Saturday, September 11, 2010

Vietnam wins two golds at int’l puppetry festival

Vietnam wins two golds at int’l puppetry festival

Vietnam bagged two out of the total four gold prizes for performances
at the second International Puppetry Festival, which closed in Hanoi
on September 9.


The host’s gold prizes went to
the Thang Long Puppetry Theatre’s water puppetry programme in
celebration of the 1,000 th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi and the
Vietnam Puppetry Theatre’s “Andersen” item based on three stories of
Danish author Hans Christian Andersen, including “The Brave Tin
Soldier”, “The Ugly Duckling” and “The Little Mermaid”.


The two remaining gold prizes belonged to Singaporean and Indonesian troupes.


The Organising Board also presented 12 gold and seven silver prizes
to the most outstanding artists and three prizes to the best directors.


The six-day festival, organised by the Department
of Performing Arts under the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism,
attracted 12 foreign troupes and five from Vietnam, including the
Vietnam Puppetry Theatre, the Thang Long Puppetry Theatre and the
puppetry troupes from Hai Phong city, Dak Lak province and Ho Chi Minh
City./.

Related Articles

Pianist to kick off Italian month

Italian pianist Cesare Picco will kick-off Italian Music Month at the Hanoi Opera House on Sept. 11.


The concert will feature pieces composed by the musician himself such
as My Room, Darakoum, Clock, The First Star, October and a special
homage to Bach, A Long Wait.


Picco is a multi-talented
Italian pianist and composer. His creations have always been a result of
his personal and innovative concept of music, according to Cesare
Bieller, chief of the cultural and political arm at the Italian Embassy
in Hanoi .


"Picco is a modern-style pianist. He gives interactive performances, always incorporating his audience," said Bieller.


"The upcoming concert in Vietnam is a chance for me to introduce my
improvisation style. I'm pleased to arrive in Hanoi a few days before
Saturday's performance because those days will allow me to get a feel
for the atmosphere and lifestyle of Hanoi ," Picco said.


Normally, Picco likes to understand the local life in places he is to
perform so as to select the most suitable pieces. He also improvises
during his concerts, which is always well received by his audiences.


On Sept. 11, Picco will also perform with Vietnamese musician Tri Minh
in a work entitled Hanoi Improvisation. The two musicians worked
together to create the concept for the piece.


Hanoi
Improvisation lasts about 20 minutes and uses Hanoi 's typical
sounds, said musician Minh. "I'm honoured that I will perform with
Cesare Picco. We both agreed that it is important to use Vietnamese
timbre as street sounds and voices," said Tri Minh.

Related Articles

Remembering old Nha Trang

The central coastal city of Nha Trang has long been famed for its
beautiful palm-fringed beach, breath-taking vistas and succulent
seafood. But if you're bored with lazy days by the beach, Nha Trang Xua
(Old Nha Trang) is the place for you.


It's hard to believe
the resort, which occupies 2ha in Thong Thai Village at the foot
of Giang Huong Mountain , is just 3km from the chaotic city
centre.


The resort has 11 bungalows nestling in a field of
rice. The air is scented with the sweet smell of lotus flowers, and a
gentle breeze wafts your cares away.


The resort is owned by Truong Dinh Ngoc Yen, a Nha Trang-born woman, who loves peace and quiet.


"I used to spend a lot of time living with my grandma in the village when I was a child," she says.


"Later, I went to university in Nha Trang, before opening a business in
the bustling city. However, I always longed for the peaceful atmosphere
that I remembered from my childhood.


"I love seeing
small birds pecking at food on the ground. I have always dreamt of
building a small secluded garden like my mum's. My childhood is full of
fond memories."


She followed her dreams and bought a small plot of land which she turned into a picturesque garden.


Visiting friends urged her to open the garden to the public, so she established Nha Trang Xua in 2009.


In the beginning it was just a small garden and a food court. But even
then, about 200 people would visit daily – three times that number on
the weekends.


To create a local atmosphere, Yen has bought
plants native to the area to her garden. There are also vegetables,
fruit trees and herbs.


"The resort reminds me a lot of my
grandparents' house in Vinh Phuong Village 30 years ago," says local
resident Huynh Phuong.


"Every corner of the resort is a
reflection of different parts of Nha Trang in days gone by. The wet
yin-yang roofed house in the middle of the garden, the pond, the mossy
brick path."


Yen has relocated houses dating back 100 to
300 years to the resort, which now comprises 11 houses; a food court
capable of accommodating 250 diners; a food centre for package tourists
and formal functions, which has a capacity of 700 guests; and a
seven-room hotel.


The restaurants offers more than 100 traditional local dishes, which are served authentically.


"The resort is unique, local but professionally run," says Bui Minh
Thang, director of Phuong Thang Tourism Company. "Nha Trang lacks places
like this. It gives visitors an incite into local culture."


However, Thang says the owner should advertise the place better to foreign visitors and provide better car-parking facilities.


But these shortcomings do not put off Beth Keyser from Australia .


"I like the small cosy and nature-friendly atmosphere of the resort,"
she says. "I have stayed in similar places in Thailand , but here, I
feel like I'm experiencing Vietnamese life as it was in the early 19th
century. All the furniture inside the old house is authentic."


Yen says she wants visitors to feel like they are in a time warp.


"I want visitors to see a different world, to escape from the hustle
and bustle of city life and return to the old peaceful days when people
had time for one another. I want people to hear birds singing in the
morning, smell the scent of flowers and discover themselves, something
that can only happen in a place of quietness and harmony," she says.


Lovely as the resort is, Yen is not happy – she has expansionist plans.


"I want to relocate more old houses so that I can host wedding parties.
I love to imagine a wedding procession proceeding down the path in a
field of mature rice," she sighs./.

Related Articles

Friday, September 10, 2010

Wrestling: Contenders grapple for national glory

About 200 wrestlers from 19 teams will show off their skills at the
National Greco-Romans and Freestyle Championships on Sept. 15.


The national squad's coaching board will choose the top wrestlers from
the tournament who will represent the country at the Asian Games (ASIAD)
in Guangzhou , China from November 12-27.


"We
recruit the best wrestlers at the championship for the national team for
ASIAD and the 2012 Olympics qualifiers," said the National Sports
Administration's wrestling division head, Vu The Long. Athletes will
compete for 26 medal sets in the men's and women's weight divisions at
Ha Dong Gymnasium.


Teams from Hanoi , Ninh Binh, Bac Ninh and the Army have sent their squads to a one-year training session in China .


"Most of the teams prepared well for the championship because the
athletes will compete for official berths on the national squad that
will compete in the biggest Asian sporting event," said Long.


Long said he hoped favourites Nguyen Thi Lua, Pham Thi Hue and Luong
Thi Quyen would pick up gold medals at the championship and at the Asian
Games.


Last year Lua bagged a bronze medal in the
women's 48kg weight class at the World Greco-Roman and Freestyle
Wrestling Championship in Herning City , Denmark ./.

Related Articles

Fleeting Hanoi moments captured by capital native

Photographer Nguyen Duc Loi showed visitors photos of Hanoi that
are part of his private exhibition at Nguyen Hong street.


One photo captures Guom (Sword) Lake during autumn. Another image
captures a barber cutting a client's hair in a small alley.


To Loi each photo contains a story or a memoir about the capital.


"We do not know what we have until it is gone forever. It is my desire
to capture those lost moments that will never return," said Loi.


In order to catch unique images, Loi usually works early in the
morning and wanders around into the late hours of the night.


The 65-year-old man first studied electrical engineering at the Hanoi
University of Science and Technology before he was infatuated by
photographs.


"It was photography that chose me," he said.


A few of the patrons were curious why most of his photos concentrated
on capturing labourers as well as the contrast between black and white.


"I was born to a poor family, so I know deeply
about poor people, who have to struggle to make it through the day," Loi
said. "I also want to emphasise the difference between the rich and the
poor through colours."


Nguyen Huy Thong, a
journalist, photography critic and friend of Loi's, said that each of
Loi's photographs revealed extraordinary scenes that people hardly
notice.


"My friends and Loi's family members are
willing to support him since we know he wants to do something for
Hanoi ," said Thong.


Loi has taken 2,000 photos of
Hanoi . The pictures will be compiled into books that are dedicated
to the 1,000th anniversary of the capital this year./.

Related Articles

Nadal edges closer to first US Open final

nadal
Rafael Nadal of Spain hits a return to compatriot Fernando Verdasco during the US Open tennis tournament in New York, September 9, 2010
Photo: Reuters

For the third year in a row, Rafa Nadal is through to the semifinals of the US Open. The one title he needs to complete his grand slam collection is now tantalizingly close.

Nadal booked his place in the last four by thrashing his fellow Spaniard Fernando Verdasco 7-5 6-3 6-4 on Thursday. The pair are supposedly great friends, so pity Nadal's enemies.

The world number one has never made it to the final at Flushing Meadows before, more often a victim of the hard courts than his rivals, but it only seems a matter of time.

The prospect of the ultimate grand slam final is looming larger than ever. Nadal and Roger Federer have already played each other in the finals at Wimbledon, Australia and Paris but never in New York.

The pair still need to win their semifinals on Saturday but it will take a monumental performance to stop either of them.

"I think that he will play the final against Roger," Verdasco said. "It's gonna be a tough match because I think Roger plays really good in these conditions.”

“It's gonna be a very tough final for Rafa if he plays against Roger."

Nadal's next opponent is Russia's Mikhail Youzhny, the only player left in the men's draw not ranked in the top three. The 12th seed earned his place in the semis the hard way, beating Stanislas Wawrinka of Switzerland 3-6 7-6 3-6 6-3 6-3 on Thursday.

Swirling winds

By any measure, it was an impressive and brave performance, but at what price? Youzhny spent four hours slugging it out on the center court when the swirling winds were at their strongest and was exhausted by the end.

Youzhny did beat Nadal to make the semifinals at Flushing Meadows four years ago but the 24-year-old Spaniard is stronger, wiser and infinitely more popular now. The Russian knows he will not have many friends if he finds a way to ruin the prospect of a first Nadal-Federer showdown in the Big Apple.

"I'm ready to be bad person," Youzhny said. "I love to be bad person in this case."

Nadal needed less than two and a half hours to see off Verdasco, who was unable to muster the energy to repeat his incredible five-set win over David Ferrer in the quarterfinals.

They played under lights in the cool evening air with Nadal, dressed again in the all black outfit he has chosen for this year's championship, cutting a menacing figure when he strolled on to court.

In the initial skirmishes, he was in a mood almost as dark as his clothing, and it showed in his game as the wind picked up and made life hard for both men.

When he dropped his service game, the crowd at Arthur Ashe Stadium instantly fell into a hush. They knew as well as Nadal that it was the first time in the entire tournament that the lefthander had been broken.

For the briefest of moments, an upset seemed possible, but they need not have worried. Nadal began to pile on the pressure and Verdaco, despite being seeded eighth, could not hold him out.

When Nadal pinched the opening set, the result was a foregone conclusion and he ran away with the next two to charge into the semis without losing a set or another service game and performing an impromptu pirouette to win a point at the net.

Great match

"I think I've played every day better," Nadal said. "I played a great match against very difficult opponent like Fernando.

"For me, to be in the semifinals is amazing but I have to keep going and keep playing better if I really want to have chances to be in the final."

Wawrinka, best known as Federer's partner in the Swiss men's doubles team that won the gold medal at the Beijing Olympics, had been one of the revelations of the tournament, upsetting fourth seed Andy Murray in the third round then winning a four and a half hour five-setter against Sam Querrey in the round of 16.

But the combination of fatigue and a niggling leg injury eventually wore him down and he was virtually powerless to stop Youzhny winning the last two sets.

"I think I gave everything today," Wawrinka said. "But if I go back, I'm very pleased with the tournament."

The first title of the championships was decided on Thursday when Bob Bryan and Liezel Huber teamed up to win the mixed doubles final, 6-4 6-4 over Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi and Kveta Peschke.

Bob will partner his twin brother Mike in Friday's men's doubles title against Quershi, a Pakistani who took up the game to get out of doing his homework, and India's Rohan Bopanna.

The women's singles semifinals will also be held on Friday with top seed Caroline Wozniacki facing Vera Zvonareva in the first match before Venus Williams and the defending champion Kim Clijsters renew their decade long rivalry in the second.

Related Articles

Venus and Clijsters set to renew old rivalry

venus
Venus Williams of the US hits a return to Australia's Jarmila Groth of Australia at the 2010 Wimbledon tennis championships in London, June 28, 2010
Photo: Reuters

A rivalry spanning almost a decade will be rekindled on Friday when Venus Williams and Kim Clijsters square off for a place in the US Open final.

Both players have won the title twice but the stakes could hardly be higher when they meet in the semifinals at Flushing Meadows. The winner will play either Caroline Wozniacki or Vera Zvonareva, who meet in the other semi, in Saturday's final in Arthur Ashe Stadium.

Williams, who won the championship in 2000 and 2001, has not made the final in New York since 2002, when the American lost to her younger sister Serena, while Clijsters is trying to defend the title she won last year.

With Serena missing through injury this year, Venus has opted out of the doubles to focus on singles and her form so far has been illuminating, advancing to the last four without dropping a single set.

"I've always played pretty well here," said Venus. "I feel really comfortable here, and it's great to come back to a place where I have won and a place where I've played well.”

“So all in all, I feel positive."

Clijsters also has a great record at Flushing Meadows, winning her last 19 matches in New York. She won the title for the first time in 2005 but was injured then took a break to start a family.

The Belgian completed a fairytale return to New York when she won last season, celebrating her victory on court with her infant daughter, and says her unexpected success last year has provided her with the confidence she can do it again.

"It's something that you have to experience, obviously," she said. "I guess it's maybe like having a baby.”

“You can't explain it to somebody who has never had a baby what it's like to give birth, because it's a feeling that you can't describe unless it's happened to you."

The pair have played each other 12 times since 2001, winning six times each. Williams was the dominant player in their earlier clashes but Clijsters has won the last four, including a classic three-setter at last year's US Open quarterfinals.

"It was really close,” Williams said. “I'm sure that match made a big difference for her, because she went on to win the title."

"I'm sure we'll have another really good matchup but I'd like to kind of flip the way it turns out."

Wozniacki, promoted to the top seed this year because of the absence of world number one Serena, made the final against Clijsters in 2009 but is a more confident player now.

The 20-year-old won three lead-up events last month to finish as the leading point scorer in the US hard court series. If she wins the US Open she will collect a bonus cash prize of US$1 million and replace Serena atop the world rankings.

The Dane has sailed through her matches without dropping a set and developed a killer's instinct to finish off her opponents quickly.

"I'm really competitive," she said. "I really don't like losing."

The pair have played each other just four times before, all in the last two seasons, splitting them two apiece.

Zvonareva, six years older than Wozniacki, has taken longer to hit her straps and will be appearing in her first US Open semifinal, but the seventh-seeded Russian is now flush with confidence after reaching the Wimbledon final in July.

Related Articles