Saturday, February 12, 2011

Vietnam set for 1st international chorus contest

The first ever Vietnam International Chorus Festival and Competition to be held in Hoi An next month will provide Vietnamese choirs the opportunity to meet their international counterparts and take part in a festival of this size for the first time.

It will be hosted by renowned choir organizer, Interkultur of Germany.

For its six categories of competition, 34 choirs from eight countries have signed up so far. The compulsory categories include mixed, male, female, and children choirs.

Indonesia will send 12 choirs, followed by the Philippines with 10. Vietnam will be represented by five choirs from Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, and Quang Nam province.

The event will also feature advisory circles, rehearsals with choir experts, and encounter concerts.

A highlight will be the big opening show on March 15 on a giant floating stage by the Hoai River square.

Besides the competition, the choirs will also perform for locals and tourists at eight venues across Hoi An.

The event, scheduled to be held from March 15 to 18, is among 12 international competitions for amateur choirs held by Interkultur.

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Thais fall for Vietnamese kids' book

HCM CITY — Popular children's book writer Nguyen Nhat Anh has sold the rights to Thailand-based Nanmee Books Publishing House for translation of one of his best-selling books into Thai.

Cho Toi Xin Mot Ve Di Tuoi Tho (Give Me A Ticket Back To Childhood) is a narration by an urban boy named Mui of the events in his and three friends' lives.

The book received a sensational reception from critics and readers of all ages, selling a record -- for children's books -- 20,000 copies within a week of being published in 2008.

It was reprinted by the Tre (Youth) Publishing House.

Translator Montira Rato will work to get the Thai version published in August to mark 35 years of diplomatic relations between Viet Nam and Thailand.

Last year the Viet Nam Writers Association nominated the book for the Southeast Asian Writers Award instituted by the Thai royal family, and it duly won the prize.

The HCM City-based Anh began writing in 1984 and is known for his simple style and accurately depicting the purity and sensitivity of children's minds.

His other famous books include Toi La Be To (I'm Be To) and Dao Mong Mo (The Dreamlike Island), both about young girls and boys. Both have seen reprints.

His latest book, Toi Thay Hoa Vang Tren Co Xanh (I See Yellow Flowers on the Green Grass), sold 32,000 copies in just two months of publication last year.

Co Gai Den Tu Hom Qua (The Girl Comes from Yesterday), which Tre published in 1995, remains one of the country's best-selling kids' books.

Moscow University recently included it in the curriculum for Vietnamese-language students.

It is also expected to be translated into Russian. - VNS

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Hue agencies consider creating tours based on city's heavy rain

Le Huong

Touring in the rain: Foreign tourists enjoy walking along Hue's Trang Tien Bridge in light rain. Local authorities and travel agencies are thinking hard to design tours targeting Hue's rainy days. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Viet

Touring in the rain: Foreign tourists enjoy walking along Hue's Trang Tien Bridge in light rain. Local authorities and travel agencies are thinking hard to design tours targeting Hue's rainy days. — VNA/VNS Photo Quoc Viet

Royal treatment: Tourists visit one of Hue's royal palaces. — VNA/VNS Photo Huy Hung

Royal treatment: Tourists visit one of Hue's royal palaces. — VNA/VNS Photo Huy Hung

The song Remember Ha Noi's Autumn by late composer Trinh Cong Son has inspired Saigontourist to design a tour of the city's beautiful locations mentioned in the lyrics.

"Ha Noi in autumn with yellow-leafed Celtis sinensis, red-leafed tropical almonds . . . small lanes perfumed by milky pines, old houses with brown mossy roofs, West Lake with flocks of Eurasian coot flying to the sun . . .," the song says.

Nguyen Duc Thanh, 67, who has taken the tour says it is both romantic and has deep cultural meanings.

"It has not only satisfied tourists' desires to explore the capital, but also introduced in the most vivid and realistic way the city's tangible and intangible cultural spaces," Thanh says.

He wonders why Hue travel agencies do not design a tour in Hue's rainy season based on the theme Old Flame, after another song by the same musician about his first love.

"It rains hard and long over the old tower . . .," says the song.

Tourists may visit the famed musician's house by Phu Cam Bridge, where he used to watch the small road on the other side of the An Cuu River through a curtain of rain "over small tree leaves".

Columns of trees, narrow roads and ancient towers in the rain are all mentioned in Son's song, redolent of his feelings and memories of Hue. This will lure tourists to a Hue Old Flame tour as they were attracted to the Remember Ha Noi's Autumn tour, Thanh says.

While the rest of the country has two seasons – wet and dry – the central province of Thua Thien-Hue also has two seasons – heavy rainy and light rainy.

Hue's heavy rainy season starts in September with widespread flooding and lasts till December. Drizzling rains then continues till April, when the summer thunderstorms arrive.

The Hue area is at the junction of climates of the North and South. The average rainfall in the whole province is 2,700mm.

While locals may look on such continuous rain as a disadvantage to the area's economic development, artists regard the rain as heaven's gift.

"Hue's rain is a way of playing guitar by the heaven, a combination of fragile and abnormal clashes," writes author Nguyen Xuan Hoang, "Rains can be as quiet as whispers over the leaves, as far as an old tale and as uproarious as laughter. Hue's rain is as mysterious as a human."

Writer Hoang Phu Ngoc Tuong says to see Hue in a vaporous blanket of rain is to comprehend the innermost feelings of the people.

Painter Vo Xuan Huy, a teacher at the Hue Fine Arts College, admits that the blur and no clear borders in his paintings are the unconscious influence of Hue's rain.

Huy says it might be the same with music, with deep melodies inspired by the sorrowful sound of continuous rain.

Researcher Nguyen Thu Hanh, who chairs the Scientific Union for Developing Sustainable Tourism, has recently proposed that Hue's rain be turned into a unique tourism product.

"Rain curbs outdoor activities while at the same time nurturing indoor entertainment," Hanh says. "Tourists have more time to get closer to one another, to meditate, enjoy music, poetry and drink tea or coffee."

Union members have put forward some ideas for tourism products that can be exploited during the rainy season.

These include visiting suitable destinations, tours along the Huong River with stops to view the scenery like Vong Canh Hill, Ngu Phung Tower (at Ngo Mon Gate), the peak of Ngu Binh Mountain and high-rise hotels along the Huong River.

They have proposed a system of hotels and cafes, with decor to suit the environment, offering suitable atmospheres and spaces for watching the rain and enjoying its profound pleasures.

Indoor activities could include the likes of poetry readings, musical performances, exhibitions and cooking or painting classes while pagodas and gardens could meet the demand for meditation.

The wet season is a good time to enjoy Hue's complicated cuisine and increase the sale of the likes of umbrellas, traditional bamboo conical hats and raincoats, they say.

The director of Vietnamtourism's branch in Hue, Nguyen Thi Kim Binh, says tours designed with rain themes are more suitable to small groups of tourists.

"Taking care of tourists in the rain requires proper organisation," she says. "My branch receives big groups. Not many foreign tourists have a specific urge to drink coffee in the rain."

Tran Tien Dat, from the Sales Department of Hue Travel, admits the proposal has merits. The company has been in operation for 20 years but has no specific tour designed for the wet season.

"From now on we may take advantage of the rain, to keep tourists longer rather than letting them go to other destinations when it rains," he says.

Ngo Hoa, deputy chairman of Thua Thien-Hue People's Committee, agrees that tourism might be the economic sector to take advantage of the rain.

He tells of his own experience of the serious flood in 2007, when he saw tourists at Hue's Century Hotel swimming in the pool watching the rain on the river bank.

"They told me it was interesting to see fierce streams running in the Huong River," he recalls.

"The wet season is also a high tourism season in Hue, when luxury hotels are fully booked, mostly by westerners and Hue's temperature of 150C is still warm enough. Many told me they liked the rain."

Hoa says he will ask the local culture department to consider the proposal, and will consult tourism enterprises to help authorities further exploit tourism in the rainy season.

"Of course, the State should be responsible for completing infrastructure while local authorities and enterprises will design the product." — VNS

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Friday, February 11, 2011

Pop star Hung tops awards list

Patriotic pop: Singer Dam Vinh Hung (left) has been nominated Favourite Singer at the annual HTV Awards. Voting for the awards begins this month. — File Photo

Patriotic pop: Singer Dam Vinh Hung (left) has been nominated Favourite Singer at the annual HTV Awards. Voting for the awards begins this month. — File Photo

HCM CITY — Pop star Dam Vinh Hung is among the 46 nominees in nine categories of music, theatre performance arts, and TV series for this year's HCM City Television (HTV) Awards.

He has been nominated for Favourite Singer for the awards given to performers making contributions to HTV and to social activities.

Hung rose to fame in 2001 when he won the award for best singer from the Ben Thanh Theatre Music Club.

He has since become very popular, especially among young and middle-aged fans, for his renditions of pop and patriotic songs.

Earlier, at last month's Mai Vang (Golden Ochna) Awards given away by Nguoi Lao Dong (The Labourer) newspaper, he won in three categories – Favourite Pop Singer, Favourite for Patriotic Songs Singer, and Favourite Song.

HTV will conduct a public poll beginning later this month and closing on March 14 to choose winners of this year's awards.

Of the five or six people nominated in each category by HTV and a panel of journalists, audiences will vote for three.

Five-minute video clips of the nominees and a 60-minute film on former winners and audiences will be shown on HTV 7 every day and on HTV9 every Friday until April 4 to help viewers choose their favourites.

An Binh Bank, the event's sponsor, will also give away one award for the performer making the biggest contribution to social activities.

The winner of each category will receive the HTV Cup and VND20 million (US$1,000) in prize money.

The awards ceremony will be held at the HTV Theatre on April 4 and broadcast live on HTV9. — VNS

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Poetry Day set for next week

HA NOI — The annual Poetry Day will take place next Thursday in Ha Noi, Nghe An and HCM City.

Huu Thinh, chairman of the Viet Nam Writers Association, said the occasion would also be used to mark the 100th anniversary of Ho Chi Minh who left the country in 1911 to seek ways for national salvation from the French colonists.

"There will be a soil and water procession at Ha Noi's Temple of Literature," Thinh said. "A delegation of writers from the central region will bring some soil from President Ho's home in Sen Village to the temple."

They will also bring some water from the source of the historical Pac Bo Cave's Lenin Stream, where the president lived and worked in the 1940s, in the northern province of Cao Bang to the temple.

The soil and water will be housed at the association's museum in Ha Noi.

Poetry readings will take place in President Ho's homeland, Nghe An Province, and at Nha Rong Wharf in HCM City.

At Ha Noi's Temple of Literature the busts of 30 famed writers will be displayed.

Lanterns bearing 100 verses will also adorn the temple.

The first Poetry Day was held in 2003 at the Temple of Literature. — VNS

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Coffee buzz surrounds festival

The third international coffee festival will be held in Buon Ma Thuot in the Central Highlands on March 10 - 13.

At the event, more than 160 foreign and local coffee firms will showcase their technologies, products, and services at 500 booths.

There will be an international seminar on coffee attended by representatives from the world's biggest coffee producers, including Brazil, Columbia, Indonesia, and Ethiopia.

Ethnic groups from the Central Highlands and artists from coffee-growing nations will put on performances.

Brazilian football legend Pele will be among the attendees.

Hotels, resorts make ‘best' list

Four hotels and resorts in Viet Nam have found a place in Conde Nast Traveller's 17th Annual 2011 Gold List of World's Best Places to Stay.

Sofitel Legend Metropole Ha Noi, Life Heritage Resort Hoi An, Evason Ana Mandara & Six Senses in Nha Trang, and Park Hyatt Sai Gon were the ones making the list published in the magazine's January issue.

The list was selected by readers.

Life Heritage and Evason were also among Conde Nast Traveler's 20 Best Resorts in Asia last November.

Last year the Conde Nast Traveller Readers' Choice Awards ranked Evason Ana Mandara & Six Senses eighth followed and Life Heritage Resort Hoi An, ninth.

Trekkers race to summit Ta Cu

Thousands of local and foreign visitors gathered in Tra Cu Mountain in Binh Thuan Province on Wednesday to watch a contest to trek to the top.

The 15th annual contest attracted 250 male and female athletes from Binh Phuoc, Dong Nai, Tay Ninh, Binh Duong, Ba Ria-Vung Tau, and Binh Thuan Provinces.

The course measured 6.3km for men and 5.3km for women, including the 2,300 steps leading up to Linh Son-Truong Tho Pagoda.

Ta Thanh Xinh of Binh Thuan won the men's open division in a time of 40 minutes. Nguyen Ngoc Quang of Dong Nai and Tran Cong Binh of Binh Thuan came second and third.

In the women's division, Nguyen Thi Diem My of Binh Phuoc was first followed by Nguyen Thu Hiep of Ba Ria-Vung Tau and Nguyen Thi Dung of Binh Phuoc.

Travel firms call off Egypt tours

Vietnamese travel agencies have cancelled tours to Egypt though it is the high season due to security concerns following spreading unrest in the country.

Viet Media Travel cancelled tours departing on February 4 and 5 for which 62 persons had booked.

Perfect Tour Travel and Vietravel also cancelled trips scheduled to start during Tet last week. Vietravel said it will resume the tours when the political situation in Egypt stabilises.

VN welcomes 470,000 foreigners

Viet Nam welcomed 470,000 foreign visitors in January, a year-on-year increase of 8.9 per cent, according to the Viet Nam National Administration of Tourism. The largest number came from Cambodia, followed by France, China and Japan.

HCM City received 310,000 of them, a 10 per cent rise.

The figures include overseas Vietnamese, mostly from the US, Australia, and France.

2,000 cruise tourists visit Nha Trang

More than 2,000 passengers and crew on board three cruise ships visited Nha Trang on Wednesday. Minerva, a Marshall Islands-flagged vessel brought 400 passengers, mainly American tourists, Princess Dauphine (Portugal) came with 300 visitors from Australia and Europe, and Nautica (Marshall Islands) had 700 Americans.

According to Khanh Hoa Province tourism authorities, the city had also welcomed 1,800 foreign visitors on board the cruise ship Artermis (Bermuda) on February 5.

In the first five days of the lunar year – starting on February 3 — the city welcomed 96,000 visitors, including 19,000 foreigners, a year-on-year increase of 9 per cent. — VNS

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Tickets for Backstreet Boys concert set to go on sale

HA NOI — Tickets for a concert by the Backstreet Boys will go on sale tomorrow in Ha Noi, HCM City, Bien Hoa and Hai Phong.

Tickets can also be booked online by visiting the website www.bsb.com.vn, according to Water Buffalo Productions, the organisers.

Tickets cost VND500,000-VND2 million (US$25-100).

The This Is Us concert will take place on March 24 at Military Zone 7's Stadium in HCM City, and on March 26 at My Dinh National Stadium in Ha Noi.

Viet Nam to host inaugural international choir competition

DA NANG — The first ever International Choir Competition will be held in the central city of Hoi An between March 15 and 18, according to Le Van Giang, chairman of the Hoi An People's Committee.

Already, 34 choirs from various countries and territories including Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Singapore, Hong Kong and Estonia have registered to take part in the contest, he said.

Around 900 singers and musicians will compete in 13 categories of six different choir groups of various ages.

The opening performance will be held on March 16 on a floating stage in the Hoai River Square.

The event has been jointly organised by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, Quang Nam Province authorities and the Germany-based Interkultur organisation.

Tour operator plans underwater weddings in Nha Trang

HCM CITY – HCM City-based tour operator Vietravel has unveiled plans to organise underwater weddings for a record nine couples in Nha Trang on Valentine's Day, February 14.

The Viet Nam Dive Centre, or Vinadive, a branch of Vietravel, said it will organise the 30-minute underwater nuptials with traditional Christian rituals like exchange of rings and kissing of the bride.

Other rituals like popping the champagne and cutting the wedding cake in front of the two families and friends will be held on board the Vinadive off Mun Islet off the central city.

The day before the wedding, Vinadive instructors will teach the couples to dive.

For Valentine's Day this year, Vinadive is offering the package at VND8 million per couple, a discount of VND2 million.

The centre organised Viet Nam's first underwater wedding in 2007.

Further information is available at Vinadive, Biet Thu Street, Nha Trang and www.vietnamdive.com.

Pirated DVD copies of ‘Bi, Don't Be Afraid' flood local shops

HCM CITY — Illegal copies of the award-winning film Bi, Don't Be Afraid are flooding shops in Ha Noi and HCM City a month ahead of its release around the country.

"Many people have bought the bootleg DVDs but they have hazy pictures and awful sound," Chu Tat Khang, a representative of Galaxy, the distributor of Bi, Don't Be Afraid, said.

"I believe buyers of the pirated DVD will buy tickets to see the film at cinemas to enjoy its picture and sound quality," he added.

Bi, Don't Be Afraid, directed by Phan Dang Di, tells the story of a family in Ha Noi as seen through the eyes of Bi, a six-year-old boy.

It won several international prizes last year, including the Best Screenplay Award at the Cannes International Critic's Week and the New Talent Award at the 54th Hong Kong Asian Film Festival.

The film is scheduled to hit the screen on March 13. — VNS

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