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Art
& Entertainment News 9/9
Ex-Miss
Vietnam wins 1st Elite Model Look
Dang Thi Le Hang,
21, the 2012 Miss
In the final last
Saturday the freelance model walked away with a cash award and prizes worth a
total of VND600 million (US$27,270), and will represent Viet Nam at the
international Elite Model Look contest to be held in Paris in November.
Pham Thi Kim Thi
finished second and Nguyen Thi Ngoc Anh was third.
The jury comprised
Nguyen Thi Thuy Nga, the general director of Elite Vietnam, global fashion
professional Henri Hubert, and model Ha Anh.
The contest
featured a regional and a national round before the finals. The 20
contestants who made it to the final underwent a 10-day training course.
Elite Model Look
(known as Look of the Year from 1983 to 1995) is held in around 70 countries
to discover and launch female models in the international fashion
marketplace.
Each year it
attracts some 350,000 participants, with selections being held in more than
800 cities.
Ha
Nearly 200 groups
performed 20 typical songs and dances of Chau Van, at the first festival of
its kind has been held in
Chau Van is a
spiritual performance art accompanying the hau dong (mediumship) ritual of
the Mother Goddesses' religion.
Most of the
performing groups came from all over the province and four of them came from
the neighbouring
The Ministry of
Culture, Sports and Tourism has assigned the Viet Nam Institute of Culture
and Arts Studies to spearhead the compilation of a dossier on Chau Van songs
and dances and cooperate with concerned agencies in making the dossier, to
seek UNESCO recognition of the art as an invaluable cultural heritage.
Children
from orphanage win short film competition
Orphans from Ha
Noi's Birla Children's Village beat 30 other children's teams to win a short
film competition for children, My Dreams.
The short film made
by children from the Birla Children's Village, entitled Lo Thuoc (A Bottle of
Medicine), won the first prize, while the second and third prize went to Nu
Cuoi Cua Ba – Mot Uoc Mo (Grandma's Smile – A Dream) by a group from Thang
Long junior high school in Ha Noi, and Khat Vong (Aspiration) made by Ha
Noi's Phan Chu Trinh junior high school students, respectively.
The three films
will be sent as the Vietnamese entries to the 2014 Asia International
Children Film Festival, to be held in Minamiawaji,
According to Vu Duy
Anh, an official from the Ministry of Education and Training, the contest was
an opportunity for Vietnamese students to express their views on life's
lessons and issues relevant to them creatively.
Land Reform
exhibition opens
An exhibition on
one of the most important periods in northern
The historic
campaign, from 1946 to 1957, redefined northern
The exhibition,
featuring 150 photos, artifacts and artworks, brings to life the pivotal
nature of the period.
The exhibition is
structured around two main themes. The first, "Rural areas in
Before
By the end of the
campaign 810,000ha of agricultural land were redistributed to approximately
2.2 million Vietnamese peasants (72.8 per cent of the northern rural
population), according to the Viet Nam National Museum of History (VNMH).
A range of original
documents are used to narrate a decade of momentous political change.
President Ho Chi Minh's speech at the 5th National Conference on Land Reform,
the 1957 National Decree on Land Reform and a Certificate of Land Ownership
issued to peasants in
The words these
documents bear are not just proof that history happened, they, like poetry,
still have the power to move.
"Only with
land reform that returns the land to our peasants and frees the workforce
from the landlords' chains and shackles, can we end the sickening poverty and
backwardness of our peasants," President Ho Chi Minh wrote in a report
to the National Assembly's Third Meeting, December 1953.
Meanwhile, other
exhibits viscerally recreate peasant life. A life-size peasant's house along
with the artifacts that would fill it up–clothes, personal effects and work
tools–bring a dynamism to the museum visitor's experience.
The exhibition,
organised by the VNMH, relied on exhibit contributions from the Ho Chi Minh
Museum; the Government Office; the National Archives Centres I, II, III; and
from provincial museums of: Hung Yen, Thai Nguyen, Nam Dinh and Thai Binh.
Nguyen Van Cuong,
the VNMH's director, hopes the exhibit will "help educate Vietnamese,
especially youngsters, on the history of the Land Reform campaign and the
nation's revolution for independence".
The exhibition will
run at the VNMH,
Canadian
painter creates portrait of President Ho Chi Minh
Noted Canadian
painter Jean-Mauriece Gelinas handed his painting of President Ho Chi Minh to
Vietnamese ambassador to Canada To Anh Dung on the occasion of
Ambassador Dung
said the painting was a priceless and meaningful gift, adding that the
embassy would display it at a solemn place and consider it a concrete
expression of the friendship between the two peoples.
Gelinas travelled throughout
When he learned
about the President's friendship with Spanish painter Pablo Picasso, he
decided to draw the President's portrait in the background of Picasso's Joy
of Living painting.
The Montreal-based
artist, who spent two months on the painting, said the most difficult part
was not only trying to paint the President as he appeared in real life, but
also expressing his beautiful and open soul.
Vietnamese
students to compete in
Three short films
produced by Vietnamese students have been selected to compete in the Asian
International Children’s Film Festival set for November 29 in
The finalists,
announced on September 6, are Lo Thuoc (drug bottle) by Birla Orphanage, Nu
Cuoi cua Ba-Mot Uoc Mo (Grandmother’s smile-One dream), by Thang Long
secondary school,
They are the
award-winning films of the 8th film-making competition, offering high school
students a chance to showcase their talent in the cinema industry.
The competition,
initiated by the Japan-Vietnam and Vietnam-Japan ambassadors, helps students
cherish their dreams, develop life skills, and especially create a friendly
learning environment for them.
Vietnamese students
will join their Asian counterparts on a visit to Japan this November to vie
for the best amateur film – a chance to develop closer ties.
Contest
focuses on splendor of Ha Long Bay
A photo contest
offering professional photographers, hobbyists and enthusiasts the
opportunity to showcase their most impressive photos of Ha Long Bay was
launched on September 8.
The contest in
honour of the 20th anniversary of Ha Long Bay’s recognition as a UNESCO World
Heritage site has been organized by the Vietnam Association of Photographic
Artists and Quang Ninh provincial Association of Literature and Arts.
The organizing
board will award one first prize, two second prizes, three third prizes and
five consolation prizes with cash prizes ranging from VND20 million to VND2
million each.
The deadline for
submitting entries is October 1. The awards ceremony is set to take place on
October 14 at
H’re ethnic
people preserve traditional culture
H’re ethnic people
in central Quang Ngai province’s Ba To district are striving to preserve
their rich and diversified culture, which is on the verge of oblivion.
Pham Van Su is one
of the very few H’re ethnic people in Ba To district who know how to make and
use their traditional musical instruments.
In his 80, the man
has forgotten himself in passing down the skills to his descendants with a
hope of preserving and upholding H’re people’s cultural values.
“The H’re ethnic
group boasts many folk songs along with musical instruments like Vo Roat and
Tuc Chinh. I want to pass them on to my descendants,” said Su.
However, Su added,
it is a hard work as nowadays, the young are not really interested in this
traditional genre of music.
As time goes by,
traditional festivals, rituals and musical instruments of the H’re group have
fallen into oblivion. Less and less people master the instruments and folk
songs. Meanwhile, young people turn their back on traditional culture.
Dinh Van Uoc from
Ba To town said young people play modern genres of music jubilantly on stages
but few of them know how to play traditional musical instruments.
In an effort to
preserve the culture of H’re people, local authorities have organised many
traditional musical performance contests and festivals.
Dinh Thi Y Ban Quy,
head of the Culture and Sports Department of Ba To district, said firstly,
the department reviewed all current arts forms and then, it devised plans to
boost the use of them to help protect cultural identities of H’re ethnic
people.
Many local people
said it is crucial to preserve and uphold the traditional culture of H’re
people in the central
However, they
added, the work requires the participation of the entire people, especially
H’re people.
The Mekong Delta
The Ok-Om-Bok
festival, which is held annually in Go Quao district, has been upgraded into
a culture-tourism-sports festival featuring a variety of activities, such as
art performances, trade fairs and photo exhibitions, showcasing the
social-economic achievements, culture and cuisine of the Khmer group.
Campaigns to
eradicate illiteracy and offer bilingual education were launched in such
districts with large communities of ethnic minorities, as Chau Thanh, Go Quao
and Giong Rieng, said Danh Nho, Head of the Ethnic Affairs Board under the
Provincial People’s Council.
More than 30
schools across the locality teach in ethnic minority languages in addition to
Vietnamese while hundreds of classes teaching Khmer are run at pagodas over
the summer holidays.
The local budget
was earmarked for assisting the upgrade of Khmer and Hoa (ethnic Chinese)
pagodas. In particular, more than 25 billion VND (1.1 million USD) was spent
on the construction of crematoriums, the purchase of five-tonne musical
instruments, and the building of iconic, long, narrow boats for “Ngo” boat
race, a distinctive traditional festival of the Khmer people.
In addition to
increasing air time for broadcasts in Khmer, the province now publishes
magazines and newspapers in the language of its ethnic minority readers.
The locality is
also dedicating resources to the protection of tangible and intangible
cultural heritages in line with social-economic and tourism development, with
a particular focus on preserving languages, costumes, religions and
festivals.
Films on
Scotland to be screened in Vietnam
Various genres of
movies capturing the life and people of
The glorious
Sunshine on Leith musical will open the week, themed “
Other movies to be
shown include “Ae Fond Kiss,” “For those in Peril,” “Not Another Happy
Ending,” and “Shell”.
This year’s event
will also mark the first time the British Council partners with Yxineff, a
local non-profit organisation supporting young filmmakers, to introduce seven
short Vietnamese entries and six award-winning Scottish short films.
Free tickets will
be distributed at the British Council in the two cities from September 15.
Theatre
revives
The Tuong Theatre
(classical drama) has embarked on restoring a historical play titled Tieng
Goi Non Song (Motherland's Call). It was written by Kinh Dan in 1962.
The play presents
an account of an historical battle between southern Han troops from
The battle, which
took place on the
The victory was
based on the ingenious tactic of using sharpened tree trunks imbedded in the
river to impale the invaders as the tide in the estuary receded. The win
opened a new and almost continuous period of independence for the nation.
Ngo Quyen (897-944)
was a Vietnamese general during the Southern Han Dynasty occupation of Giao
Chau city in the Hong (Red River) Valley in northern
Pham Ngoc Tuan,
director of the theatre, said the play was being revived because it not only
won a golden medal at the National Stage Competition in 1962, but was
connected to a major event in the nation's long history.
"It
contributes to consolidating national patriotism and pride in each
individual," he said.
The play is
directed by Dang Ba Tai and stage designed by painter Nguyen Hoang Phong.
Actor Xuan Quy, who has received a Meritorious Award, will act the main
character, Ngo Quyen.
When first
presented in 1962, the play was directed by Nguyen Dinh Phong with the
participation of famous actors Quang Ton and Bach Tra and meritorious artist
Van Thanh.
"It will be a
great challenge for the artists to renew themselves. They will follow the
original script, but add current news on national sovereignty in the
The play is
expected to be performed in September.
Tuong originated in
the 12th century in
Along with cheo
(traditional opera) in the north and cai luong (reformed theatre) in the
south, tuong is an integral part of Vietnamese culture.
The art was
developed from a folk art into a royal art, and has themes eulogising loyalty
to the monarch and patriotic duty.
Source: VNS/VNA/VOV/SGT/SGGP/ND
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Thứ Ba, 9 tháng 9, 2014
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