During a recent event at Kwai Chung Hospital's Patient Resource & Social Centre, an everyday activity room found itself transformed into a performance space, with an audience being treated to the delightful sound of Christmas songs.
Giving joy: Kwai Chung Hospital registered psychiatric nurse Yeung Ka-lok initiated the recent concert, with the aim of bringing everyone together for a special Christmas performance. Source from news.gov.hk
Lam Lai-ying, one of the performers and a peer support worker at the hospital, explained that the aim of the concert was not only to spread festive cheer, but to boost the confidence and outlook of hospitalised mental health 'persons-in-recovery', many of whom participated in the performance.
“Regardless of your mood, you can find healing through songs or music,” she said. “It creates a sense of connection with your peers. This highlights the many activities organised by the hospital to support recovery. We all share the same belief, which I believe is the core value of continuing these events.”
The concert was organised by a band, named "Music Buddy", that was formed by medical staff at the hospital. Yeung Ka-lok, the band's guitarist, initiated it, with the idea of everyone together for a special Christmas performance.
Healing process: Peer support worker Lam Lai-ying says music can help people to connect with others and that the concerts are designed to support patients’ recovery. Source from news.gov.hk
Musical therapy
“The key message of this concert is to give joy to the in-patient service users, that means persons-in-recovery,” Ka-lok explained. “As their daily life inside our hospital area was quite boring, we wished to give them some joy.”
Ka-lok has been working at Kwai Chung Hospital as a registered psychiatric nurse for 13 years. He is currently responsible for organising various activities for persons-in-recovery. The Christmas concert was the 11th event he had arranged for patients since March of last year, with concerts of different themes being held approximately every two months.
Team effort: Hospital staff and volunteers construct decorations, using balloons, to help create a festive atmosphere on the day of the concert. Source from news.gov.hk
Team effort
On the day of the performance, Ka-lok arrived at the centre early in the morning to prepare, transforming the activity room into a concert venue by arranging various musical instruments and testing out the sound system.
Prior to the event he invited hospital staff and volunteers to make large-scale decorations, using balloons, to help create a festive atmosphere.
Team members assisted in a variety of other ways, too.
“As our Patient Resource & Social Centre was not a place for musical performances, we do not have many musical instruments and live performance gear, such as amplifiers,” Ka-lok said. “Luckily, we have a lot of nice, kind colleagues and volunteers. Once they knew that we were going to conduct a mini-concert, they donated some of the gear to us, to the hospital.”
Debut performance: Hospitalised person-in-recovery Au Pak-hang (third right) says he wanted to convey a message that patients with mental health conditions can recover and perform in front of audiences. Source from news.gov.hk
Building confidence
While some of the in-patients involved had participated in previous concerts, for others this was their first time taking the stage. Au Pak-hang was one of those making his debut, and said he had been practising his song for a month and a half.
“Everyone should try something new in life,” he said. “I aimed to convey a message that patients with mental health conditions can recover and perform in front of audiences.”
Ka-lok added that he and his colleagues will continue to identify potential persons-in-recovery who would benefit from participating in the concerts, and will offer them guidance and training to prepare them for performing in front of an audience.
“We hope that their performance can inspire our persons-in-recovery, that it can cheer them up, helping them to regain the self-confidence which they lost due to their mental health disease.”
The long-awaited second season of “Squid Game” on Netflix and singing superstar Andrea Bocelli’s Christmas TV special are some of the new television, films and music headed to a device near you.
Also among the streaming offerings worth your time as selected by The Associated Press’ entertainment journalists: the British coming-of-age tale “Bird” from British filmmaker Andrea Arnold and Mariah Carey's Christmas special ahead of the Kansas City Chiefs and Pittsburgh Steelers game.
— British filmmaker Andrea Arnold (“Fish Tank”) made perhaps her most divisive movie yet with “Bird,” a coming-of-age tale about a 12-year-old named Bailey (Nykiya Adams) that come to MUBI on Monday. Her life in Kent is far from easy, growing up with parents who aren’t far from childhood themselves, including a tattoo covered dad named Bug (Barry Keoghan). But then one day she meets a stranger named Bird (Franz Rogowski) and things take a fantastical turn. In his review for the Associated Press, film writer Jake Coyle wrote that, “A resolutely realistic filmmaker turning to magical realism has the uncomfortable effect of making the whole movie, not just the Rogowski bits, feel inauthentic. Instead of being ‘too real for ya,’ ‘Bird,’ with its in-your-face poverty and narrative extremes, never feels particularly real at all.” MUBI also has Arnold’s “Fish Tank” and “Wasp” available for streaming too.
— AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr
— Nothing says “happy holidays” quite like tuning into a festive music special. On Christmas Eve, the Recording Academy and superstar Andrea Bocelli will team up for “Christmas with Andrea Bocelli and Friends: A Grammy Holiday Special,” airing live and on-demand on Paramount+ at 8 p.m. ET. Bocelli will be joined by his family, his wife Veronica and daughter Virginia Bocelli, as well as Jennifer Hudson, Dua Lipa, Sofia Carson and Josh Groban for a memorable night of merry performances.
— It’s hard to make the whole family happy on Christmas, especially when someone else controls the remote. But this Wednesday, there’s something for everyone with a Netflix subscription to enjoy: Mariah Carey will kick off the NFL Christmas Gameday with a pre-recorded performance of her smash “All I Want for Christmas Is You,” airing ahead of the Kansas City Chiefs and Pittsburgh Steelers game at 1 p.m. ET, and again at 4:30 p.m. ET, when the Baltimore Ravens take on the Houston Texans. Music fans would be wise to stay tuned in for the latter match-up: Beyoncé will take the stage at halftime. Who said sport fans and pop heads couldn’t get along?
— AP Music Writer Maria Sherman
—The long-awaited second season of “Squid Game” begins Thursday on Netflix. Lee Jung-jae returns to lead the seven-episode season, which is already nominated for best drama series at the 2025 Golden Globe Awards. The show follows a game where contestants who are down on their luck and in debt are recruited to compete for a cash prize, only to find out it has deadly consequences. Hwang Dong-hyuk, who created the series and wrote and directed season one, also wrote and directed season two. A third and final season has already completed filming.
— Alicia Rancilio
This image released by Mubi shows Barry Keoghan in a scene from "Bird." (Robbie Ryan/Mubi via AP)
This image released by Mubi shows Barry Keoghan in a scene from "Bird." (Robbie Ryan/Mubi via AP)
This image released by Mubi shows Nykiya Adams in a scene from "Bird." (Atsushi Nishijima/Mubi via AP)
This image released by Netflix shows Lee Jung-jae in a scene from "Squid Game." (No Ju-han/Netflix via AP)