Topic: Event
Tokyo City Cup Race Celebrates A Decade-Long Relationship Between Two Premier Horse Tracks
Santa Anita Park and Tokyo Ohi Race Track provide various Japanese cultural exhibitions to local community. Raffle drawing grand prize is a pair of airline tickets to Japan.
Santa Anita Park will host the annual Tokyo City Cup, in conjunction with Tokyo Ohi Race Track on Saturday, April 1. The annual spring event celebrates a 12-year-long partnership between two of the premier tracks followed with the presence of Soma Nomaoi samurai warriors, and a wide variety of cultural exhibitions and travel information on Japan.
The Tokyo City Cup has been upgraded to a Grade III since last year. The upgraded race, with their higher level of competition, appeals to even more horse race fans. In the 71-year history of Santa Anita Park, Tokyo City Cup is the sole graded stake race that has been named for a major city outside of the U.S. and no other prestigious race tracks have similar graded races. “We are very proud of our decade-long partnership with Ohi Race Track and looking forward to developing a new level of relationship,” said Ron Charles, Santa Anita Park President.
Every year, Tokyo Ohi Race Track also hosts ‘Santa Anita Trophy’, celebrating its friendship with having Santa Anita Park representatives. Santa Anita Park and Ohi Race Track have been actively developing their partnership in each side. “While we are celebrating our partnership through Tokyo City Cup race, all of the Santa Anita Park staff are pleased to present Japanese culture to the local communities because it provides wonderful cultural exchange opportunities,” Charles added.
On the Tokyo City Cup day, the Soma Nomaoi samurai warriors from Fukushima Prefecture, a National Important Intangible Folk-Custom Cultural Property, will participate to the event for the fifth consecutive year. Soma Nomaoi is a festival that recreates a battle scene from more than 1,000 years ago. Between the races, mounted samurai in traditional Japanese armor with ancestral flagstaffs streaming from their backs, will ride across the track.
The Japan Day, which was held along with Tokyo City Cup and provided various Japanese cultural exhibitions, has been renamed to Japan Family Day. The upgraded cultural exhibition will showcase more Japanese cultural exhibitions such as Sado (tea ceremony), Kado (flower arranging), Koto (Japanese harp), Shodo (calligraphy), Karate and Shin Kendo (Japanese martial arts) and Wadaiko (Japanese drums).
Also, as a new addition, Japan Travel Expo provides tourism information to the event attendees, introducing Japan as a more attractive travel destination. The event will feature two fabulous raffles - one for a pair of round trip tickets to Japan and the other for a trip to Las Vegas. Event attendees will receive one free admission ($5 worth) with the event advertising included coupon for the event. Free admission coupon will be also available at www.tokyocitycup.com. The web site provides more information about the specific event schedule.
Santa Anita Park is located in Arcadia, California, a residential community 14 miles northeast of downtown Los Angeles. Santa Anita Park opens each year on December 26, with daily racing continuing through late April, from Wednesday through Sunday. On the Tokyo City Cup day, gates open at 10:30 a.m. and post time for the first race is 12:30 p.m. Please visit at www.tokyocitycup.com for more information.
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The Soma Nomaoi samurai warriors from Fukushima Prefecture, a National Important Intangible Folk-Custom Cultural Property, will participate to the event for the fifth consecutive year.
Posted by culturalnews
at 09:37 PST
Japanese director Hirokazu Koreeda's touching film follows the empty lives of 12-year-old Akira (Yuya Yagira) and his three younger siblings (Ayu Kitaura, Hiei Kimura and Momoko Shimizu) after their mother abandons them in a tiny Tokyo apartment. Pragmatic, determined and wise beyond his years, Akira manages the household as best he can--but eventually the money runs out, and the children must find new ways to survive. The movie is based on a real 1988 event best known as the "Affair of the Four Abandoned Children of Nishi-Sugamo". “Nobody Knows” was Japan's entry to the Academy Awards’ Foreign Language Film in 2004. Fourteen-year-old Yuya Yagira, who plays as Akira, won the "Best Actor Award" at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival.
Cultural Exhibits: Kimekomi Dolls, Tea Ceremony, Fabric Dyeing, Sumi-e, Kimono Display, Bonai, Chigiri-e, Koi fish, Dharma School displays, Ikebana, Display of Sword, Japanese school displays, pictorial displays of Buddhists in Internment Camps, Books on Buddhism.
Hanford, Calif. -- The Ruth and Sherman Lee Institute for Japanese Art presents the new exhibition Modern Mode: Kimono for Japanese New Woman from Dec. 6 through Apr. 1, 2006.
The program of The Four Seasons of Japan: Through the Art of Nihon Buyo is following:
The program will showcase works from various prefectures in Japan. Dances that celebrate the joy of life (Aomori) the daily life of fishermen (Hokkaido and Kumamoto), farmers' prayers for rain (Ishikawa) and rice planting (Hiroshima). Dances from traditional Japanese festivals that celebrate a good harvest (Miyagi), festivities from a night festival (Saitama) and an ancient performing art piece of the Tohoku region of Iwate prefecture.
Ride or Die by Gajin Fujita. 2005. 83 x 126 in.
This will benefit the OAA Elevator Fund for senior citizens and disabled members and to celebrate Peru’s 100th Anniversary of Japanese Immigration. The Diamantes will go to Peru to participate in the 100th Anniversary Celebration after this concert in Los Angeles.