Art
& Entertainment News 22/9
Motorcycle
ride fights cancer
A group of eight
motorcyclists from
The tour operator,
Glenn Phillips, said yesterday that the journey, the 2014 Distinguished
Gentleman's Ride, was being held to raise funds for prostate cancer
research.
Participants hope
to raisen US$1 million, including some of it donated themselves. Each sponsor
is expected to contribute US$200 to the ride.
Participants can
visit www.gentlemansride.com/rider/glennoi or www.gentlemansride.com to learn
more.
Hotel holds
fundraising gala
The New World Sai
Gon Hotel will marks its 20 anniversary on October 8 with a gala dinner of
"giving back to the community", raising funds for the Christina
Noble Children's Foundation.
The event will
begin with cocktails and champagne, canapes and gourmet hors d'oeuvres before
the five-course dinner prepared by three of the New World's top executive
chefs, Richard Hilton from New World Beijing Hotel, Ivan Chieregatti from New
World Makati Hotel and Saju Rajappan from New World Sai Gon Hotel.
The dinner will
also feature entertainment including magic, live acoustic music, and a DJ. A
live auction will be held to raise money for the charity.
Tickets are VND4.2
million (US$ 200) per person, including a gift voucher for a one-night stay
at the Residence Club Deluxe Room, with breakfast for two.
All proceeds from
ticket sales will go to the Christina Noble Children's Foundation, in support
of the city's underprivileged and disabled children.
Photo book
marks Liberation Day
Photographer Huu
Nen has released a photo book to celebrate the 60th Liberation Day for Ha Noi
on October 10.
As a member of the
International Federation of Photographic Art, Nen has featured Ha Noi for
almost 60 years.
The book, entitled
Ha Noi Capital, consists of 178 photos depicting the daily work and life of
different stratas of people and their beauty.
"Each photo is
described in Vietnamese and English. I'd like foreign readers to learn more
about Ha Noi, which is now more than 1000 years old," Nen said.
VN theatre
stages Brecht play
Modern drama:
Caucasian Chalk Circle is being staged at the Viet Nam Youth Theatre for the
first time. — Photo courtesy of Goethe Institute Standing in the middle of a
Caucasian chalk circle, two women claim a boy to be their own offspring and
are firmly gripping each of the boy'shands as a judge looks on .
Actors of the Viet
Nam Youth Theatre performed this excerpt from Caucasian Chalk Circle, the
renowned work of the late German modernist playwright Bertolt Brecht
(1898-1956), at a recent press conference on the cultural co-operation
project between the theatre and Goethe Institute in the capital city.
Caucasian Chalk
Circle will be performed for the first time at the Viet Nam Youth Theatre
under this project. The excerpt at the press conference features a trial over
the right to keep the child, and the ending was not shown.
The play narrates
the story of a servant who sacrifices her love for a soldier to rescue a baby
boy, and in the process, she becomes a better mother to the boy than his real
parents, who are wealthy.
Truong Nhuan, the
theatre director, nurtured the project after taking part in a festival in
Goethe Institute
approved the proposal, and Caucasian Chalk Circle was chosen to introduce a
new artistic style for Vietnamese theatre lovers.
In the past, Russian
theatre director Sergeievich Stanislavsky's reality plays influenced
Vietnamese theatre, and Brecht's abstract work was placed on the back burner.
"It is a
chance for our regular young audiences to experience a masterpiece which
criticises selfishness and teaches confidence," said Nhuan.
"Staging these
works will also be a good chance for our actors to get closer to the world
contemporary stage."
Freelance German
director Dominik Gunther was invited to
This is the first
time Gunther has set up Caucasian Chalk Circle.
The director, who
is following the principle of setting up a stage for a specific play only
once, said he had been pouring all of his creativity into the production of
this play for Ha Noi audiences.
As a freelancer in
"The artists
here are professional and they are very open to working with me. At the
beginning, the language barrier made this a bit difficult, but this is not
important because we can use body language on the stage," said Gunther.
The director has
only praises for his set designer, Doan Bang, who used a modern-style stage
design, including props which suddenly appear on the stage during the
performance without any apparent movement.
"All different
sectors behind the stage are very important. Bang and I work effectively. I'm
happy to work with him," Gunther quipped.
In the production
for Ha Noi audiences, the director cut off the part on the origin of World
War II because it was no longer suitable.
"I think
Vietnamese are no longer interested in war. In the bloodiest of times, people
reveal their animal instincts," Gunther noted.
After watching the
play last Wednesday, veteran stage director and People's Artist Pham Thi
Thanh said she was completely charmed by the performance.
"The play is
quite physical and intellectual, in keeping with Bertolt Brecht's style. It
does not address the audience directly, but it makes them think
a lot. Costumes and
props are abstract but quite realistic," Thanh noted.
"I like the
play very much. The director brings the characters closer to contemporary
life. The characters are diversified, making the play vivid," she added.
Under the project,
the play was shown thrice for free on September, then it will be included in
the
"Right from
the beginning, we believed in the success of this kind of co-operation
because it is supported by Nhuan and all theatre members. The artists have
been quite enthusiastic and have expressed their full creativity," said
Almuth Meyer Zollitsch, the institute's director.
Co-operation with
the Goethe Institute is suitable to the theatre's development plan to set up
stage masterpieces. In recent years, the plays that were produced included
Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House and Athur Miler's All My Sons.
"We
acknowledge that setting up stage masterpieces is a way to make the
Vietnamese contemporary stage popular in the world," said Nhuan.
“Disney
Live! Mickey’s Magic Show” makes debut in city
Mickey Mouse, Goofy
Dog, Donald Duck, Minnie Mouse and Snow White - the most-loved characters
from Walt Disney’s cartoons will arrive in
They will appear in
12 magic performances, “Disney Live! Mickey’s Magic Show” which will be held
at Hoa Binh Theater on September 24-28.
Like its editions
in over 300 cities in 75 countries, the “Disney Live! Mickey’s Magic Show” in
It features the
special magic from legendary Disney films, performed right before your eyes:
Cinderella’s rags turn into a beautiful ball gown in a split second;
Aladdin’s Princess Jasmine levitates into the air; and the enchanted dancing
brooms in Fantasia help sweep Minnie off her feet.
The Master Magician
himself – Mickey Mouse – performs astonishing illusions along with
Cinderella’s Fairy Godmother,
Jim Steinmeyer, an
internationally respected designer of magical illusions and theatrical
special effects with more than 20 years of world-class
experience, who
worked with world-leading illusionists such as David Copperfield, Lance
Burton, and Siegfried & Roy, will created some most astonishing tricks at
the show, including a dynamic sawing-in-half duet and an awe-inspiring
levitation of Minnie set to blacklight.
To the tune of “A
Whole New World, illusionist Michael Barron levitates Princess Jasmine in the
air.
Disney Live!
presents Mickey’s Magic Show will bring audiences into a world where Disney
magic takes on a whole new meaning.
Families will have
unforgettable experience in a magical afternoon as they watch a fun magic
show and get the opportunity to meet popular Disney characters Mickey Mouse
and Goofy.
“Disney Live!
Mickey’s Magic Show” will have two English-language performances, and the
other 10 with Vietnamese voice-overs by local singers and artists.
The 12 performances
are expected to cost a total of over VND12 billion (US$564,812).
No-laughing show
entertains viewers
Cuoi La Thua, a
Vietnamese version of the famous entertainment programme Laugh and You Lose
from the Netherlands-based full-service media company Talpa, will air on HTV7
early next month.
The format includes
two comedians and two teams whose goal is to make their opponent's audience
laugh. Laughter is forbidden on the show.
Similarly, Cuoi La
Thua will include funny and fantastic ordeals that are meant to cause
audiences break the rule of "no laughter".
Each weekly
45-minute episode will feature two teams of two comedians each competing in
six games – Cuoi Len Nao (Laugh), Nhung Hanh Dong Ky Quac (Fantastic acts),
Dien Kich (Play-cat), Long Tieng (Dub), Phong Van (Interview), and Doi Mat
(Confront).
This is the first
entertainment TV programme in the country where laughing will be forbidden.
The first episode
of Cuoi La Thua will air on HTV7 at 9.30pm on Wednesday, October 1.
Central
Highlands take action to preserve ethnic minority languages
Over the past three
years, the Central Highlands provinces have been implementing measures to
preserve spoken and written ethnic minority languages.
The Central
Highlands comprise the five provinces of Lam Dong, Gia Lai, Dak Lak, Dak Nong
and Kon Tum with a population of 6.5 million.
Forty-five percent
of the population is made up of ethnic minorities, including the Bahnar,
Jrai,
According to the
region’s Steering Committee, 1.4 million students registered for the
2014-2015 academic year, with 461,000 students belonging to ethnic minority
groups. On average, the number of ethnic minority students increases by 10
percent each year.
Kon Tum and Gia Lai
provinces added Bahnar and Jrai languages to the curriculum for 3 rd -5 th
graders at 121 primary schools.
Students have also
benefited from free textbooks and documents in their mother tongues.
Additionally,
ethnic minority language courses have been offered for officials and civil
servants to improve their communications with locals.
The Central
Highlands provinces also worked with ministries and research institutions to
publish Ede-Vietnamese and Bahnar-Vietnamese dictionaries and bilingual books
that were distributed to local communities.
At present, Kon Tum
and Lam Dong provinces are designing textbooks in Sedang and Churu to expand
the coverage of these languages.
Joining the
localities’ efforts, the bureau of the Voice of Vietnam now broadcasts news
in Bahnar,
Each month, the
Vietnam News Agency provides 18,300 free copies of the pictorial “Dan toc va
Mien nui” (Ethnic Minorities and Mountainous Region), written in Bahnar,
Source: VNS/VNA/VOV/SGGP
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Thứ Hai, 22 tháng 9, 2014
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