Monday, April 29, 2024

Tragedy of ‘golden’ daughter’s fall resonates with Asian immigrant children - The Washington Post

Tragedy of ‘golden’ daughter’s fall resonates with Asian immigrant children - The Washington Post




Tragedy of ‘golden’ daughter’s fall resonates with Asian immigrant children


By Yanan Wang
July 27, 2015 at 5:57 a.m. EDT

Jennifer Pan, 28, fed her parents lies about her success and then hired hit men to ===
For a while, Jennifer Pan’s parents regarded her as their “golden” child.


The young Canadian woman, who lived in the city of Markham just north of Toronto, was a straight A student at a Catholic school who won scholarships and early acceptance to college. True to her father’s wishes, she graduated from the University of Toronto’s prestigious pharmacology program and went on to work at a blood-testing lab at SickKids hospital.




Pan’s accomplishments used to make her mother and father, Bich Ha and Huei Hann Pan, brim with pride. After all, they had arrived in Toronto as refugees from Vietnam, working as laborers for an auto parts manufacturer so their two kids could have the bright future that they couldn’t attain for themselves.



But in Pan’s case, that perfect fate was all an elaborate lie. She failed to graduate from high school, let alone the University of Toronto, as she had told her parents. Her trial, for plotting with hit men to kill her parents, ended in January, and she’s serving a long sentence. But the full story of this troubled young woman is just now being told as a complete and powerful narrative by someone who knew her — and indeed, it’s searing.





In a story published in Toronto Life magazine last week, reporter Karen Ho detailed the intricate web of deception that her high school classmate at Mary Ward Catholic Secondary School in north Scarborough spun to prevent her parents from discovering the unimaginable: that their golden child was, in fact, failing. Using court documents and interviews, Ho pieced together Pan’s descent from a precocious elementary schooler to a chronic liar who forged report cards, scholarship letters and university transcripts — all to preserve an image of perfection. The headline: “Jennifer Pan’s Revenge: the inside story of a golden child, the killers she hired, and the parents she wanted dead.”


[Harlem principal who committed suicide admitted she cheated on state exams, officials say]



[Maddy Middleton, 8-year-old girl missing in Santa Cruz, found dead in a dumpster]





Their high school, Ho wrote, “was the perfect community for a student like Jennifer. A social butterfly with an easy, high-pitched laugh, she mixed with guys, girls, Asians, Caucasians, jocks, nerds, people deep into the arts. Outside of school, Jennifer swam and practiced the martial art of wushu.” But Ho would “discover later that Jennifer’s friendly, confident persona was a façade, beneath which she was tormented by feelings of inadequacy, self-doubt and shame.”


Among the signs that few saw were cuts on her forearms, self-inflicted.


The real Jennifer never enrolled in university. She never graduated from high school.



“Jennifer’s parents assumed their daughter was an A student,” wrote Ho in the article. “In truth, she earned mostly Bs—respectable for most kids but unacceptable in her strict household. So Jennifer continued to doctor her report cards throughout high school. She received early acceptance” to Ryerson University in Toronto, “but then failed calculus in her final year and wasn’t able to graduate. The university withdrew its offer. Desperate to keep her parents from digging into her high school records, she lied and said she’d be starting at Ryerson in the fall. She said her plan was to do two years of science, then transfer over to U of T’s pharmacology program, which was her father’s hope. Hann was delighted and bought her a laptop. Jennifer collected used biology and physics textbooks and bought school supplies. In September, she pretended to attend frosh week. When it came to tuition, she doctored papers stating she was receiving an OSAP loan and convinced her dad she’d won a $3,000 scholarship. She would pack up her book bag and take public transit downtown. Her parents assumed she was headed to class. Instead, Jennifer would go to public libraries …..”





She pretended to be transferring to the University of Toronto and indeed, to be graduating from it, telling her parents when it came time for the graduation ceremony that there weren’t enough tickets to go around and they would not be able to attend.


Ultimately, Ho wrote, Pan’s parents finally got suspicious, began tailing her and learned the truth.



When she confessed her deceptions, life in the Pan household quickly began to unravel.


Bich and Hann had raised Jennifer and her brother, Felix, to believe in the supreme importance of academic success, and they restricted their activities to ensure nothing less. Pan, whose high school life included numerous extracurricular activities, like figure skating, piano, martial arts and swimming, in addition to long nights studying, was forbidden from attending parties of any kind. Dating was out of the question. In their Markham home, they had trophy cases displaying Pan’s many awards.





When Pan’s parents learned that all of their efforts had been for naught, they placed further restrictions on their now-adult daughter. No more cellphone. No more laptop. No more clandestine dates with her boyfriend, Daniel Wong.


While she eventually gained more freedom, Pan stayed angry. She thought about how much better her life would be without her parents. And so, with Daniel’s help, she plotted to kill the two people who had made her life like “house arrest.”

Pan’s parents, Huei Hann and Bich Ha Pan, arrived in Canada as political refugees from Vietnam. (Court exhibit)


The scene described in Toronto Life and earlier in the trial is gruesome. In a planned murder disguised to look like a robbery gone awry, Pan played the part of helpless witness as three hired hit men, David Mylvaganam, Lenford Crawford and allegedly Eric Carty, fatally shot her mother and severely wounded her father. She called 911, distraught, to bolster the illusion.






And the initial headlines supported it: “Markham’s Bich Ha Pan was gunned down inside her own home during what appears to have been a random home invasion,” reported the Markham Economist & Sun. “Markham killing shocks neighbours.” “Home invasion suspects ‘pose very real danger’; Markham police warn residents after woman killed in random attack,” said the Toronto Star.


But police officers investigating the case caught on within a couple weeks. This lie — that an immigrant couple was shot by random burglars and not through the will of their daughter — would have to be Pan’s last.


This January, an Ontario court found Pan and her three-co accused (Wong, Crawford and Mylvaganam) guilty of first-degree murder and attempted murder. They were all handed life sentences with no chance of parole for 25 years. Carty, who has pleaded not guilty, will be tried separately.






While Pan’s trial was heavily reported in the Toronto press, it turned out to represent only a fragment of a more complex and tangled story, told by Ho.


The Toronto Life piece, in part because it was reported and researched by a former classmate familiar with Pan’s life, offered an account of the complications leading up to her horrific deed. Since it was published last Wednesday, the article has been widely shared on Facebook, striking a powerful chord with Asian immigrant children in Canada and the U.S. who have taken to social media to share tales of childhoods characterized by high expectations and the crippling fear associated with not meeting them.


Pan’s case tells the story of Asian immigrants’ dreams turned to violent nightmare. The saga is fraught with many of the tensions that have pervaded discussions surrounding Asian immigrant communities in recent years, from the “model minority” myth to the debate over whether Asian parenting yields better results. As attention is drawn to the mental health issues among Asian Americans, it now also fuels questions about how much pressure is too much.






It’s a mistake to take one case and generalize or stereotype, noted Jennifer Lee, a sociology professor at the University of California Irvine who specializes in Asian American life in America. And she said, it would be a mistake to attribute Pan’s troubles to “tiger parenting.”


Pan’s story is an extreme case. “It’s so easy to blame immigrant parents,” said Lee, who co-authored the recently released book “The Asian American Achievement Paradox.” “The danger of highlighting cases like Jennifer’s is that they contribute to a misconception that all Asian American kids experience this extreme pressure and are mentally unstable.”

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But she said, “Jennifer’s parents certainly had a role in making her feel trapped, but I think there’s a broader discussion to be had about the expectations that teachers, peers and institutions place on people like Jennifer to fit that stereotype of the exceptional Asian American student.”






[Why Asian American kids excel. It’s not ‘Tiger Moms.’]


“Ultimately, it’s a horrible crime,” writer Ho said in an interview with The Washington Post. “But because so many people have gone through the experience of growing up like Jennifer, it’s not unfathomable to them that someone would just break.”


Ho said the expectations placed on many Asian American children “have a huge long-term impact on your ability to withstand failure.” She added, “You just grow up chronically afraid. This buildup of lies is because Jennifer felt like the alternative was just unfathomable.”


“The more I learned about Jennifer’s strict upbringing,” Ho wrote, “the more I could relate to her. I grew up with immigrant parents who also came to Canada from Asia (in their case Hong Kong) with almost nothing, and a father who demanded a lot from me. My dad expected me to be at the top of my class, especially in math and science, to always be obedient, and to be exemplary in every other way. He wanted a child who was like a trophy — something he could brag about.”


In the Reddit discussion of the story, one user, who created a new account in order to comment anonymously, writes: “…. This story did a number on me, because my life used to resemble hers. I come from an Asian family, with a lot of that immigrant parent mentality. I was an exceptional student in high school, getting scholarships for university and having my pick on which to attend. And then it went downhill from there.”


He also lived at home, pretending to have a respectable job: “[My parents] gave me everything, sacrificed so much for my success, and this was the result.” But unlike Pan, he adds, “I accepted those conditions from my parents to fix my life …. I don’t have any sympathy for Jennifer Pan because I feel like I was in her shoes. After her parents found out, her dad reacted similar to mine, so did her mom.”


But, he wrote, “I used the opportunity to get my life back, she used it to wreck hers.”


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By Yanan WangYanan Wang was a reporter on the Morning Mix team. She left The Washington Post in September 2016. Twitter

Saturday, April 27, 2024

The Paradise (TV series) - Wikipedia

The Paradise (TV series) - Wikipedia

The Paradise (TV series)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Paradise
series title over blue wallpaper effect
GenreDrama
Created byBill Gallagher
Based onAu Bonheur des Dames
by Emile Zola
Written by
Directed by
  • David Drury
  • Marc Jobst
  • Susan Tully
  • Bill Gallagher
  • Kenneth Glenaan
Starring
ComposerMaurizio Malagnini
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
No. of series2
No. of episodes16 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Susan Hogg
  • Bill Gallagher
  • Rebecca Eaton (for Masterpiece)
ProducerSimon Lewis
Cinematography
  • Alan Almond
  • Simon Richards
  • Peter Greenhalgh
Running time59 minutes
Production companies
Original release
NetworkBBC One
Release25 September 2012 –
8 December 2013
Emun Elliott as John Moray

The Paradise is a British television costume drama series co-produced by BBC Studios and Masterpiece.[1] The Paradise premiered in the United Kingdom on BBC One on 25 September 2012 and premiered in the United States on PBS on 6 October 2013.[2] The series is an adaptation of Émile Zola's 1883 novel Au Bonheur des Dames which relocates the story to North East England. (Zola's novel itself is a retelling of the story of Aristide Boucicaut, the Bellême-born founder of Le Bon Marché).[3]

A second series was commissioned by BBC One in late October 2012[4] and was broadcast on 20 October 2013 on BBC One.[5]

On 12 February 2014, the BBC confirmed that The Paradise would not return for a third series.[6] It cited that the programme had lower figures than other relatively new dramas such as Death in ParadiseSherlock and Silk. Furthermore, its ITV rival Mr Selfridge was performing better.

Plot[edit]

Series 1[edit]

Series 1 begins in 1875, and portrays the lives and loves of the people who work, shop and trade, in and around the first English department store.[7] The owner of The Paradise department store is widower John Moray. Moray was once a draper's boy in Emersons, the small shop that grew under his managership into The Paradise, which has come to dominate the high street to the detriment of small shopkeepers nearby.

Into this world comes Denise Lovett, from the small town of Peebles in Scotland, whose uncle Edmund is one of the shopkeepers struggling to survive. Denise takes a job at The Paradise and is soon seen by Moray as a rising star, to the annoyance of Miss Audrey, the head of ladies' fashion, and of Clara, a fellow shopgirl. Moray is financially dependent on Lord Glendenning, whose daughter Katherine is determined to marry Moray and sees Denise as a direct threat to her ambitions.

Series 2[edit]

Lord Glendenning has died and Katherine Glendenning has inherited The Paradise. She now has a husband, Tom Weston, and a young stepdaughter, Flora. Katherine asks Moray, who has been exiled to Paris, to return to revive the fortunes of The Paradise, and save it from being sold. Weston is determined to control his wife and The Paradise, overruling Moray to his own advantage. Moray's position at the Bon Marche is a reference to Octave Mouret's derision and constant competition with the same.

Production[edit]

The series was filmed at Lambton Castle, which was converted into an 1870s[8] bustling upmarket department store. Alongside, a Victorian street with shops and a tavern were constructed. Biddick Hall, also on the Lambton estate, was used as Lord Glendenning's house.[9]

Cast[edit]

Main cast[edit]

CharacterPortrayed byBased onSeasons
12
Denise LovettJoanna VanderhamDenise BauduMain
Edmund LovettPeter WightBauduMain
John MorayEmun ElliottOctave MouretMain
DudleyMatthew McNultyBourdoncleMain
Jonas FranksDavid HaymanJouveMain
Miss AudreySarah LancashireMadame Aurélie LhommeMainRecurring
ClaraSonya CassidyClara PrunaireMain
SamStephen WightHutin and DelocheMain
ArthurFinn Burridge/Main
The Hon. Katherine GlendenningElaine CassidyMadame DesforgesMain
Lord GlendenningPatrick MalahideBaron HartmannMain
PaulineRuby BentallPauline CugnotMain
Susy BellKatie Moore/Main
MyrtleLisa Millett/Main
Tom WestonBen Daniels/Main
Flora WestonEdie Whitehead/Main

Recurring and guest cast[edit]

Guest stars who played a major part in an episode were credited in the opening credits, amongst the main cast, for that specific episode. The following actors' names were included in the opening credits in at least one episode:

  • Olivia Hallinan as Jocelin Brookmire, a wealthy but unhappy friend of Katherine's
  • Mark Bonnar as Peter Adler, a wealthy philanthropist and suitor to Katherine
  • Arthur Darvill as Bradley Burroughs, a barber who is Moray's business partner for a short time
  • David Bamber as Charles Chisholm, a milliner with a shop across the street from The Paradise
  • Adrian Scarborough as Joseph Fenton, one of the Fenton brothers, wealthy businessmen intent on buying The Paradise
  • Kevin Guthrie as Nathaniel, one of the boys working in the loading bays at The Paradise, who is secretly employed by Mr Fenton
  • Branka Katic as Clémence Romanis, a free-thinking Parisian supplier and friend of Moray's
  • Julia Ford as Ruby Bell, Susy's estranged mother
  • John Duttine as Campbell Balentine, the wealthy owner of a successful beer brewery
  • Liz White as Lucille Balentine, a former nurse who has recently married Campbell
  • Nathan Stewart-Jarrett as Christian Cartwright, a renowned photographer

Episodes[edit]

Series 1 (2012)[edit]

#TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateUK viewers (million)[10]
1"Episode 1"Marc JobstBill Gallagher25 September 20126.61
Denise Lovett arrives in a northern English town to seek employment with her uncle in his draper's shop. His shop is failing under pressure from The Paradise, the first high-class department store in the town, and cannot afford to take her on. Undeterred, she seeks a position as a salesgirl at The Paradise and comes under the watchful eye of the head of ladies fashion, Miss Audrey, and her strict standards. She soon catches the eye of the widowed owner Moray, much to the chagrin of salesgirl Clara, who has slept with him, and Katherine Glendenning, daughter of Lord Glendenning, who expects to marry him.
2"Episode 2"David DruryBill Gallagher2 October 20125.79
Katherine Glendenning brings her friend Mrs. Brookmire to the store to cheer her up. Dazzled by the array of goods and the attention given to her by Sam at the draper's counter, Mrs. Brookmire buys so many items that Moray opens the first store account for her to settle the bill at a later date. After becoming ill in the store, Mrs Brookmire is helped by Sam. She invites him to the Glendennings' home, where she breaks down to reveal she has left her husband. She kisses Sam just as Lord Glendenning and Katherine walk in. Sam is accused of ungentlemanly behaviour and Moray is asked to dismiss him. With the reputation of The Paradise is at stake, Moray is intent on discovering the truth.
3"Episode 3"David DruryGaby Chiappe9 October 20125.70
Denise’s discovery of a baby in the Ladieswear department causes ripples throughout the store. Clara resents Denise's popularity, while Miss Audrey fears Denise's ambitions. Meanwhile, Arthur questions his own foundling status. Moray uses the baby to increase sales, while Katherine pursues Peter Adler, who runs a home for foundlings, in an attempt to make Moray jealous. Denise comes up with an idea for a children's department and uses Katherine as a go-between to tell Moray about her idea, which fails. Clara's secret is threatened when the foundlings take a field trip to the Paradise.
4"Episode 4"Sue TullyBill Gallagher16 October 20125.14
Miss Audrey develops a mysterious illness, causing her to lose her voice. Her absence creates a vacancy for a temporary Head of Ladieswear, and Moray appoints Denise as head because a potential client is expected to make a large order. A jealous Clara tries to sabotage the order while Katherine enjoys the effect Peter Adler is having on her life, but her behaviour worries her father. Clara tries to seduce Moray once again. Katherine, unable to forget Moray, ends her friendship with Adler. Moray assures Miss Audrey that she is appreciated at The Paradise.
5"Episode 5"Marc JobstBill Gallagher23 October 20125.82
Bradley Burroughs' barber shop is in the way of The Paradise's expansion, and Moray is forced to make Burroughs a junior partner to continue expanding. However, Burroughs causes consternation throughout the store so Jonas takes matters into his own hands. Denise's idea for a "Gentlemen's Afternoon" is stolen by Miss Audrey and becomes a disaster when misunderstood by the gentlemen's wives. Miss Glendenning deliberately provokes Moray by shopping with his rival shopkeepers, giving Denise's uncle false hopes for the survival of his failing business.
6"Episode 6"Sue TullyBill Gallagher30 October 20125.30
Exotic lovebirds arrive as a new attraction to be sold at the Paradise. Pauline is promoted to sell the birds, but accidentally releases one. Lord Glendenning offers Moray a bigger loan to buy the freehold of every shop in the street. Moray commits to an engagement with Katherine. Despite the warnings of Miss Audrey, Denise is unable to keep her true feelings from Moray any longer. On the announcement of the engagement, Denise leaves The Paradise to live with her uncle. Arthur fears that Jonas has done something to Burroughs, having seen them together.
7"Episode 7"Marc JobstKatie Baxendale6 November 20125.69
Katherine's wedding plans and her future plans for Moray and The Paradise threaten Jonas, whose presence upsets her, as does the picture of Moray's former wife. Denise's plan for a co-operative of the small traders in the neighbouring street has some initial success, causing reduced sales at The Paradise, but ultimately fails when the traders fall out, prompted by hatmaker Charles Chisholm. Lord Glendenning suggests that Moray and Katherine take an extended honeymoon in Europe following the wedding.
8"Episode 8"David DruryBill Gallagher13 November 20125.77
As the wedding approaches, Denise returns to The Paradise. Moray confesses his love for her, much to her delight. However, Lord Glendenning now owns the freeholds of The Paradise and all the surrounding shops, having changed his mind about loaning Moray the money to buy them, and insists that Moray's marriage to Katherine must take place. Katherine warns Denise that if she and Moray get together, Moray could lose The Paradise. Burroughs' body turns up in the river, and since Jonas is the main suspect, Dudley attempts to dismiss him. Just before his wedding, Moray searches The Paradise for Denise and the series ends with them kissing.

Series 2 (2013)[edit]

#TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateUK viewers (million)[10]
9"Episode 1"David DruryBill Gallagher20 October 20136.04
It is one year later. Lord Glendenning has died. Katherine has a new husband, Tom Weston, and a ten year old step daughter, Flora. Denise is still at the department store while the disgraced Moray is working in Paris. The Paradise, now owned by Katherine and her husband, may be sold unless its sales improve. Katherine recalls Moray to save The Paradise, although her husband and the staff, especially Denise, doubt her motives.
10"Episode 2"David DruryBill Gallagher27 October 20135.44
Miss Audrey's impending wedding to Edmund Lovett raises questions as to who will replace her. Moray's friend from Paris, the flirtatious Clemence, arrives in town as a fireworks supplier. Clemence causes controversy among the girls when she declares that women should be able to continue to work after marriage, causing Miss Audrey to doubt her wedding plans to Edmund. Tom Weston becomes fixated on Clemence, much to Katherine's jealousy. Denise is also jealous of Clemence, until she learns that Clemence is not interested in men. The banished Jonas arrives back in a cart, half-dead.
11"Episode 3"David DruryGaby Chiappe3 November 20135.50
Filling the now vacant Head of Ladieswear position proves to be complicated: Tom Weston favours Clara, but Katherine worries that he intends to make Clara his mistress, so she supports Denise. Denise is delighted to be under consideration, but Moray tries to discourage her from applying, afraid of Denise becoming a pawn in Katherine and Tom's games. Tom intends to send Flora away to boarding school, so Dudley takes Flora under his wing to educate her at The Paradise. The annual Paradise staff outing to the music hall is cancelled by Weston, but Jonas encourages Denise to organise an alternate event.
12"Episode 4"Kenny GlenaanBill Gallagher10 November 20135.50
Tom Weston's plans to expand The Paradise threaten to put Moray's hope of buying the store back beyond his financial reach. Moray reluctantly considers allying himself with Mr. Fenton, who suggests that Moray flirt with Katherine to make Tom jealous enough to sell the shop. A mysterious vagabond breaks into Edmund's shop and is revealed to be a figure from Susy's past. Distraught, Susy loses her temper at Flora and is dismissed. However, Denise tries to think of a way to get Susy's job back.
13"Episode 5"David DruryBill Gallagher17 November 20135.03
Weston is upset when Moray opens a department selling timepieces, taking the limelight from his new food hall. Moray schemes with Jonas and Fenton to further upset Weston by using Katherine's father's pocket watch as a centrepiece attraction, giving the impression that Katherine is still in love with Moray. Denise's democratic method of running the Ladieswear department attracts Weston's attention and he offers her the chance to show the other departments her ways, which upsets Moray. Meanwhile, Sam becomes obsessed with the watch and accidentally hypnotises Susy into falling in love with him.
14"Episode 6"Bill GallagherBill Gallagher24 November 20135.52
Katherine is terrified by her husband's cruel mind games and she confides in Moray about Tom's increasingly spiteful behaviour, unaware that Tom is spying on her. Wealthy newlyweds Lucille and elderly Campbell Ballentine become Paradise customers, and Lucille asks the Ladieswear department to teach her how to be a lady. Denise sees Ballentine as a potential backer for Moray and takes the initiative to convince him to invest in The Paradise. Moray's scheming with Fenton and Jonas causes emotions to run high and his flirtation with Katherine to go too far.
15"Episode 7"David DruryBen Harris1 December 20135.08
Weston hires photographer Christian Cartwright to take portraits of his family and The Paradise staff. Cartwright becomes interested in making Clara his muse, while Katherine tries to repair her fragile marriage to Tom. Moray and Denise's relationship is still strained even when he reveals he was only flirting with Katherine as part of his plan to regain control of The Paradise. Denise creates 'Paradise Postcards' with Cartwright for their customers, much to the annoyance of Moray. Weston reveals Moray's plotting to Katherine, and suggests she has a holiday abroad alone. The Paradise is chosen to bring a serialised ghost story to life, which brings Moray and Denise back together. Weston makes a proposal to Clara.
16"Episode 8"David DruryGaby Chiappe8 December 20135.07
A smartly dressed French debt collector dies in the store shortly after the arrival of Clemence, who is supplying Hazard dice and Parisian rouge, a product associated with prostitutes. Denise is challenged to sell the product to ladies, who find rouge too scandalous. Weston confronts Clemence and reveals that he knows the debt collector was looking for her. He has bought her debts and tries to blackmail her, as Katherine discovers she is pregnant and tries to fix her marriage with Tom. Denise, Jonas and Moray attempt to stop Weston. Denise and Moray reconcile, but he is reluctant to marry her since she would be forced to quit The Paradise. Denise decides to start her own business from her uncle's shop so that the two can be free to be together. The series ends with them kissing.