THE APPA Newsletter
Sept 18, 2007
Hispanic Heritage Month
began on Sept. 15.
http://www.infoplease.com/spot/hhm1.html
http://www.nps.gov/history/nr/feature/hispanic/
See This Weekend
MISSION STATEMENT:
Promote full utilization
of the capabilities of the Enterprise's employees and champion the betterment
of the company and community. Promote interest in Asian Pacific issues and culture
and act as a bridge to all groups within our community. (substitute in your
Enterprise and company, etcÉ)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ed. by Douglas Ikemi
(dkikemi@pacbell.net)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Back issues of the
newsletter for all of 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005 are available at http://www.ikemi.info/APPA/newsletters.html
if you want to look up some past event. The website www.apa-pro.org
no longer exists. This newsletter was originally published under the auspices
of the Hughes Asian Pacific Professional Association (no longer extant). It
currently has no affiliation and is available to anyone who is interested in
downloading it.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Please send in
information on cultural events and news items to dkikemi@pacbell.net or dkikemi@mac.com . Thanks to those who have.
Long range calendar
items:
Chinatown Farmers Market
EVERY THURSDAY FROM 2-6PM, the Chinatown Farmers' Market takes place at Hill
& Alpine bringing fresh fruits and produce by California Farmers to the
Chinatown Community. FRIED BANANA, FRIED YAM, HAWAIIAN CHICKEN. We invite you
to come and experience the Chinatown Farmers' Market. Free parking with
purchase.
The Downtown Arts
District/Little Tokyo Farmers' Market
Weller Court 2nd & San
Pedro in
Little Tokyo Summer Hours
10-3pm
Features fresh produce,
Hawaiian Chicken, more food gifts...and live jazz band.
Tuesdays from 10 a.m.- 3
p.m.
The weekly market is held
every Tuesday from 10 a.m.- 3 p.m year round, rain or shine.
Sponsored by LARABA
the market will include farm-fresh produce, Asian produce, organic produce,
eggs, seafood, cheese, olives, olive oils, flowers, plants, bread and prepared
foods and more.
Hawaiian Chicken, Roasted
corn on the cobb
Local businesses
interested in having a prepared food booth at the market or individuals
interested in volunteering at this non-profit event, please contact Susan
Hutchinson at 323-660-8660 for more information
Los Angeles Public
Library Celebrates our DiverseCity
http://www.lapl.org/kidspath/events/diversecity/index.html
August
28 - September 23 A World Premiere of Calling Aphrodite
WINNER
OF SILVER MEDAL PINTER REVIEW PRIZE FOR DRAMA
Written
by: Velina Hasu Houston
Directed
by: Shashin Desai
The
award-winning author of 2005's hit play TEA is back at ICT with an amazing new
World Premiere.
Keiko and
her sister were standing outside their home in Hiroshima on a sunny day in
August 1945 when the unthinkable happened. Keiko's story in the years
after the "accident" is one of anger, denial and, ultimately,
growth. This provocative play examines the destructive consequences of
past mistakes and how we can learn to make the world a better place for future
generations. An engrossing story of redemption and forgiveness, it
promotes harmony and understanding. It will touch your heart and remind
you why peace is so important in our world today.
ICT is
located at 300 E. Ocean Boulevard, Long Beach, CA 90802 in the Center Theater
of the Long Beach Performing Arts Center. The Center Theatre is located behind
the larger Terrace Theater.
ictlongbeach.org
FACES OF BATTLE: Japanese
Prints from the Permanent Collection
On display from May 26 -
September 26, 2006
This installation explores
the themes of samurai virtue in conflicts ranging from legends of pre-history
to epic moments of civil war in the late 19th century.
The thirty woodblock
prints from the installation are also presented online in an interactive
feature with stories of the protagonists, zoom screens enabling
close inspection of the images, and a brief biography of the influential
printmaker Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (1839-92).
http://collectionsonline.lacma.org/MWEB/about/japan_about.asp
Los Angeles County Museum
of Art
5905 Wilshire Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90036
323 857-6000 (general
information)
323 857-0098 (TDD)
http://www.lacma.org
An Urban Oasis: The Orange
County Agricultural and Nikkei Heritage Museum at the Fullerton Arboretum
Spotlighting the rich
agricultural legacy of Orange County and the Japanese American communityÕs
contributions to that chronicle.
Sowing Dreams, Cultivating
Lives: Nikkei Farmers in Pre-World War II Orange County.
Opens February 10, 2007.
The Orange County
Agricultural and Nikkei Heritage Museum has been built on the grounds of the
Fullerton Arboretum and has been designed along the lines of a packing house.
California State University, Fullerton, and the Fullerton Arboretum are working
together to open the museum to the public. The inside of the building is
divided into four sections: Nikkei, Pioneer, Educational, and Transportation
and Geography. There is a small bookstore and the Potting Shed will move its
plant sales adjacent to the bookstore alcove.
The museum will highlight
the history, development, and impact of agriculture, as well as the
contributions of the Japanese American community and the local pioneer
families, to the growth of Orange County. This introductory exhibit will be a
peek into upcoming planned exhibitions and will be open throughout the summer.
The first major exhibit
will focus on the Nikkei. Sowing Dreams, Cultivating Lives: Nikkei Farmers in
Pre-World War II Orange County will journey with the early Japanese immigrants
to California, and follow their stories as they establish permanent communities
in Orange County by marrying, raising families, founding schools and social
groups, and above all, cultivating the land.
Fullerton Arboretum,
California State University, Fullerton
1900 Associated Road
Fullerton, California
92831
October
12, 2007 - January 21, 2008
Rank and Style :
Power Dressing in Imperial China
For
generations ChinaÕs rulers wore emblems on their robes that identified their
place in a complex system of rank and privilege. This exhibition explores how
this imperial hierarchy was maintained through the bestowing and wearing of
exquisitely woven and embroidered Ôrank badges,Õ as they have become known in
the West.
Identity and status, so
carefully crafted and preserved among ChinaÕs elite, were expressed primarily
through garments and their decoration, making them virtually a second skin Ð so
intimately connected to oneÕs person that even in death wearing the appropriate
badge assured a continuation of earthly status. The exhibition is rich in a
wide variety of rank and festival badges worn by the emperor, members of the
imperial household, and civil and military officials.
Rank and Style: Power
Dressing in Imperial China presents for the first time in the United States
selections from the Chris Hall Collection of Hong Kong. These rare and
exquisite rank badges date from 1500 to the mid-19th century, with many from
the Ming Dynasty (1368Ð1644). Numerous badges feature woven or embroidered
mythical creatures such as the dragon and phoenix, while others depict rabbits,
cranes and tigers. Additional pieces in the exhibition are drawn from the
collections of the Pacific Asia Museum and local collections.
Dale Gluckman, Guest
Curator
This exhibition will be
part of the fourth city-wide collaboration of PasadenaÕs cultural institutions,
ÒArt and Ideas.Ó
Related Events
Saturday,
November 3, 2007, 1-4pm,
Free Family
Festival
In
celebration of the new exhibition Rank and Style:
Power Dressing in Imperial China, this all-ages festival will focus
on activities related to Imperial Chinese culture and the symbolism of dragons,
birds, lions, tigers, flowers and lanterns in works of art. Free.
46 North
Los Robles Avenue, Pasadena California 91101 [Google Map]
Hours: Wed Ð Sun: 10:00am-6:00pm
Runs September 20 -
October 14, 2007 DURANGO
By Julia Cho
Directed by Chay Yew
When Boo-Seng Lee is laid
off from the job to which he has devoted the last 25 years of his life, he
decides to take his two sons Jimmy and Isaac on a road trip to Durango,
Colorado. As they make their way across the Arizona desert, they confront
family secrets, peeling back the layers of identity, alienation and duty that
define being Asian in America. DURANGO promises to be a thought-provoking
examination of the fears, fantasies, and failures of a family standing in the
shadow of the American Dream.
Single Tickets Available
Starting August 20th!
WEST COAST PREMIERE
Previews September 13 -
16, 2007
Opens September 19, 2007
Wednesday - Saturday @ 8
pm, Sunday @ 2:00pm
$60 Opening Night
$35 Regular Tickets
$30 Students &
Seniors
$20 Preview Tickets
American Sign
Language-interpreted performance October 7, 2007 @ 2:00 pm
$20 Tickets for Deaf
& Hard of Hearing Patrons
For more information,
please call East West Players at (213) 625-7000 or email info@eastwestplayers.org.
Click here to visit the Mark Taper Forum online
for more details.
September 15 Ð November
10, 2007 BUGU: THE SPIRIT OF THE SAMURAI WARRIOR
The Japanese American
Cultural & Community Center is proud to host this exquisite and extensive
exhibition of traditional Japanese arms and armor. With this exhibit, gallery
goers can travel back into feudal Japan and glance at some of the most
dangerous and romanticized professions of all time including Samurai Warrior
and Ninja. The exhibition will examine how Bugu is represented and conveyed
through manga (Japanese comics), and will include a section for gallery-goers
to try on replica armor and include video of kendo, sumo and yabusame bouts.
Presented by The Japan
Foundation, Los Angeles
George J. Doizaki
Gallery, Main Floor Admission Free
Tuesdays Ð Fridays:
12noon to 4pm Saturdays: 11am to 4pm Closed Sundays, Mondays and holidays
Japanese American
Cultural and Community Center
244 South San Pedro
Street, Suite 505 (between 2nd and
3rd Streets)
Los Angeles (Little
Tokyo), CA 90012
(213) 628-2725
Aratani/Japan America
Theatre Box Office Info:(213) 680-3700
Saturday, September
22, 2007 Lifelong Learning
Sumi-e and Origami
Cards Ryosen Shibata
2:00pm - 3:30pm
Create beautiful
cards for those special people in your life that can be shared on birthdays,
holidays, or just because. $8 for National Museum members, $13 for non-members.
Includes supplies and Museum admission. Reservations recommended.
Made possible, in part,
by the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles.
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369 East First Street
Los Angeles,
California 90012
phone: (213) 625-0414
fax: (213) 625-1770
Sunday,
September 23, 2007
From
Barbed Wire to Barbed Hooks: Work in Progress 2:00pm - 3:30pm
Cory
Shiozaki explores the history of Manzanar inmates who turned to trout fishing
to escape the hardships of incarceration. The filmmaker suggests that through
fishing inmates found a much sought-after feeling of freedom, however brief, as
they matched wits with the wily trout of the famed Eastern Sierra fishing
grounds. Shiozaki will share stories of "escaping" at night from
camp, highlight Manzanar's well-known fishermen, and share examples of fishing
tackle used in camp.
Made
possible, in part, by the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles.
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369 East
First Street
Los
Angeles, California 90012
phone:
(213) 625-0414
fax: (213)
625-1770
Sept 26 Gagaku and moon
viewing at New Otani Hotel
8-9PM $5
Program includes
Etenraku ( transcending-heaven-music): The most familiar of all Gagaku pieces, this
melody has become the basis for many Japanese folksongs and popular
songs. It has come to be used in recent times as processional music in
weddings.
Senshuraku
Bato
Bugaku
Nasori
The New Otani Hotel and
Garden is located at 120 South Los Angeles Street, Los Angeles, CA 90012. (213)
253-9232.
For reservations
213-253-9200
CaliforniaJapanese-Style
Gardens: Tradition & Practice
September 28-30, 2007; Los
Angeles, CA
Three day conference
presented by the California Garden & Landscape History Society and Co-hosted
by The Garden Conservancy, the Japanese American National Museum, and the Los
Angeles Conservancy.
Exotic portions of great
estates, commercial teahouse gardens, modest bungalow gardens, and public
sister city or friendship gardensÑfor more than a century the lure of Japan has
inspired a category of gardens that will be the subject of the California
Garden and Landscape History SocietyÕs conference and annual meeting.
Little Tokyo, long-time
heart of the Los Angeles Japanese American community, is the site of the
conference. Through talks, an exhibition visit, and garden tours, the
conference will focus not only on the Japanese-style garden in California but
on the Japanese Americans who designed, constructed, and maintained them.
Registration and Fees:
(Registration deadline September 7)
Members (CGLHS, JANM, GC,
LAC)
$225.00*
Non-members
$270.00*
Saturday
Dinner
$ 75.00
Pre-conference bus
tour
$ 70.00
* Includes Friday evening
reception and exhibit; Saturday lectures and walking tour of Little Tokyo;
Sunday garden tours and closing reception.
To register, fill out the
attached form. For more information visit www.cglhs.org, e-mail conference@cglhs.org or phone (323) 462-2443.
Hotel:
A block of rooms has been
reserved for Conference attendees at the New Otani hotel in Little Tokyo.
Call by September 5 for the special group rate of $105 per night: reservation
desk at 800-639-6826 or 213-253-9215, Rosalind Pargas or 213-253-9242,
Nini Whitaker and refer to Group name: California Garden & Landscape
History Society.
Conference Schedule:
Friday
PM Opening Reception & Exhibit
Landscaping America:
Beyond the Japanese Garden
Japanese American National
Museum, Little Tokyo
This multimedia exhibition
reveals the personal stories, historical journeys, communities, and creativity
that underlie the surface of the ÒJapanese garden.Ó
Saturday
Lectures
Democracy Center, Little
Tokyo
Highlights: Walking tour
of Little Tokyo during mid-day lecture break; late afternoon visit to New Otani
Hotel roof top garden and no-host cocktail reception; optional dinner includes
a reading by Naomi Hirahara.
Sunday
Self Driving Tour:
Cultivating LA: 100
Years of Japanese-Style Garden Making in Southern California
Los Angeles Conservancy
docents will be on hand to interpret five gardens and sites featured in the
JANM exhibit and discussed in SaturdayÕs lectures.
Car pools will be arranged
for Conference attendees. The day will end in a special private garden.
Cultivating LA is included with conference registration. Additional
tickets for people not attending the conference are available at
www.laconservancy.org
Speakers (partial list)
Kendall H. Brown,
Associate Professor, Asian Art History at California State University, Long
Beach is the foremost scholar of AmericaÕs Japanese gardens. He is the author
of Japanese-Style Gardens of the Pacific West Coast, Rizzoli, 1999. In addition to giving us a general
overview of California Japanese-style gardens he will speak on ÒKinzuchi Fujii
and the Storrier-Stearns Japanese Garden.Ó
Naomi Hirahara is an
award-winning author of a mystery series set in Los Angeles featuring Japanese
American gardener and atomic bomb survivor, Mas Arai. Hirahara is the editor of
Green Makers: Japanese American Gardeners in Southern California, and she has written or edited numerous other works.
Her short film, MamoÕs Weeds,
featuring another fictional Los Angeles gardener is part of the exhibit Landscaping
America: Beyond the Japanese Garden.
Takeo Uesugi, Ph.D, FASLA,
taught landscape architecture for several decades at Cal Poly (CSPU) Pomona,
and is much sought after as a designer of Japanese-style gardens. His James
Irvine Garden at the Japanese American Cultural & Community Center will be
featured during the Conference. Dr. Uesugi, in his talk ÒFrom Japanese Garden
to California Landscape,Ó will discuss the future of California Japanese-style
gardens based on his experience in the design, construction, and maintenance of
gardens and his knowledge of the history and concepts of Japanese gardens.
William Noble, Director of
Preservation Projects for The Garden Conservancy will moderate a panel
discussion, Traditions in Transformation. This panel will examine issues
surrounding the preservation of three southern-Californian Japanese-style
gardens: the Huntington Japanese Garden; the James Irvine Garden and the Ganna
Walska Lotusland Japanese Garden.
The panelists
include:
Bill Noble, Moderator, The
Garden Conservancy
Chris Aihara, Executive
Director, Japanese American Cultural and Community Center
Jim Folsom, Director of
the Huntington Botanical Gardens
Greg Kitajima, Japanese
Garden Specialist, Lotusland
Trudi Sandmeier, Director
of Education, Los Angeles Conservancy
Gardens to be visited
during the Conference (partial list)
Garden in the Sky, New
Otani Hotel, Little Tokyo
Huntington Japanese Garden
James Irvine Garden,
Seiryu-en, Little Tokyo
Norton Avenue
Garden of Peace, Roosevelt
High School, Boyle Heights, Los Angeles
Storrier-Stearns Japanese
Garden, Pasadena
San Gabriel Nursery
UCLA Hannah Carter
Japanese Garden
Pre-Conference Options for
Friday, September 28
There are several public
Japanese-style gardens of note in the Los Angeles area. Conference attendees
are encouraged to visit some of these gardens during the day on Friday. A list
of public gardens will be included with registration confirmation.
Bus Tour 9am-5pm:
Designed for out-of-town
guests, this tour will visit two important public Japanese-style gardens. The
tour departs from the New Otani Hotel in downtown Los Angeles and travels to
west Los Angeles to the UCLA Hannah Carter Japanese Garden. After lunch in the
Sawtelle area, the tour continues across town to Pasadena to visit the Japanese
Garden at the Huntington Botanical Gardens. At both gardens there will be a
guided special tour. Please reserve early as space is limited.
Self Drive to UCLA Hannah
Carter Japanese Garden:
This garden is open to the
public by appointment only. The Conference is making special arrangements with
the University to visit on Friday. There will be a fee to park on campus and
for a shuttle to the garden. Information about this special opportunity will be
sent with the registration confirmation.
Carolyn Bennett
Landscape Historian
Nancy Goslee Power &
Associates
1660 Stanford Street
Santa Monica, CA
90404
310.264.0266
Saturday, September
29, 2007
Little Tokyo Walking
Tour 10:15am
- 12:15pm
Relive history and learn
about present-day Little Tokyo with National Museum docents on this historic
walking tour. $8 for National Museum members and $13 for non-members, includes
Museum admission. Reservations along with comfortable walking shoes and clothes
are recommended. Weather permitting.
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369 East First Street
Los Angeles, California
90012
phone: (213) 625-0414
fax: (213) 625-1770
Saturday, September 29,
2007 1pm FOREST OF WORDS
Painting with Visual
Language Origin of Japanese Kanji Ideogram
Early written signs of
Chinese script were found on tortoise shells and ox bones and date back to the
Shang dynasty (14th-11th Century BCE). These first characters were direct
interpretation of nature, signs of medicine and agriculture, or practices in
divination. Through the Japan FoundationÕs international program, two
outstanding figures working in collaboration, Tetsuji Atsuji, Professor at
Kyoto University, and Hirokazu Kosaka, Artistic Director of Japanese American
Cultural and Community Center, will explore the evolution of Chinese ideogram
with a lecture and calligraphic demonstration. Accompanying this program will
be a collection of calligraphy brushes, including those made from the whiskers
of rats, eyelashes of an ostrich and the hair from a boyÕs first hair-cut; a
variety of specialty calligraphic ink; traditional paper; and scrolls from distinguished
calligraphers of Japan.
Space is limited, please
RSVP by calling Gavin Kelley at (213) 628-2725 ext. 133. Support provided by
the Japan Foundation, Los Angeles
Aratani/Japan America
Theatre Free Admission
Japanese American
Cultural and Community Center
244 South San Pedro
Street, Suite 505 (between 2nd and
3rd Streets)
Los Angeles (Little
Tokyo), CA 90012
(213) 628-2725
Aratani/Japan America
Theatre Box Office Info:(213) 680-3700
Sept 30 Samurai Films at
the JACCC in Little Tokyo
11AM
Three Outlaw Samurai
Bandits vs Samurai
Squadron
Samurai Rebellion
Throne of Blood (MacBeth in feudal Japan)
Festival pass $30 or $10
single
Japanese American
Cultural and
Community Center
244 South San Pedro
Street, Suite 505
(between 2nd and 3rd
Streets)
Los Angeles (Little
Tokyo), CA 90012
(213) 628-2725
October 06, 2007 Dream of
the Red Mansions
A performance of Shaoxing
opera
A Shaoxing opera
performance based on the classic novel Hong Lou Meng (A Dream of Red Mansion).
Performed by the Los
Angeles Yue Troupe, which focuses exclusively on Shaoxing opera tradition. The
troupe consists of former professional actors from China as well as
accomplished amateur performers. Although the members hail from various parts
of China, most are from Shangha
Tickets: $20
In connection with the performance, there will be a conference (in
Chinese) on October 2. Details at http://www.international.ucla.edu/asia/showevent.asp?eventid=6030
Saturday 7:00 PM - 9:30 PM
Baldwin Park Performing
Arts Center
4640 N. Maine Ave.
Baldwin Park,
CA 91706
For more information
please contact
Joanna Wang
Tel:
(626) 282-9000 / (626) 73-4942
Posted by: Center for Chinese Studies
Sponsor(s): Center for
Chinese Studies, Los Angeles Yue Troupe
Oct 6 Akimatsuri Fall Festival, presented by East San Gabriel Japanese Community
Center, Inc.
12-8PM
1203 West Puente Avenue,
West Covina, 91790, 626-960-2566
Saturday, November 03,
2007Forty-eight Buddhas of Measureless Life: Court Eunuch Patronage at the
Sculpture Grottoes of Longmen
Amy McNair presents the
Twentieth Sammy Yukuan Lee Lecture in Chinese Archaeology & Art
PARKING: Enter UCLA from
Sunset Blvd. at Westwood Plaza. Proceed directly ahead to Lot 4. There is
an elevator at the southeast end of Lot 4 and a stairwell at the northeast end,
closest to the museum. Parking is $8.
The centerpiece of the
sculpted cave-shrines at Longmen is the colossal Vairocana assembly sponsored
by Emperor Gaozong and Empress Wu during the Tang dynasty (618-907). Fifty
years after its completion, however, a consortium of court eunuchs added a
display of forty-eight Buddha figures to its walls. This intrusive project
allows us to explore questions about the spiritual and social purposes of
Buddhist statuary and patronage in medieval China.
Amy McNair is the author
of Donors of Longmen: Faith, Politics, and Patronage in Medieval Chinese
Buddhist Sculpture, published in
2007 by the University of Hawaii Press. She is Associate Professor of
Chinese Art at the University of Kansas, where she teaches and researches early
and medieval Chinese art.
2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
Lenart Auditorium
Fowler Museum of Cultural
History
UCLA
Los Angeles, CA 90095
For more information
please contact
Richard Gunde
Tel: 310 825-8683
2007
U.S. Tour - Bunraku: The National
Puppet Theatre of Japan
Because
Bunraku is based in Osaka, Japan, special attention was given to Kansai-area
Sister Cities in the United States.
The troupe will perform in Boston, MA; Champaign, IL; Evanston, IL; Berkeley, CA;
San Francisco, CA; concluding
its tour in Los Angeles with four performances at the Japanese American
Cultural & Community Center, Aratani/Japan America Theatre. In 2007, San Francisco celebrates its
50th anniversary of Sister City Affiliations with the city of Osaka.
Dates: October 2 Ð 20, 2007
Program: An Introduction to Bunraku (25 minutes)
Tsubosaka Kannon Reigenki Ð
Miracle at the Tsubosaka Kannon
Temple (55 minutes)
Date Musume Koi no Higanoko Ð
OshichiÕs Burning Love (25 minutes)
Company: 16 Puppeteers, Musicians and
Narrators, with an 17 additional
touring
staff of wig masters, costumers, and stage technicians.
October
12, 2007
Asian Art Museum, San Francisco, CA
October
13 & 14, 2007
Zellerbach Hall, Berkeley, CA
University of California, Berkeley
October
18, 19 & 20, 2007
Aratani/Japan America Theatre, Los
Angeles, CA
Japanese American Cultural &
Community Center
An
Exclusive Southern California Engagement
Experience
Bunraku in its first full-scale U.S. performance in nearly two decades!
Presented
in Japanese with English super titles.
Thursday
October 18, 2007 8pm
Friday
October 19, 2007 8pm
Saturday
October 20, 2007
2pm
& 8pm
Aratani/Japan
America Theatre
$100
Opening Night Gold Circle Seating (includes Reception)
$65
orchestra, $58 balcony
$60,
$55 JACCC Members
To purchase tickets,
or for more information call the Aratani / Japan America Theatre box office at
(213) 680-3700 from noon to 5 pm, Monday through Saturday and Sundays only on
performance days.
Fax orders to (213)
680-1872 or send email inquiries to boxoffice@jaccc.org.
Call 213-628-2725 to become a JACCC Member and receive Priority
Handling!
The
2007 U.S. Tour of Bunraku: The National Puppet Theatre of Japan is
produced and coordinated by the Japanese
American Cultural & Community Center.
DAWN'S LIGHT: THE JOURNEY
OF GORDON HIRABAYASHI
By Jeanne Sakata
Directed by Jessica
Kubzansky Based on a true story. During the Japanese Internment of WWII, UW
student Gordon Hirabayashi refused evacuation orders as a violation of his
civil rights and became a federal prisoner. His 1942 conviction was not
overturned until 1987.
WORLD PREMIERE
Previews - November 1 -
4, 2007
Opening Night - Wednesday
November 7, 2007
Performance Run -
November 8 - December 2, 2007
Wednesday - Saturday @ 8
pm, Sunday @ 2:00pm
*NO PERFORMANCE Thursday,
November 22, 2007
$60 Opening Night
$35 Regular Tickets
$30 Students &
Seniors
$20 Preview Tickets
American Sign
Language-interpreted performance Sunday, November 25, 2007 @ 2:00 pm
$20 Tickets for Deaf
& Hard of Hearing Patrons
For more information,
please call East West Players at (213) 625-7000 or email info@eastwestplayers.org.
Click here to visit the Mark Taper Forum online
for more details.
November 03, 2007
Forty-eight Buddhas of Measureless Life: Court Eunuch Patronage at the
Sculpture Grottoes of Longmen
Amy McNair presents the
Twentieth Sammy Yukuan Lee Lecture in Chinese Archaeology & Art
The centerpiece of the
sculpted cave-shrines at Longmen is the colossal Vairocana assembly sponsored
by Emperor Gaozong and Empress Wu during the Tang dynasty (618-907). Fifty
years after its completion, however, a consortium of court eunuchs added a
display of forty-eight Buddha figures to its walls. This intrusive project
allows us to explore questions about the spiritual and social purposes of
Buddhist statuary and patronage in medieval China.
Amy McNair is the author
of Donors of Longmen: Faith, Politics, and Patronage in Medieval Chinese
Buddhist Sculpture, published in 2007 by the University of Hawaii
Press. She is Associate Professor of Chinese Art at the University of
Kansas, where she teaches and researches early and medieval Chinese art.
PARKING: Enter UCLA from
Sunset Blvd. at Westwood Plaza. Proceed directly ahead to Lot 4. There is
an elevator at the southeast end of Lot 4 and a stairwell at the northeast end,
closest to the museum. Parking is $8.
Saturday, 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
Lenart Auditorium
Fowler Museum of Cultural
History
UCLA
Los Angeles, CA 90095
For more information
please contact
Richard Gunde
Tel: 310 825-8683
Posted by: Center for Chinese Studies
Sponsor(s): Center for Buddhist Studies,
Center
for Chinese Studies
http://www.international.ucla.edu/asia/showevent.asp?eventid=5940
November 10 and 17 The
World of Murakami: MOCA Exhibit
UCLA Extension course in
conjunction with MOCA exhibit
In Conjunction with MOCA's
exhibition, © MURAKAMI, UCLA Extension offers a two session course exploring
the work of internationally acclaimed between the artist's work, traditional
Japanese painting, and Western pop art through exhibition walkthroughs, slide
lectures, and discussion.
Instructor: Mika
Yoshitake, MOCA Project Coordinator for © MURAKAMI and doctoral student in the
Department of Art History at the University of California, Los Angeles
The Geffen Contemporary at
MOCA
Los Angeles, CA 90066
Cost: $85 MOCA members;
$95 nonmembers
Tel: (310) 825-9971
Posted by: Asia Institute
Sponsor(s): UCLA Extension
http://www.international.ucla.edu/asia/showevent.asp?eventid=6035
November 10, 2007
Rethinking China and Europe: Connections and Comparisons
A day-long conference
presented in conjunction with the Southern California China Colloquium
Organizer: Professor
Jeffrey Wasserstrom (History, UC Irvine)
Presenters:
Robert Bickers
Professor of Historical Studies, University of Bristol.
Wai-kit Choi
Assistant Professor of Sociology, California State University, Los
Angeles.
Kathryn Edgerton-Tarpley
Associate Professor of History, San Diego State University.
Richard S. Horowitz
Associate Professor of History, California State University, Northridge.
Ruth Rogaski
Associate Professor of History, Vanderbilt University.
Wensheng Wang
Mellon/ACLS Fellow and doctoral candidate in History, University of
California Irvine.
Jeffrey Wasserstrom
Professor of Histoy, University of California, Irvine. P
Titles and additional
information soon.
Saturday, 10:00 AM - 4:30
PM
6275 Bunche Hall
UCLA
Los Angeles, CA 90095
For more information
please contact
Richard Gunde
Tel: 310 825-8683
Sponsor: Center for
Chinese Studies
Dec 1, 2 Japan Expo 2007
*NOVEMBER/DECEMBER
Chinese American
Museum
Jake Lee
exhibit opens.
See LA
Library DiverseCity events at http://www.lapl.org/kidspath/events/diversecity/index.html
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This Weekend (and earlier/later)
Thursday, September 20,
7pm 10th Annual Los Angeles Music
and Art School Stars for the Arts Benefit Concert
A Concert to benefit
youngsters and their development in the arts In its 10th year, Stars for the
Arts has raised student scholarships through its programs, which provide a
terrific showcase of young talent from the Greater East Los Angeles area. The
proceeds will go to the Scholarship Fund.
For more information
visit
www.lamusart.org or contact LAMAS at (323)
262-7734
Aratani/Japan America
Theatre $250, $120, $50, $20
Japanese American
Cultural and Community Center
244 South San Pedro
Street, Suite 505 (between 2nd and
3rd Streets)
Los Angeles (Little
Tokyo), CA 90012
(213) 628-2725
Aratani/Japan America
Theatre Box Office Info:(213) 680-3700
Saturday, September
22, 2007 Lifelong Learning
Sumi-e and Origami
Cards Ryosen Shibata
2:00pm - 3:30pm
Create beautiful
cards for those special people in your life that can be shared on birthdays,
holidays, or just because. $8 for National Museum members, $13 for non-members.
Includes supplies and Museum admission. Reservations recommended.
Made possible, in part,
by the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles.
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369 East First Street
Los Angeles,
California 90012
phone: (213) 625-0414
fax: (213) 625-1770
Sunday,
September 23, 2007
From
Barbed Wire to Barbed Hooks: Work in Progress 2:00pm - 3:30pm
Cory
Shiozaki explores the history of Manzanar inmates who turned to trout fishing
to escape the hardships of incarceration. The filmmaker suggests that through
fishing inmates found a much sought-after feeling of freedom, however brief, as
they matched wits with the wily trout of the famed Eastern Sierra fishing
grounds. Shiozaki will share stories of "escaping" at night from
camp, highlight Manzanar's well-known fishermen, and share examples of fishing
tackle used in camp.
Made
possible, in part, by the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles.
JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM
369 East
First Street
Los
Angeles, California 90012
phone:
(213) 625-0414
fax: (213)
625-1770
Last
weekend (or so) I went to:
On
Friday I attended a presentation
by author Naomi Hirahara on how she sold her first works to New York publishing
houses, sponsored by the Greater LA Singles JACL.
Tuned
in by accident to a KCET documentary
Ò Most Honorable SonÓ about the only Nisei in the US Air Force during
World War II. See http://www.pbs.org/mosthonorableson/
For
more info. DVD available.
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Links to selected
articles from the LA Times. To actually access the articles, you may have to
sign up for a free account.
DISPATCH FROM HONOLULU
Captive clientele helps
Costco rule
In Hawaii, the warehouse
retailer dominates the retail market, offering bargains on ukuleles and milk.
But a visit could take all day.
By Tomas Alex Tizon, Los
Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 16, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-na-costco16sep16,1,2034266.story
Hsu thrived in 'bundling'
system
Campaign finance changes
helped create the environment in which a fugitive could be welcomed by Kennedys
and Clintons.
By Tom Hamburger, Dan
Morain and Robin Fields, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
September 14, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/la-na-hsu14sep14,1,2659713.story
Not at home with English
A new census report says
43% in the state and 53% in L.A. speak a different language in their private
lives.
By Anna Gorman and David
Pierson, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
September 13, 2007
Bienvenidos. Huan
ying. Dobro pozhalovat.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-language13sep13,1,7918437.story
MOVIES
SHOWBIZ 7s: Seven best
shoot-'em-up scenes in cinema
'Shoot 'Em Up' director Michael
Davis gives us his picks.
By Deborah Netburn, Los
Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 13, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/movies/la-et-showbiz7s13sep13,1,1452499.story
Salsa's real home? It's
L.A.
Dozens of orchestras help
the style thrive. The beat of the city is Afro Caribbean.
By Ernesto Lechner,
Special To The Times
September 13, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-wk-cover13sep13,1,6375537.story
A Hart-felt commitment to
racial peace
The Newhall high school
where ethnic tensions erupted last year erects a monument to cultural diversity.
By Ann M. Simmons, Los
Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 12, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-newhall12sep12,1,786481.story
World's oldest man turns
112
Tomoji Tanabe says he'd
like to live forever.
From the Associated Press
9:32 AM PDT, September 18,
2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-oldest19sep19,1,7768042.story
POP MUSIC REVIEW
Sonex crosses cultural
boundaries
Sonex shows the power of
son jarocho in Little Tokyo, while harpist Duarte plucks new fans.
By Agustin Gurza, Los
Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 15, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-celso15sep15,1,6777941.story
Amid a web of suspicion,
an
When a high-profile
sex-and-spy scandal touched the FBI's Los Angeles China Squad, a prized
investigator became collateral damage.
By H.G. Reza, Los Angeles
Times Staff Writer
September 14, 2007
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-agent14sep14,1,7512459.story