Little Hong Kong Season 5 @ HKAPA: Lyric Theatre – 10-12, 14-19, 24-26 July, 2015

Little Hong Kong Season 5 @ HKAPA: Lyric Theatre - 10-12, 14-19, 24-26 July, 2015

“Little Hong Kong Season 5” continues its hilarious parody of today’s Hong Kong people described through various characters in several sketches, starring Joey Leung and Ivana Wong.

Little Hong Kong Season 5
W Theatre
Date: 10-12, 14-19, 24-26 July, 2015
Venue: HKAPA: Lyric Theatre
Tickets: $480, $380, $280, from HKTicketing
More info: 
10 July 2015 (Fri) at 8pm
11 July 2015 (Sat) at 3pm & 8pm
12 July 2015 (Sun) at 3pm & 8pm

14 July 2015 (Tue) at 8pm
15 July 2015 (Wed) at 8pm
16 July 2015 (Thu) at 8pm
17 July 2015 (Fri) at 8pm
18 July 2015 (Sat) at 3pm & 8pm
19 July 2015 (Sun) at 3pm & 8pm

24 July 2015 (Fri) at 8pm
25 July 2015 (Sat) at 3pm & 8pm
26 July 2015 (Sun) at 8pm

Jekyll & Hyde @ Jockey Club Amphitheatre, HKAPA – 1-3, 7-10 May, 2015

J&H_poster

A new adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson’s mystery story Jekyll & Hyde brings this dark tale of terror and suspense to spin-chilling life! Following successful productions in London and at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, acclaimed playwright Jonathan Holloway (Les Miserables) directs Stevenson’s gothic horror masterpiece in Hong Kong. With a cast of professional UK and HK actors.

Jekyll & Hyde
Chung Ying Theatre
Date: 1-10 May, 2015
Venue: Jockey Club Amphitheatre, HKAPA
Tickets: $420, $340, $260 from HKTicketing
More info:
1 May 2015 (Fri) at 8pm
2 May 2015 (Sat) at 3pm & 8pm
3 May 2015 (Sun) at 3pm

7 May 2015 (Thu) at 8pm
8 May 2015 (Fri) at 8pm
9 May 2015 (Sat) at 8pm
10 May 2015 (Sun) at 3pm

Disney’s Beauty and the Beast @ The Venetian Theatre – 13 June – 26 July, 2015

Beauty

This is the classic story of Belle, a young woman in a provincial town, and the Beast, who is really a young prince trapped in a spell placed by an enchantress. If the Beast can learn to love and be loved, the curse will end and he will be transformed to his former self. But time is running out. If the Beast does not learn his lesson soon, he and his household will be doomed for all eternity. This international tour will see the show’s original Broadway creative team reuniting to bring this Broadway classic to life. The musical is directed by Rob Roth and choreographed by Matt West, with costume design by Ann Hould-Ward (Tony Award® winner for her work on Disney’s Beauty and the Beast). Based on the 1991 Academy-Award winning animated feature film, the show had run for 13 years on Broadway.

Disney’s Beauty and the Beast
Date: 13 June – 26 July, 2015
Venue: The Venetian Theatre
Tickets: $680, $480, $280 from CotaiTicketing

Cesar Millan LIVE – Love your Dogs Tour 2015 @ CotaiArena – 6 June, 2015

Cesar Millan LIVE - Love your Dogs Tour 2015 @ CotaiArena - 6 June, 2015

International dog behaviour expert Cesar Millan, will tour Asia this summer with his educational and entertaining live show, sharing his unique techniques on how to establish a balanced and happy relationship with dogs.

Cesar Millan LIVE – Love your Dogs Tour 2015
Date: :7:30pm, 6th June, 2015
Venue: Cotai Arena
Tickets: $880, $680, $480, $280 from CotaiTicketing

Tallis Vocalis: Victoria’s Requiem @ All Saints’ Church – 28 June, 2015

Tallis Vocalis: Victoria's Requiem @ All Saints' Church - 28 June, 2015

Tomás Luis de Victoria’s Requiem is widely regarded as the greatest masterpiece of Renaissance polyphony. Tallis Vocalis will perform this great work in their second concert entitled ‘In Memoriam’, on 28 June 2015 at All Saints’ Cathedral, Hong Kong.

To commemorate the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, the concert brings together music written in the Renaissance period and the present day on the theme of remembering those we have lost. Victoria’s Requiem was written for his patron the Holy Roman Empress Maria. This Spanish work sets itself apart from its English and Italian Renaissance contemporaries by its mystical intensity of expression achieved through the simplest musical means.

The Requiem will be interspersed with four contemporary works: Arvo Pärt’s Da pacem Domine (a tribute to those who died in the 2004 Madrid bombings) and The Woman With the Alabaster Box (which references Jesus’ burial); James MacMillan’s A Child’s Prayer (written after the Dunblane massacre in 1996) and John Tavener’s Song for Athene (a tribute to his friend Athene Hariades).

Christopher Watson, of The Tallis Scholars and Theatre of Voices will conduct the concert.

In Memoriam
Tallis Vocalis
Date: 8pm, 28 June, 2015
Venue: All Saints’ Cathedral, 11 Pak Po Street, Mongkok, Hong Kong
Tickets: $250, online reservation commences 1 June 2015
More info:
Programme
Victoria: Requiem (Officium Defunctorum 1605)
Pärt: Da pacem Domine
Pärt: The Woman With the Alabaster Box
MacMillan: A Child’s Prayer
Tavener: Song for Athene

Suishou No Fune @ The Empty Gallery – 9 May, 2015

Suishou No Fune @ The Empty Gallery - 9 May, 2015

Emerging from the fertile Tokyo experimental scene centering on Setagaya based PSF records Suishou No Fune, who comprise Pirako Kurenai (guitar, vox) and Kageo (guitar), have been playing together since 1999. Their musical style is rooted in the post-war psychedelic rock of The Velvet Underground and Les Rallizes Denudes, while also calling to mind the sound of more contemporary “shoegaze” acts like Slowdive and Grouper.

Suishou No FuneTheir name, which translates to “The Crystal Ship”, has its origin in a classic song by The Doors, and their sound also shares in that song’s sense of exquisite melancholy. However, unlike many of their contemporaries, Suishou No Fune manage to take the basic elements of “psychedelic” music appropriated by so many bands – long-form guitar jams, layers of shimmering feedback, heavily processed vocals – and forge a music which is at once utterly personal and evocative of the present. Although the basis of their music lies in Western rock, Suishou no Fune display a distinctly Asian sensibility in their melodic phrasing and use of aural space. Hearing their languidly swirling guitar melodies, bathed in fluorescent clouds of feedback, one is transported to a realm beyond time and space.

Suishou No Fune’s musical aesthetic is yet another example of the “Mono No Aware” popularized by authors like Murakami Haruki, but their music transcends the “Japanese-ness” of this aesthetic category to communicate something more urgent and universal. Like an aural analogue of Wong Kar Wai’s films, Suishou No Fune’s music poignantly expresses the feelings of futility, melancholy, and longing experienced by those living in Asia’s “modern” economies who must daily submit to life under economic and political stasis.

Suishou No Fune will perform a duo guitar set to open the evening, followed by a full set as a four-piece band with the addition of a bassist and drummer. Tea and snacks will be provided for all ticket holders.

Suishou No Fune
Date: 8pm, 9 May, 2015
Venue: The Empty Gallery
Tickets: $100 from www.theemptygallery.com/ticket
More info: live@theemptygallery.com

Hong Kong 27-33 South Korea @ HK Football Club – 25 April, 2015

Tom McQueen

South Korea claim away win over Hong Kong in Asia Rugby Championship

A brace of tries each in the first-half from powerful fullback Jang Seong-min and speedy right winger Jegal Bin set the foundation for a 33-26 victory for South Korea over hosts Hong Kong in week two of the Asia Rugby Championship on Saturday.

The dangerous backs found holes in the defence to silence a sizeable crowd at Hong Kong Football Club and give South Korea an invaluable victory in their campaign to win back the number two slot in Asia currently held by Hong Kong.

Hong Kong desperately tried to claw their way back from a 25-7 deficit at the break but Korea hung on for a crucial victory in the home-and-away competition, which has been revamped to a top three format, including seven-time Asian Five Nations champions Japan.

“We weren’t good enough on the day,” conceded Hong Kong head coach Andy Hall. “Our execution was poor and to give away four tries in the first half and concede a bonus point is disappointing.”

The powerfully-built Jang, who scored a brace against Japan in the tournament opener last week in Incheon – Japan winning 56-30 – was once again in superb form as he easily sliced through to score the first of Korea’s five tries in the fifth minute.

Winger Bin Jegal then added a second a few minutes later when he rounded opposite number Salom Yiu Kam-shing to dot down to give his side a 12-0 lead.

Hong Kong who looked slow and a bit rusty had to thank sevens star Tom McQueen for their first points on the board when a solo effort saw the winger touch down under the post – having taken a quick tap and chipped and chased successfully.

But that was about the only success for the home team as Korea dominated the breakdown and the set-pieces to provide good ball to their dangerous backs with Jegal and Jang scoring again.

Korean fly-half Oh Youn-hyung could have put the result beyond doubt if he had his kicking boots on but he only managed to convert one try and a penalty as the visitors led 25-7 at halftime. Oh added a second penalty soon after the break but the sin-binning of Korean tighthead Kim Kwang-sik for a shoulder charge set the stage for a comeback by the home team.

Loosehead prop John Aikman smuggled the ball over the line from a driving maul and substitute fly-half Niall Rowark added the extra points to make it 28-14.

A lapse in concentration resulted in one of many turnovers by Hong Kong and Korea gratefully accepted the gift with left winger Chang Yong-heung scoring a try against the run of play to push the lead to 33-14.

But with Korea wilting fast, and with Hong Kong bringing on their bench, the tide began to turn. Fullback Alex McQueen spotted a hole and was through in a flash to score Hong Kong’s third try and make it 33-19.

With time running out, winger Salom Yiu Kam-shing then dotted down making full use of a long cut-out pass which created room for him to round the last line of defence. A successful conversion by Rowark brought Hong Kong within reach, 33-26, but time had run out.

“We have a lot of work to do now. It will not get any easier,” Hall said. “We had targeted both the Korean games but life is difficult with two games away now.”

Hong Kong travel to Japan and South Korea over the next two weekends before hosting Japan at home in the final round on May 23.

“Korea took their opportunities and credit to them. But it was all about what we didn’t do today,” Hall added.

A delighted Korea coach Chung Hyung Suk commented on the win, “It was truly a team performance and I think that was the difference today. We played as a team with a lot of heart but also very smartly. We implemented certain changes from how we played Japan, particularly in our defensive patterns and where we wanted to play on the pitch and that helped us create space against Hong Kong.”

The win brings South Korea’s series points total to six after today’s bonus point win. Hong Kong are on two points after collecting their own four-try bonus point and another for a loss within seven. Defending champions Japan are atop the table on six points after their opening win and with a game in hand on South Korea.

Hong Kong 27-33 South Korea @ HK Football Club - 25 April, 2015

Additional reporting and photo HKRFU.

White Party Hong Kong 10th Anniversary @ Kai Tak Cruise Terminal – 30 May, 2015

White Party Hong Kong 10th Anniversary @ Kai Tak Cruise Terminal - 30 May, 2015

White Party Hong Kong 10th Anniversary
Date: 9pm, 30 May, 2015
Venue: Hall A, 2/F, Kai Tak Cruise Terminal
33 Shing Fung Road, Kowloon
Tickets: $1080 (VIP), $880, $680 (Advance: 27 May), $480 (Advance: 4 May) from HKTicketing
More info: DJ’s announced included Thomas Gold, Omnia, Richard Durand, Spencer Tarring, DJ Yin, Sukimama.
Website: www.whitepartyhk.com