Monday, January 24, 2011

UNESCO recognition of Giong festival celebrated

HA NOI — Festivities celebrating UNESCO's recognition of Giong festival are expected to attract up to 8,000 revellers today in Soc Son District, on the northern outskirts of Ha Noi.

At the event, UNESCO Viet Nam representative Katherine Morin Muller will present the certificate recognising the Giong festival as Intangible Heritage of Humanity to the authorities of Gia Lam and Soc Son villages.

Up to 700 locals from Soc Son District and Phu Dong village will also recreate some of the most impressive elements of the celebrated festival in front of the Giong Temple in Ha Noi's Gia Lam District, where the historic Gia Ngu stone platform resides.

Young artists to compete at international festival

HA NOI — Eight paintings by Vietnamese children 6-10 years old were selected on Wednesday out of nearly 20,000 entries to compete in the Mitsubishi-Enikki Asian Children's Art Festival in Japan.

The judges also selected 10 runners-up and the 10 best group works.

HCM City Ao dai show raises funds for charity

HCM CITY — The Viet Nam Ao Dai Association, dedicated to the traditional Vietnamese ao dai, or long dress, held a charity fashion show in HCM City last night to raise funds for poor households in the nation's central region.

The event was attended by representatives from the consulate generals of the US, France, Russia, Germany, Cuba, Japan, South Korea, India, Indonesia and Laos as well as foreign organisations and businesses.

Proceeds will go to families in difficulty in Phong Dien District in the province of Thua Thien-Hue, and to buy boats to ferry students in Quang Trach District in the central province of Quang Binh, who must cross a river to attend school.

Paradise Park to serve up Tet entertainment

HA NOI — Ha Noi's Bao Son Paradise Park will host festivities during the Tet (Lunar New Year) holidays on February 4-7.

Activities includes folk games, puppetry, circus perfomers, and artists from Bao Son Theatre.

VTV begins series on Khmer culture, lifestyle

HCMCITY — Viet Nam Television has begun to show a series on the culture and lifestyle of the Khmer people living in Viet Nam's south-western region on its VTV1 channel.

The 30-episode series, titled Hay Cung Em Dieu Sarikakeo (Join me in the Sarikakeo Dance), is about the life and love of Sophia, a former Khmer Sarikakeo dancer who lived in a small village in Soc Trang Province in the early 1980s.

The film recounts Sophia's life as a dancer before she moved to An Giang Province and learned weaving.

"We wanted to spotlight the Khmer people and their culture, lifestyle, and dance," said Hue.

There are nearly 1.3 million Khmers in the Delta, living mostly in Soc Trang and Tra Vinh. — VNS

Related Articles

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Youthful stars in concert

Violinist Bui Cong Duy - Photo: Courtesy of HBSO
A shock began last Wednesday’s HCMC Ballet Symphony Orchestra (HBSO) concert in the Saigon Opera House – a ten-year old boy, Nguyen The Vinh, sitting at the keyboard waiting to begin the opening movement of Haydn’s Piano Concerto in D. It was the start of an evening mostly devoted to star students from Hanoi’s National Academy of Music, though set to conclude with the appearance of the tutor of many of them, celebrated violinist Bui Cong Duy.

Vinh, both formal and breath-takingly nonchalant, was warmly received. A harder task confronted violinist Nguyen Linh Uyen (16) with the second and third movements of Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto. Romantic works demand an expressive emotional commitment many believe even 16-year-olds can’t come up with. But her high notes proved sweet, and her technique allowed her to get away nicely with the difficult third movement.

Bui Cam Ly (18) followed with two short crowd-pleasers, Massenet’s Meditation and Elgar’s Salut d’amour, the second taken at a surprisingly brisk pace. But the best of the youthful violinists was saved until last. Nguyen Thien Minh (17) immediately established his pre-eminence by his confidence and assured stage presence, and gave Pablo de Sarasate’s Zigeunerweisen with great brilliance. A mature interpretative disposition and a strong sense of style together brought the first half of the evening to a close with an ovation, and rightly.

But the second half began with an equally stellar performance – Do Hoang Linh Chi (13) playing the opening movement of Mozart’s Piano Concerto in C, K.467. Here was another indubitable stylist, lovingly playful, and showing in her phrasing and emphases a mastery that would have graced a pianist of any age. The orchestra, too, recognized her star quality and dutifully rose to the occasion.

Finally Bui Cong Duy appeared, playing the solo violin part in Nguyen Manh Duy Linh’s Concerto Grosso for violin, piano, percussion and string orchestra. It proved a difficult work to come to terms with for the audience, but, with the composer himself present, this was clearly an important occasion. And if what we shall remember are first and foremost Hanoi’s young instrumentalists, this nevertheless proved a successful and happy event all round.

Related Articles

Jet Li arrives in Vietnam

Chinese movie star and kung fu master Jet Li landed in Hanoi Thursday afternoon and will stay in the capital for five days to attend charity activities as a goodwill ambassador for the International Red Cross.

The Hollywood actor is scheduled to appear at the Youth Park in Hanoi from 8:30 – 9:00 am January 22 to attend a blood donation, expected to attract 2,000 and is aimed at storing blood for patients during Tet.

At 11:00 am, Jan Li will visit a mangrove forest in Nghe An province in the central region and engage in Red Cross activities in Thanh Hoa and Nghe An.

He will be back in Hanoi the following day and present gifts to 40 enthusiastic volunteers of the Vietnamese Red Cross and will reply to questions about volunteer activities from youths in the capital.

He will have a question-answer session during a press conference in Hanoi on January 24 before returning home.

At his hometown, he is chairman of the Chinese Red Cross Foundation.

Bio

Jet Li, 47, is a real martial art master that makes international fame as an action star. Jet Li is arguably one of the most famous Chinese in the world.

He began practicing Wushu at the age of 8 and after years of training he represented Beijing Wushu team in various performances and competitions.

Jet Li already started acting when he was still an active martial artist. His debut movie was Shaolin Temple in 1982, followed by 2 sequels which made him a national action star.

Related Articles

Jet Li arrives in Vietnam

Chinese movie star and kung fu master Jet Li landed in Hanoi Thursday afternoon and will stay in the capital for five days to attend charity activities as a goodwill ambassador for the International Red Cross.

The Hollywood actor is scheduled to appear at the Youth Park in Hanoi from 8:30 – 9:00 am January 22 to attend a blood donation, expected to attract 2,000 and is aimed at storing blood for patients during Tet.

At 11:00 am, Jan Li will visit a mangrove forest in Nghe An province in the central region and engage in Red Cross activities in Thanh Hoa and Nghe An.

He will be back in Hanoi the following day and present gifts to 40 enthusiastic volunteers of the Vietnamese Red Cross and will reply to questions about volunteer activities from youths in the capital.

He will have a question-answer session during a press conference in Hanoi on January 24 before returning home.

At his hometown, he is chairman of the Chinese Red Cross Foundation.

Bio

Jet Li, 47, is a real martial art master that makes international fame as an action star. Jet Li is arguably one of the most famous Chinese in the world.

He began practicing Wushu at the age of 8 and after years of training he represented Beijing Wushu team in various performances and competitions.

Jet Li already started acting when he was still an active martial artist. His debut movie was Shaolin Temple in 1982, followed by 2 sequels which made him a national action star.

Related Articles

Is Vietnam Idol reaching for the moon?

Vietnam Idol – modeled upon the American version American Idol – is generally considered a successful singing contest and an effective channel through which to search for talents on Vietnamese television. As the program’s slogan “From zero to hero” suggests, the best singers will be selected from thousands of unknowns and propelled to prominence by local viewers.

Generally, the Vietnam Idol’s script has two parts. In the first round, the audition round, the audience will have a chance to entertain themselves with hilarious scenarios, the equivalent of watching slapstick comedies. Several scandals exposed during this stage help the program to become a magnet for the media.

Next comes the second round, the real acid test in which the singers compete with each other week after week, trying to win the audience’s hearts with their best performance, best music, songs, and hot dancing.

What makes the show riveting to the thousands of viewers sitting in front of their tubes is the fact that the contestants are forced to eliminate each other to go through to the next round and eventually to win the title.

For those contestants who accept this tough rule and are willing to endure the emotional hurt that comes with the elimination, the contest offers them plenty of benefits that would help them hone their talents and develop their professional career.

Uyen Linh

2010 Vietnam Idol-crowned Uyen Linh

Behind the scene, singers are trained by vocal experts, choreographers, fashion designers, and music directors. These professionals would teach them some singing techniques and train them to handle questions from the media. Appearing on Vietnam Idol also gives the contestants an opportunity to establish working relationships with the right people, a shortcut to getting a foothold in the recording industry and securing their first recording contract without too much sweat.

The audience as the judges

In 1990s, the contestants performed on the local television and would be evaluated by the judges who decided who the winner was. But starting in 2006, with the appearance of Vietnam Idol, the imported version of American Idol, the audience’s vote determined the winner of the contest. Today, both Vietnam Idol and Sao Mai Diem Hen (Morning Star – Rendez Vous) follow this format.

Unlike American Idol, where the judges are often unsympathetic and even hurtful with their harsh comments, Vietnamese judges, due to cultural differences, often give constructive comments or feedbacks, and choose to avoid hurting the participants.

Generally, most Vietnamese singing contests aim to produce instant celebrities by giving the contestants as much face time on television and in front of the media as possible. In addition, the organizers publish moving, Horatio Alger type of stories about the contestants to boost their images and catapult them to stardom.

This formula has proved very successful in American Idol. For example, Carrie Underwood – the winner of 2005 American Idol – was promoted as a farm girl who dreamed big dreams, and in a series of photos Carrie was seen helping her father on the farm. Temptress Brown, another contestant, intimated to thousands of viewers that she joined the contest to please her ailing mother in the hospital.

 audience

The audience, therefore, has been regarded a vital element of the competition’s success. In the growing consumer era, singing contests help the viewers choose the winner based on their own taste.

Will a shining star ever emerge?

After the competition, record companies, television manufacturers and other businesses begin to conduct projects to exploit the winner’s name.

However, the local showbiz industry in Vietnam has yet to learn the world’s expertise in turning new winners into celebrities and sustaining their stardom status.

“The showbiz industry in Vietnam fails to do that, just like a poor man who doesn’t have enough money left to buy gas for his newly-purchased Lexus,” said Vo Thien Thanh, a well-known musician.

The success of recent singing contests has shed plenty of light on Vietnam’s contemporary culture. Like a hero, the winner has been portrayed as a talented, hard-working individual who, with a little bit of luck, have risen to fame and fortune. He or she, in other words, represents all that celebrities have and all that ordinary people lack.

However, in the most anti-hero fashion, the winner is actually a product of the entertainment industry, an item manufactured for commercial purposes.

Phuong Vy

2006 Vietnam Idol-crowned Phuong Vy

As Christopher E. Bell, author of American, Idolatry: Celebrity, Commodity and Reality Television, comments in his book, “[Their public acclaims] are not entirely the product of their own deeds, nor are they entirely the product of media construction. They are a hybrid form.”

Talents not built in one day

Musician Bao Chan does not believe that talent could be cultivated in one day.

From 1995–2005, famous singers like Thanh Lam, Hong Nhung, My Linh, Tran Thu Ha and My Tam enrolled in and won many singing contests, but no one could claim that their success derived from such contests.

Their top positions, their existing diva status in the music industry should be seen as a result of a series of factors, like their formal musical training, hard work and persistent efforts over a long period of time, Chan said.

Just a Will-o'-the-wisp

In some quarters, there is the belief that Vietnam Idol provides the local showbiz with new talents and saves them a lot of time and trouble searching for these idols on their own. Not to mention the many nights and hours of good entertainment supplied to the audience.

According to musician Quoc Bao, singing contests like Vietnam Idol just created so-called “colorful entertainment bubbles”, out of which few truly talented singers have ever appeared.

At present, most singing contests are targeted for commercial purposes. While there is nothing wrong with making money and providing entertainment for the masses, they create an illusion of grandeur among young people that winning the title would automatically take them to the moon and transform them overnight into a shining star.

Related Articles

Is Vietnam Idol reaching for the moon?

Vietnam Idol – modeled upon the American version American Idol – is generally considered a successful singing contest and an effective channel through which to search for talents on Vietnamese television. As the program’s slogan “From zero to hero” suggests, the best singers will be selected from thousands of unknowns and propelled to prominence by local viewers.

Generally, the Vietnam Idol’s script has two parts. In the first round, the audition round, the audience will have a chance to entertain themselves with hilarious scenarios, the equivalent of watching slapstick comedies. Several scandals exposed during this stage help the program to become a magnet for the media.

Next comes the second round, the real acid test in which the singers compete with each other week after week, trying to win the audience’s hearts with their best performance, best music, songs, and hot dancing.

What makes the show riveting to the thousands of viewers sitting in front of their tubes is the fact that the contestants are forced to eliminate each other to go through to the next round and eventually to win the title.

For those contestants who accept this tough rule and are willing to endure the emotional hurt that comes with the elimination, the contest offers them plenty of benefits that would help them hone their talents and develop their professional career.

Uyen Linh

2010 Vietnam Idol-crowned Uyen Linh

Behind the scene, singers are trained by vocal experts, choreographers, fashion designers, and music directors. These professionals would teach them some singing techniques and train them to handle questions from the media. Appearing on Vietnam Idol also gives the contestants an opportunity to establish working relationships with the right people, a shortcut to getting a foothold in the recording industry and securing their first recording contract without too much sweat.

The audience as the judges

In 1990s, the contestants performed on the local television and would be evaluated by the judges who decided who the winner was. But starting in 2006, with the appearance of Vietnam Idol, the imported version of American Idol, the audience’s vote determined the winner of the contest. Today, both Vietnam Idol and Sao Mai Diem Hen (Morning Star – Rendez Vous) follow this format.

Unlike American Idol, where the judges are often unsympathetic and even hurtful with their harsh comments, Vietnamese judges, due to cultural differences, often give constructive comments or feedbacks, and choose to avoid hurting the participants.

Generally, most Vietnamese singing contests aim to produce instant celebrities by giving the contestants as much face time on television and in front of the media as possible. In addition, the organizers publish moving, Horatio Alger type of stories about the contestants to boost their images and catapult them to stardom.

This formula has proved very successful in American Idol. For example, Carrie Underwood – the winner of 2005 American Idol – was promoted as a farm girl who dreamed big dreams, and in a series of photos Carrie was seen helping her father on the farm. Temptress Brown, another contestant, intimated to thousands of viewers that she joined the contest to please her ailing mother in the hospital.

 audience

The audience, therefore, has been regarded a vital element of the competition’s success. In the growing consumer era, singing contests help the viewers choose the winner based on their own taste.

Will a shining star ever emerge?

After the competition, record companies, television manufacturers and other businesses begin to conduct projects to exploit the winner’s name.

However, the local showbiz industry in Vietnam has yet to learn the world’s expertise in turning new winners into celebrities and sustaining their stardom status.

“The showbiz industry in Vietnam fails to do that, just like a poor man who doesn’t have enough money left to buy gas for his newly-purchased Lexus,” said Vo Thien Thanh, a well-known musician.

The success of recent singing contests has shed plenty of light on Vietnam’s contemporary culture. Like a hero, the winner has been portrayed as a talented, hard-working individual who, with a little bit of luck, have risen to fame and fortune. He or she, in other words, represents all that celebrities have and all that ordinary people lack.

However, in the most anti-hero fashion, the winner is actually a product of the entertainment industry, an item manufactured for commercial purposes.

Phuong Vy

2006 Vietnam Idol-crowned Phuong Vy

As Christopher E. Bell, author of American, Idolatry: Celebrity, Commodity and Reality Television, comments in his book, “[Their public acclaims] are not entirely the product of their own deeds, nor are they entirely the product of media construction. They are a hybrid form.”

Talents not built in one day

Musician Bao Chan does not believe that talent could be cultivated in one day.

From 1995–2005, famous singers like Thanh Lam, Hong Nhung, My Linh, Tran Thu Ha and My Tam enrolled in and won many singing contests, but no one could claim that their success derived from such contests.

Their top positions, their existing diva status in the music industry should be seen as a result of a series of factors, like their formal musical training, hard work and persistent efforts over a long period of time, Chan said.

Just a Will-o'-the-wisp

In some quarters, there is the belief that Vietnam Idol provides the local showbiz with new talents and saves them a lot of time and trouble searching for these idols on their own. Not to mention the many nights and hours of good entertainment supplied to the audience.

According to musician Quoc Bao, singing contests like Vietnam Idol just created so-called “colorful entertainment bubbles”, out of which few truly talented singers have ever appeared.

At present, most singing contests are targeted for commercial purposes. While there is nothing wrong with making money and providing entertainment for the masses, they create an illusion of grandeur among young people that winning the title would automatically take them to the moon and transform them overnight into a shining star.

Related Articles

Award for photos of dioxin victims

HA NOI – A story told through photos by Pham Vu Dung was granted the Gold Cup of the Viet Nam Association of Photographic Artists (VAPA) at a ceremony for the best pix of 2010 this morning.

Entitled Prime Example, the photos tell the story of Pham The Minh from the northern province of Hai Phong, an Agent Orange victim. He has overcome many troubles in life to study and teach English to more than 1,500 students, especially disabled children.

The VAPA selected the photos from 358 entries by 210 photographers. A-grade prizes were awarded to Nguyen Huong Vuong from the Central Highlands province of Dac Lac, Lam Thanh Liem from the southern province of Bac Lieu, Truong Ngoc Minh from the southern province of Binh Thuan, Bui Tien Phong from the southern province of Tra Vinh and Pham Thi Thu from HCM City.

The VAPA also grants prizes for pictorial books. The top prizes went to photos of Agent Orange victims depicted in That's the Way They Live by Nguyen A from HCM City, and photos of north Viet Nam during the American War in Memories of the War by Chu Chi Thanh from Ha Noi.

The photos were not only aesthetic, but also depicted humanity and current issues of life, said Vu Quoc Khanh, VAPA president.

VAPA also awarded a gold medal to a photo of a fire-fighter at work in a competition titled Portraits of Today's Vietnamese People. The photo, Silence, was taken by Diep Duc Minh.

The organising board selected 119 of the best photos for a show at Exhibition House at 45 Trang Tien street, Ha Noi until the end of this month.

The photos will be exhibited in HCM City in March. – VNS

Related Articles