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.


Historic Joy Kogawa House Society,

Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dragon Boat team,

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1) scroll the categories links (below),
2) use the search function

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View Article  Flamenco at the Cafe de Chinitas: Inspired performance by Mozaico Flamenco and Orchid Ensemble
Welcome to Cafe de Chinatas a la Vancouver, courtesy of Mozaico Flamenco and Vancouver's renowned Chinese and New Music performers, the Orchid Ensemble. It is a musical collaboration created by producer project director Kassandra and artistic director Oscar Nieto. Guest dancer Pablo Pizano, provided an exciting male lead to the five company dancers of Spanish, Mexican, English, Chinese and Filipino heritage. Flamenco guitarist Peter Mole, flamenco singer Keiko Ooka and flamenco cellist Cyrena Huang provided dimension to the traditional and innovative music of Orchid Ensemble's Lan Tung on erhu, Gelina Tang on zheng and Jonathan Bernard on percussion.   more »
View Article  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.
View Article  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.

View Article  Honouring Theatre: Frangipani Perfume - dynamic and fragrant theatre for the mind
Frangipani is known as the traditional Hawaiian lei flower. Frangipani Perfume is a dynamic three woman play that tells the story of three sisters who left their native island of Samoa to find a better life in New Zealand. The play opens with three woman dancing to a beautiful musical piece of opera, only to reveal that they are actually scrubbing washrooms in New Zealand to make ends meet.   more »
View Article  Honouring Theatre: Annie Mae's Movement
Annie Mae's Movement is a powerful two person play with strong acting from Michelle St. John, who plays Annie Mae, the MikMaq woman who travelled to Wounded Knee to become involved with the American Indian Movement (AIM). There is a reference to AIM leaders Leonard Pelletier, and Dennis Banks whom Annie Mae becomes involved with, but the play is really Annie's journey through empowerment, hope, resistance and her eventual death.   more »
View Article  Honouring Theatre - A tri-national tour of 3 plays from Canada, Australia & New Zealand: What Colour is Love?
What colour is Love? Is it Black? Is it White? This question is asked to the audience at a pivotal moment in the play Windmill Baby. Set in Australia, an aboriginal woman returns to the now abandoned former cattle station of her young adult life. Fifty years have passed as she shares her tale with the audience in a mixture of oral story-telling, and dream-time revelations.   more »
2009 TICKETS Available on DECEMBER 15, 9am

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, Dinner 6pm


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
2004 - The debut of Gung Haggis Won-Ton
2005 - Haggis lettuce wrap!
2007 - Haggis dim sum appetizer buffet
2008 - Scotch tastings!
Watch for more surprises in 2009!


Description of 2008 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner
co-hosted with Media colunist Catherine Barr
featuring performers: , celtic band Blackthorn, bagpiper Joe McDonald and Brave Waves, Ji-Rong Huang on erhu, Film maker Ann-Marie Fleming, Vancouver poet laureate George McWhirter, Playwright Grace Chin and a scene from "The Quickie"

Description of 2007 Gung Haggis Fat Choy Dinner
co-hosted with CBC Radio's Priya Ramu,
featuring performers:
Silk Road Music, Heather Pawsey, Brave Waves, Leora Cashe, No Luck Club, Dr. Ian Mason (Burns Club of Vancouver) Lensey Namioka - Author "Half and Half" Margaret Gallagher, "Twisting Fortunes" (sneak preview of play)

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

Media Inquiries
Call Gung Haggis Productions 778-846-7090

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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 starting March Sunday 1:30 pm -3:30 pm Tuesday 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 15+ years of experience including novice, recreational and competitive levels, and both community and corporate teams.

Our 2008 season took us to races in Burnaby, Vancouver, Vernon, Vancouver Taiwanese race, UBC, Ft. Langley. It was our strongest team ever and we are proud of our race performances.

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

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