International Women’s Day: 6 inspirational women who made their mark on Hong Kong

Today, 8 March, marks the occasion of International Women’s Day. Founded in the early 1900s, the event has grown over the years, now serving as a way to recognise the struggle for women’s rights around the world.

Hong Kong has had no shortage of trailblazing women, all of whom made valuable and groundbreaking contributions to their respective fields, from education to sports to government. Here are just a few of the exceptional women to make their mark on Hong Kong’s history over the years:

Irene Cheng, first female university graduate in Hong Kong

A member of the affluent Ho Tung family, Irene could have led a comfortable, carefree life, but instead she set out to achieve more. In 1926, she became Hong Kong’s first female university graduate, receiving an English degree from Hong Kong University. After earning a doctorate in London, she moved to Guangzhou to teach at Lingnan University and became a member of the Ministry of Education.

In 1948 she returned to Hong Kong and became the city’s first senior education officer. Her motivation was partly inspired by her mother, Lady Clara Ho Tung, who told her, “Gather all the learning you can from your teachers, study to serve humanity and hand over your knowledge to others.”

Hazel Ying Lee, first Chinese-American female pilot in US military

Although she was born in Portland, Oregon, the Chinese-American pilot became a hero in both China and the US for helping to protect both countries during World War II.

In 1933, Hazel travelled to China to volunteer for the Chinese Air Force, but was turned away because she was a woman. Instead, she stayed in Canton and flew for a private airline until 1937, when Japan invaded China. She survived the bombing attacks and escaped to Hong Kong, where she continued to help the war effort by visiting a refugee camp for women with babies. She then returned to the US and ultimately became the first Chinese-American woman to fly for the US military, and was tasked with ferrying aircrafts from manufacturers to North America airfields.

Tragically, she died in a crash in 1944. Her sister, Frances Tong, said of Hazel: “It so happened that Hazel got her pilot’s license right after the passing of our father. If dad had still been there, I don’t think she would have been able to get it. But she knew that’s what she wanted to do. She didn’t care if it was ladylike or not.”

Emily Lau Wai-hing, first elected legislator in Hong Kong

Also dubbed an “Iron Lady,” in 1991 Emily Lau Wai-hing became the first woman to be elected to Hong Kong’s Legislative Council. She also served as chairperson of the pro-democracy Democratic Party.

Previously working as a journalist, she famously posed a controversial question to Margaret Thatcher in 1984 about the Sino-British Joint Declaration to “deliver over 5 million people into the hands of a communist dictatorship.” She has been an unwavering advocate of a free press and human rights, often flying to Geneva to attend United Nations hearings on human rights issues.

When she left Legco last year, she vowed to continue serving civil society: “My bosses are the Hong Kong people,” she said. “I have no conflict of interests or conflict of roles. I devoted all my time to serving the Hong Kong people.”

Perveen Crawford, Hong Kong’s first female pilot

Perveen became Hong Kong’s first female pilot in 1995, and she is now on track to become the city’s first astronaut. After introducing herself to Virgin Group founder Richard Branson at a party, she was offered a once-in-a-lifetime trip to outer space as part of Virgin Galactic’s push to create a space tourism industry. Originally scheduled for 2008, the trip was delayed after some setbacks, but 100 people have already signed on including the likes of John Travolta, Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie.

Perveen was quoted as saying, “My husband and kids don’t think it is completely safe. But I told them it’s more dangerous to cross the road in Hong Kong. Besides, I’m not afraid of death. I would rather die and float gracefully in space than be buried on Earth.”

Lee Lai-shan, Hong Kong’s first Olympics gold medalist

Professional windsurfer Lee Lai-shan was not only the first woman to win an Olympic gold medal for Hong Kong, but she also remains the only person in the city’s history – male or female – to clinch the top athletic award. Affectionately known as “San San,” the athlete, now 46, won gold at the 1996 summer games in Atlanta while representing the then British colony. After winning, she proudly announced to media: “Hong Kong athletes are not rubbish!” And right she was.

Margaret Leung Ko May-yee, first female CEO of a Hong Kong bank

Hong Kong-born Margaret Leung Ko May-yee became the first female CEO of a Hong Kong-listed bank when she took the reigns as Hang Seng Bank’s head honcho in 2009.

After graduating from Hong Kong University in 1975, she started working at Bank of America, followed by various positions at HSBC in retail, commercial and investment banking. In 1985, she decided to relocate to Melbourne for a position with HSBC – something she says changed the trajectory of her career path.

“I was told it would not be right for a woman to leave her family in Hong Kong,” she said. “If I hadn’t gone to Australia, I would likely have stayed on in my job, comfortable until retirement and becoming part of the bank’s furniture.”

When she returned to Hong Kong, she made sure that didn’t happen.

Text: Emily Petsko

‘All My Sons’: a timeless, moving tale of grief and deceit

all my sons

Like Death of a Salesman, American writer Arthur Miller’s earlier play, All My Sons, is a portrayal of the ‘American dream’ gone horribly awry. Driven by money and the dream of building a successful business to pass on to his sons, Joe Keller is complicit in a crime that ultimately leaves 21 pilots dead during the height of World War II. For years, he ignores the repercussions and denies any wrongdoing, but his actions later come back to haunt him in ways he never could have anticipated.

All My Sons was written in 1948, but the themes it covers are just as timely as ever. It is a story of deceit and greed, but also of family and country, and love and loss. As one of the highlights of the ongoing 45th Hong Kong Arts Festival, it is now playing at the Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts’ Lyric Theatre in Wan Chai. The play, put on by Rose Theatre Kingston in London, made its exclusive Asian premiere here.

“There are certain men in the world who rather see everybody hung before they’ll take blame,” Joe says about his former business partner, who was imprisoned several years earlier for covering up cracks on defective aircraft engines and shipping them out to the war effort. The consequences, of course, were fatal. Joe denied involvement and was exonerated, but continues to remain blind to the fact that the ‘certain man’ he describes is a perfect portrayal of himself – not of his partner, who was only taking orders from Joe to conceal the cracks.

Further complicating matters is the fact that Joe’s elder son, Larry, a pilot in the war, went missing around the same time as the other pilots’ deaths. When the play opens, the audience learns that Larry has been missing for three years, yet his mother, Kate Keller, still holds out hope that he is alive.

Kate is one of the play’s most complex characters. Kate’s refusal to accept Larry’s death becomes a sickness, driving her to madness. She looks everywhere for signs that he is still alivehis horoscope, the fact that his memorial tree was blown over in a storm, newspaper clippings of other missing soldiers returning home years later. Her denial is deeply frustrating but also heartbreaking, as the audience later learns it’s a coping mechanism to avoid accepting an even harsher truth.

“Your brother’s alive,” Kate tells her younger son, Chris. “Because if he’s dead, your father killed him. Do you understand me now? God does not let a son be killed by his father.”

And then there’s Chris, the younger Keller son, who wants to marry his brother’s fiancée, Ann – who also happens to be the daughter of Joe’s jailed business partner. For this, he has to come to terms with the guilt of dating “Larry’s girl,” as his disapproving mother calls her, and later the guilt of knowing that his own father is responsible for the ruin of Ann’s father. All of this comes to a head when Ann’s brother, George, confronts Joe, and the Keller family learns how Larry really died.

Without revealing too much, the ending is harrowing – the kind of ending that leaves audiences almost too shaken to gather their wits and applaud the performers, even if the praise is well-deserved. The actor who portrays Joe pulls off the tricky task of getting the audience to sympathisehowever slightlywith Joe’s plight. Everything about the play feels real, down to the costumes and the authenticity of the actors’ Midwestern accents (the play takes place near Cincinnati, Ohio).

As said best by the play’s director, Michael Rudman: “I got a good idea of the kind of acting Arthur Miller wanted in the hours I spent with him in auditions and rehearsals for a Broadway production of Death of a Salesman. He wanted actors who were truthful and interesting, but also capable of expressing deep emotion. That is the kind of actor that we wanted for this production.”

This production of All My Sons certainly achieves that. It is a classic that is well worth seeing on the stage. The play will run in Hong Kong through 11 March. For more information and tickets, click here.

Text: Emily Petsko

Eyewear brand hosts Monster event to launch new collection

Eyewear brand Gentle Monster celebrated the launch of its 2017 Spring/Summer Eyewear collection with a preview party at its flagship store in Causeway Bay.

Founded in Seoul, Korea, in 2011, Gentle Monster was introduced to Hong Kong by Puyi Optical last year. The designer eyewear brand distinguishes itself with their ‘high-end experimentation’ philosophy.

The event was attended by CEO of Puyi Optical, Jeffrey Yau and his wife, Dr Margaret Lee, along with a number of celebrities.

Click here to watch the video

Paintings by Picasso on display in Times Square

Spanish artist Pablo Picasso was a notorious womaniser who had a number of muses during his life. Of the seven important women he met, two killed themselves and two went mad. Another died of natural causes four years into their relationship.

But it was was his second wife and last lover, Jacqueline Roque, who won Picasso’s focus during the later years of his life

Paintings Picasso dedicated to Jacqueline are currently on display at Times Square.

The 13 artworks from “The Picasso and Jacqueline Exhibition” are being exhibited outside of Spain for the first time.

Twelve of the artworks (linocuts) in the exhibition were finished in 1962 using the linoleum printing technique and are inspired by cubism. The oil portrait of Jacqueline on canvas is a piece that belongs to the artist’s unique complete series that can be found in the Museu Picasso in Barcelona.

Kathy Chow and Lluís Bagunyà i Valls, Institutional Relations and Contracting Museu Picasso Barcelona, together with Times Square representatives attended the opening ceremony for the exhibition recently.

Times Square is hosting The Picasso and Jacqueline Exhibition with the Museu Picasso Barcelona, in the Living Room Museum until 21 March.

Click here for more information.

Venue: Times Square, Causeway Bay

Date: Until 21 March

Time: 10am – 10pm

Free Admission

March Madness: What to see and do in Hong Kong this month

Taste Hong Kong_eff

Taste of Hong Kong

Returning for a second year, Taste of Hong Kong is the perfect culinary treat for ardent foodies. Spanning four days, the event welcomes dozens of tastemakers, chefs and restaurateurs from across the city. As testament to the event’s popularity, this year’s festival is set to be even bigger and better than before.

More than 60 purveyors of fine foodstuffs will be on-site at the Gourmet Market, selling everything from luxury chocolates and handmade breads to French cheese and Spanish charcuterie. After perusing at leisure, guests will also be able to stop for a bite to eat at one of the many pop-up restaurants, spin-offs of some of Hong Kong’s most notable eateries. Celebrity chefs – including the likes of Siu Hin Chi and Antoine Audran – will also be appearing.

Venue: Central Harbourfront
Date: 16–19 March
Enquiries: tasteofhongkong@img.com
Website: www.hongkong.tastefestivals.com

Chick Corea Elecktric BandThe Chick Corea Elektric 

Established in 1986, The Chick Corea Elektric, an eclectic jazz fusion band, will perform in the city this spring. The popular ensemble is headed up by esteemed pianist, the eponymous Chick Corea.

Venue: HKBU Community Hall
Date: 22 March
Enquiries: (+1) 712 4425
Website: www.chickcorea.com

Altrn8_effALTN8 Festival 

Describing itself as encompassing “40 artists, eight stages, one party,” ALTN8 Festival is the ultimate calendar event for anyone interested in electronic music. A multi-venue extravaganza, the one-day festival will run in several of Hong Kong’s most popular clubs, lounges and bars, including Zafran, Halcyon, Fly and Volar.

Spread out along Wyndham Street and Lan Kwai Fong, festival-goers are issued one wristband that grants them entrance to all the venues. This year will be ALTN8’s inaugural event and to celebrate the organisers have snagged some of the industry’s biggest DJs, including Stephan Bodzin, Tube and Berger, and Shigeto.

Various ticket options are available including music and culinary packages plus an exclusive VIP option that allows backstage access.

Venue: Various locations, Central
Date: 11–12 March
Enquiries: info@altn8.com
Website: www.altn8.com

HK Young Readers Festival_pathInternational Young Readers’ Festival

A spin-off from the city’s more established Hong Kong Literary Festival, this event has been created with younger readers in mind. There will be a range of activities, including discussions and workshops.

Venue: Comix Home Base, Wan Chai Date: 6–17 March
Enquiries: 2877 9770
Website: www.youngreadersfestival.org.hk

Tai Kok Tsui  Temple Fair

Held in celebration of the Hung Shing Festival, the 13th Tai Kok Tsui Temple Fair will be held in early March. The event features a street parade and a 500-foot luminous dragon dance in the evening.

Venue: Fuk Tsun Street, Tai Kok Tsui, Kowloon
Date: 5 March
Enquiries: N/A
Website: www.tkttemplefair.org.hk

Joey_YungJoey Yung in concert

Award-winning singer and actress Joey Yung returns to the stage this month for several nights of musical performance. The popular Cantonese songstress will be performing in HKAPA’s Lyric Theatre.

Venue: Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts
Date: 26-30 March
Enquiries: 2584 8500
Website: www.joeyyung.hk

CW City  Challenge HK

A child welfare scheme is hosting an eight-kilometre “challenge run” in which teams traverse Hong Kong in groups, solving puzzles and finding out more about the city’s past. Proceeds from the event will go to Nepalese schools.

Venue: Citywide
Date: 11 March
Enquiries: info@cwshk.org
Website: www.cwshk.org

Up-and-Coming Artist Euan Macleod

NockArt Gallery will be showcasing Euan Macleod’s latest paintings in a new display titled High and Low. The exhibition features several stand-out works including a piece that depicts China’s stunning Huangshan Mountains.

Venue: NockArt Gallery, Aberdeen
Date: Tuesday – Friday daily
from 20 March
Enquiries: 2525 9691
Website: www.nockartgallery.com

Arthur Miller’s All My Sons
Part of the Hong Kong Arts Festival, acclaimed US playwright Arthur Miller’s powerful play All My Sons will be performed by the Rose Theatre, Kingston – a highly respected UK theatre group. It’s a tale of deception and intrigue, as an all-American success story goes horribly awry.

Venue: Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts
Date: 3–11 March
Enquiries: 2824 3555
Website: www.hk.artsfestival.org

beerfest2Beerfest Asia
In what promises to be one of the hottest tickets in town – eight days of “great beer, food and entertainment” – Beerfest Asia heads to Hong Kong this year to the delight of beer lovers and aficionados. Featuring an impressive array of international tipples, plus some weird and wonderful flavours, the event will also be attended by industry experts.
Alongside plenty of chances to sip and sample, imbibers will also have the opportunity to listen to some renowned acts – the entertainment schedule features international DJs, local bands and live music. Adding to the inebriated fun are the dozens of beer-based games and competitions on offer.

Venue: West Kowloon Cultural District
Date: 2–5 March
Enquiries: contact@ticketflap.com
Website: www.beerfestasiahk.com

What to do on International Women’s Day in Hong Kong

Womens Day

This March, Women’s Day arrives in Hong Kong, with an array of events on offer that celebrate empowering women. From culinary feasts to networking socials, we’ve rounded up the best places to celebrate and show your support.

Be Bold: International Women’s Day 2017

Join speakers and thinkers at Azure Restaurant for an evening of stories and tales of bravery brought to you by Liberty Asia. Wine and canapés are included with the ticket and all proceeds from the event will be donated to help support anti-slavery projects.

Monday 6 March from 6.30pm; Azure, 33 Wyndham Street

Click here for more information.

Mrs. Pound and Benefit IWD

Mrs. Pound and Benefit have teamed up to celebrate the day with an evening of cocktails and food from Mrs. Pound’s new ‘Fire Rooster’ menu. Ladies will enjoy a complimentary eyebrow wax plus a mini makeover, and the first 50 guests will be treated to a free Benefit makeup goody bag.

Wednesday 8 March from 6pm; Mrs Pound, 6 Pound Lane

Click here for more information.

Women at Sea

An insightful and inclusive talk, Women at Sea aims to tell the stories of the powerful women behind Hong Kong’s maritime successes. The evening will look back at how women have contributed to the industry, as well as celebrate recent achievements.

Wednesday 8 March from 6.30pm; Hong Kong Maritime Museum

Click here for more information.

Women’s Five

An event that’s for a good cause and keeps you fit sounds too good to be true but the Women’s Five run is that and more. Included in your registration fee is a five week running and yoga programme that culminates in a fun event when hundreds of women join forces to complete the ‘journey.’ Part of the proceeds goes to local women’s charities.

Saturday 1 April from 7.45am; Aberdeen Country Park

Click here for more information.

Swire Women of Wine Festival

Treat you and your girlfriends to a night of wine sampling at the Swire Women of Wine Festival. Well-known Hong Kong restaurateurs and wine experts will be in attendance and there will also be mini-workshops so you can hone your vino skills to perfection.

Friday 10 March from 5pm; HKGCC Chamber Theatre

Click here for more information.

Text: Siobhan Brewood-Wyatt

Find out what’s on this December in Hong Kong

INK Asia 2016

李義弘Lee Yi- Hong_嘯風挾浪Wild Stormy Sea Waves Crashing into Rocks_日本金箋紙Gold paper from Japan_89.3 x 89.3 cm _2016_羲之堂,台北Xizhitang Gallery, Taipei

The second iteration of the only expo devoted to contemporary ink art returns to the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre this month. A grand total of more than 50 art galleries and organisations – including the very finest examples from Hong Kong, Beijing, Shanghai, Taipei and Singapore – will showcase some 1,000 works of modern and contemporary ink art at this year’s show – INK Asia 2016.

The event represents a unique collaboration of scholars, curators and galleries from across Asia, all united in presented a number of specially themed exhibitions, including Chinese Contemporary Calligraphy, Taiwan Pavilion and Ink+, with the latter featuring art works from across a variety of media, including painting, calligraphy, photography, prints, Venue: Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre

Date: 16-18 December (private preview and vernissage on 15 Dec)
Enquiries: 3107 0681
Website: www.inkasiahk.com

Wicked

Wicked

This musical retelling of The Wizard of Oz, based on the novel by Gregory Maguire, is set to Defy Gravity on a Hong Kong stage.

Venue: Hong Kong Academy for Performing Arts, 1 Gloucester Road, Wan Chai
Date: 8 December – 8 January
Enquiries: 2584 8500
Website: www.hkapa.edu

Hong Kong French Film Festival

Planetarium-move-poster_eff

Ah, the French. Nobody makes films quite like them. The absurdity, the farce, the sex, the high drama – and more plot twists than your average US Election. All in all, they certainly have a well-earned reputation for making rather engaging movies, something that is perfectly exemplified by this year’s superb selection of cinematic gems being presented as part of the Hong Kong French Film Festival.

A true highlight of this year’s event is Planetarium, a French-Belgium drama starring Natalie Portman (Black Swan, Zoolander) and Lily-Rose Depp – daughter of Johnny Depp – as a pair of psychic sisters in pre-WWII France. Directed by Rebecca Ziotowski, this sensual tale of intrigue debuted at the Venice Film Festival to rave reviews.

All-in-all, there’s 48 films to choose from at the three-week long festival. So, whether you just have a passing interest in foreign films or are an avid Francophile cinephile, there’s something here apt to tickle your fancy.

Venue: Selected Hong Kong cinemas
Date: Until 14 December
Tickets: Hong Kong City Hall and Hong Kong Film Archive
Website: www.hkfrenchfilmfestival.com/

DJ Snake

DJ Snake_path2

The French DJ behind top club hits like “Turn Down For What” and “Lean On” (in collaboration with Major Lazer and MØ) comes to Macau.

Venue: Club Civic, Level 2, The Shops at The Boulevard, City of Dreams, Estrada do Istmo, Cotai, Macau
Date: 7 December, 10 pm
Enquiries: +853 6638 4999
Website: www.cubic-cod.com

 

Hong Kong Story Corner

This is the first exhibition by Hong Kong illustrator Don Mak. It comprises a series of six illustrations, each depicts one particular post-1960’s period, with images of street corners and intersections representing time’s turning points in Hong Kong. Although the landscape, people and buildings change, each piece maintains similar themes, capturing the unique Hong Kong character and identity that has passed through generations.
The works for this exhibition were all illustrated in watercolour with digital modification, ultimately then rendered as etchings.

Venue: G/F, 14 St. Francis Street, Wan Chai
Date: 29 November – 15 December
Time: Tue to Sat 12:00-19:30; Sun & Public Holidays 12:00-19:00
Enquiries: 2529 3955
Website: www.oddoneout.hk

The Wonderful World of Disney on Ice

A magical performance on ice showcasing a full lineup of Disney characters, both classic and new, including Mickey and Goofy, Dory and Nemo, Anna and Elsa, and many more.

Venue: Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre, 1 Expo Dr, Wan Chai
Date: 8-11 December
Enquiries: 2525 7406
Website: www.hkticketing.com/events/WCTHEWO1216P

The Great European Carnival

A whirlwind of thrilling rides, carnival games, live local and international musical acts, comedy performers, an enormous outdoor ice rink and food from around the world.

Venue: Central Waterfront Event Space
Date: 16 December – 12 February
Enquiries: 2524 6433
Website: www.tgec.asia

Hong Kong Ballet: The Nutcracker

Featuring Russian composer Tchaikovsky’s magical score, The Nutcracker is the perfect festive family treat, complete with a cast of colourful characters, including the Sugar Plum Fairy, Clara and the Rat King.

Venue: Hong Kong Cultural Centre, Grand Theatre
Date: 16-25 December
Enquiries: Online submission
Website: www.hkballet.com

Longines International Jockeys’ Championship

This annual event is back again with a four-race opener, showcasing the best jockeys the city has to offer.

Venue: Happy Valley Racecourse, Wong Nai Chung Rd, Happy Valley
Date: 7 December
Enquiries: Online submission
Website: www.hkjc.com

A Master Class with Nina Gold

Nina Gold_eff

Presented by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) in partnership with the Hong Kong Academy of Performing Arts, this is a rare opportunity to spend an evening with Nina Gold, an award-winning British casting director. Over the course of her illustrious career, Nina has cast a variety of critically acclaimed television series and movies, including The King’s Speech, The Imitation Game and – most popular of all – Game of Thrones. This year, she was honoured with a BAFTA special award for her outstanding contribution to casting more than 100 television and film productions. Learn the intriguing secrets of casting for the big screen from a true master of the craft, as she candidly shares her insights for one night only.

Venue: Drama Theatre, HK Academy of Performing Arts, 1 Gloucester Road, Wanchai
Date: 15 December, 6:30 pm
Enquiries: RSVP to events@bafta.org