Thursday, February 17, 2011

Culture Vulture

Actress Minh Chau is a familiar face on the big and small screens. Vietnamese cinema lovers may recognise her as the woman with a double identity in Song Nu (The Two Women) or Ms Nhan in the Berlin Film Festival award-winning Ben Khong Chong (Wharf of Widows).

She spoke to Culture Vulture about the importance of a work ethic in acting and her latest role in the television series Bi Thu Tinh Uy (The Provincial Party Committee Secretary).

Tell us about your role in Bi Thu Tinh Uy ?

My character is named Thuong, and she's got a lot of personality. As soon as I accepted the role from director Quoc Trong, I studied her life, from her childhood through her last days. The character is based on a real person named Dong. She was born in Bac Ninh and later moved to Vinh Phuc. Before 1954, Dong was a revolutionary activist in Viet Bac base with Kim Ngoc. They were very young and their lives were intertwined. When Kim Ngoc moved back to Vinh Phuc to become the provincial Party committee secretary, Dong went with him. He appointed her a position as head of the Vinh Phuc Party inspection board. The further I went into the script, the more I liked Thuong for her straightforwardness, hot-headedness yet she is knowledgeable and decisive.

How did you land this role?

When it comes to casting, the crew was really worried about the role of Thuong. Trong then revealed that he already had someone in mind who would be perfect for the role. As soon as my name came up, screenwriter Thuy Linh instantly agreed. For a while, Trong had been telling me that he had a very interesting role for me.

Is it true that you first rejected the part?

No. The story is that, when I accepted this role, my hair was curly and died strawberry blonde, while my character was a peasant living in the country in the 1960s. I expressed my concerns to Trong, and he promised me a hairdresser who could help me get into character. But when I arrived at the location, there was no hairdresser. Trong had misunderstood that I didn't want to have my hair straightened, but, in truth, it couldn't have been done. I had asked a number of professional hairdressers and was told that if I had it straightened, I would look like a girl in a shampoo ad, which wouldn't be consistent with the character at all. I threw a diva-scale fit and said that I would no longer play this part.

After I returned to Ha Noi and finally calmed down, a sense of responsibility took over. Then I asked a make-up artist friend of mine to make a custom wig for me. It's funny that a little thing could cause such a conflagration, but things happen. As soon as I tried on the wig, I found the peace of mind to play the role and everything was fine. When I play a role, everything must be perfect. You must ask for perfection, first of all in yourself, in order to really get into a role.

Can you share some of your memories of shooting the film?

Thuong is addicted to black tobacco, she walks around with a bamboo hubble-bubble pipe with her all the time. The pipe is her security blanket, with which she shares all her ups and downs. At first, everyone in my family told me horrible stories about pipe tobacco.

One even told the tale of a man who was high on tobacco and dove head first into a burning stove and burned his face off. I was a bit intimidated but knew that I had to make the sacrifice as it was my character's thing. So I got creative because I had no idea how to smoke a pipe.

First, I took a puff of cigarette and held the smoke in my mouth. Then, I placed my mouth on the pipe and we started shooting. But then I thought it wouldn't look real, so I knew I have to practice smoking a pipe. It was definitely no piece-of-cake. Practice makes perfect, and on one lovely day, everyone saw me smoking the pipe like an addict.

You once said you wanted to play a rebel. Have you gotten your dream role?

The national film and television industry hasn't been able yet to produce such a role for an actress my age. I would love to someday play that type of character, someone who is ambitious but with a bit of a dark side. — VNS

Related Articles

Young pianist to celebrate homecoming at Opera House

Home sweet home: Pianist Trinh Mai Trang is returning after eight years abroad and will perform at the Ha Noi Opera House. — File Photo

Home sweet home: Pianist Trinh Mai Trang is returning after eight years abroad and will perform at the Ha Noi Opera House. — File Photo

HA NOI — Young pianist Trinh Mai Trang has returned after eight years abroad and will celebrate the occasion with a concert at Ha Noi Opera House next Wednesday.

"When I came back, I was told that my music might be difficult for audiences to understand," said Trang. "The thought of that scared me. So, I wanted to put together a concert to show people that piano and classical music are not alien."

The programme she selected will include pieces by Mendelssohn, Chopin, Mozart, Beethoven, Schumann and Debussy, each chosen to express the emotions of different stages in a man's life.

For an artist, Trang said, the most painful thing was not finding the sympathy of her audience, so she thought of new ways to make her music accessible. There, her concert will be accompanied by elements from other media, including film and photographs that Trang hopes would help bring her music closer to the audience.

"I will perform with my heart and I expect that the audience will open their minds and hearts," she said.

Trang is also celebrating her recovery from an injury in 2009 that temporarily prevented her from playing piano. She wasn't allowed to touch the piano keys and felt a door had closed in front of her eyes. But, with an unstoppable passion for music, she placed a mirror beside her piano and played on the imaginary keys reflected in the mirror.

As her hands recovered, she had to resume practicing as if she were a beginner.

Trang was born in 1986 and began her musical training at the age of four. She received a scholarship to study at the prestigious Royal Academy of Music in London in 2004. As a soloist, Trang has won many awards, including the top prize at the Paganini Festival, second prize in the Beethoven Competition in London, and the Jacque Samuel Competition's Mozart Prize. She has also performed in festivals in Austria, Italy, the UK, Hungary and Spain. — VNS

Related Articles

Scholarships for female scientists

The “L’Oréal – UNESCO – For women in science in 2011” to discover young talented scientists and honor the contributions of women to the development of the science is open for entries.

L’Oreal Vietnam organized the fellowship in conjunction with the National Committee for UNESCO in Vietnam and Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology.

Since its launch in Vietnam in 2008, the national fellowship has granted scholarships worth VND750 million for the projects of six young Vietnamese.

The program welcomes entries until April 30. Candidates under 40 years old with a minimum PhD qualification who are doing projects on life science and material science could win a scholarship worth VND150 million. The award ceremony will be in October in Hanoi.

Additionally, female scientists who wish to do research at laboratories overseas can apply for the international fellowships. Candidates must be under 35 and to be a major in biology, biochemistry, biological technology, pharmacy, agriculture or physiology. Each scholarship is worth a maximum US$40,000. The scholarship committee of UNESCO-L’Oréal in Paris will choose the successful entries. Deadline for applications and projects is May 31.

For further information about the scholarship program, access the website www.phunutrongkhoahoc.com or contact L’Oreal Vietnam at 54- 56 Nguyen Trai St., Zen Plaza Building, Unit 603, Dist. 1, HCMC, tel: 3925 5834.

Related Articles

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

HSBC community grant applications open

From now to the end of this month, HSBC Vietnam is accepting applications for the bank’s Future First program.

International and local non-governmental organizations, which provide education and life skills for street children, orphans and children in care, as well as vocational training for underprivileged young women in Vietnam are invited to apply.

“What we are looking for is those initiatives that will have a long-term benefit for Vietnamese youths, giving them the chance of a brighter future,” Matthew Martin, Chief Technology and Services Officer and chairman of the Corporate Sustainability Committee of HSBC Vietnam, said in the statement.

The key areas of focus for Future First projects are formal education, basic early childhood, primary and secondary education, informal education, and vocational training to help individuals achieve their goals, as well as offer access to counseling.

Educational projects will benefit children below 18 years, and life skills and vocational training projects will target youths aged from 15 to 24 years.

Tenders for projects should be submitted by February 28. HSBC will announce and release funding to successful applicants by the end of March.

Over the past four years, 22 projects benefiting disadvantaged children in Vietnam have been funded by Future First Global and HSBC Vietnam totaling over VND10 billion. Over 51,000 underprivileged children from shelters and children’s villages nationwide have benefited from the program.

The total budget estimated for 2011 is VND700 million.

One key project for 2011 is an audio book library, originally funded by Future First local scheme, which will have 18,000 copies of audio books produced and available for public through visual impaired association offices nationwide from April 2011.

Related Articles

Scholarships worth US$34,500 await students

HCMC – The Institute of International Education (IIE) Vietnam on Tuesday announced that the 10 best Vietnamese students of business, engineering and sciences may be entitled to scholarships worth US$3,450 each from the fifth GE Foundation Scholar-Leaders 2011.

IIE Vietnam said that the applicants must be freshmen from 10 participating universities including Can Tho, Danang, Foreign Trade in Hanoi and HCMC, Hanoi National Economics, Hanoi University of Technology, and Hue University. Others are Nha Trang University, University of Economics in HCMC, and Vietnam National Universities in Hanoi and HCMC.

The students must have good academic records and possess leadership skills. The ten best students will receive financial support of US$3,450 each for the remainder of their studies up to three years.

The program will also make a chance for students to join the Leadership Development seminar and a Career seminar for such people to share ideas and develop networking as well as an opportunity to be mentored by a business leader at GE in Vietnam.

GE is an American company doing business in the technology, finance and media services.

For more information and application, visit the website www.iie.org/hanoi. The deadline for application is April 15.

Related Articles

Piano show by Trang Trinh

New Year concert with National Symphony Orchestra

Pianist Trang Trinh - Photo: The pianist
Pianist Trang Trinh, a graduate from the Royal Academy of Music in the U.K., will have a performance called “Diary of Piano” at the Hanoi Opera House, 1 Trang Tien Street at 8 p.m. on February 23.

The show is about the ups and downs in life from innocence to pain and wisdom.

Born in Vinh Phuc Province, the pianist was invited to work for the London-based All Souls Orchestra, and she has had various performance tours in Italy, Austria, Hungary and Ireland.

In 2007, she won the Francis Simmer Prize for playing solo piano, and the Lilian Davis Prize for her performance of Beethoven‘s Sonatas.

One year later, she was awarded the Gretta GM Parkinson Prize for her outstanding academic records.

She will perform the show in HCMC early April.

Tickets are available at the Opera House at VND300,000, VND500,000 and VND1 million.

*Vietnam National Symphony Orchestra concert conducted by Tetsuji Honna featuring piano soloist Isadora Kim will play at  Hanoi Opera House February 18 and 19.

Pieces to be played include Overture from Opera “Russlan and Ludmilla” by M.Glinka and Piano Concerto No.2 by S.Rachmaninov.

The painting “Ascending Dragon” by Do Hong Quan depicting Hanoi, past and present, will be on display during the concert. The event will also include a famous waltz and polka by Johann Strauss II and the waltz, Gold and Silver, by Austrian musician Franz Lehar.

Ethnic percussionists will perform with the orchestra to add a traditional Vietnamese flavor to the European classics.

Tickets are available at the Opera House for VND450, 000, VND350,000, VND250, 000, and VND150,000 and discounted 50% for students.

Related Articles

Mango Bay Cup 2011 calling all expat football stars

Mango Bay Phu Quoc, an eco-luxe resort recently featured on the prestigious British Condé Nast Traveller 2011, is set to organize the fourth annual football tournament for the expat community in Vietnam, on May 7, 2011.

This Mango Bay Vietnam's 'Champions League' will take place at Cua Can Stadium on the secluded Phu Quoc island. This year, it will hosts eight expat teams, competing for the title on brand new pitch for a bigger cup (in size only as it is meant to be a fun and relaxing weekend).

US$150 would be the registration fee per team of 10, including 1 goal keeper, 6 starting players and 3 substitutes.

Each player can enjoy a reduced rate of $12 per person for special BBQ night to either celebrate football expertise or drown your sorrow. Each non-player accompanying the team pays $15 for BBQ.

Ronan Le Bihan, Mango Bay's General Manager, is very excited about the event and enthuses, "we expect that this year, our football tournament will attract not only 'the usual suspects' from previous years but also newcomers from the expat community in Vietnam.

"I see it as one of the best ways to socialize and get to know each other better".

After the whole day of playing football, Mango Bay's spa overlooking the beach is a welcoming break for full body massage at $20.

To celebrate this event, Mango Bay is offering a special promotion of stay 3 nights, pay 2, with rooms and bungalows starting from $40 to $75.

Mango Bay, www.mangobayphuquoc.com, has 37 rooms and bungalows constructed using natural materials from the island.

Related Articles