Todd Wong with Lion Head

Asian Canadian adventures in inter-cultural Vancouver
and home of Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner.

Welcome to GungHaggisFatChoy.com

Home to my passions for my inter-cultural adventures,

Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Robbie Burns
Chinese New Year Dinner event.


Save Kogawa House campaign,

Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat team,

Find what you are looking for by
1) scroll the topics links,
2) use the search function

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

2009 TICKETS Available in October 2009

WHAT: GUNG HAGGIS FAT CHOY: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner - 12th Annual Dinner, celebrating 250th Anniversary of Robert Burns' birth + Chinese New Year's Eve.

WHEN: 6PM January 25 2009, SUNDAY
doors open 5pm


WHERE: Floata Chinese Restaurant, #400 180 Keefer St.

CULTURE: Our Performers create something special for us every year with traditional and contemporary performances featuring everything in-between and beyond!

FOOD: A quirky fusion/mix/buffet of Scottish Canadian and Chinese Canadian culture 10 course Chinese banguet dinner In 2004, we presented the debut of Gung Haggis Won-Ton including haggis served with plum or sweet and sour sauces.! For 2005 it was haggis lettuce wrap! 2007 saw the creation of Haggis dim sum appetizer buffet - Watch for more surprises in 2008!

On-line tickets at
Tickets Tonight - Vancouver's Community Box Office
or NEW PHONE NUMBER 604-631-2872
$2.50 extra

Description of 2006 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner featuring performers: Rick Scott & Harry Wong, The Shirleys, Joe McDonald & Brave Waves, Sean Gunn, author Joy Kogawa, with co-host Prem Gill .

Media Inquiries
Call Gung Haggis Productions 604-987-7124
cell: 778-846-7090

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Join the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat team
for lots of summer fun, fitness and friendship. We are a social team full of cultural vigor, that likes to eat.

We have been featured on television, local, national and international. We have a unique and internationally famous fundraiser dinner event.

We practice Sundays 1pm -3pm and Tuesdays 6pm-7:45pm We meet at Dragon Zone clubhouse - just south of Science World in Creekside Park above the Aquabus and dragon boat docks.

Our coach Todd Wong has over 12 years of experience including novice, recreational and competitive levels, and both community and corporate teams.

Our 2005 Season brought us the David Lam Award for being the team that best represented the multicultural spirit of the Alcan Dragon Boat Festival, and Bronze medals at the Vancouver International Taiwanese Dragon Boat Race. We also raced at Harrison Lake and Sea Vancouver regatta.



For more information:
Click on Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat team information
phone: 778-846-7090
e-mail: gunghaggis at yahoo dot ca

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Year Archive
View Article  Generations: The Chan Legacy on CBC Newsworld. July 29th - 4pm and midnight
Generations: The Chan Legacy on CBC Newsworld.
July 29th - 4pm and midnight

The Chan Legacy is the lead episode in the new documentary series Generations on CBC Newsworld.  It debuted on July 4th - my grandmother's 97th birthday.

How fitting!  Because the show is about her grand-father Rev. Chan Yu Tan who came to Canada in 1896 as a Christian missionary.

Feedback has been very positive.  Family members are very proud.  Friends are very supportive.  Historians are enthusiastic. Strangers are thrilled.

Listen to Auntie Helen and Uncle Victor tell stories about Rev. and Mrs. Chan, and about growing up in pre-WW2 BC, and facing racial discrimination.  Uncle Victor Wong also tells about enlisting as a Canadian soldier to go behind enemy lines in the Pacific for suicide squadrons, fighting for Canada, even though Chinese-Canadians could not vote in the country of their birth.

The next generations assimiliated more easily into Canadian culture.  Gary Lee became an actor and singer.  Janice Wong became a visual artist and author of the book CHOW: From China to Canada - memories of food and family, which addressed the history of Rev. Chan coming to Canada, and how Janice's dad started a Chinese restaurant in Prince Albert SK.

Then there is Todd Wong - cultural and community activist who founded Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner - which inspired a CBC Vancouver television performance special.  Todd is shown active in the dragon boat community, and speaking at a Terry Fox Run in the role of a 16 year cancer survivor.  Renowned Japanese-Canadian author Joy Kogawa makes an appearance, as Todd was also involved in helping to save Kogawa's childhood home from demolition and to turn it into a national historic and literary landmark.



July 29th Sunday - repeats at midnight

  4:00 p.m. Generations: The Chan Legacy
- Missionaries from China come to the West Coast help Westernize Chinese immigrant workers in the late 1800's.
Generations: The Chan Legacy
J
View Article  Kilts and family history abound during two episodes of the 6-part Generations series on CBC Newsworld
Kilts and family history abound during two episodes of the 6-part Generations series on CBC Newsworld

Find out what a 250 year old Anglophone family in Quebec City and a 120 year old Chinese-Canadian family in Vancouver have in common.

Both have:
bagpipes and kilts
+ accordion music
+ canoe/dragon boat racing
+ immigration as a topic
+ Church music
+ archival photos/newsreels of an ex-premier
+ cultural/racial discrimination stories
+ prominent Canadian historical events to show how
   the families embraced them or were challenged by them
+ both featured saving a historical literary landmark.
+ younger generation learning the non-English language

Generations: The Chan Legacy features Todd Wong, founder of Gung Haggis Fat Choy, a quirky Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner, which inspired a CBC Vancouver television performance special.  Todd's involvements with Terry Fox Run, Joy Kogawa House campaign and dragon boat racing are also shown.

July 29th 4pm PST / July 30th 12am

4:00 p.m. Generations: The Chan Legacy
- Missionaries from China come to the West Coast help Westernize Chinese immigrant workers in the late 1800's.
Generations: The Chan Legacy
August 5th 4pm PST

4:00 p.m. Generations: The Blairs of Quebec
- An Anglophone family with 250 years of history in Quebec City struggles to maintain it's heritage.
Generations: The Blairs of Quebec

July 4, 10 pm ET/PT, July 8 10 am ET, July 29, 7 pm ET
The documentary begins with Todd Wong playing the accordion, wearing a kilt. He promotes cultural fusion, and in doing so, he honours the legacy of his great, great, grandfather Reverend Chan Yu Tan. The Chans go back seven generations in Canada and are one of the oldest families on the West Coast.
Chan family
The Chan family
Reverend Chan and his wife Wong Chiu Lin left China for Victoria in 1896 at a time when most Chinese immigrants were simple labourers, houseboys and laundrymen who had come to British Columbia to build the railroad or work in the mines. The Chans were different. They were educated and Westernized Methodist Church missionaries who came to convert the Chinese already in Canada, and teach them English. The Chans were a family with status and they believed in integration. However even they could not escape the racism that existed at the time, the notorious head tax and laws that excluded the Chinese from citizenship.
In the documentary, Reverend Chan's granddaughter Helen Lee, grandson Victor Wong, and great grandson Gary Lee recall being barred from theaters, swimming pools and restaurants. The Chinese were not allowed to become doctors or lawyers, pharmacists or teachers. Still, several members of the Chan family served in World War II, because they felt they were Canadian and wanted to contribute. Finally, in 1947, Chinese born in Canada were granted citizenship and the right to vote.

Today, Todd Wong, represents a younger generation of successful professionals and entrepreneurs scattered across North America. He promotes his own brand of cultural integration through an annual event in Vancouver called Gung Haggis Fat Choy. It's a celebration that joins Chinese New Year with Robbie Burns Day, and brings together the two cultures that once lived completely separately in the early days of British Columbia.

We also meet a member of the youngest generation, teenager Tracey Hinder, who also cherishes the legacy of Reverend Chan, but in contrast to his desire to promote English she is studying mandarin and longs to visit the birthplace of her ancestors.

Produced by Halya Kuchmij, narrated by Michelle Cheung.

July 11, 10 pm ET/PT, July 15, 10 am ET, August 5, 7 pm ET

For 250 years, the Blair family has been part of the Protestant Anglophone community of Quebec City. The Anglophones were once the dominant cultural and economic force in the city, but now they are a tiny minority, and those who have chosen to stay have had to adapt to a very different world. Louisa Blair guides us through the story of her family, which is also the story of a community that had to change.
Ronnie Blair
Ronnie Blair

The senior member of the family today is Ronnie Blair. He grew up in Quebec, but like generations of Blairs before him, he worked his way up the corporate ladder in the Price Company with the lumber barons of the Saguenay. Ronnie Blair's great grandfather came to the Saguenay from Scotland in 1842. Ronnie's mother was Jean Marsh. Her roots go back to the first English families to make Quebec home after British troops defeated the French on the Plains of Abraham in 1759. The Marsh family amassed a fortune in the shoe industry in Quebec City.

The Marshes and the Blairs were part of a privileged establishment that lived separately from the Catholics and the Francophones, with their own churches and institutions. The Garrison Club for instance, is a social club that is still an inner sanctum for Quebec's Anglo businessmen.

Blair family
The Blair family

Work took Ronnie Blair and his family to England in the 1960’s but his children longed to return to Canada, and to Quebec City. Alison Blair was the first to return, as a student, in 1972. Her brother David followed in 1974. Both were excited by the political and social changes that had taken place during the Quiet Revolution in Quebec and threw themselves into everything Francophone. David learned to speak French, married a French Canadian and settled into a law practice.

Then came the Referendum of 1995, a painful moment in the history of the Anglophone community, and for the passionate Blairs. But David decided he was in Quebec to stay, and today his children are bilingual and bicultural. More recently his sister Louisa also returned to Quebec City and a desire to rediscover her past led her to write a book called, The Anglos, the Hidden Face of Quebec. Her daughter is also is growing up bilingual and bicultural, representing a new generation comfortable in both worlds.

Produced by Jennifer Clibbon and Lynne Robson.
View Article  GUNG HAGGIS FAT CHOY: The CBC TV special - summaries and video clip - view the origin of Gung Haggis Fat Choy and Toddish McWong
Todd writes up summaries of the CBC TV special: Gung Haggis Fat Choy, and adds up-to-date links... Robbie Burns Day meets Chinese New Year. Two separate cultures. Nothing in common. Everything in common. How often do you get to have a television special based on your idea of a dinner party? View the VIDEO clip link!    more »
View Article  GUNG HAGGIS FAT CHOY: The CBC TV special - summaries and video clip - view the origin of Gung Haggis Fat Choy and Toddish McWong
Robbie Burns Day meets Chinese New Year. Two separate cultures. Nothing in common. Everything in common. ~~~ Summary of the CBC TV special, based on Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner: Gung Haggis Fat Choy. ~~~ This article features summaries of each segment of the special + links    more »
View Article  CBC Television Performance Special "Gung Haggis Fat Choy" on February 9th - 7pm
To celebrated the dual holidays of Robbie Burns Day (January 25th) and Chinese New Year in 2004 (January 24th), CBC Television in Vancouver decided to produce a performance special based on the concepts of "Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner. This humble dinner event has grown from a 1998 dinner of 16 people to an incredibly entertaining dinner of 600 people in 2005, co-hostedy by CBC Radio's Shelagh Rogers and attended by Vancouver's mayor, city councilors and MLA's plus many other cultural and community leaders. This is the re-broadcast of the 2004 performance special that received nominations for 2 LEO Awards for best in television in BC. It was produced by Moyra Rogers of Out To See Productions, and directed by both Moyra and Ken.   more »
View Article  CBC website features Gung Haggis Fat Choy website and event picture!
CBC website features Gung Haggis Fat Choy website and event picture!

CBC must like Gung Haggis Fat Choy!
Here is a picture of  Sounds Like Canada host Shelagh Rogers with Todd Wong and Tom Chin, taken by Boris Mann at the 2005 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner.

CBC British Columbia celebrates the Lunar New Year in both radio and television.  There will be a morning radio broadcast direct from Floata Chinese Restaurant on Chinese New Year morning and of course... the CBC Television Performance Special Gung Haggis Fat Choy airs February 9 at 7pm.





View Article  Toddish McWong meets George Sapounidis - featured in the CBC tv special "Gung Haggis Fat Choy"
George Sapounidis was the one featured performer in the CBC television special "Gung Haggis Fat Choy" that I hadn't met - until tonight. He is the Montreal-born Greek Canadian who spends most of his time working as a statistican in Ottawa, but remarkably has become a popular Mandarin singer in China, especially popular with the ladies. I immediately found George Sapounidis standing just outside the hallway to the stage dressing rooms. "Todd Wong, wow! Finally..." says George. "George... wow! Finally..." says Todd. I presented him with a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team t-shirt. George is thrilled.    more »
View Article  Shelagh Rogers talks about Gung Haggis Fat Choy� on CBC Radio's "Sounds Like Canada"
One million and a half CBC Radio listeners across Canada listened to Shelagh Rogers describe her Gung Haggis Fat Choy™ hosting experience to the nation on Monday morning, January 31st. It was an exhilerating evening, Shelagh absolutely LOVED the event, and she hopes tol return next year as a co-host with me again.   more »
View Article  "Gung Haggis Fat Choy" - the CBC TV special will be re-broadcast on Feb 9th - Chinese New Year Day
This is a great show that features The Paper Boys, Silk Road Music, George Sapounidis, Joe McDonald & Brave Waves. Neil Grey also performed "Address to a Haggis" and my friend LaLa sang "Auld Lang Syne" with Brave Waves. "Gung Haggis Fat Choy" will be re-broad cast at 7pm on Feb 9th, 2005. This is the special that recieved 2 Leo Award nominations - for best musical / variety show, and for best direction musical / variety show.    more »
View Article  Will the CBC Gung Haggis Fat Choy tv special be re-broadcast???
For news on the rebroadcast of Gung Haggis Fat Choy tv special or for purchase of video tapes - Please call CBC Vancouver at 604-662-6000 or toll free audience relations number: 1-866-306-4636.   more »
View Article  CBC TV Special "Gung Haggis Fat Choy" + CBC Radio: All in one Day!!!
"Wow! What a show... fast moving - lots of interesting topics. Truly quirky and at times full of irreverent trivia about Scots and Chinese - just like the actual Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner.   more »
View Article  Tonight! Watch CBC TV - Gung Haggis Fat Choy, 7:30pm
Tonight we get to see how well CBC Regional Director Rae Hull's vision of a multicultural television performance special has been realized...   more »
View Article  January 23, 7:30pm is Gung Haggis Fat Choy CBC tv special

The date is set, the time is set... sit back on Friday, January 23 at 7:30pm with your haggis wun-tun and the haggis potato chips and get ready for the unexpected.

What will happen on the tv screen, I cannot say...  but it will included juxtapositions of Scottish Canadian and Chinese Canadian cultures that will make you marvel at the marvel we call Canada.  Everything was filmed in Vancouver, BC.  On locations, performers and props were in Vancouver - with the exception of George Sampson from Ottawa.

More info in my previous post about the Gung Haggis Fat Choy TV Special.

View Article  TV Special coming in January
Gung Haggis Fat Choy will soon become a tv special for CBC regional tv. It will air somewhere between January ...   more »
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