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ANNOUNCEMENTSBeyond Manzanar Beyond Manzanar is a 3-D interactive exhibit by artists Tamiko Thiel and Zara Houshmand that dramatically casts visitors into the role of internees inside the Manzanar, Calif. internment camp. The work contrasts the experiences of Japanese Americans during WWII and the more contemporary situation of Iranian Americans and the attempts by both groups to achieve the American dream while being characterized by their own country as the enemy. This permanent installation at the San Jose Museum of Art opens Sun., Nov. 3, 3 p.m. at 110 S. Market St., San Jose. For more info: 408-271-6840 or visit www.sjmusart.org. Filipino American Cinefest Last Call Filipino CineArts (FACINE) makes its last call for entries to the 9th annual Filipino American Cinefest. Deadline is Oct. 31, 6:30 p.m. The annual film festival may be the only North American festival to showcase new media works by Filipino and Filipino American filmmakers and video artists. All interested artists should submit VHS copies of their entries to Dr. Mauro Tumbocon, Director, 537 Jones St., PMB 2643, San Francisco. For more info: 415-557-4430 or mftworks@hotmail.com. Here We Are In collaboration with the Shih Yu-Lang Central YMCA of San Francisco, the Theatre of Yugen embarks on a new educational outreach program targeting the Pan-Asian communities of the Tenderloin and SOMA neighborhoods. This outreach provides free training and creative performance opportunities for youth ages 9-18. Here We Are will run through Nov. 8 at the Central YMCA, 220 Golden Gate Ave. (at Hyde), San Francisco. For more info: 415-621-0507 or www.theatreofyugen.org. ARTSHeroes of the Homeland A visual exploration of the contemporary lives of overseas Filipina workers and Filipino World War II veterans, from Hong Kong to San Francisco, through the black and white photography of Bay Area photojournalist Rick Rocamora. On exhibition until Dec. 7 at BABILONIA 1808, 1808 Fifth St., Berkeley. For more info: 510-883-1808 or www.bwf.org/pusod. In the Face of War The Asian & Pacific Islander Coalition Against War presents In the Face of War: Asian Photographers View Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine, Philippines & U.S.A., showing through Nov. 30 at the Asian Resource Gallery, 310 8th St., in Oaklands Chinatown. The opening reception on Tues., Oct. 15 from 6-8 p.m. will feature cultural and political presentations by Diskarte Namin and KASAMA. For more info: 415-274-6760 x310. Quilts on Display The San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles presents Quilts, Expressively Korean, an exhibit of 26 quilts by Korean artists influenced by American patchwork quilts. Quilts will be on display through Oct. 27 at the Museum of Quilts, 110 Paseo de San Antonio, in downtown San Jose. Admission: $3-4. For more info: 408-971-0323 x10 or www.sjquiltmuseum.org. Shelf Life Shirley Tse Capp Street Project artist-in-residence, uses white Styrofoam, vacuum-formed acrylic and memory foam to trasform the California College of Arts and Crafts galleries into an otherworldly space. The show opens Weds. Nov. 6, 7 p.m. and continues until Jan. 10 at the CCACs Logan Galleries, 1111 Eighth St., San Francisco. For more into: 415-551-9210. There Once Was a Princess... Abhinaya Dance Company of San Jose presents There Once Was a Princess... performed by Mythili Kumar and the Abhinaya Dancers. The performance features tales of princesses from Indian mythology, literature and contemporary times. Showing Sat., Nov. 9 at 7 p.m. at the Mexican Heritage Theater, 1700 Alum Rock Ave., San Jose. Tickets: $10-15. For more info: 408-983-0491 or www.abhinaya.com. Woman Warrior Pusod: Center for Culture and Ecology presents Woman Warrior: The Thoughts and Sounds of Established and Emerging Artists, works in music, poetry, and pinay/pilipina-centric performances featuring Janet Mendoza Stickman with turntable sounds by Youth Fiyah. The performance takes place Fri., Oct. 26, 8 p.m., at Pusod, 1808 Fifth St., Berkeley. Tickets: $5-20. For more info: 510-883-1808 or www.pusod.org. DANCEShangri La, Shang Ni La The San Francisco Arts Commission Chinatown Community Arts Program, the Chinese Culture Foundation and the Chinese Folk Association present Shangri La, Shang Ni La (The Sun and Moon in the Heart). This showcase will feature the talented students of the Chinese Folk Dance Association performing a number of Chinese and ethnic minority dances. The performance will take place Sun., Oct, 27, at the Chinese Culture Center, 730 Kearny St., Third Floor, at 3 p.m. Tickets: $8-12. For more info: 415-957-1146. READINGS AND LECTURESAdeline Yen Mah The author of the New York Times bestseller, Falling Leaves, will read from her new work, A Thousand Pieces of Gold: A Memoir of Chinas Past Through Proverbs. The reading will be held on Nov. 5, 6:30 p.m., at the Latina/Hispanic Community Meeting Room, San Francisco Main Library, 100 Larkin St. For more info: www.sfpl.org. The Good Women of China: Hidden Voices The Mechanics Institute and the Asia Society presents a reading entitled The Good Women of China: Hidden Voices. Bejing journalist Xinran Xues book gathers together interviews from a 1990s radio call-in show in which she invited Chinese women to speak about their lives. Mon., Nov. 4, 6 p.m. at the Mechanics Institute, 57 Post Street, San Francisco. Admission: $7. For more info: 415-393-0100, or www.milibrary.org. The Grapes of Wrath As part of the California Council for the Humanities California Stories: Reading the Grapes of Wrath project, the Chinatown Branch of the San Francisco Public Library presents a series of Chinese language (Mandarin) book reading discussions on John Steinbecks book, The Grapes of Wrath, Oct. 5, 19 and 26, 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. at the Chinatown Branch library, 1135 Powell St., San Francisco. For more info: 415-274-0275. THEATERKuan-Yin: Our Lady of Compassion Ghost Festival 2 presents the world premiere of a new performance work by Brenda Wong Aoki and Mark Izu. Musicians and actors from Japan, Hong Kong, Los Angeles and the Bay Area join together in an exploration of the figure of Kuan-Yin, at the Yerba Buena Center Theater, San Francisco, Sat., Nov. 9, 8 p.m. and Sun., Nov. 10, 2 p.m. Tickets: $15-25. For more info: 415-978-2787. Master of the (Miss) Universe The New Conservatory Theatre Center and Noel Alumit present Master of the (Miss) Universe, starring Alumit paying tribute to one of the worlds most enduring cultural icons: the beauty pageant. The show is a rollicking statement about race, sexuality, art and how to tell if one has a good nose. The show runs until Oct. 27 at the New Conservatory Theater Center, 25 Van Ness Ave. near Market, San Francisco. Tickets: $15-25. For more info: 415-861-8972 or www.nctcsf.org. Spike Rhees Get on the Bus The Asian American Theater Company presents The 18 Mighty Mountain Warriors in Spike Rhees Get on the Bus, a satirical look at a busload of very odd passengers who find themselves on a madcap journey to the gravesite of Bruce Lee. The play will run until Oct. 26, Thurs. - Sat., 8 p.m., and Sun., 7 p.m. at the Theatre of Yugen/Noh Space, 2840 Mariposa St., San Francisco. Tickets: $12-15. For more info: 415-440-5545 or www.asianamericantheater.org. WORKSHOPSBuild Your Own Taiko-style Drum The Crissy Field Center presents a workshop for families to build their own Taiko-style drum. In this workshop, add a modern twist to tradition by building a big drum of your own using a clean, recycled garbage can, and experience its power and excitement by drumming with the group. Sat., Nov. 9, 1 - 4 p.m. at the Crissy Field Center in the Presidio, 603 Mason at Helleck. Tickets: $20. For more info and to register: 415-561-7752.
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THEATERFreak storm Lodestone Theatre Ensemble presents the world premier of Freak Storm, a haunting and provocative examination of the nature of responsibility, the mysterious shifting bonds of friendship and the unknowability of the ones we love. The show will run until Nov. 17 at the Little Theatre, 3326 Victory Blvd., Burbank. Tickets: $12-14. For more info: 323-993-7245 or www.lodestonetheatre.org.
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ARTSDo-ho suh Seattle Art Museum (SAM) presents the work of contemporary Korean artist Do-Ho Suh, who uses suspended diaphanous silk and nylon architectural installations to reconstruct space and explore identity. These works will be on display through Dec. 1 at SAM, 100 University St., Seattle. For more info: 206-654-3255 or www.seattleartmuseum.org.
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ARTSAsian American Jazz Portraits Photos of Asian American jazz artists in performance, by Hiromi Oda and Kieran Ridge, including jazz greats Jon Jang, Francis Wong, Yoko Noge, Tatsu Aoki, as well as emerging talents Jeff Chan, Jen Shyu, Leon Lee and Jimmy Biala, will be on display until Oct. 28 at HotHouse Gallery, 31 E. Balbo St, Chicago. Admission: free, with tickets to HotHouse concerts. An official event of the Asian American Jazz Festival. Further info: 312-362-9707 or www.hothouse.net.
ARTSBohnchang Koo Bohnchang Koos first American retrospective will open to the public on Nov. 6 at the Peabody Essex Museum, East India Square, Salem, Mass. The exhibition will feature 28 photographs representing a broad spectrum of the Korean photographers work. Bohnchang Koo: Masterworks of Korean Photography will remain on view through Feb. 18, 2003. For more info: 978-745-9500 or www.pem.org. Chen Zhen The Chinese-born, Paris-based artist Chen Zhen poetically employs both his study of traditional Chinese culture and his knowledge of Western avant-garde art to create work that engages contemporary social issues. The Institute of Contemporary Art, 955 Boylston St., Boston will showcase Inner Body Landscapes until Dec. 31. Admission: $5-7, free on Thurs. For more info: 617-266-5152 or www.icaboston.org. Munakat Shiko A retrospective exhibition devoted to Munakat Shiko, who was known to his Japanese contemporaries as an iconoclast and is often considered the 20th centurys most influential artist of the woodblock print, runs through Nov. 10 at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Benjamin Franklin Parkway (at 26th St.). For more info: 215-763-8100 or www.philamuseum.org.
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ANNOUNCEMENTSInternational Open Poetry Contest The International Library of Poetry announces that $58,000 in prizes will be awarded in the International Open Poetry Contest this year. Poets from the San Francisco area, particularly beginners, are welcome to submit. Entry is open and free to everyone. Entries must be postmarked by Dec. 31, 2002. For more info: www.poetry.com. South Asian Film Day Peripheral Productions is seeking short, feature and documentary films to screen at South Asian Film Day. Programming at the event will include a screening of a short documentary about Academy-Award winning director Satyajit Ray, an interview with Mira Nair and a film by Ray. Deadline for submission is Nov. 6. For more info: www.sulekha.com.
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