In Search of Perfect Consonance

A film by Ruby Yang

Press Kit

Year: 2016 Length: 39 min. Language: English/Cantonese/Mandarin/Japanese Subtitles: English

Website: www.consonance-movie.com

Press Contact: E: [email protected]

Production Company: Chang Ai Media Project Ltd. E: [email protected] SYNOPSIS

Twenty-five years ago, was at war with , the Chinese and the Japanese were at loggerheads and relations across the Strait were frosty.

Directed by Oscar® winner Ruby Yang, In Search of Perfect Consonance profiles the Asian Youth Orchestra, established against this historical backdrop with the aim of connecting the region’s young people through music. As we watch the budding musicians of today’s Asia learn to work together, we are reminded of the higher ideals that music inspires.

DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT Ruby Yang

When I traveled to China in 1986, you couldn’t mention the word “Taiwan” without rousing suspicion you might be a spy. The Chinese considered their Vietnamese neighbors enemies, and they still couldn’t forgive the Japanese for their invasion of Nanking – five decades earlier.

In such an environment, the idea of bringing young people from different Asian countries together to play music seemed little more than a Quixotic dream. But that is exactly what Richard Pontzious and the late did when they set up the Asian Youth Orchestra.

Last year, I was able to witness first hand just how successful this dream has become when I spent the summer with the Asian Youth Orchestra filming this documentary. It was inspiring for me to see the orchestra’s dedicated artist faculty working together with talented young musicians from all over Asia to create a strong community of trusted friends.

Music has the power to heal and bind. In today’s complex world, it’s more important than ever to have music and the performing arts bridging political and cultural divides and bringing people together. DIRECTOR’S BIO Ruby Yang Ruby Yang is an award-winning Chinese American filmmaker. She directed The Blood of Yingzhou District, which won the Oscar for best documentary short in 2007, and The Warriors of Qiugang, which received an Academy nomination in the same category in 2011. The Wall Street Journal called her 2014 documentary My Voice, My Life one of the “five most essential films” to come out of that year. She now heads the Hong Kong Documentary Initiative at the University of Hong Kong, which aims to nurture the next generation of documentary filmmakers in the region.

SELECTED FILMOGRAPHY

The Blood of Yingzhou District (2006) Documentary Short

Follows the lives of children orphaned by AIDS in the remote villages of Anhui Province.

www.bloodofyingzhou.com

The Warriors of Qiugang (2010) Documentary Short

Profiles an Anhui farmer and his campaign to halt the poisoning of his village’s water and soil by a nearby factory.

www.warriorsofqiugang.com

My Voice, My Life (2014)

Feature Documentary

Follows an unlikely group of misfit high school students from Hong Kong cast together for a musical theater performance.

www.myvoicemylifemovie.com HISTORICAL CONTEXT

The late 1980s were tense times for East Asia. With Mainland China and Vietnam shooting each other across their shared border, tens of thousands of Vietnamese people were trying to escape their country in boats, heading for Hong Kong. Meanwhile, a number of incidents embittered relations between China and . Frictions arose when Japanese history textbooks dealing with the 1931-45 war between the two countries were revised, and again when the then Japanese prime minister, Yasuhiro Nakasone, visited the Yasukuni Shrine, which commemorates Japanese soldiers who died during the conflict, some of whom are considered war criminals. At the same time, ongoing disputes over unification kept China and Taiwan at loggerheads.

“Peace may sound simple - one beautiful word - but it requires everything we have, every quality, every strength, every dream, every high ideal.” – Yehudi Menuhin, Violinist and Conductor FILM SUBJECT

The Asian Youth Orchestra (AYO), set up in 1987, was the brainchild of conductor and teacher, Richard Pontzious. His goal was to create an orchestra that would unite the region and celebrate the excellence of young Asian musicians.

“If we could enjoy peace and realize that we can get along with each other, even though we have different values and come from different backgrounds. This is what I was trying to convey to the members of the orchestra.”

– Richard Pontzious, AYO Founder, Artistic Director, and Conductor

Backed by the distinguished violinist Yehudi Menuhin, the orchestra played its first concert in 1990. Since then, it has given more than 350 performances in some of the world’s top venues, reaching over a million concertgoers and becoming what the San Francisco Chronicle describes as the “finest among youth orchestras around the world.”

The 100 members of the AYO are among the finest young musicians from Mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, , Japan, , , the , , , and Vietnam. Chosen through highly competitive auditions held throughout the region, they are together for six weeks each summer, first for a three- week rehearsal camp in Hong Kong, then for a three-week international concert tour alongside celebrated conductors and solo artists.

In Search of Perfect Consonance looks at the AYO’s history and mission, the founders’ ideals, and the personal stories of those involved in the orchestra. Following Asia’s best young musicians as they learn to work together, the film explores the higher ideals that music inspires. FEATURING

Richard Pontzious, Artistic Director & Conductor

Asian Youth Orchestra was created by Richard Pontzious, who at the time was touring extensively in Taiwan, Japan and China introducing Chinese audiences emerging from the horrors of the Cultural Revolution to the music of Beethoven, Brahms, Prokofiev and Copland. The orchestra’s founding principle was to promote peace and friendship through the power of music. It’s an aim that has garnered support from some of the world’s top musicians, with the great violinist Yehudi Menuhin leading the way, becoming the orchestra’s co-founder and first conductor.

James Judd, Principal Conductor Principal conductor of the AYO since 2007, the British-born James Judd’s music directorships have included Principal Guest Conductor of the Orchestre National de Lille in France and a groundbreaking 14 years as Music Director of the Florida Philharmonic Orchestra.

Steven Isserlis, Cello Soloist Steven Isserlis has supported the Asian Youth Orchestra as a soloist since 2013. Born in the UK, he is one of the world’s most famous cellists, known for the passion of his performance and his diverse repertoire. He is one of only two living cellists featured in Gramophone’s Hall of Fame. FEATURING

Artist Faculty

Toko Inomoto, Viola Born in Kumamoto, Japan, Toko Inomoto was a member of the very first AYO. Her late father, Otoya Inomoto, played a critical role in the successful launch of the orchestra in Japan.

Rhonda Rider, Cello Rhonda Rider is currently Chair of Chamber Music at the Boston Conservatory in the United States and has been a faculty artist with the AYO for the past 12 years.

Thanos Adamopoulos, Violin Thanos Adamopoulos started his musical studies with his father in Israel. At 19, he was appointed solo violinist of the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra. He has been a faculty artist with the AYO for the past 20 years.

Stefano Pagliani, Violin Stefano Pagliani has been described by Lorin Maazel as “the most prominent concertmaster in Italy”. 2015 was his first summer with the AYO.

Jay Liu, Viola Jay Liu was 16 when he entered the Shanghai Conservatory where Richard Pontzious was serving as music director. A member of the AYO’s artist faculty since 1999, Liu is associate principal violist with the San Francisco Symphony.

David Sheets, Double Bass Kansas-native David Sheets is a member of the Baltimore Symphony. He has been an AYO faculty artist since 2006.

Fabio Piazzalunga, Chorus Master Fabio Piazzalunga is an Italian pianist, organist, composer, and conductor. He teaches musical language, piano, and choral performance at the Gaetano Donizetti Institute of Music in Bergamo. 2015 was his first summer with the AYO. FEATURING

Orchestra Members

Tzu Wei Huang Cellist, Taiwan

Ho Khanh Van Hoang First Violinist, Vietnam

Yi Hao Xu First Violinist, China

He Yu Yan Concertmaster, China

Kanako Fukumoto Second Violinist, Japan

Sanche Jagatheesan Double Bassist, Singapore

Charlie Tsz Ho Wong Double Bassist, Hong Kong

Mayu Ohkado Double Bassist, Japan

Shao Hua Wu Bass Trombonist, Taiwan

Other Artists

Sooyeon Lee Soprano

Jenny Hou Mezzo Soprano

Jun Bum Lee Tenor

Benno Schollum Baritone

Entire AYO Artist Faculty

2015 Orchestra Members

Tokyo Chorus Members PRODUCTION STILLS

Production Still 1 Production Still 2 Hong Kong double bassist Charlie Tsz Ho Wong Ho Khanh Van Hoang from Hanoi is one of the is the oldest player in his section. As a teenager, only two Vietnamese players in AYO. She failed he suffered from depression before finding her first audition. But when admitted on her solace in music. second try, she nearly got the chance to be the concert master.

Production Still 3 Production Still 4 An AYO violin audition at the Academy for Trombonist Wu Shao Hua from Taiwan nearly Performing Arts in Hong Kong. gave up his chance to take part in AYO’s summer camp when his father was diagnosed with cancer two weeks before he was meant to depart.

Production Still 5 Production Still 6 Lively Indian Singaporean Sanche Jagatheesan Japanese violinist Kanako Fukomoto is angry loves to jam with his fellow double bassists, who with herself for not practicing and disappointing come from seven different Asian countries. the conductor. PRODUCTION STILLS

Production Still 7 Production Still 8 Richard Pontzious conducts Beethoven’s 9th Richard Pontzious founded the Asian Youth Symphony in Hong Kong’s City Hall Concert Orchestra in 1987 with the legendary violinist Hall, one of many concerts celebrating the Yehudi Menuhin. AYO’s 25th anniversary.

Production Still 9 Production Still 10 After a three-week concert tour of Asia, the AYO About 100 young musicians are invited to join performs its final concert of the 2015 season at the AYO each year. They are selected from as the Tokyo Opera City Concert Hall. many as 1,000 applicants through auditions in different Asian countries.

Production Still 11 Production Still 12 The AYO was founded in 1987, when the Sino- Richard Pontzious taught at the Shanghai Vietnamese war was coming to an end and Conservatory in the 1980s, the first Western hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese boat people musician to spend such a long period in China were starting to arrive in Hong Kong. Ten years at a time when the country was still emerging later, these people had mostly been resettled. from the tumult of the Cultural revolution. PRESS

Young Asian musicians can show divided Hong Kong how to connect, says filmmaker

South China Morning Post | June 26, 2016 https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B1XihUdaX7jcWFhuTjV2b1VXWm8

How Asian Youth Orchestra changed a Hong Kong refugee’s life South China Morning Post | August 17, 2015 https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B1XihUdaX7jcQnhsTDFEYjR0NnM

For Asian Youth Orchestra, Mission Is More Than Just Music The New York Times | August 6, 2015 https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B1XihUdaX7jcaGNGTzNGYjc4VGc

East meets east in music

Financial Times | August 3, 2004 https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B1XihUdaX7jcWjFrZUVCRXJyeU0 POSTERS CREDITS

PRESENTED BY Marbella Ltd.

DIRECTED, PRODUCED & EDITED BY Ruby Yang

ASSOCIATE PRODUCER Candy Chan

EXECUTIVE PRODUCER Jim Thompson

CINEMATOGRAPHERS Yiu Fai Wong Mike Mak Harry Lee

ADDITIONAL CINEMATOGRAPHERS Tony Chiu Justin J.R. Yip Yoshihisa Toda Douglas Taiki Ideguchi

SOUND RECORDIST Kin Fai Ng

CREATIVE ADVISOR Lambert Yam

ASSOCIATE EDITORS Ka Ue So Bo Li

ADDITIONAL EDITING Derek Chan Candy Chan

FILM CREW Man Chung Ma Koon Wah Wong Gloria Cheung

OUTREACH MANAGER Catherine Chan

PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS Alistair Webb Dominic Chan Jacky Cheung Andra Au

PRODUCTION INTERNS Amrita Sanju Daryanani Anjali Lal Anna Chan Alvin Chan Justine Jankowski Marine Candel COLORIST Gary Coates

POST PRODUCTION SOUND Berkeley Sound Artists

RE-RECORDING MIXERS James LeBrecht Dan Olmsted

DIALOGUE EDITOR Erik Reimers

SOUND EFFECTS EDITOR Bijan Sharifi

EDITING INTERNS Ka Mei Li Jacky Cheung Chi On Chui

ENGLISH SUBTITLES Lizi Hesling James Hill

CHINESE TRANSLATION Muriel Ma Coco Feng

SPECIAL ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

PRODUCED WITH SUPPORT FROM Jim Thompson

ADDITIONAL SUPPORT Lee Hysan Foundation Ozner Chien Lee YangTse Foundation

PRODUCTION SUPPORT Journalism and Media Studies Centre, The University of Hong Kong Copyright © 2016 Marbella Ltd. www.consonance-movie.com | [email protected]