Klee
Wyck” and P. K. Page’s “Planet Earth”

Doris Chilcott, actor

Alden Nowlan poems

Leora Cashe, jazz gospel singer
songs by Leonard Cohen

Rhonda Larrabee, chief of the Qayqayt
First Nations


“Coyote and the Enemy Aliens” by Thomas King:

Bill Dow, actor
“The
Promised Land”
by Aron Buchkowsky,

Bill Dow, Manami Hara, Hiro Katagawa,
Maiko Yamamoto (actors)
“Call My People Home”by Dorothy Livesay (radio documentary poem)

Marion Quednau of the Writers’
Union of
Canada
    The significance of Kogawa House

Joy Kogawa
“Obasan”


This
promises to be an incredible event.  All the pieces just fell into
place.  The actors have found some incredible moving literary
works.

Sheryl McKay starts things off with “Ann of Green
Gables” a beloved Canadian institution with contemporary parallels to
Joy Kogawa's “Naomi's Road” in that an opera has now been written and
performed, and like Anne's House in PEI, people are now making
pilgramages to Kogawa House.

Joy Coghill is a treasured actor
and arts advocate.  By choosing to read Emily Carr's Klee-wyck,
Joy has found a parallel in that Emily Carr's childhood home has been
turned into a heritage site.  Hopefully Kogawa House will be the
same.

Doris Chilcott has chosen to read some poems by Alden
Nowlan, who had been a writer-in-residence at many places throughout
Canada.  We hope to create a Writers-in-Residence program for Kogawa House.

Dorothy Livesay wrote “Call My People Home”, for a CBC radio documentary that critized the internment and dispersal of Japanese Canadians in 1949.  This will be read by actors Bill Dow, Manami Hara, Hiro Katagawa,
Maiko Yamamoto


Thomas
King wrote an incredible short story about the mythical Coyote playing
havoc with the internment of Japanese Canadians and the confiscation of
their property in “Coyote and the Enemy Aliens.”

Leore Cashe is
an incredibly gifted jazz and gospel singer. She has picked two songs
by Leonard Cohen to perform.  “Hallelujah” and “Dance Me to the
End of Love”

And then there is Joy….