The Georgia Straight - Doxa's Big Leap - May 5, 2016

Page 1


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2 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016


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CONTENTS

Spanish Banks. Kerry Banks photo.

13

HEALTHY LIVING

The Power of Food author Adam Hart calls himself a “digestitarian�, which has led him to embrace plant-based proteins that are gentle on his gut and leave him with a whole lot more energy. > BY CHARLIE SMITH

THE LARGEST SELECTION OF THE NORTH FACE IN VANCOUVER

17

BOOKS

As VPL’s aboriginal storyteller, the optimistic Renae Morriseau helps deconstruct colonialism on the road to reconciliation.

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COQUITLAM

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TRAVEL

Tofino’s waves attract surfers, but it’s also hosting exceptional culinary events for those who aren’t interested in going underwater. > BY GAIL JOHNSON

23

COVER

High art meets lowbrow in Aim for the Roses, the daredevil opener to a typically wild array of films coming to this year’s DOXA Documentary Film Festival.

29

FOOD

Dietitians like Ann Marie Rideout have some great advice on how to prepare meals that won’t expand your waistline. > BY GAIL JOHNSON

31

START HERE 30 37 50 51 33 46 45 50 51 38

The Bottle Comedy Confessions I Saw You Music Real Estate Red Meat Savage Love Straight Stars Theatre

TIME OUT 39 Arts 44 Music

SERVICES

ARTS

Real-life, messy love is at the centre of two of the most exciting new plays to emerge at this year’s rEvolver Theatre Festival. > BY ANDRE A WARNER

47 Careers 21 Healthy Living 46 Real Estate

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Fast-rising Elliphant talks Bangkok reggae, ADHD, Skrillex, and all the amazing places that have influenced her Living Life Golden. > BY MIKE USINGER

47

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MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 7


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8 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016

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DOXA FEST

Drug horrors had Nazi links > BY GA IL JOHNSON

W

hen Jan Schulte-Hillen was born in Germany in 1961 with deformed, extremely short arms, he was met with horror. His mom’s doctor, in a voice devoid of emotion, advised her to have another child and get rid of him. No one in that delivery room knew that the newborn, with his big, bright eyes, was one of thousands of babies being born all over the world with severe deformities as a result of the worst drug disaster in history. To ease her morning sickness, his mom had taken thalidomide. Baby Schulte-Hillen was one of the lucky ones whose parents loved him fiercely from the get-go. Others were given up for adoption, sent to mental institutions, or, according to thalidomide researcher Martin Johnson, killed at the hands of the very doctors who delivered them. Schulte-Hillen shares his story in filmmaker John Zaritsky’s new documentary, No Limits: The Thalidomide Saga, the final film in his trilogy about the world’s “thalidomiders”. Their experiences are especially heartbreaking and enraging, given that signs of the drug’s effects were early and obvious; nine months after the first deformed baby was born, thalidomide was brought to market in Germany. Doctors in almost 50 countries went on to prescribe the pill to pregnant women for years, despite baby after baby being born with stunted, misshapen arms and legs or limbless altogether. But the tale gets much darker and more disturbing than that. No Limits, which has its world premiere at the 15th annual DOXA Documentary Film Festival, sheds shocking light on Grünenthal (formerly Chemie Grünenthal), the German pharmaceutical company behind the drug. Thalidomide, in fact, had its origins in Nazi Germany. According to the film, the drug’s inventor, Heinrich Mückter, was a doctor whose experiments were performed on prisoners in Nazi concentration camps. Chemist Otto Ambros, after spending four years in prison for Auschwitz forcedlabour atrocities, became chair of Grünenthal’s board of directors, hired by the company’s then owner, Hermann Wirtz, who was an influential member of the Nazi Party.

John Zaritsky’s documentary No Limits delves into the horrific history and ongoing injustice of people born deformed due to the drug thalidomide.

A team of Australian lawyers for thalidomide victim Lynette Row discovered the truth behind the drug by unearthing volumes of damning evidence about Grünenthal, documents that had been sealed and placed in archives for 40 years after criminal charges of manslaughter and premeditated bodily harm against its executives were dropped in the early 1970s. “I had no idea that all this terrible, terrible suffering and damage was all caused by Nazi war criminals who knew the drug was dangerous before they even put it on the market,” Zaritsky says in a phone interview. “I was blown away. And horrified.” Zaritsky—whose many other films include Do You Really Want to Know?, about families facing Huntington’s disease, and Leave Them Laughing, which followed singer and former Vancouverite Carla Zilbersmith after she was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)—first featured a group of young adults coping with thalidomide’s signature birth defects (deformed or missing limbs) in his 1989 film, Broken Promises. He revisited those individuals in 1999’s Extraordinary People, which centred on the reintroduction of thalidomide on the Canadian market to treat multiple myeloma and epilepsy. Aside from documenting thalidomide’s disturbing back story, No Limits features some of the same people from Zaritsky’s previous two films featuring the drug and its effects, completing

a kind of Seven Up!–style series on the drug’s disabled victims. With No Limits, he’s hoping that those victims will see some form of justice. Grünenthal is still owned by the Wirtz family, which is allegedly worth billions. “I really, really hope that Grünenthal will finally, finally do what they should have done 50 years ago and compensate adequately victims outside of Germany, none of whom have received a penny,” Zaritsky claims. “It’s staggering.” Grünenthal denied Zaritsky’s requests to be interviewed for the film. According to the website for Contergan, the brand name thalidomide was sold under in Germany, the Grünenthal Foundation provides financial assistance for thalidomide victims in acute emergency situations. The website states: “The Grünenthal Foundation supports individual thalidomide victims by assuming the costs for individual benefits in kind, focusing on mobility and adaptions in the living environment associated with the disability that are not paid for by social security funds (health insurance companies, social services department, etc.). Those people interested in this support must be recognized by the Thalidomide Foundation For Disabled People or an institution with similar criteria for recognition.” -

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No Limits screens as part of the DOXA Documentary Film Festival at the Vancity Theatre on Saturday (May 7). See page 23 for more DOXA coverage.

TIME FLIES

The Georgia Straight | Vancouver’s News and Entertainment Weekly | Volume 50 Number 2523

WHEN YOU’RE HAVING FUN!

1635 West Broadway, Vancouver, B.C. V6J 1W9 www.straight.com Phone: 604-730-7000 / Fax: 604-730-7010 / e-mail: gs.info@straight.com Display Advertising: 604-730-7020 / Fax: 604-730-7012 / e-mail: sales@straight.com Classifieds: 604-730-7060 / e-mail: classads@straight.com Subscriptions: 604-730-7000 Distribution: 604-730-7087 EDITOR + PUBLISHER Dan McLeod ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Yolanda Stepien GENERAL MANAGER Matt McLeod EDITOR Charlie Smith SECTION EDITORS

Janet Smith (Arts/Fashion) Mike Usinger (Music) Steve Newton (Time Out) Adrian Mack (Movies) Brian Lynch (Books) EDITORIAL ADMINISTRATOR Doug Sarti ASSOCIATE EDITORS

Gail Johnson, John Lucas, Alexander Varty STAFF WRITERS

Tammy Kwan, Lucy Lau, Travis Lupick, Carlito Pablo, Amanda Siebert, Craig Takeuchi SENIOR EDITOR Martin Dunphy EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Jennie Ramstad PROOFREADER Pat Ryffranck CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

Gregory Adams, Nathan Caddell, David Chau, Jack Christie, Jennifer Croll, Ken Eisner (Movies), George Fetherling, Tara Henley, Michael Hingston, Ng Weng Hoong, Alex Hudson, Kurtis Kolt,

Robin Laurence (Visual Arts), Mark Leiren-Young, John Lekich, Amy Lu, Bob Mackin, Michael Mann, Rose Marcus, Beth McArthur, Verne McDonald, Allan MacInnis, Guy MacPherson, Tony Montague, Kathleen Oliver, Ben Parfitt, Vivian Pencz, Bill Richardson, Gurpreet Singh, Colin Thomas (Theatre), Jacqueline Turner, Andrea Warner, Jessica Werb, Stephen Wong, Alan Woo ART DEPARTMENT MANAGER

Janet McDonald SENIOR DESIGNER David Ko CONTRIBUTING ARTISTS

Alfonso Arnold, Rebecca Blissett, Trevor Brady, Louise Christie, Emily Cooper, Randall Cosco, Krystian Guevara, Evaan Kheraj, Kris Krug, Tracey Kusiewicz, Kevin Langdale, Shayne Letain, Matt Mignanelli, Mark “Atomos” Pilon, Carlo Ricci, William Ting, Alex Waterhouse-Hayward DIGITAL PRODUCT MANAGER

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PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR Mike Correia PRODUCTION

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AD SERVICES ASSOCIATE

Lyndsey Krezanoski

AD SERVICES ASSISTANT Jon Cranny DIRECTOR OF ARTS, ADVERTISING & MARKETING

Laura Moore SALES MANAGER Sharon Smith (On Leave) ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES

Steve Barmash, Glenn Cohen, Laura Findlay Robyn Marsh, David Pearlman, Patrick Ruel, Dawn Searle, Kathy Skelton

PROMOTIONS + SPECIAL PROJECTS

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The Georgia Straight is published every Thursday by the Vancouver Free Press Publishing SUBMISSIONS The Straight accepts no responsibility for, and will not Corp. Copies are distributed free every week throughout Vancouver, Burnaby, North necessarily respond to, any submitted materials. All submissions should be and West Vancouver, New Westminster, and Richmond. International Standard Serial addressed to contact@straight.com. Number ISSN 0709-8995. Subscription rates in Canada $182.00/52 issues (includes GST), $92.00/26 issues (includes GST); United States $379.00/52 issues, $205.00/ 26 issues; foreign $715.00/52 issues, $365.00/26 issues. Contact 604-730-7087 if you wish to distribute free copies of the Georgia Straight at your place of business. Entire contents copyright © 2016 Vancouver Free Press, Best Of Vancouver, BOV And Golden Plates Are Trade-Marks Of Vancouver Free Press Publishing Corp.

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10 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016


FORUMS TAKE ACTION BENEFITS FASHION FOOD AND DRINK ET CETERA KIDS’ STUFF SPORTS ATTRACTIONS OUT OF TOWN

events/ timeout

< < < < < < < < < <

THE BIG BANG TO THE MULTIVERSE AND BEYOND Michael Turner discusses what we know and how we know it. Simulcast from Chicago’s Adler Planetarium as part of the Kavli Lecture Series. May 5, 5-7 pm, H.R. MacMillan Space Centre (1100 Chestnut). Tix $8-13, info www.spacecentre.ca/feature-series/.

FORUMS 2THIS WEEK UBC 2050: THE FUTURE OF HIGHER EDUCATION Panel discussion reviews the major changes that have occurred in the past 100 years, looks at breakthroughs and innovations poised to have significant influences on the future, and charts the near-term future of teaching and learning at UBC. May 5, 2-4 pm, Irving K. Barber Learning Centre (1961 East Mall, UBC). Free admission, info events.ctlt.ubc. ca/events/ubc-2050-the-future-of-highereducation-panel-discussion/.

CANADIAN WOMEN SHAPING DIASPORIC RELIGIOUS IDENTITIES Book launch and panel discussion with Becky Lee, Kate Power, and Tak-Ling Terry Woo. May 6, 7-9 pm, SFU Harbour Centre (515 W. Hastings). Info www.sfu.ca/ humanities-institute/public-events/publicevents/2016/women-identities.html. WILD SALMON, FOOD SOVEREIGNTY, AND CLIMATE CONNECTIONS Stó:lo¯ elder Eddie Gardner talks about salmon

as a food staple for indigenous people and what it means to the physical, spiritual, and cultural well-being of First Nations. May 7, 3-4:30 pm, Vancouver Public Library Britannia Branch (1661 Napier). Free admission, info www.vpl.ca/.

EARTHQUAKE PREPAREDNESS Learn how to prepare for any type of emergency or disaster you may be faced with at home or at work. To May 12, various VPL branches. Free admission, info www.vpl.ca/.

TAKE ACTION 2UPCOMING HIGHLIGHTS INTERNATIONAL DAY AGAINST HOMOPHOBIA AND TRANSPHOBIA BREAKFAST Stories and conversation about the experiences, complexity, and beauty of LGBTQ families. Emmy Award– winning news anchor Kevin Newman and his son Alex will share their story of struggle, connection, and forgiveness. May 13, doors 7 am, program starts 7:30 am, Fairmont Hotel Vancouver (900 W. Georgia). Tix $90 at www.eventbrite.ca/. RALLY FOR EDUCATION Students, parents, and community members rally in support of education as a fundamental human right. May 28, 1 pm, Vancouver Art Gallery (750 Hornby). Info www.bcstudentalliance.org/.

BENEFITS

FOOD AND DRINK

2THIS WEEK

2THIS WEEK

MOTHER’S DAY TEA Fundraiser featuring tea and treats, a nature walk, a kids’ table, and music by the New Generation Blue Note Jazz Quartet. Proceeds go to Mothers Helping Mothers. May 7, 3-5 pm, Corrigan Nature House (2645 Dollarton Hwy., North Van). Info www.whisca.org/.

SUNDAY PAELLA SERIES Executive chef Alex Chen conjures up the rustic flavours of Spain’s national dish with a string of events featuring paella as the centrepiece. To May 29, 6-9 pm, Boulevard Kitchen & Oyster Bar (845 Burrard). Tix $49, info www.eventbrite.ca/e/sunday-paellaseries-tickets-22668431890/.

on the web!

FASHION

CINCO DE MAYO EN LA CASA DE AMIGOS Wet Ape Productions and Buena Onda host a Mexican fiesta featuring traditional street food, drinks, and live entertainment. Event includes a street market, mariachi bands, salsa dancers, and luchador wrestlers. May 7, 4-10 pm, Robson Square Ice Rink (Robson and Howe). Tix $20, info www.casadeamigos.ca/.

2THIS WEEK

2UPCOMING HIGHLIGHTS

WALK FOR WATER FASHION SHOW BENEFIT Canadian and South Sudanese models walk the runway in the Obakki Foundation’s designer collections. Proceeds help bring clean water to Africa. May 10, 7:30 pm, Holt Renfrew (737 Dunsmuir Street). Info www.eventbrite. ca/e/obakki-x-holt-renfrew-walk-for-waterfashion-show-benefit-tickets-6922153347/.

VANCOUVER CRAFT BEER WEEK Annual celebration of craft beer showcases 100 breweries and cideries that will be pouring over 400 beers and ciders. Also includes food and music programs. Jun 3-5, PNE (Hastings and Renfrew). Tix $85/35/30, info www.van couvercraftbeerweek.com/.

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www.redcross.ca MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 11


Events time out

from previous page

It’s no accident we’re in the Top 2.

ET CETERA 2THIS WEEK DIVERSECITY YOUTH EDUCATION AND JOB FAIR Event connects employers and educators who are looking for skilled workers eager to gain the tools to join the Canadian work experience. May 4, 12-4 pm, Guildford Recreation Centre (15105 105th Ave., Surrey). Free admission, info www.eventbrite.ca/e/ diversecity-youth-education-and-job-fairtickets-23114454957/.

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WALK FOR WATER

FA S H I O N S H OW B E N E F I T Holt Renfrew x Obakki

Grace Bol

Tasha Tilberg

TIAN JIN FESTIVAL Highlights include family-friendly games, authentic Taiwanese food, interactive activity booths, and free health consultations with a chiropractor and Chinese-medicine doctor. May 7-8, 11 am–4 pm, Tian Jin Temple (3426 Smith Ave., Burnaby). Info www.tianjintemple.org/ tianjintemple/en/tian-jin-cultural-festival/. HERITAGE VANCOUVER 2016 TOP 10 ENDANGERED SITES BUS TOUR Heritage expert Donald Luxton leads a bus tour of Heritage Vancouver’s top 10 endangered sites. May 7, 1-5 pm, Museum of Vancouver (1100 Chestnut Street). Tix $40/30, info www.heritage vancouver.org/. VANCOUVER UNCOVERED The Vancouver International Burlesque Festival presents an evening of Vancouver burlesque talent. Headlined by Julie Atlas Muz and Mat Fraser. May 7, 8 pm, Vancouver Playhouse (600 Hamilton). Tix $65/45/35, info www.vibf.ca/.

2UPCOMING HIGHLIGHTS M AY 1 0 T H @ 7 : 3 0 P M H o l t R e n f r e w | Va n c o u v e r , B C

F E AT U R E D M O D E L S

Heather Marks

THE INTERNATIONAL CABARET The Vancouver International Burlesque Festival presents an evening of burlesque talent from around the world. Includes Julie Atlas Muz and Mat Fraser. May 6, 8 pm, Vancouver Playhouse (600 Hamilton). Tix $65/45/35, info www.vibf.ca/.

Ajak Deng

Janice Alida

Mari Agory

The fashion industry’s best models from South Sudan and Canada are coming together for an exciting night of fashion and philanthropy. 100% of all ticket proceeds go directly to the Obakki Foundation’s clean water projects. Featuring guest speakers Ger Duany and Mari Malek, with special musical performance by Emmanuel Jal. General Admission Tickets: $50 Doors at 7:30pm

Standard Tickets: $150 Doors at 7:30pm

VIP Tickets: $300 Private Reception at 6:30pm – 8:30pm

Fashion show (standing tickets), reception with drinks + catering by Hawksworth

Fashion show (seated tickets), aftershow photo opportunity with our special guests, reception with drinks + catering by Hawksworth

VIP front row seats, private reception (hosted by our special guests) with drinks + catering by Hawksworth, special presentation & exclusive gifts.

ECCW WRESTLING: BALLROOM BRAWL VI Elite Canadian Championship Wrestling presents wrestling matches featuring tables, ladders, and chairs. Jul 16, doors 7 pm, show 8 pm, Commodore Ballroom (868 Granville). Tix $30/25/20 (plus service charges and fees) at www.livenation.com/. HONDA CELEBRATION OF LIGHT 2016 Annual fireworks festival features performances by teams from Netherlands (July 23), Australia (July 27), and United States (July 30). Jul 23, 27, 30, English Bay (downtown Vancouver). Free admission, info www.hondacelebrationoflight.com/.

KIDS’ STUFF 2THIS WEEK PLAYLAND Annual family-friendly attraction features midway games, the Kids Playce, an arcade, a haunted mansion, and rides such as Atmosfear, Corkscrew, Hellevator, Music Express, and Wooden Roller Coaster. May 7–Sep 18, Playland (2901 E. Hastings). Info www.pne.ca/. AL SIMMONS: SYMPHONIC SHENANIGANS Gordon Gerrard conducts the VSO and children’s entertainer Al Simmons in a family-friendly show. May 8, 2 pm, Orpheum Theatre (601 Smithe). Info www.vancouversymphony.ca/.

SPORTS 2UPCOMING HIGHLIGHTS CANADA VS. EL SALVADOR Soccer teams from Canada and El Salvador compete in a FIFA World Cup qualifying match. Sep 6, BC Place Stadium (777 Pacific Boulevard). Tix at www.ticketmaster.ca/.

ATTRACTIONS DR. SUN YAT-SEN CLASSICAL CHINESE GARDEN The garden is an authentic representation of an age-old garden tradition that reached its peak in the Ming Dynasty. It is the first of its kind outside of China and is available for rental. Regular events include garden tours, cultural exchanges, and educational programs. Hours change seasonally; call or check website for times. 578 Carrall. Info 604-6623207, www.vancouverchinesegarden.com/. EDGEWATER CASINO Casino in the downtown core offers 24-hour gaming, over 60 table games, a poker room, a high-limit section, 500 slot machines, and live entertainment. 760 Pacific Blvd. S. Info 604-687-3343, www.edgewatercasino.ca/.

OUT OF TOWN 2UPCOMING HIGHLIGHTS TOFINO FOOD AND WINE FESTIVAL The 14th annual event celebrates the marriage of food and wine by showcasing local culinary talents and British Columbia wines. Jun 3-5, various Tofino venues. Info www.tofinofoodandwinefestival.com/.

TIME OUT EVENTS LISTINGS are a public service provided free of charge, based on available space and editorial discretion. We can’t guarantee inclusion, and we give priority to events taking place within one week of publication. Submit listings online using the event-submission form at straight.com/AddEvent. Events that don’t make it into the paper due to space constraints will appear on the website.

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Author and chef Adam Hart describes him-

BY CHARL IE SM IT H

self as a “digestitarian”. In a phone interview with the Georgia Straight, the Squamish-based nutritional researcher said he bases his diet around which foods are easiest on his gut. And he maintained that this has given him a tremendous boost in energy. “The first step is to think about what it means to become a digestitarian,” Hart advised. “You have to stabilize your blood sugar on a daily basis using natural, plant-based foods. The number one food that I’ve done that with is hemp seeds. I start off by adding in a tablespoon of hemp seeds at breakfast, lunch, and dinner.” Hart included several tips on how to incorporate hemp into different foods and beverages in his 2013 book, The Power of Food: 100 Essential Recipes for Abundant Health and Happiness. And he claimed that anyone who consumes hemp seeds three times a day over a seven-day period will likely notice a significant increase in energy level. That’s because hemp seeds are a complete source of protein, rich in essential amino and fatty acids. According to Hart, they’re also not nearly as heavy as meat, which is loaded with protein. “Excessive amounts of protein are hard to digest,” Hart said. “One, it creates acidity, but two, it also zaps your energy. All the energy in your digestive system is going to break that down.” He wasn’t always slim, and he didn’t always focus on his diet. Growing up in Toronto in the 1970s and ’80s, Hart ate foods filled with sugar. At the age of 13, he was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and was put on medication. He said that several years later, while attending university, he worked in a pizza restaurant where he had “unlimited access” to what was made in the kitchen.

healthy

Gut instinct boosts energy

Self-described “digestitarian” Adam Hart says that healing himself with natural foods gave him a passion for teaching others to do the same.

plant-based proteins. And he hasn’t entirely sworn off the foods he And as he discovered ate as a young man. Adam Hart touts the power of plant-based proteins “I follow the 80/20 model,” he said. “Eighty how he could heal with to combat depression and stabilize blood-sugar levels better food choices, he percent of my food comes from nice, clean plantdeveloped a passion for based sources. But I still go to the bar with my friends and I’ll have a beer. I’ll eat pizza.” “That was a time when my health started to take teaching others how to do this. a turn,” he recalled. “I was diagnosed as prediaIn 2003, Hart created his company, Power of betic and had high cholesterol. I was about 50 Food, and he moved to Squamish in 2005 to be Adam Hart is one of the speakers at Winspiration pounds overweight and had severe food allergies.” closer to Vancouver, where he could offer stress- Day Vancouver on Saturday (May 7) at the VanBy the time he was 25, he said, he was also management solutions to corporate clients. couver Orpheum Annex. suffering from depression and anxiety, for which he was given more medication. On his Winspiration comes to Vancouver website, Hart reveals that he spent sleepless nights crying in bed. His life finally began to Second World War buffs know that VE Day, aka Victory in Europe Day, is celebrated turn around when he discovered the joy of inon May 7 in Commonwealth countries. That’s because this is the day in 1945 when door rock-climbing in Toronto. Germany formally surrendered to Allied forces in Rheims, France. It came a week “I began to get addicted to the feeling it was givafter Adolf Hitler committed suicide in his Berlin bunker. ing me,” he said. “I realized many years later that it The end of the war inspired a grassroots group in Frankfurt, Germany, to launch a was my form of meditation. The only time that I was movement in 2003 to support health and wellness every May 7. Called “Winspiration Day”, it has spread to not in a depressed state was when I was climbing.” different cities. This year, it will be celebrated in Vancouver for the first time. Fearing that his corporate job in Toronto was That’s because the nonprofit Winspiration Association selected former Vancity executive Doris Orr as one of leading to occupational burnout, Hart moved its global hosts. In addition to Adam Hart (see above), the event at the Vancouver Orpheum Annex on Saturday to Golden, B.C., which has a reputation as an (May 7) will include a presentation by Lucila McElroy, cofounder of the Gratitude Graffiti Project and administraoutdoor-recreation mecca. He said he trained tive director of Kadampa Meditation Centre Vancouver. Dr. Divi Chandna, a family physician and mind-bodyto become a mountain guide but soon realized spirit-medicine coach, will also speak at Winspiration Vancouver. how poorly he had been eating. That’s when Hart “Our guest speakers for this inaugural event in Vancouver all share the commonality that healing and began making subtle additions to his diet. happiness is achievable by tapping into our own resources,” Orr said in an April news release announcing “I was learning how to stabilize my blood sugar the lineup. “They address some of the problems that are prevalent in society like depression, stress, anxfor the first time ever,” he said. iety, chronic pain and food allergies and offer solutions. My goal is that everyone attending will come away With some changes, he noticed that his energy inspired and with tools they can use for success and wellness in their lives.” level perked up. He didn’t eliminate cookies, pop, > CHARLIE SMITH and chocolate cake—he just gradually lost the cravings for these sugar bombs as he consumed more

2

ON THE TRAIL TO MOBILITY It’s no exaggeration to say

2 that there are few regions in

the world with better-looking hiking trails than beautiful British Columbia. But not everybody can enjoy the footpaths that cross our valleys, circle our lakes, and climb our mountains. Hiking is simply not an activity that’s easily accessible to people with a physical disability. That makes Inland Lake Provincial Park a rare find. “There is not a lot of places like this in North America,” said David Morris, executive director of the Powell River Model Community Project. “There’s a 13-kilometre The 13-kilometre trail around the Sunshine Coast’s Inland Lake was designed trail all around this lake, and it was to be fully accessible for people with mobility issues. Stephen Hui photo. constructed to be fully accessible for persons with mobility issues, designed for people with disabilities, they can cast a line in and that sort of and even specially built spots for fishing. stuff,” Morris continued. “It is a rarity.” including wheelchairs.” More than that, there are cabins and “If people want, they can stop, they Located a five-hour drive north bathrooms along the trail that were can go out to the end of the dock, and of downtown Vancouver (including

> BY TRAVIS LUPICK a ferry ride up the Sunshine Coast), Inland Lake is just the right distance away for a long weekend out of town. Morris noted the trail is popular with everybody, disabled or not. For example, the extra-wide paths and minimal hills make it perfect for a bicycle ride with young children. Rod Dalziel is the Sunshine Coast area supervisor for B.C. Parks. He told the Georgia Straight Inland Lake was first made universally accessible back in the 1980s. Since then, he continued, there have been several rounds of maintenance and improvements. He explained that it’s a combination of nature and an attention to detail that makes Inland Lake accessible for all. First, there is the path’s location, which is free of any hills. And park staff put extra effort into trail maintenance, keeping the dirt packed tight, for example.

Finally, artificial features such as boardwalks and bridges were built extra wide to accommodate mobility aids. Given that there are relatively few provincial parks like it, Dalziel recommended that anybody hoping to use one of the cabins outfitted for disabled people contact the park’s operator, Unlimited Trails, well in advance of their trip. “With a large 13-kilometre trail and cabins and everything like this, I think it’s relatively unique,” he said. Although Inland Lake is one of the province’s best outdoor options for people with disabilities, there are alternatives. B.C. Parks supplied a list of favourite provincial parks, including Alice Lake near Squamish, Bear Creek in the Okanagan, and Goldstream and Rathtrevor Beach, both located on Vancouver Island. -

MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 13


HEALTHY LIVING

MOTHER’S DAY

The VanDusen Botanical Garden will offer everything from an outdoor pop-up café to a jazz band and a photo booth at Heron Lake (above) for Mother’s Day.

What could be healthier than a stroll with Mom through Vancouver’s

2 largest and most spectacular horticultural display? The 22-hectare

VanDusen Botanical Garden (5251 Oak Street) will be open on Sunday (May 8) from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., providing plenty of time to make your way through the Elizabethan Maze, check out the Stone Garden, view wood sculptures, and marvel at the multitude of plants and flowers. Starting at 11 a.m., there will be a harpist in the plaza to keep Mom entertained, as well as a jazz band and photo booth at Heron Lake. Truffles will operate an outdoor pop-up café from noon to 5 p.m. And Shaughnessy Restaurant will be serving Mother’s Day brunch from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and a Mother’s Day dinner in the evening.

FEEL-GOOD FASHION Who says fashion can’t do good? This Tuesday (May 10), Vancouver-

2 based label Obakki is partnering with Holt Renfrew (737 Dunsmuir

TOMORROW’S

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Street) to host its largest designer fundraiser to date: the Walk for Water fashion show. The event will feature top models from Canada, including superstar show-opener Heather Marks, as well as those from South Sudan—many of whom have rebuilt their lives after leaving their war-torn home country. Rocking the latest styles from Obakki and Holt Renfrew, the models will be joined by Sudanese DJ and activist Mari Malek, musician Emmanual Jal, and UN refugee goodwill ambassador Ger Duany as they help the Obakki Foundation construct clean water wells in South Sudan. “A lot of these Sudanese girls are really carrying their own tragic story of living in or fleeing from their own country,” says Obakki founder and creative director Treana Peake by phone, “so the idea that they’re walking in the show in order to bring their own people clean water is pretty symbolic.” One hundred percent of ticket sales, which start at $50 and include access to wine, bubbly, and canapés, plus 10 percent of Holt Renfrew sales following the event, will benefit the Obakki Foundation. For more information about the show or to purchase tickets, visit www. walkforwaterbenefit.eventbrite.ca/.

them to a digital-learning camp this summer. Langara College is offering its Introduction to Digital Music Production over a two-week period from July 4 to 8 and from July 11 to 15. It’s open to anyone between the ages of 13 and 18, and students will learn about sequencing, recording, keyboard skills for composing and arranging, music theory, and music software. Anyone who enrolls is urged to bring their own headphones. For more information, contact Eleanor Clarke at eclarke@langara.bc.ca. The UBC website also has a long list of Geering Up camps, which are designed to make science, technology, and engineering exciting for kids. For details, visit www.geeringup. apsc.ubc.ca/. And the Vancouver-based Centre for Digital Media is reviving its popular summer program, Tomorrow’s Master of Digital Media, for students from grades 9 to 12. It began in 2008 in partnership with Electronic Arts as a monthlong summer boot camp. This year, it’s being offered from August 8 to 26. For more information, visit thecdm.ca/.

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MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 15


HEALTHY LIVING

B.C. inventor aspires to erase disability stigma

Princess Louisa Inlet Special

> B Y C HARLIE SMITH

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rowing up in the Netherlands, Barbara Alink recognized at a very young age that people are uncomfortable talking about death and injuries. But the Richmond inventor also learned an important lesson from her grandmother: “If you ever face a problem, turn it around and you just might find a solution.” Those two notions have come together in Alink’s radically chic mobility aid, the Alinker, which she designed to transform the lives of people with disabilities. “It moves with your feet,” Alink told the Straight by phone. “While you sit in the saddle, you walk. You take away all the pressure on your lower limbs. And you’re upright, you’re at eye level.” At the April 23 TEDxEastVan conference, Alink told the audience that four years ago, she and her mother walked by some elderly people on low-rise scooters. “My mom is quite a character, and she has got a way of being quite forthright,” Alink recalled. “Out of the blue, she said, ‘Over my dead body I’ll ever use one of those.’ ” Alink said that when she asked why, her mother paused before saying: “Well, actually, I’m really scared to be disabled and to be looked upon as I look upon them.” This incident helped Alink gain insight into how mobility aids can emphasize a person’s disability. She concluded that this might make some refuse to use them, leaving them more vulnerable to falls and other accidents. So Alink set out to create a device that would promote active living and be stylish enough for her mother and others to want to ride it. “It would be so cool that the user would feel proud and happy,” Alink said. “And, ultimately, it needed to be so cool that it would

Cindy Brooks and Barbara Alink are marketing a stylish mobility aid.

overcome [people’s] discomfort with other people with a disability.” A year ago, she and her partner, Cindy Brooks, launched the product in the Netherlands, and they’re getting ready to market it in Canada. On May 18 Alink will be in Toronto to film a segment for CBC TV’s Dragons’ Den. The Alinker is already for sale on www.alinker.com/ for US$1,977, which works out to about CDN$2,500. Barbara Alink will speak at Propelling Social Ventures: Lessons on Empowered Entrepreneurship, which takes place from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Monday (May 9) at the UBC Robson Square Theatre. A longer version of this story is available at Straight.com.

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HEALTHY LIVING

Morriseau shares First Nations narratives > BY A M A NDA SIEBE R T

R

enae Morriseau, recently named the Vancouver Public Library’s 2016 aboriginal storyteller in residence, is ready to share the diverse cultural realities of Canada’s First Nations with anyone who is ready to listen. Originally from Winnipeg, and of Cree and Saulteaux descent, Morriseau calls herself a “settler on Coast Salish shores”, having made Vancouver her home 30 years ago. She is the program’s seventh storyteller. Created in 2009 as a way for the VPL to honour aboriginal culture through the art of storytelling, it is the first public-library program of its kind in B.C. and the second in Canada to focus on promoting intercultural understanding among indigenous and nonindigenous people. For Morriseau—already a storyteller of sorts throughout her career as an actor, writer, film producer, director, and musician—the role offers her both an opportunity to share with Vancouverites the cultural teachings of Canada’s First Nations and an important platform to discuss the role of all Canadians in what she calls the necessary decolonization and reconciliation facing our country. “In regards to this sort of new energy of Canada in response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, I think the ability to talk narratives in a variety of platforms is where we’re going,” Morriseau said during an interview with the Georgia Straight at the VPL’s Georgia Street central branch. In addition to speaking one-on-one with anyone who has questions about aboriginal culture (bookable by appointment through the VPL’s website), Morriseau will be hosting a series of talks at the central branch through May and June. She is also interested in creating an online platform where narratives can be discussed in further detail.

Renae Morriseau is the Vancouver Public Library’s 2016 aboriginal storyteller in residence. Amanda Siebert photo.

“My hope is that—through the type of dialogues that I have with individuals and the work that I’ve done in theatre, film, TV, and song—that we can change our relationship with the world in regards to our history of disassociation with the land and the waters by reintroducing indigenous perspectives.” Morriseau’s story began on Treaty 1 territory in the north end of Winnipeg, where she lived with her family alongside communities of descendants of Ukrainian and Polish settlers. Although she grew up learning the protocols of ceremony and the traditional teachings of her Cree and Saulteaux heritage, her family still felt the effects of Canada’s unfair treatment of First Nations people. They lived below the poverty line and collected welfare.

“My family chose not to move up to where they forced us to live, so even though I’m status Indian, I’ve never lived on a reserve and I never went to residential school—but I was a product of a system that didn’t recognize who I was,” Morriseau said of her past. “It’s an interesting part of our Canadian history that a lot of people don’t understand: that response to not being from a Eurocentric ideology.” That response—the 1876 federal statute known as the Indian Act that, essentially, aimed to eradicate aboriginal culture through involuntary assimilation—eventually brought with it residential schools that, ultimately, displaced more than 150,000 children. It wasn’t until Morriseau heard Phil Fontaine speak in 1990 that she understood the full extent of residential schools

and the effects they had on Canada’s indigenous families and communities. At the time, Fontaine was Manitoba’s vice chief for the Assembly of First Nations. It was the first time Fontaine had spoken publicly about his personal experience at the Fort Alexander Indian Residential School. “He was sexually assaulted. He was physically assaulted. This was my first inclination of what residential schools were really about, and, ironically, that informed much of my work,” Morriseau reflected. Fontaine, who was later elected National Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, was credited by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission for bringing residential schools into the public eye. Despite the horrendous treatment of Canada’s aboriginal population by

past governments, Morriseau’s attitude toward reconciliation is refreshingly positive. “I think we’re at a really cool place right now,” Morriseau said, smiling. “I’m optimistic. We can only take small steps, but if I can affect you, say, by helping you understand what ‘unceded territory’ means, I did my job. That, to me, is part of the decolonization process.” According to Morriseau, Anishinabe comedian Ryan McMahon says a decolonization has to happen before a reconciliation. This resonates with her. “I believe that, as artists, we are sort of doing that in deconstructing the knowledge that we’ve grown up in,” Morriseau said. Among the topics she seeks to deconstruct is that of Canada’s missing and murdered indigenous women, as well as the historic relationship between Chinese Canadians and First Nations and the issues of Coast Salish languages facing extinction. At the top of her list, though, Morriseau said, is sharing the important values and world-views regarding a pillar of First Nations culture: their relationship to land and water. “If people are open to understanding that there is an alternative history of the way we look at land and water, at Kikâwînaw Askiy, or Mother Earth, then instead of seeing it as a resource to be exploited, we would see that the ideas of our community constructs are so beautiful, are so inclusive, because there’s no separation between what’s alive in our worldview,” Morriseau said. “These expressions are things that I think all Canadians are a part of.” Renae Morriseau’s next event at the VPL, Conversations With Renae: Storytelling Traditions in Music, is next Thursday (May 12) at 2 p.m. For more info, visit www.vpl.ca/programs/.

ThIs moTher’S day,

TrEat moM with a viSIt to the gaRdEn! SUNDAY, MAY 8, 2016 Event Hours 11am - 5pm Bring your mom for a walk through 55 acres of trails, lakes and flowers at the beautiful VanDusen Botanical Garden. Enjoy live jazz music and a photo booth at Heron Lake. Bring a picnic lunch, visit a special outdoor pop-up café by Truffles or dine at Shaughnessy Restaurant.

For more details visit vandusengarden.org

Regular garden admission applies

MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 17


HEALTHY LIVING

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here’s farm-to-table cuisine, and then there’s boatto-table. The latter takes the spotlight at the annual sustainable-seafood festival known as Feast Tofino. Tuff City is gaining a reputation for its culinary offerings as much as for its sand and surf. Local chefs join forces with kitchen talents from throughout North America for the food fest, which runs May 6 to 22. Among the Tofino chefs taking part are Wolf in the Fog’s Nick Nutting, SoBo’s Lisa Ahier, Long Beach Lodge’s Ian Riddick, Shelter’s Matty Kane, and Warren Bar from the Pointe Restaurant at the Wickaninnish Inn. Chefs heading to breathtakingly beautiful Clayoquot Sound for the event, meanwhile, include Lora Kirk, who

TOFINO FOOD AND WINE FESTIVAL

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WinspirationDayVancouver.com 18 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016

works with celebrity chef Lynn Crawford at Toronto’s Ruby Watchco; New York City’s Amanda Cohen, from the “vegetable restaurant” Dirt Candy; and Anita Lo of Annisa, which is also in New York. Representing Vancouver are John Crook and Erik Heck, the duo behind Yaletown’s WildTale and the Flying Pig, which now has three locations; and Hiroshi and Miju Kawai, husbandand-wife industry vets who ran Kokoro Japanese Restaurant in North Vancouver and Hiroshi’s Sushi Creations on Oak Street before opening the adorable Basho café on East Hastings Street in 2014. Highlights include the Tofino Dock Festival (May 14), Dim Sum & Dumpling Night (May 15), and a Chefs’ Tapas Party at the Tofino Botanical Gardens (May 19). More details are at www.feasttofino.com/.

The Tofino Food and Wine Festival offers many culinary and drink events in a gorgeous setting. Rebecca Wellman photo.

The signature event of this annual extravaganza, Grazing in the Gardens, is already sold-out, and no wonder: imagine multiple B.C. wineries and breweries along with Tofino restaurants, offering samples throughout the winding paths of the beautiful Tofino Botanical Gardens. However, there are plenty of other fest happenings that will make the trek to the ocean village during the June 3 to 5 weekend worthwhile. The 14th annual festival kicks off with the Cocktail Show (June 3), featuring local mixologists offering up their finest creations with food pairings. Look for wine, spirit, and craft-beer tastings too at the party, which takes place at the Schooner Restaurant. With stunning ocean and mountain views, the same venue hosts a sunset barbecue the next night. And if you’re disappointed about not being able to attend the bucolic Grazing event on June 4, take heart: you can still visit the Tofino Botanical Gardens the day before or after. Here, you’ll find 12 acres of flower, herb, and kitchen gardens; a serene duck pond; picturesque shoreline; and a forest full of pocket gardens and art installations, all connected by a network of paths and boardwalks. There’s a café and gift shop, too. Of course, you could also spend your time strolling along the area’s miles of sandy beaches or going kayaking, standup paddleboarding, or whale-watching. Check out tofinofoodandwinefestival.com/ for more info.

PACIFIC GODDESS RETREAT Surfing, standup-paddleboarding yogis unite: this allinclusive getaway is about getting closer to nature through ocean sports and the ancient practice of yoga. Presented by Nadia Bonenfant, the founder of Juna Yoga, and Tofino Yoga’s Dede Monette, the five-day retreat (from May 27 to June 1) includes two surf lessons by Surf Sisters Surf School, a standup-paddleboard excursion, interpretive walks through the temperate coastal rainforest, meditation, and yoga sessions—including some that take place on the beach and atop standup paddleboards. West Coast meals and snacks are provided, and there’s plenty of time for reading, relaxing, and doing nothing. Leaders will help participants tap into the links between yoga and surfing, with the ocean being the main teacher. Tofino couldn’t be a more perfect place for yoga, with its endess surrounding beauty, and it has become a paradise for surfers because of the size of those Pacific Ocean swells. If you need any convincing on the latter, Outside magazine named Tofino the best surf town in North America a few years ago. For more information on the package ($1,850, including accommodation), go to www.tofinoyoga.com/. -

A five-day Tofino retreat includes paddelboard yoga, led by Tofino Yoga’s Dede Monette. Anne-Marie Laplante photo.


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MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 19


HEALTHY LIVING

At Dharma Movement Company, Shannon Cluff (standing, centre) and her fellow instructors aim to “get out of the yoga box”. Amanda Siebert photo.

Yoga studio reaches for the unfamiliar In any of Dharma Movement Company’s classes, expect to go far beyond downward-facing dog > B Y A M A N DA SIEBER T

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This free lecture is for individuals with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and their support circles, as well as health care professionals to learn more about IBS, with a special focus on diet, including Low-FODMAPs. The Gastrointestinal Society is committed to improving the lives of individuals with GI and liver conditions by supporting research, advocating for appropriate patient access to health care, and promoting gastrointestinal and liver health. Date:

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hen Shannon Cluff talks about movement, her eyes sparkle. As yogis like to say, there’s a light within her—one that no one who enters Dharma Movement Company (DMC) is immune to absorbing. That contagious energy exhibited by Cluff and her kindhearted crew of yogis seems to ignite a mind-body consciousness in practitioners that separates DMC from the average cookie-cutter yoga studio. The word experienced is an understatement in Cluff’s case: she’s been teaching yoga to students and instructors alike in Vancouver for almost 15 years. Before diving headfirst into yoga, Cluff trained as a dancer. As the manager of the enlivened Yaletown space—the reinvigoration of what was formerly known as Exhale Studio—Cluff, along with her tightknit team of instructors, has thrown out the rule book and created a place for practitioners to “move all ways” by injecting a series of movement modalities into their classes that strict yogis might dub too experimental. Cluff, however, says it’s a “space for people to feel mechanically what their bodies can do” through intuitive movement that encourages not a step but a leap out of one’s comfort zone. A quick glance at DMC’s schedule will reveal that yoga is just one part of what is offered. Although familiar names like hatha, yin, and vinyasa appear, some are more idiosyncratic: Cirque Fit utilizes dynamic movement and conditioning to build stamina and active flexibility (hello, splits!), while Primal Flow combines yoga and a series of animalistic movement sequences that will have you crawling through the studio on all fours. Cluff’s Freeform Hatha class begins in a place that, she says, often perturbs DMC virgins: off the mat. “That, for some people, is like: ‘What? I have to leave my life raft?’ ” Cluff says with a chuckle. “It helps that our teachers are fusing the movement styles in classes, so it’s easy to pull people through that uncomfortable feeling.” Pointing across the circle of instructors who have joined the interview, she tells me that their programming is partly inspired by Slava Goloubov, an instructor at DMC whose commitment

to variety has helped Cluff, other instructors, and DMC’s regulars “get out of the yoga box”. “Before I started yoga, I was in construction. I did nothing prior to it, no dance, no martial arts—I just dove into this thing,” Goloubov says. It started with yoga. Then Goloubov took up acrobatics, circus training, capoeira, and kung fu. He says opening his mind to other disciplines has made him not only a better student, but a better teacher. “You see things that are good about the practice, but then you see the things that are missing as well, so you try to infuse the things that are lacking,” he says. He says a student of his who has practised yoga for five years was unable to flatten her palms to the ground in certain postures. “After two of my Movement Lab classes, where we do a lot of kicking, conditioning, and martial arts, she was able to go flat with her hands to the floor, where she was always on her fingertips before,” Goloubov says. Other instructors at DMC agree with Goloubov’s sentiments: the injection of difference, of unfamiliar movement and diversity, has helped remove an element of rigidity in their practices, opening them up to new experiences and closer connections, both in the studio and out. Erika Valliere, a hatha/TNTconditioning-class instructor, says DMC’s message is as much about community as it is about cultivating a healthy lifestyle: “At the end of the day, it’s not a competition. We’re all here to make people’s bodies healthier, to make them have a better relationship to movement, and to nurture this idea of community support.” “This,” Cluff says as she opens her hands to the floor, “should make us more friendly. We do this to get better at that, at the outside world. We get in our body, we get out pain, we get out of our heads, and we go out there with the intention of creating change.” In addition to regular classes, Dharma Movement Company hosts a variety of workshops. On May 14 and 15, Lucie-Honey Ray will present her Sensual Diva movement workshop, and on May 28, Morgan Lee Snow will host the Family Yoga Playshop (ages 2 and up).


HEALTHY LIVING

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Sea to Sky Highway before the 2010 Winter Games. CLOUD NINE IS A FERRY RIDE AWAY Long-time residents of B.C.

have known for years that the Southern Gulf Islands are one of the underrated jewels of our province. But this year, the secret is getting out to the rest of the world. That’s because the New York Times recommended this piece of paradise as one of its 52 destinations to visit in 2016. Part of the reason is the near-Mediterranean climate. Visiting the vineyards and farms on Salt Spring Island can feel like a trip to Tuscany. But even Tuscany can’t match the spectacular marine birds and mammals, including orcas, that make the waters around the Southern Gulf Islands their home. Toss in the hiking on Galiano Island (which includes a glorious view of Active Pass) and the mountain biking on Hornby Island and you’ve got all the ingredients for a perfect getway. Best of all, you don’t have to trade $1.46 for a euro to enjoy this glorious escape from the rat race. -

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offers over 50 volunteer-led support groups throughout BC. These provide people with Parkinson's, their carepartners & families an opportunity to meet in a friendly, supportive setting with others who are experiencing similar difficulties. Some groups may offer exercise support. For information on locating a support group near you, please contact PSBC at 604 662 3240 or toll free 1 800 668 3330. Fertility Support Group Discover new perspectives make positive changes and learn simple tools to take charge of your reproductive wellness while connecting with other women. The meetings provide a space for open discussion. 2nd Tuesday of each month 7:45 - 8:45pm (Sign up required) Reg & Info call: 604-266-6470 or www.familypassages.ca IBD Support Group Suffer from Crohn's and ulcerative colitis? Living with IBD can often be overwhelming, but you're not alone! 3rd Wed of each month the GI Society holds a free IBD support group meeting for patients & their families to come together in an open, friendly environment. 7:00pm at RavenSong Community Health Centre (2450 Ontario St). or more information call 604-875-4875. Drug & Alcohol Problems? Free advanced information and help on how quit drinking & using drugs. For more information call Barry Bjornson @ 604-836-7568 or email me @livinghumility@live.com Concerns of Growing Old? If you are 60 plus and find yourself alone, let's talk and support each other 604-682-3269 ext 7101

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DOXA FEST

Three men and a bow: Aim for the Roses filmmaker John Bolton (left) and composer/double bassist Mark Haney (far right) flank daredevil Ken Carter (played by Vancouver’s Andrew McNee). Trevor Brady photo.

Film festival ramps it up

who went to that show got a free CD—and I was still using CDs back then. At first I was just kind of overwhelmed by it. It was an overwhelming sensory experience, because the planetarium show had visuals and everything. The more I listened to it, Inspired Aim for the Roses fires a rocket-powered Lincoln the more interested I was Continental through the DOXA Documentary Film Festival in it. I have a background in making classical-music At its heart, John Bolton’s Aim for the Roses is performance pieces, and I felt like this was a piece the story of two men and their obsessions. Those of music that I could bring to life. I really had no obsessions couldn’t be more different, but the idea what I was getting into.” BY JOHN LUCAS force that drives them—that damn-the-torpedoes Right. Let’s rewind and amend that openambition that keeps the most irrational of dreams ing sentence: Aim for the Roses, which opens alive—unites the documentary’s subjects. this year’s DOXA Documentary Film Festival In 1976, Canadian daredevil Ken Carter (think on Thursday (May 5), is in fact the story of three of him as a hoser Evel Knievel) announced that men and their obsessions. As the scope of Bolton’s he intended to pilot a rocket-powered Lincoln project grew—from a staging of musical performContinental off of a ramp and over the St. Law- ances to a full-on documentary, complete with rence Seaway, landing some 1,200 metres away on interviews, fully realized set pieces, and seamless the American side, on a bed of rosebushes. This callbacks to The Devil at Your Heels—so did the frankly outlandish project consumed five years of challenge of actually finishing the damn thing. the so-called Mad Canadian’s life and was subse“The film just kept getting bigger, and it did quently documented in Robert Fortier’s award- get way behind schedule, and it did go way over winning 1981 National Film Board production, budget,” the filmmaker notes. “There were lots of The Devil at Your Heels. times when I wasn’t sure if I’d ever finish it. At It was Fortier’s film that inspired Mark Haney the end of it, I’d spent about as much time on the to retell Carter’s story in his own way—through film as Mark did on his album and Ken did on his music. The Vancouver composer and double bass- stunt, but I was making a film about them, so I was ist’s 2010 album, also titled Aim for the Roses, is a inspired by both of them all the way through. And masterpiece of absurdity and beauty, perhaps best I was inspired by the music all the way through.” described by the Straight’s own Adrian Mack (who appears in Bolton’s film), who called it “utterly A QUIRKY FILM about a composer and a dareamazing and completely fucking ridiculous”. With devil seems like an odd fit for DOXA’s spotlight musical structures based on the mathematical program Borders and Boundaries, in which most constant pi and arrangements incorporating doz- of the selections focus on such heavy themes as ens of layers of droning bass timbres, Aim for the the Syrian refugee crisis and the struggles of miRoses turned out to be an epic undertaking. Work- grant workers. There is an actual border in Bolton’s ing with engineer and coproducer David Gannett, movie, of course; the St. Lawrence separates OnHaney entered the studio for what was supposed to tario from the state of New York. As DOXA dirbe a few days of recording. Two-and-a-half years, ector of programming Dorothy Woodend tells the one serious hand injury, and a crumbling romantic Straight, however, the true boundaries explored in relationship later, it was finally released at a sold- Aim for the Roses, and in Jay Cheel’s How to Build a Time Machine, aren’t necessarily quite that literal. out show at the H.R. MacMillan Space Centre. “How to Build a Time Machine is an interest“I was at the now-legendary album launch party at the planetarium in 2010,” Bolton tells ing one as well, because it’s such a far-out kind the Straight in a telephone interview. “Everyone of hypothesis that they start with, but it becomes

quite real by the end of the film,” Woodend says. “And I think Aim for the Roses does something very similar, where you start out with something that’s just absolutely, ridiculously cuckoo, and then you set out to make it possible, or to make it happen. And whether that’s a fool’s errand or a kind of tilting-at-windmills experience, there’s something that’s gloriously human about those kinds of endeavours. And I think that’s why something like Aim for the Roses is so compelling, because there’s that quest to do something that you don’t even know if it’s possible or that you’re capable of doing it, but that you can’t not do it. You have to do it.” Haney sees that quality in himself and recognizes that it’s one of the ways his project echoes Carter’s. “I think there’s a similarity in mindset, and I thought that while I was making it,” the composer says. “I think that’s kind of what John ran with in the movie—it’s that locked-oncourse, gonna-barrel-through-no-matter-what mindset that he and I definitely share. To me, that’s the big parallel. What I do and what he did are so far apart on the spectrum that it’s not fair to make comparisons, because I’m not going to break my bones or my neck or anything, but it’s that ‘This is what I do, and come hell or high water I’m gonna do it, even though by all signs it’s leading to disaster.’ ” “What’s been fun for me is seeing Ken as an artist and Mark as a daredevil, as a stuntman,” Bolton says. “The film is about the beauty and the terror of making a living as either a composer or a stuntman. I think I’m interested in what is highbrow and beautiful about jumping cars, and what is ugly and lowbrow about composing contemporary classical music. So that’s been fun for me. If anything, I’m trying to mystify stunt driving and demystify composing. “What they really have in common is a vision and a real work ethic, and obsession,” the director says of his similarly driven subjects, but he could very well include himself in their company. “What that line is between a healthy obsession and an unhealthy obsession, who are any of us to say? I know I certainly never asked myself that question.” Aim for the Roses opens the DOXA Documentary Film Festival at the Vancouver Playhouse on Thursday (May 5), with an additional screening on May 15 at the Vancity Theatre.

Claire Simon indulges her story obsession

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> BY L UC Y LAU

irector Claire Simon shoots what—or rather, whom—she knows. And if her documentary subjects are any indication—an ex-diplomat determined to keep his failing business afloat; a pair of wideeyed, hopelessly in-love teenagers; a screeching band of raucous schoolchildren—her Rolodex certainly runs deep. “I’m like a novelist, more or less, in a glamorous way of thinking,” says Simon, speaking to the Straight en route from Geneva to a screening in Lausanne, Switzerland. “I meet things in my life and I feel that they are films.” Born in London, England, but raised on a diet of reds and whites in Provence, the ambitious writer, editor, and director has been A catering company faces catastrophe in crafting fictional and nonfictional stories Claire Simon’s 1995 film, Coute Que Coute. for more than 25 years. Frustrated with the fantastical films that dominated French cinAside from the occasional spoken reference, ema in the late ’80s, she began making docu- it’s only the intimate nature of Simon’s films mentaries that were instead grounded in the that hints at her personal connections with familiarity of everyday life. each of her “stars”. Dr. Jean-Marie Bouvier, the

retiring physician in her first doc, Les Patients, was a close friend of her father’s; Jihad, the envoy turned entrepreneur in Coûte Que Coûte, is a friend of a former beau, as is Mimi, the freespirited raconteur of the movie that shares her name. (“He was very prolific, this boyfriend,” the perceptive filmmaker admits with a laugh.) Perhaps most notably, Simon has also looked to her daughter, Manon, for inspiration. She becomes a spectator at recess during the child’s grade-school years for Récréations, and later, Mom follows Manon’s summer love story with the village baker’s son, Greg, in 800 Kilomètres de Différence/Romance. Despite these real-life relationships, however, it’s the settings that drive Simon’s films, rather than the characters. “I specially make films about places because I feel like places are like scripts,” she explains. “The scripts are inside the place and my job is to find it and to make it come out.” This is nowhere more apparent than in Simon’s Les Bureaux de Dieu, a fictional story with actors woven from real voice recordings captured at a family-planning

centre over the course of seven years, and in her latest work, Le Bois Dont les Rêves Sont Faits, a study of the diverse comings and goings at one of Paris’s busiest parks. This expansive collection makes up the bulk of this year’s French French series at the DOXA Documentary Film Festival. Three other French-language f licks, including Flow Mechanics, an eye-opening account of the current refugee crisis, and The Final Passage, which explores France’s historic Chauvet–Pont d’Arc Cave using 3-D models, will join Simon’s films in the program, although it may be Simon’s fixation on the seemingly unanswerable question “What really is a story?” that produces the most engaging results. “This is my obsession,” she says. “Each time I think I have an answer, I want to do another film and I feel like I’m at the beginning again.” Les Patients opens the DOXA Documentary Film Festival's French French series at SFU's Goldcorp Centre for the Arts on Saturday (May 7).

MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 23


DOXA FEST

This film festival is big enough for all of us

T

he Georgia Straight’s intrepid team of critics, blowhards, and opinion-makers has been busy chowing down on the diverse selection of films at this year’s DOXA Documentary Film Festival. Here are a few certified hits and a couple near misses. Visit Straight. com for even more reviews, features, notes, and a couple words to the wise.

ALISA

IN

pleasure, a true box of delights from its opening scene featuring a man who laminates Sparks merchandise and reverently records the sound, to the obsessed painter Jamilla Naji, whose cheerfully insane portraits of Ron need to be hanging in my living room, right now. Cinematheque, May 9 (9 p.m.) > AM PISTOL SHRIMPS (USA/Canada) Even after seeing Parks and Recreation star Aubrey Plaza convince Jimmy Fallon of the Pistol Shrimps’ validity on late-night television, it’s hard to believe that the women’s recreational basketball team is real. And that’s no dig at filmmaker and homeboy Brent Hodge (though it does seem wildly convenient that the Shrimps are shooting through their best season yet during the doc’s filming). Rather, the L.A.–based crew composed of actresses, musicians, comediennes, and even an astute entertainment lawyer is so genuinely committed to its all-ladies league— and so supportive of one another’s endeavours off the court—that you have to see it to believe it. Don’t know a thing about basketball? Neither do the Shrimps—or, more specifically, their dedicated podcasters, who offer hilarious play-by-play from the northwest corner of the gym. But Hodge delves into the lives of the league’s women with such spark that the points don’t really matter. Playhouse, May 11 (7 p.m.); Vancity, May 15 (5:30 p.m.) > LL

WARLAND (Poland)

Young Alisa Kovalenko’s raw, deeply personal work starts out as a document of the war in Ukraine but ends up asking big questions about the role of the nonfiction director and whether objective journalism is ever possible. Alisa in Warland gives us a first-person look at the riots that erupt on Kiev’s streets, then follows Kovalenko and codirector Luibov Durakova as they embed themselves with Right Sector nationalist fighters on the eastern front, capturing the chaos of war in rough handheld footage: hiding out from snipers and mortars and driving through burning villages. It’s a rare, disorienting look at the frontlines of an ugly civil war. But the movie is really more about Kovalenko, and the way she changes once she holes up with the paramilitaries—tough guys who fuss over her, making sure she’s protected and teaching her to shoot guns. As she shifts from filmmaker to armed fighter, you may find yourself struggling with ambivalence: is she seduced by the cause, is she a righteous fighter, or is she just a victim of youthful idealism? Vancity, May 7 (2:15 p.m.) > JANET SMITH THE BABUSHKAS OF CHERNOBYL

(USA/Ukraine) A revealing portrait of three stubborn seniors who refuse to follow the status quo after the 1986 nuclear accident that displaced 160,000 people, The Babushkas of Chernobyl is a testament to the resilience and determination that only come with old age. After returning to the exclusion zone—2,600 square kilometres of land deemed by the U.S.S.R. military too unsafe to inhabit—these women live as if the villages they once called home aren’t poisoned by toxic radiation. Growing food, catching fish, and raising animals, these self-sustaining, spry babushkas defy their age, outliving those who relocated, despite their daily yard work and penchants for vodka and moonshine. Having suffered famine and war, they show no fear when officials reveal to them that their villages are still contaminated. “Starvation is what scares me, not radiation,” says Hanna Zavorotyna. Directed and produced by Holly Morris, this rousing and at times haunting documentary raises the question: what is more deadly— the anguish of being displaced or radiation? Cinematheque, May 8 (8:45 p.m.) > AMANDA SIEBERT

FLOW MECHANICS (France) Medi-

Filmmaker Alisa Kovalenko finds herself sympathizing with right-wing Ukrainian paramilitaries in Alisa in Warland.

explores the erosion of silence in contemporary life, finding no shortage of talking heads to interview about the subject. He travels to London, Mumbai, and across the U.S. to speak with scientists, authors, monks, and even a man who has taken a yearlong vow of silence as he walks across America. In Japan, he examines traditional cultural elements that integrate quietness, such as Zen Buddhism and the tea ceremony—and how that appreciation is vanishing. His interviewees discuss everything from noise pollution to religion, health, and John Cage’s controversial silent piece 4’33”. Although the film conveys tranquillity only superficially through images, rather than editing, pace, and structure, this documentary is so replete with well-composed cinematography and intriguing, occasionally worrisome ideas that it remains a worthwhile, even necessary, watch. Cinematheque, May 7 (12 p.m.) and May 11 (6:30 p.m.) > CRAIG TAKEUCHI THE LEAGUE OF EXOTIQUE DANCERS (Canada) “Feminism was

about not trading your soul and your pussy for a wedding ring.” That’s one of the many fine bon mots we hear from Judith Stein—the Grand Beaver of Canadian Burlesque, Nelson resident, power senior—in this breathlessly entertaining visit with some of the legends of bump and grind. The cigarillo-chomping Stein is joined by an array of frank-talking hallof-famers, seen in their homes, including the disarmingly sweet Toni Elling (who inspired Duke Ellington’s “Satin Doll”), proudly elegant Marinka, and ever-abundant Kitten Natividad, whose legendary mirrored box isn’t what you think it is, but you should see it anyway. Utterly at home in their postretirement bodies, these ferociously wise old ladies provide Rama Rau’s beautifully made doc with a climactic stage performance that’s as unexpectedly sexy as it is moving. Vancity, May 13 (8:30 p.m.) > ADRIAN MACK

tative and beautifully shot as it might be, Flow Mechanics is also maddening, with director Nathalie Loubeyre choosing to make high art when oldfashioned storytelling would do. The French filmmaker attempts to turn a spotlight on refugees illegally lighting out for Europe from war-torn Africa and the Middle East. Right from the opening, when we watch Croatian border guards stand around ruminating on footprints left on a dirt country road, pacing is a problem. Those without severe ADHD might be fine with Flow Mechanics’ decidedly laconic pace. As for the rest of us, “frustrating” doesn’t begin to describe an inarguably well-meaning film where a Libyan immigrant’s tale of a beyond-hellish boat ride to Europe is constantly interrupted by meant-for-Instagram shots of thistles waving in the wind and spiders in LEFT ON PURPOSE (USA) Roughsunlit webs. Vancity, May 13 (5 p.m.) ly two years into the making of this > MIKE USINGER searing and unforgettable doc, Mayer Vishner announced that he was preIN PURSUIT OF SILENCE (USA) paring to end his life. “I’m dying of What price do we pay for our media- loneliness,” pleads the aging yippie, filled urban lives? Patrick Shen a man whose influence on American 24 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016

radical culture is incalculable, but who feels—alcoholism and clinical depression aside—that his time is up. His arguments are cogent, his trickster wit intact, his friends resigned. Filmmaker Justin Schein’s treatment of his own subsequent ethical dilemma is sometimes a little too onthe-nose, but the viewer is haunted by subtler questions. From Vishner’s super-high-functioning youth to dereliction in one lifetime—how’d that happen? Why is suicide seemingly epidemic among his old colleagues? And what place is there now for a dyed-in-the-wool American dissident who didn’t sell out like Jerry Rubin or check out like Abbie Hoffman? Vancity, May 9 (6:45 p.m.) > AM MIGRANT DREAMS (Canada) Officially known as the Tomato Capital of the World, Leamington, Ontario, has a horribly bleak side in Migrant Dreams. As home to the largest concentration of greenhouses in North America, the town is a magnet for migrant workers around the globe, many of whom end up completely exploited. Southern Ontario isn’t the kind of place you’d expect to see labourers from Mexico literally living on top of each other 26 deep in a converted garage, or Filipino moms paying huge sums to shady labour brokers who’ve convinced them there’s money to be made in Canada. What all the migrants have in common is that they’re trapped in a system where a living wage is an everelusive dream, and where to complain is to risk being sent back home. All too tellingly, greenhouse operators and Canadian federal government officials are among those who refused to be interviewed for the film. Cinematheque, May 7 (2 p.m.) > MU MR. GAGA (Israel) Mark this “re-

quired viewing” for dance fans who know the term Gaga goes far beyond the lady in the meat dress. Director Tomer Heymann digs artfully into the enigma of famed Batsheva Dance Company choreographer Ohad Naharin, providing new revelations about the way history, geography, and personal tragedy have shaped his work—and the revolutionary movement language of the title. Blending a stunning collection of archival footage

(Naharin entertaining Israeli troops, and hoofing it with his mom at a kibbutz), interviews with the film’s uncompromising subject, and aweinspiring dance excerpts, Heymann crafts a definitive portrait of a brilliant innovator who’s influenced dance around the planet. Vancity, May 6 (9 p.m.) > JS MY LOVE AFFAIR WITH THE BRAIN: THE LIFE AND SCIENCE OF DR. MARIAN DIAMOND (USA)

Dr. Marian Diamond keeps a preserved human brain in a delicate hatbox, and eagerly uncovers the spongy organ for anyone who shows even the faintest interest. And it is utterly fascinating. A revolutionary figure in modern neuroscience, Diamond is a rock star seen through the lens of filmmakers Catherine Ryan and Gary Weimberg. Her groundbreaking studies are chronicled with care, offering a thoroughly inspiring crash course in human anatomy. But even more captivating than the research is the woman herself, a subject of undying curiosity, charm, and an infectious zeal—even in the face of rampant sexism—which makes the answer to her question “Don’t you just love the brain?” ahem, a no-brainer. Cinematheque, May 8 (6:30 p.m.) > LUCY LAU NEVER TURN YOUR BACK ON SPARKS (Israel) An appropri-

TRAPPED (USA) Shot on the frontlines of the prochoice movement, Trapped is a disheartening reminder of why, in 2016, we so desperately need feminism. Filmmaker Dawn Porter walks viewers through the workings of women’s health and abortion clinics throughout Texas, Mississippi, and Alabama, illuminating in grave detail the struggles that plague physicians and medical staff due to laws designed solely to attack women’s reproductive rights. These scenes are interspersed with heartbreaking patient interviews, footage from legislative meetings, and glimpses of prolife rallies, where it becomes depressingly clear that the freedoms and safety of women continue to be dictated by men. The result is a disconcerting—and absolutely eyeopening—examination of the sorry state of women’s rights south of the border, an issue made no less concerning by similar conditions that persist around the globe. Cinematheque, May 10 (6 p.m.) > LL UNDER THE SUN (Russia) This epically eerie look inside the closed world of North Korea could easily be retitled Don’t Forget to Smile!. That order is barked at countless people corralled for this staged documentary. Russian director Vitaly Mansky has gained access to the country only by agreeing to follow a script approved by North Korean rulers—one about an ideal family taking the roles of the ideal working class, its adorable eightyear-old daughter entering the ranks of the Children’s Union. He also had to accept the “help” of escorts who tell him what to shoot, and order their subjects around. But Mansky’s brilliance is in letting his camera linger before and after each scene, so that we can see the intense stage-managing that goes into running a totalitarian state. At one point, his escort manhandles a group of female factory workers into a tidy row; at another, he cajoles a bunch of seamstresses into being more enthusiastic in their patriotic cheers. Mansky sets these moments against majestically shot imagery of the hidden state, with its tiny subjects dwarfed by monuments to Kim Jong-Il and Kim Il-Sung. Most terrifying? The subjects do manage to smile on command—but their eyes betray a fear that will chill you to your core. Vancity, May 6 (6:45 p.m.) > JS

ately eccentric doc for a thoroughly unique band, if band is the right word for what brothers Ron and Russell Mael have been up to since the early ’70s. Filmmaker Pini Schatz relies on fans both famous and otherwise, plus a few old and still dazzled collaborators, to explain the deep appeal of Sparks’ wild 45-year project. (Tantalizing musical snippets, archival pics, and video clips provide the rest.) Best known for 1974’s operatic U.K. megahit “This Town Ain’t Big Enough for the Both of Us”, Sparks has been an endlessly inventive force in avant-pop ever since. Producer Tony Visconti doesn’t hesitate to describe songwriter Ron as a genius. Blink and you’ll miss a shot of Paul McCartney dressed as the keyboard-playing half of the duo, recognizable largely because of his comic glower and Hitler mustache. The DOXA Documentary Film Festival Despite hilariously iffy subtitles, or runs from May 5 to 15. More informamaybe because of them, this film is a tion is at www.doxafestival.ca/.


MOVIES

Wised-up Natasha has bittersweet edge

A woman still living on the

2 fortune and residual love of her

late husband begins to feel trapped in her pleasant Los Angeles home, especially when starting to lose connection to her increasingly absent daughter. But can she overcome her habitual ways in order to let a roguish older gentleman into her life? Wait a minute! I’m describing last year’s I’ll See You in My Dreams, with Blythe Danner as the bored widow, Malin Akerman as the daughter, and Sam Elliott as the grizzled suitor. The Meddler plays an almost identical story for comedy, substituting sitcom developments for the earlier film’s thoughtfully crafted characterizations. But not all the changes are bad. Here, Susan Sarandon is frequently funny and sometimes touching as the title character, Marnie Minervini, a New Jersey widow who moved west to be near daughter Lori (Rose Byrne), a struggling screenwriter and experienced mom-avoider. As Marnie drives around town, looking for things to do and people to bother—there are several pointless subplots in this vein—she leaves a steady stream of unrequited messages on Lori’s phone. Marnie starts most of her mobile diary entries with “Anyway…”, her passive-aggressive equivalent of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie’s Maggie Smith saying “It’s only me” whenever entering a room.

MAY 6

MAY 7 MAY 8

MAY 10

Starring Susan Sarandon. Rating unavailable

2

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MAY 11

THE MEDDLER

NOW PLAYING!

MAY 12

> KEN EISNER

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MAY 13

The aspirations and heartbreak the immigrant experience are captured with bittersweet precision in Natasha, a second adaptation by writer-director David Bezmozgis of his own, award-winning work. The still-young novelist covered some of this territory, more tentatively, in 2009’s Victoria Day. His visual storytelling is only somewhat improved here, but his insightful dialogue and talent for apt casting give the new movie enough sharp edges to make it memorable on most levels. Alex Ozerov plays 16-year-old Mark, a gentle Toronto suburbanite lazing away his summer reading Nietzsche and selling pot, the better to avoid employment. Things change when Mark’s mom (Deanna Dezmari, an Ashley Judd type only 12 years older than Ozerov) gives him a task: when his uncle remarries, Mark’s supposed to look after his new stepcousin, 14-year-old Natasha (excellent Sasha K. Gordon), who doesn’t speak any English. She soon turns the tables on this would-be mentor with her wised-up demeanour and sexual aggressiveness. Natasha’s a withering presence around her own mother (Aya-Tatyana Stolnits) but an angel in the company of Mark’s parents, whom she sees as blessedly normal. Her own childhood was harrowing, as we learn, and the boy gets in over his head. Their own connection is tender and confusing, but this doesn’t explain why Mark would drag Natasha on his drug deals before he even gets to know her. And his relationship with a philosophical pot supplier (Aidan Shipley) feels like a missed opportunity. Like Bezmozgis, much of the cast is Russian-born, and that limitation—given the Canadian setting— might explain the diversity of appearance for Latvian characters who keep commenting on whether or not people “look Jewish”. Perhaps this is intentional. Mark is caught between his own life and that of people who keep hanging on to old identities, real or imagined.

2 of

MAY 14

Starring Alex Ozerov. In English and Russian, with English subtitles. Rating unavailable

MAY 15

NATASHA

mopey Jason Sudeikis because, hey, he has two daughters. And his dead wife (Jennifer Garner, in home movies) was a marine! Another sub-subplot involves a young mom (Tomorrowland’s Britt Robertson) abandoned in childhood by—as we see coming miles away—a Home Shopping Network diva played by Julia Roberts in an Anna Wintour fright wig. But the worst bits involve two sisters (Kate Hudson and Sarah Chalke) hiding secrets from racist, homophobic parents (Robert Pine and Margo Martindale), whose bigotry melts away the moment they meet the grandkids. Marshall really should have called this mess GrandSasha K. Gordon plays the promiscuous Russian teen of the title in writer-director David Bezmozgis’s latest, Natasha. mother’s Day, because it’s aimed at provided by four screenwriters and people who haven’t seen a movie When Lori heads to New York to RATCHET & CLANK work on a pilot, Mom has even more Featuring the voices of James Arnold a lot of sappy music, we know she’s since 1972. > KEN EISNER meant to find the widower played by free time on her hands. In one of The Taylor and David Kaye. Rated PG Meddler’s more charming moments, Kids’ movies don’t get much Marnie wanders onto a film set busier and noisier than Ratchet and becomes an instant extra. This introduces her to the gruff security & Clank, an animated space advendude played by Whiplasher J.K. Sim- ture based on a PlayStation game. mons, channelling Sam Elliott so Young gamers might not mind all 1660 EAST BROADWAY @ COMMERCIAL hard I thought he was trying to sell the competing colours and sounds, MEDIA SPONSOR but their parents might need a stiff her a Ram-tough truck. Writer-director Lorene Scafaria drink in a dark room afterwards. The story line is simple, though, reportedly drew on her relationADVANCE TICKETS AT WWW.RIOTHEATRETICKETS.CA ship with her own mother for this with one nice twist. Ratchet is a LIVE RECORDING OF THE JASON ELLIS SHOW 12:00 pm (notably Anglo-cast) effort, which catlike mechanic who worships the struggles to find the right balance Galactic Rangers, a band of superONLY YESTERDAY 5:30 pm Studio Ghibli's 25th Anniversary remaster of Isao Takahata's animated coming-of-age classic. *Japanese w/ English subs. of amused detachment and deeper heroes. Clank is an accidentally exploration of family dynamics. good robot made in the evil-robot ENTER THE RED DRAGON 8:00 pm RDS Video World Premiere! As in her debut feature, Seeking factory. They team up with the RanDRIVE Friday Late Night Movie 11:55 pm Hey, girl. Get your Ryan Gosling Úp oal` mk& a Friend for the End of the World, gers to fend off the planet-destroythe result is about halfway there. ing plans of the leader of the Blarg In this case, though, the other half (voiced by Paul Giamatti). The twist comes when we find out the head stars Blythe Danner. > KEN EISNER Ranger is a Donald Trump–like figure who’d rather shoot first and DISORDER strategize later. He’s also prone to delightful egotism and jealousy. The Starring Matthias Schoenaerts. In French, with English subtitles. Rated PG film’s plot is wisely centred on him. HADWIN'S JUDGEMENT 2:30 pm Based on Bg`f NYaddYfl k YoYj\%oaffaf_ Zggc The But it still finds way too much Golden Spruce, this acclaimed documentary covers the events that led up to the infamous destruction The big draw in this thriller time for glib metacommentary, g^ Yf ]pljYgj\afYjq +((%q]Yj%gd\ lj]] `]d\ kY[j]\ Zq l`] af\a_]fgmk @Ya\Y fYlagf g^ @Ya\Y ?oYaa$ :;& shot on the Mediterranean which is fun the first time we read coast of France is Belgium’s Mat- “cue the bad guy’s speech in 3 … 2 THE MATRIX Ljadg_q EYjYl`gf Ca[ck g^^ Yl -2(( he There is no spoon. Keanu Reeves, Laurence Fishburne and Carrie-Anne Moss star in The Wachowski's genre-bending thias Schoenaerts, Europe’s latest …,” less so for the next hundred insaga. See one, or see 'em all! All day. Back-to-back. Big screen. contribution to the world of intro- jokes—although Sylvester Stallone spective machismo, as seen in such gets in a couple of good ones as a Happy Mother's Day! multinational productions as Rust Blarg henchman. ERNEST & CELESTINE 1:45 pm A family-friendly screening of the French animation. *English dub. and Bone and Far From the MadThe film was produced in VancouAPRIL AND THE EXTRAORDINARY WORLD 4:00 pm "Avril et le monde truqué" From the ding Crowd. Here, he plays Vincent, ver by Rainmaker Entertainment. At eaf\ g^ j]fgof]\ _jYh`a[ fgn]dakl Jacques Tardi [ge]k Y jan]laf_ k[a%Ú Y\n]flmj] k]l af Yf Ydl]jfYl]$ a special-forces veteran back from its best, the design resembles a futurkl]Yehmfc ogjd\& 9dd Y_]k o]d[ge] *French w/ English subs. multiple adventures in Afghanistan. istic Florence, Italy, on crack. The or10 CLOVERFIELD LANE 6:30 pm John Goodman and Mary Elizabeth Winstead star He wants to go back, but his PTSD ange, neon green, and browns really in this latest installment in the Cloverfield franchise. *Also screening May 9 at 9:30 pm has him sidelined. pop. But the sound design—blarg! EVERYBODY WANTS SOME!! 12(( he Dac]f]\ Yk Y )10(k%]jY khajalmYd [gehYfagf lg Dazed It’s understandable that one of his It’s a cacophony of effects, wall-toand Confused, Richard Linklater's dYl]kl j]eYafk ljm] lg ^gje oal` YeZdaf_ fgklYd_aY$ ^mffq$ afservice buds would ask this skittish wall music, and clashing vocal perka_`l^md Yf\ jYf\ge \aYdg_m]$ Y ko]]l klgjq Yf\ Y cadd]j kgmf\ljY[c& *Also screening May 9 at 6:45 pm dude to join a security detail hired formances that make you long for the by a wealthy Lebanese business- quiet restraint of a Pixar movie. COMEDIAN DON BURNSTICK Log K`gok& Gf] Fa_`l /2+( he (rush seating only!) and 9:30 pm > KIM LINEKIN man (Percy Kemp) throwing a lavish party at an estate called Maryland— the film’s original title. But would MOTHER’S DAY that pal really recommend him for Starring Jennifer Aniston. Rated PG a solo gig protecting the frequently Wr i t e r- d i r e c t o r-p r o du c e r travelling businessman’s young, Garry Marshall is 81, so he’s blond wife, Jessie (Diane Kruger), had time to make movies good and their small son? THE MESSENGER 6:00 pm :aj\ Klm\a]k ;YfY\Y hj]k]flk Yf ]p[dmkan] NYf[gmn]j :aj\ O]]c screening of At the soiree, Vincent notices (The Flamingo Kid), bad (Overl`] Y[[dYae]\ \g[me]flYjq$ oal` Yf af%h]jkgf afljg ^jge David Suzuki& I 9 \ak[mkkagf lg ^gddgo& small skirmishes between vari- board), and more popular than The Gentlemen Hecklers present GREEN LANTERN Doors at 9:00 pm JqYf J]qfgd\k ous French ministers and shady good (Pretty Woman, Beaches). But other superhero movie gets fully riffed. Hilarious commentary for the best bad movies! hustlers, so he’s already on edge the creator of such TV fodder as when alone in the house with his Happy Days and Laverne & Shirley Kitsilano Theatre Company presents FOCUS: SEASON ONE "I Will be the One" /2(( he charges. Oddly, there’s no staff at has never undertaken anything as STAND BY FOR TAPE BACK UP 12+( he :jalak` h]j^gjeYf[] hg]l Yf\ ÚdeeYc]j Ross the thunderstorm-spooky Mary- breathtakingly awful as Mother’s Sutherland's oallq$ j]kgmj[]^md Yf\ ]eglagfYddq afl]fk] k`go ak Yf Ym\agnakmYd e]\alYlagf l`Yl land. When not distracted by night Day. As someone here says early uses fragments of old movies and television programs left to him by his grandfather on an old VHS tape. sweats, our brutish hero is increas- on, “It’s a disaster of historic proAPRIL AND THE EXTRAORDINARY WORLD 5:45 pm *In French w/ English subs. ingly attracted to the scantily clad portions.” How historic? Let’s just Jessie, setting in motion various say that if someone managed to FRIDAY THE 13TH )10(! ))2-- he &&& gf >ja\Yq l`] )+l` Gmj Friday Late Night Movie gets meta at midnight. conf licts of interest that suggest strap Bruce Willis onto a rocket more subtext than actually meets and shoot him to the other side of this thing, there’s no way he could the eye. When the inevitable home in- put it back on course. This Mother follows two Marshalvasion comes, Vincent reveals his inner Bruce Willis, plus some lite antecedents in Valentine’s Day extra demons. The movie builds and New Year’s Eve, in which barely an ominous head of steam, but connected stories were held togethbecause Jessie and her son never er through star power and sitcom become real personalities, the emo- chutzpah. But like their somewhat PURPLE RAIN <]Yjdq Z]dgn]\$ o] Yj] _Yl`]j]\ `]j] lg []d]ZjYl] l`ak l`af_ [Ydd]\ da^] by celebrating the tional stakes remain low. And those better British cousin Love Actually, musical genius Prince oal` `ak ]d][lja[ lmjf af l`] ]ha[ PURPLE RAIN. Big screen. Big sound. May 14 invaders don’t really have much of those movies had enough memor8 /2(( he la[c]lk _gaf_ ^Ykl ! )(2(( he jmk` k]Ylaf_ gfdq ! Kmf\Yq EYq )- 8 /2(( he& a plan. This is all quite disappoint- able moments to raise the overall ing, because young writer-director enterprise. Here, the few standout SOLD +2+( he NYf[gmn]j Hj]ea]j] g^ l`] ^]Ylmj] Úde Y\YhlYlagf g^ l`] Y[[dYae]\ fgn]d KGD< Zq Patricia McCormick, starring Gillian Anderson and David Arquette. *Filmmaker in Alice Winocour displayed a keen events are all cringeworthy. attendance for Q&A! Set in a mostly white Atlanta, eye for female power issues in her PURPLE RAIN /2(( he B ]hg m \Zk^ ik^mmr [Z[r% cnlm mZd^ f^ pbma rhn' script for the Oscar-nominated things nominally revolve around Turkish film Mustang. In Disorder, Jennifer Aniston’s frazzled Sandy, a KA?F G L@= LAE=K 9:30 pm “This hard-to-find 1987 concert movie distills all of the Purple she tries to shoehorn politics into mother of two boys whose roguish Hg^ l powers into one divine housequake.” (Rolling Stone) Directed by Prince. a routine genre outing, and both ex (Timothy Olyphant) has just married a hotty (Shay Mitchell). come up short. SEE WWW.RIOTHEATRE.CA FOR LISTINGS & UPDATED CALENDAR > KEN EISNER Thanks to the jury-rigged structure MAY 19

RE VIEW S

MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 25


PRE EM IE IER E E MED I A PAR RT TN E R

26 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016

MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 27


PRE EM IE IER E E MED I A PAR RT TN E R

26 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016

MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 27


MOVIES

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COARSE LANGUAGE, DRUG USE

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28 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016

At a mere 69 years young, the Oscar-winning actor shows up in one of the best roles of her career > B Y A D RIAN MACK

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he fine comic actor Anna Faris delivers an offhand but cutting zinger in the new film Keanu. Playing herself, she explains that she starred in the first four films in the Scary Movie franchise, but not the fifth. “Too old,” she squeaks, in her House Bunny voice. A week later, The Meddler comes along and gives 69-yearold Susan Sarandon one of the best roles of her career. “Yeah, how about that? I guess people maybe realize that there are a lot of tickets being bought by people that are older,” says the Oscar winner, calling the Straight from her Manhattan home. “Hollywood isn’t exactly opening the floodgates to films with women in leads, let alone older women. But that’s okay! We’re doing fine.” Oddly enough, The Meddler, opening Friday (May 6), comes in the wake of two other notable films that feature seniors living the single life in L.A. Blythe Danner starred in I’ll See You in My Dreams in early 2015, and Lily Tomlin followed with Grandma about four months later. In The Meddler, Sarandon’s recently widowed Marnie Minervini relocates to Hollywood in order to be closer to her scriptwriter daughter, Lori (Rose Byrne)—a situation taken from writer-director Lorene Scafaria’s real life. Marnie is based on Scafaria’s mother, Gail. “Actually, before I even said I would do it, I got a five-minute sizzle reel with Gail doing, shot by shot, the first five minutes of the movie,” says Sarandon, with a chuckle. “Really, the voice-over, her going driving, singing, going to the

mall, showing her apartment, looking at the balcony, the garage—the whole thing. When I saw that, I just had to do it; I just found her so open and lovely and sweet.” Open and lovely and sweet, yes—Sarandon even wears Gail’s butterfly prints in the film—but she adds that the elder Scafaria wasn’t allowed on-set, presumably to forestall any actual meddling. If that conjures the image of a young filmmaker pouring comic scorn on her mom, and notwithstanding Sarandon’s bright and funny take on the material, The Meddler actually ends up being a rather touching look at grief, among other matters. “It certainly could have been done much broader, but one of the things I established when I said I would do it was this idea of basing it in reality,” says Sarandon. “And she cast such wonderful people who all played it very, very straight—all those funny women, everyone from Cecily Strong to Jerrod Carmichael.” Let’s not forget J.K. Simmons as a Harley-riding suitor named Zipper, just one more happy detail in this tale of American film rousing itself from the more conventional elevation of youth and narcissistic personality disorder. “By the way, he said he would do the part and then he won the Academy Award,” dishes Sarandon. “And any other guy would have said, ‘No, I’m on to bigger and better things.’ I called Lorene immediately and said, ‘Is he still in?’ And she said, ‘Oh yeah, I checked, he’s still in.’ ” “So,” she concludes, about her 61-year-old costar, “he’s a humble guy. And sexy.” -


FOOD

Healthy eating at home is easier than you think

E

veryone knows that a wholesome diet to in the long term. Healthy eating should be is a cornerstone of healthy living, but simple and consistent.� pulling it off regularly can be tough. Rideout is a fan of the 80/20 rule: “If you eat When life’s busy, time is tight, and whole healthy foods in the right amount 80 people are tired, cooking a delicious, nutritious percent of the time, you can still enjoy more meal at the end of the day seems like a tall order. decadent foods 20 percent of the time.� But it doesn’t have to be complicated. And To help make healthy eating simple, she sugpreparing good food in your own kitchen is gests creating a menu plan for the week ahead of one of the best ways to curb weight gain and time—and sticking to it: “It will not only help to obesity. The stats on that front are troubling: reduce overeating, it will also save you time and nearly 60 percent of Canadian adults and 26 money in the long run.� percent of children and adolescents are overCut up veggies and fruit ahead of time and weight or obese, according generally look for ways to into the Heart and Stroke clude more nutrients in your Foundation of Canada. diet, Rideout adds. “Typical Making healthy food at North American diets are Gail Johnson home begins at the supertoo high calorically and too market, says Hilit Nurick, founder of the Dizzy low in overall nutrients. Always serve differentWhisk, which offers kids’ cooking classes. coloured fruit and veggies prior to the meal. Fill “Anything that is preprepared and -packaged up on nutrient-dense foods when you are hunalready has a disadvantage of being out of one’s gry. A side benefit is most fruits and vegetables control,� she says. “You don’t know what’s in it are also high in fibre. Make it fun—bring home unless you yourself put it there. a new type of vegetable or fruit each week from “Choose ingredients rather than packaged the grocery store.� food with multi-ingredients,� she adds. “A deNutritious, home-cooked meals don’t have licious dish doesn’t need to comprise of more to be boring, says Jessica Carter, registered than three to four ingredients. Always read the dietitian at Dani Health. She recommends label and make sure that you understand what is theme nights if you have trouble coming up in your food. The idea is, if you can’t pronounce with ideas: Mexican Mondays (with fajitas, enit and you are not sure what it is, it probably isn’t chiladas, or rice and beans, for example), Italgood for you. Shop for fresh food, fresh herbs ian Fridays, slow-cooker Sundays, and so on. and spices, rather than artificial flavours.� “It’ll help you keep on track and avoid eatAnn Marie Rideout, founder of Well Fed— ing out when you already have a plan,� Carter a North Vancouver food studio that offers says. She notes too that learning how to flavour cooking classes, meal-assembly classes, and foods at home can make it feel like you’re eatmeals to go—says that common stumbling ing out. This will help you avoid resorting to blocks people face when it comes to cooking takeout, which will save you money—as well healthy meals at home include overthinking as fat, sugar, and sodium. things and following trendy diets that exCarter says to make a dish taste Mexican, clude food and are too restrictive. use cumin (1 tsp), chili pepper (1 tsp), cayenne “These diets play havoc on your metabol- (1/4 tsp), and a pinch of salt and pepper. To make any dish taste Asian, she says to comism and your overall health,� Rideout tells the Straight. “Plus they are too hard to stick bine soy or gluten-free tamari (1 Tbsp), sesame oil

Best Eats

THINGS TO DO

Well Fed’s Ann Marie Rideout (Kia Porter photo) warns against diets that can damage your metabolism while dietitian Jessica Carter says there are simple ways to flavour food to taste like you’re eating out.

(1 tsp), rice wine vinegar (1 tsp), garlic (one or two cloves or 1 tsp powdered), ginger (1/2 tsp fresh or powdered), and honey (1 Tbsp). Optional ingredients include a dash of sriracha, lime juice, peanut butter (for a great satay sauce), and fish sauce. And for Greek flavour, Carter suggests adding juice from half a lemon, oregano (1 tsp), thyme (1 tsp), basil (1 tsp), dill (1/2 tsp), and salt and pepper. Et voilĂ . Other tips? Eat without distraction. “If you put in effort to shop, prep, and cook, do the meal justice and savour it without a TV, computer, or phone stealing away your attention,â€? Carter says. “You’ll likely eat slower, which gives our bodies time to feel full. This helps us avoid going for seconds when we really aren’t still hungry.â€? Watch portion sizes. To make it easy, use a cup measure to help control this at home, Rideout says. “A general example of a balanced meal would be two cups of veggies and/or fruit, one cup of complex carbohydrates such as rice, yams, or potatoes, and 3/4 cup of lean protein. Keep in mind that serving sizes when eating out and at the grocery store are typically too large.â€? Drink only water with meals and avoid juice and sugary drinks throughout the day, she adds: “Each cup—only 250 mL—of juice or pop is approximately 150 calories. It adds up fast.â€?

Snacking does have its place. “Maintaining a relatively consistent blood sugar level is important, so eating small amounts more frequently—two to three times per day—is a great tactic,� Rideout says. “Purchase easy, healthy snack items like hummus, tzatziki, frozen fruit, or yogurt so they’re on hand and accessible.� If you have children, get them in the habit of healthy eating and cooking early on. “My best advice is to start where you are with what you like or love, talk about this with your family, and let them also share what they love,� says Barb McMahon, founder of Sprouting Chefs, a nonprofit that fosters the development of school garden programs. “If it’s mac ’n’ cheese, try making it from scratch with your kids. Get them to grate the cheese with you, mix the sauce, and teach them how to boil pasta—all basics when it comes to learning what to make in the kitchen. And instead of burying the veggies in the sauce, cut them up raw and serve them fresh on the side. Try some new veggies that your kids pick out.� And give yourself a break if you don’t manage to eat as healthily as you’d like all the time. “Don’t give up if you fall off a bit along the way,� McMahon says. “Have compassion for yourself and your family for trying something new, because at least you are trying.� -

FOOD High five

Meal ticket DISH ’N DAZZLE The B.C. Hospitality Foundation’s (BCHF) seventh annual Dish ‘n’ Dazzle event is back in town on May 18 (6:30 to 9:30 p.m.) at the Vancouver Convention Centre East, Parkview Terrace (999 Canada Place). Presented by the BCHF and Wine Australia, the extravaganza will feature 110 premium wines from 30 Australian wineries, and finger food created by chefs from 13 restaurants. The evening will also feature a cocktail competition that will see six bartenders shaking up drinks with a Down Under theme. Guests will also enjoy live music, a silent auction, and a grand-prize raffle of two tickets to Brisbane on Air Canada’s Boeing 787 Dreamliner. Proceeds will provide financial assistance to B.C. workers in the hospitality industry. Tickets ($85/person) or for a group of six or more ($79/person) can be purchased online at www.eply.com/DishnDazzle2016/. -

Five places to find healthy salad bars

1

FIELD & SOCIAL (415 Dunsmuir Street) Fresh and mouth-watering salad bowls in a bright and contemporary space.

2

TRACTOR FOODS (various locations) Pick your veggie salad base, and then add optional proteins like chicken breast or albacore tuna steak.

3

NOSH (101–510 West Georgia Street) Choose from a variety of salads on the menu, or build your own in the grab-and-go section.

4

GREEN LEAF SALAD (560 Bute Street) Build your own tasty salad with a Mediterranean twist at this family-owned and -operated restaurant.

5

THE CHOPPED LEAF (various locations) Customize everything in your salad bowl, from proteins to greens, grains to cheeses, veggies to dressings.

Drink of the week

BENCHMARK PALE ALE Parallel 49 Brewing is at it again, following up its raved-about Brew Brothers Vol. 2 collaboration with two specially prepared suds for Famoso Neapolitan Pizzeria. The Vancouver-based Italian eatery—which operates a spot not far from P49 at 1380 Commercial Drive—will be pouring the new Benchmark Craft Lager and our fave, the Benchmark Pale Ale, to pair with its recently rolled out spring menu. Bracingly crisp, with a citrus-infused malt body, this hop-forward ale should please as many crowds as the simple, wood-fired pizzas that Famoso delivers daily. -

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MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 29


FOOD

l fo o s

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Co me E x p e r ie n c e ! wh a t G r e f f o re e c e h a s t o

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B.C. wines of 2015: a very stellar vintage

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DINE-IN, TAKE-OUT & FREE HOME DELIVERY SERVING LUNCH & DINNER CLOSED MONDAYS

J

ust a few days ago, I had the opportunity to catch a panel of British Columbian winemakers giving the trade and media a full report on vintage 2015, timed to coincide with a blitz of new-release white wines hitting store shelves and restaurant wine lists. In short, it was an excellent vintage. It started early, with a warm and dry spring, followed by a long, hot summer. There were indeed many fires throughout

t h r e e l o c at i o n s o p e n i n g t h i s w e e k ! F o r l o c at i o n s & s c h e d u l e s , v i s i t e at l o c a l . o r g

COME & CELEBRATE

the Okanagan, but they were kept in check by many well-respected teams of professionals and volunteers; there wasn’t any discernible smoke damage in the region’s vineyards. Just as Vancouver enjoyed a lengthy sunny season (a few smoky days and water restrictions aside), British Columbian wine grapes had plenty of time to ripen and fully develop both f lavours and phenolics. This week’s column is packed with as many 2015 releases as space allows, the vast majority available winery-direct at the prices listed or on local store shelves for a couple bucks more. SUMAC RIDGE 2015 GEWÜRZTRAMINER ($14.99, www.sumac

ridge.com/) A well-built, midweight Gewürztraminer with litchi and a touch of earthy sage on the nose, and with passion fruit, fruit cocktail, and a wee kiss of honey.

MONTE CREEK RANCH 2015 RIESLING ($16.99, www.montecreekranch

winery.com/) Aromatics include river rock and muddled lemon, with a fuller mouth feel than some may expect from Riesling, kept intact with well-integrated acidity, lemonade essences, and a zip of orange zest right at the end.

QUAILS’ GATE 2015 CHENIN BLANC ($19.18, www.quailsgate.

com/) Love it! I wish we had more Chenin Blanc planted in the Valley. Prickly pear, star fruit, sage, and brioche elements come swirling out of the glass, with Ambrosia apple and mineral notes carrying them all through a lengthy finish.

HILLSIDE 2015 UNOAKED PINOT GRIS ($16.29, www.hillsidewinery.

ca/) An abundance of peaches, nectarines, and apricots is punctuated by distinctive marmalade notes and grapefruit pith, bringing extra components of both flavour and texture.

NOW TAKING RESERVATIONS FOR

Join us at the Harvest Table for Legacy’s version of The Historical 1976 Tasting an event that turned the wine world on its head. Blind taste wines from BC, USA and France, then vote on your favorite.

MOTHER’S DAY

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STAG’S HOLLOW 2015 ALBARIÑO ($21.99, www.stagshollowwinery.

com/) Albariño? Like the Albariño variety made famous in northern Spain and Portugal? Yup, that Albariño. The variety doesn’t seem to be too homesick, either, as it appears to be quite comfortable in its Okanagan surroundings, enjoying the region’s flair for natural acidity and mineral-driven wines. Loads of lime and grapefruit are accented by white floral notes, while a little time in barrel gives it a nice bit of weight. SEE YA LATER RANCH 2015 CHARDONNAY ($14.99, www.sylranch.com/)

The bulk of these Chardonnay grapes came from vineyards in Okanagan Falls, a subregion that the variety seems to adore. With healthy lashings of oak, there are some decadent cinnamon-toast characteristics going on, with a little lemon curd and pineapple topping things off. Fairly rich, but well balanced all the way through.

SEA STAR 2015 SALISH SEA

($22, www.seastarvineyards.ca/) The vintage quality was pretty much the same over on Pender Island, where see page 32

30 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016


ARTS

Real-life love—in all its messiest, most moving BY ANDREA WAR N ER

incarnations—is the basis of Mis Papás and Never the Last, two of the most exciting local pieces at this year’s rEvolver Theatre Festival, Up in the Air’s annual presentation of new work by emerging artists. Mis Papás tells the story of writer-director Pedro Chamale Jr.’s parents’ relationship via 15 rounds in the ring—the same number that once upon a time indicated a championship match. “My dad was an amateur boxer when he used to live in Guatemala,” Chamale tells the Straight via Skype from the Banff Centre, where he’s attending a theatre intensive. “My parents were always sparring with each other but in a joking fashion. When he was teaching me how to box, my mom would playfully beat up my dad if he got a little too rough with me.” His parents’ love story is an extraordinary one that’s spanned many kilometres and many different forms, he says. They had been childhood neighbours in Guatemala, but when his father fell in love with his mother, she rejected him due to “socioeconomic differences”. “He’s from the lower classes in Guatemala, she’s from the upper,” Chamale Jr. explains. “Then he left the country and left her behind. But they kept a relationship, as he would write her letters and she would respond. It wasn’t until she came to Canada that they fell in love.” Mis Papás maps the many forms of their love story: newly arrived Canadian immigrants, newlyweds, new parents, sparring partners, and then, suddenly, caretaker and patient. When Chamale Jr. was just 13 years old, his father contracted an infection that nearly claimed his

rEvolver fest is a labour of love

Above, Anjela Magpantay spars in Mis Papás (Will Martin photo); below left, Nadeem Phillip and Christine Quintana in Never the Last. (Tristan Casey photo).

not creators, Quintana that ultimately ended in tragedy. Never the Last ofsays. The Russian-born fers the rare opportunity to hear Eckhardt-GramAt Up in the Air’s annual celebration of new work, Mis Papás and violinist’s work was sel- maté’s compositions performed together to help Never the Last take two wildly different looks at real-life romance dom performed, and she bring the pair’s journey to life. butted up against insti“There’s the bones and the blood,” Quintana life. He ultimately survived, but the consequences tutionalized sexism and eventually fascism around says. “There’s the facts and dates and times and of his illness—he suffered brain damage and is also Europe before relocating to Canada in 1953. events, and then there’s the experiences and the now deaf—changed everything for the family. But that’s for another story. Never the Last keeps imprints that that leaves on someone… There’s “My parents would never tell their story as if it’s its focus on those 10 compositions she wrote dur- also something about honouring someone’s some harrowing journey,” Chamale says. He be- ing her decade-long relationship with Grammaté. legacy. These were real people, and putting lieves it’s a miracle. In the context of “leaving home The Eckhardt-Grammaté Foundation in Win- her music at the forefront of this performance and what they know, all the culture and the nipeg, which promotes her work and supports means a lot to us.” language that they know—what is sickness? young artists, even provided Quintana with a set What’s one more thing to add to that?” Mis Pa- of unpublished letters the couple exchanged dur- Up in the Air’s rEvolver Theatre Festival runs from pás, he says, is simply his way of honouring his ing their union—a turbulent, powerful romance Wednesday (May 11) to May 22 at the Cultch. parents and their story. More to explore at rEvolver Theatre Festival Christine Quintana, who co-created Never the Last with Molly MacKinnon, shares that Here are more highlights at the rEvolver Theatre Festival, which runs from Wednesday desire to honour two incredible people and (May 11) to May 22 at the Cultch: one remarkable love story. When MacKinOkay.Odd. promises to be just that. From the creative minds of the local interdisciplinnon, a violinist, introduced her to the comary arts company Hong Kong Exile comes this utterly confounding but wonderfully ambipositions of violin prodigy Sophie-Carmen tious experience, which promises to be part spiritual retreat and part social commentary. Eckhardt-Gramatté, Quintana was hooked. Silenced, the newest offering from Vancouver’s Urban Ink, the indigenous and intercultural performMacKinnon had always wanted to create ance company, explores the lives and stories silenced within our communities—and challenges our own a theatrical performance around the 10 complicity, inadvertent or otherwise, in the silencing of the most vulnerable and marginalized among us. pieces that Eckhardt-Gramatté composed Charisma Furs, cowritten and performed by Toronto’s Katie Sly, is a solo show that’s both wildly intimate between 1919 and 1929, during her marand just plain wild. Sly recounts a variety of personal experiences (winning a school-yard soccer game, riage to expressionist painter and war vetsubmitting for the first time to a dominatrix) and shares her perspective on everything from growing up eran Walter Gramatté. poor to coming out as queer—through storytelling, dance, standup comedy, and origami. “The music is just striking,” Quintana Vancouver’s Cause & Effect Circus uses juggling, props, and choreography to serve up engaging comedy and says. “I’m no classical expert, but it’s very visceral social commentary in The New Conformity, which compares the supposed comfort of fitting in to the freedom of and abstract and conjures these powerful images. independent thinking, as three coworkers attempt to stop their lives from devolving into chaos. It’s complex and complicated—like she was.” > ANDREA WARNER In 1919, Eckhardt-Grammaté was composing at a time when women were supposed to be interpreters,

2

THINGS TO DO

ARTS High five

Editor’s choice CHORAL HEAVEN The transcendent-sounding Elektra Women’s Choir traces the European roots of works for female voices in In the Abbey Garden—and takes on pieces by big-name composers like Gustav Holst and Sergei Rachmaninoff in the process. Best of all, the choir is joined by Vancouver’s Borealis String Quartet, with Stephen Smith at piano and organ. It should make for an uplifting spring concert—and a chance to marvel at the power of the female voice. Elektra Women’s Choir presents In the Abbey Garden at Ryerson United Church on Saturday (May 7).

Five events you just can’t miss this week

1

RECOLLECTING EXPO 86 (At the Museum of Vancouver through summer) Party with Expo Ernie and relive the retro kitsch magic.

2

JAMES EHNES (At the Orpheum on May 9) The stellar violinist goes unplugged for his 40thbirthday recital.

3

UNCEDED TERRITORIES (At the Museum of Anthropology to October 16) Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun shit-disturbs in colour-saturated style.

4

ART & PARENTHOOD (At Unit/Pitt Projects to June 11) A moving group show that explores one of life’s most profound experiences.

5

COMPAGNIE THOR (At the Scotiabank Dance Centre from May 5 to 7) Nicola Leahey’s solo dance is so intense you might need a fire extinguisher.

Guest pick

OURO COLLECTIVE Our guest from the arts scene is Jim Smith, producer at DanceHouse, whose season revs up again in the fall with Jessica Lang Dance, BJM, and more. Here’s his choice from this week’s calendar: “On my radar is OURO Collective’s presentation of PACE, their newest work, and Kaleido, choreographed by Montreal’s Tentacle Tribe, at Studio 1398. OURO Collective is an emerging group of local dance artists that uses street-dance vocabulary in the creation of their new works. It is exciting to see local artists engaging in and fostering national collaboration.” OURO Collective presents PACE + Kaleido at Studio 1398 from Thursday to Sunday (May 5 to 8).

MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 31


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ARTS

Bryn Terfel fetes his 50th Beloved bass-baritone traces his musical journey through song at the VRS

H

itting the half-century mark is generally a festive occasion, with the birthday boy or girl being deluged with love and lavish gifts. In the case of Bryn Terfel, however, he’s the one who’s doing the giving. The Welsh-born, internationally acclaimed bass-baritone turns 50 on November 9, and to mark this rite of passage he’s touring a concert program that surveys where he came from and who helped him along the way, before concluding with a subtle suggestion of where he might go next. “The narrative really is ‘Bryn at 50’,” the singer reveals, in a telephone interview from his Vancouver hotel. “The first song [Idris Lewis’s “Can yr arad goch”] was the first song that I ever learned as a bass-baritone, which my grandmother, from my father’s side, was very adamant that I should learn, because it’s all about what a farmer’s son should be doing—looking after his land and enjoying his life working on that farm. So that song always brings back incredible memories, as do any of those first four Welsh songs. “And then,” he adds, “the program kind of goes into English song, and this comes straight from the process of becoming a professional singer. My first singing teacher, Arthur Reckless, instead of opera arias, he would give me English songs. So my first three years of technique was through English song, and I became a big fan of that medium as well.” The English works on the program reflect more than just Reckless’s teaching: they’re also a nod, Terfel suggests, to the port cities

Welsh-born Bryn Terfel reflects on old teachers and ports. Brian Tarr photo.

that feature prominently on his touring itinerary. Frederick Keel’s folk-inf lected “Salt-Water Ballads” share the modest beauty of the Welsh material, but in the second part of his Vancouver Recital Society concert, Terfel will head into more demanding terrain, with lieder from the greatest German composers of art song, Robert Schumann and Franz Schubert. “In anybody’s career, once you leave college, Schubert and Schumann become a very important facet of stepping back from the

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operatic performing to those genius composers who can describe anything in one page, in two verses,” he says. “For instance, Schubert’s Litanei is one of the most beautiful songs—and I’ll sing that as one of the encores, hopefully. “That touches on the fact that my second singing teacher was from Germany,” he continues, “and was completely different from Arthur Reckless in the fact that he made me learn two or three songs, by memory, every week. Which, of course, sharpened my knowledge of song, but also of how to learn very quickly—and that was something that became apparent in my career over the next 25 years. Sometimes you have to learn something at the drop of a hat, and thankfully, I have that facility now.” Mastering Schubert’s demanding “Gruppe aus dem Tartarus”, in particular, could be seen as an indication of where Terfel’s headed next. “There’s nothing like being on the stage singing a Schubert song,” he says. “You can’t compare it to any other composer. And I just hope that in the future I’ll be able to learn ‘Winterreise’, for instance. In the Guildhall [School of Music] I learned some of the other song cycles.…but there’s one gaping hole, which is that winter journey.” That Terfel is considering both learning and recording “Winterreise” suggests that he’ll be giving us musical gifts for many years to come. “Isn’t it amazing that, even at 50, you can have something to aim towards?” he says. “There are wonderful things on the horizon.” -

Opens May 11th Tickets Now On Sale!

Mis Papás photo by Travis Jeffers, Point Blank Photo

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The Vancouver Recital Society presents Bryn Terfel, with pianist Natalia Katyukova, at the Orpheum on Wednesday (May 4).

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MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 33


ARTS

Ballet Kelowna dancers Heather Thompson and Mark Dennis John perform John Alleyne’s Split House Geometric. Simone Orlando photo.

Former dancer steers Ballet Kelowna forward > B Y JAN ET SMITH

I

n the late 2000s, star ballerina Simone Orlando suffered the kind of career-ending injury that would send lesser human beings into a fetal ball. Instead, the former Ballet BC dancer, a favourite who once took the leads in shows like A Streetcar Named Desire, refocused herself, enrolling for business-management studies at BCIT while she built up her choreography. Today, she is the proud artistic director and CEO of Ballet Kelowna, a blossoming company that’s moved into its own big, new facility in that Interior town. The troupe also enjoys an ambitious touring schedule that brings the art form to communities around the province—and that finally visits Vancouver with exciting new contemporary repertoire this month. “It couldn’t have wound up any more perfectly,” the artist and administrator admits, speaking to the Straight from Kelowna, where she moved to take the position almost immediately upon graduating in 2014. Reflecting on her severe hip injury, she adds: “As devastating and as dark a period as it was to go through, and not knowing what the future would hold, I certainly wouldn’t have landed here if I hadn’t have taken that leap and said, ‘Simone, you’re going to have to redefine yourself and get yourself back into school and make yourself employable.’ ” Orlando chose to specialize not in nonprofit management, but in money-minded business—a decision that could only have come from the other trauma she experienced at the exact same time she was dealing with the pain of a destroyed hip: Ballet BC filing for bankruptcy protection and shutting down in 2009 (a setback it’s since overcome). “I was in Ballet BC the day that the board came into the studio and announced that the company was ceasing operations, and it came right out of left field,” she recalls. “In that moment I was like, ‘Oh my God, this company may not exist.’ Maybe that’s what sparked that interest in trying to understand how could I be helping dance in this province.” Today, Ballet Kelowna has built a strong base in the Interior and has toured to more than 60 B.C. communities, often introducing viewers 34 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016

to dance. With only six dancers, it’s nimble, able to perform in smaller venues that bigger companies could never fit into. Once it moved into its own building from its original digs at the Canadian School of Ballet last fall, it was able to host in-studio events, teach adults the art form, and offer choreographers ample room to create. “It’s just elevated the quality of what we’re doing,” explains Orlando. “Some days it’s pretty nuts,” she admits with a laugh about her workload. “I do everything from preparing budgets and grant proposals to rehearsing the company, and I choreograph for the company—I even do the company’s laundry after a performance!” Orlando has found a fine combination of contemporary work that balances audience tastes with high artistic quality, always with a mandate to foster Canadian talent. Just look at the Renaissance program coming here as part of the Chutzpah! Plus series: it features world premieres by Orlando herself and Boston Ballet and Nederlands Dans Theater alumna Heather Myers; James Kudelka’s Byrd Music; and Split House Geometric, created by her former director at Ballet BC, John Alleyne. All of the scores on the program are inspired by early music—though the pieces are written by cuttingedge composers like B.C.’s Rodney Sharman (Kudelka’s work) and Jocelyn Morlock (Orlando’s piece). The compositions will be performed live by Toronto’s Continuum Contemporary Music—part of Orlando’s goal to look for more bold creative collaborations for her company. In all, the show is just a first look by Vancouverites at the dreams Orlando has for the company—dreams that have come with a lot of business analysis and hard work. There’s a discipline and drive here that clearly must have its roots in the dance studio. And Orlando agrees: “I really feel all of that energy and commitment that I had for my job as a professional dancer, I’ve been able to channel that into helping a company to succeed.” Chutzpah! Plus presents Ballet Kelowna’s Renaissance at the Norman and Annette Rothstein Theatre from Wednesday to Friday (May 4 to 6).


ARTS

ReVoLt ignites inner uprising > BY JA NET SM IT H

T

he opening 10 minutes of ReVoLt are as intense as dance gets: alone in a spotlight, Australian performer Nicola Leahey fights to breathe, as if some force is trying to strangle her from the inside. “It’s frightening at the beginning; it’s suffocation,” admits choreographic innovator Thierry Smits, speaking to the Straight from Brussels, where his Compagnie Thor is based. “It’s ‘I have to try to get out of this situation. I have to get more freedom of movement.’ There’s a real feeling of oppression, and then little by little in the cycle of the piece, there’s more liberty of movement.” ReVoLt has been described as a sort of embodiment of political uprising— a conflict that explodes within the dancer. In fact, the fiery piece was inspired in part by the female Peshmerga fighters Smits had seen arming themselves against ISIS on the news. “I was like, ‘Wow, these women really know what they are fighting for. They’re not just fighting with words, but fighting with weapons,’ ” Smits recalls. “I thought it would be nice to do a kind of combat for a woman trying to get out of her imprisonment. “There is still a lot of work to do around violence against women around the world,” he adds. “My mother was a very engaged feminist, so I was exposed at a very young age [to these ideas].” But with Smits based in Brussels, you also can’t help but think of this fight for freedom in terms of what he says is happening at this moment in the Belgian capital. Asked what it is like living in that city right now, only a month after terror attacks, he says it feels peaceful and people are still going out to art shows and living their lives. But he adds, “There was a moment of panic and drama—and now there’s just more police and more extreme right and

Belgian choreographer Thierry Smits was inspired by women’s fight against violence around the world—and fiery dancer Nicola Leahey. Hichem Dahes photo.

more military, and that’s the negative side of it: less liberty.” Still, it’s clear Smits loves his hometown. Brussels is a celebrated centre of contemporary performance today, and he clearly revels in that. And its multicultural makeup has helped contribute to that vibrancy, he says. “One-third of the population is an immigrant, is a foreigner. It’s huge. It’s a small city but it’s very, very cosmopolitan and international.” Even in this mostly open-minded cultural milieu, Smits stands apart as a bit of an anomaly. The veteran artist is known for creating a hugely diverse range of work—everything from the cabaret and theatrical to larger, more abstract dance creations. “It’s true that when I finish a work, most of the time the next one is in total opposition to what I did before,” he says. “It’s not easy, because most people

JAMES EHNES

in the art market need to be able to say, ‘Oh yes, he’s doing his style.’ But I’m very quickly bored of what I’ve done.” Before working with Leahey, he had never crafted a full-length solo work for a woman, and wanted to make a work for the strong, charismatic, and committed dancer. Dressed in a long camouflage T and flailing her blond mane, she digs deep for the piece, physically and emotionally. “At the same time, it’s very structured, very formal—she’s not crying or anything,” explains Smits, who makes ample use of blackouts throughout the stripped-down, pummelling piece. “It’s more about the repetition of small actions. It’s quite cold in that way—and violence is cold. That was the target.” ReVoLt is at the Scotiabank Dance Centre from Thursday to Saturday (May 5 to 7).

A Sound Experience Subscribe and save up to 25% Tickets and info at chancentre.com Trombone Shorty and Orleans Avenue – SEP 25 Mariza – NOV 2 Diego El Cigala – NOV 20 Dianne Reeves – FEB 22 Noche Flamenca’s Antigona – MAR 12 Anda Union – MAR 26 Max Raabe and Palast Orchester – APR 9 Bobby McFerrin – APR 29

IN RECITAL

PRESENTED BY:

MONDAY, MAY 9 8PM, ORPHEUM

James Ehnes violin

Andrew Armstrong piano

HANDEL Sonata in D Major BEETHOVEN Sonata in F Major, Op. 24 “Spring” BRAMWELL TOVEY Stream of Limelight

One of Canada’s greatest classical artists and one of the world’s top violinists, (and the VSO's GRAMMY® and JUNO®-winning partner) James Ehnes performs in recital as part of his fortieth birthday recital tour. Hear this exceptional artist unplugged and on the Orpheum stage with pianist Andrew Armstrong in a recital that includes a work written for James by Maestro Bramwell Tovey. MEDIA SPONSOR

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vancouversymphony.ca 604.876.3434 MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 35


ARTS

Jazz trumpeter delves deep Into the Silence

Paula Kremer, Artistic Director

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ereavement can reduce an artist to silence or inspire works that, while mourning the loss, also rejoice in the life spent. The death 18 months ago of Avishai Cohen’s father led the Israeli jazz trumpeter and composer to create Into the Silence, a deeply reflective album that takes the listener on an emotional ride from grief to fierce pride, love, and joy. “The time for writing was from December to July,” says Cohen, reached in New York City, where he lives and works for part of the year. “I had a deadline to do an album anyway, and that happened to be the same period. As I was writing, I really felt the need to concentrate on what was going on, without verbalizing to myself what every tune is or means. Everything is about life for me during that period of losing the person I love most in the world. “It was difficult, but the process was very honest. I was careful not to pick up any tunes or parts of tunes already written that might possibly work for the album, but to make sure everything is current, and celebrating not only the death but life as well, and having had him in my life. Joy, not just mourning. It was a great experience, and we played the music for the first time in the studio.” Neither Cohen’s father nor his mother was a musician, but they were passionate music lovers and fostered the enthusiasm of their children. “My elder brother and sister took that path—and I followed them. It was such an obvious and natural thing that we all played music—and I think we had a natural talent. We loved it, and at no time did we think to stop. That’s the crucial thing. You see a lot of kids playing, and at one point they stop. It’s not just about individual practice, it’s the commitment to three times a week in the conservatory and long hours in school. I remember knowing already at the age of 12 or 13 that this is my life. Growing up knowing what you want to do is a beautiful thing.” Cohen had a long list of inspirations as a young trumpeter—Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Kenny Dorham, Clark Terry, Don Cherry, Thad Jones, Art Farmer, Chet Baker, Lee Morgan, and Clifford Brown spring to his mind. In 1997 he moved to the U.S. to attend the Berklee College of Music in Boston, graduating in only two years. Soon afterward, Cohen moved to New York, where he revelled in the diversity of music and performance opportunities available to him. “I’ve done fun gigs playing reggae, Latin, South American music. I played in any circumstances—not just to get by financially, but musically speaking it’s important to do everything. It sets up flexibility and knowledge of what music is, and different cultures and different representations of what it can or should be. I was always connected to different kinds of music. From age 14 I’ve been recording pop and rock ’n’ roll and singer-songwriters.” In addition to his work with the quartet, Cohen is artistic director of the Jerusalem Jazz Festival. He also plays in the band Big Vicious, “more of a rock ’n’ roll outfit”, with two drummers and two guitarists. And as a member of 3 Cohens he continues to perform with his siblings, saxophonists Yuval and Anat. Somehow, Cohen also finds time to be a family man. “My family is in Tel Aviv, and they come with me—though not so much to New York. They sometimes go on tour with me in Europe, and we spend time in India as well. Having kids and being a touring musician is a challenge, and one of the hard things about this life. But other than that, it’s pretty great.” The Avishai Cohen Quartet performs at the Norman and Annette Rothstein Theatre on Saturday (May 7) as part of the Chutzpah! Plus series.


ARTS

Jimmy Carr’s not afraid of dark > B Y GUY M A C PHER SO N

T

hat sweet baby face sticking out of the well-tailored suit tells such well-crafted, silly one-liners (“I recently wrote a book about poltergeists, and I’m pleased to say it’s flying off the shelves�) it’s easy to see why it features on countless prime-time panel programs on British telly. Jimmy Carr is adorable. But how could such darkness emanate from that same package? On his recent Netflix special, Funny Business, Carr gleefully crosses the line. “I wrote a joke about the negative stereotypes that still prevail in our society concerning women, and I worry about telling that joke because I worry that if I were to tell that joke, and it would be misconstrued as genuine misogyny, it could really light the fuse on some bitch’s tampon. I would feel awful,� he tells the crowd. But they get it. These aren’t opinions; they’re jokes. And Carr tells both sweet and sour ones. “I try and sort of mix both of those kind of styles,� he says on the phone from London, during one of the only 10 days he’s spent at home this year. “All I can do is one-liners. I don’t really do long stories. So it’s trying to find a balance between those two in the light and the shade. Because for me, I can’t sustain one of them for an hour.� Many comedians make jokes with their colleagues backstage that they’d never dare say on-stage. A few like Carr relish pushing buttons. “I’ve always liked the idea of there being no barrier between the audience and the comedian,� he says. “The more you can kind of break that barrier down and treat the audience like they’re your friend, they get it. Because there’s no malice in my act; I’m just trying to say things that I think are funny.� Even though he’s well enough known now that he’s essentially

British comedian Jimmy Carr may look adorable, but he’s not afraid to mix a few sour jokes in with the sweet ones—and sometimes viewers are shocked.

preaching to the choir, he can still surprise and shock newbies to his live shows who’ve only ever seen the clean-cut funnyman on network television. And there might very well be a few newbies in Vancouver, a city he’s never been to before, despite having a Canadian wife. (“I think I maybe have some records by Bryan Adams somewhere and I like his photography a lot, so I feel like I’m a native.�) “Sometimes if you come and see me live you might be shocked at how rude it really is,� he says. “I sort of figure if someone’s paid to see me live, I can be as rude as I want, because they’ve literally bought into it.� Then there are those reading about this at home. Some rabble-rousing journalist on a slow news day tattles on him to the masses and then shit hits the fan. Apologies are demanded amid the outrage. But Carr will have none of it. He stands firm. “I didn’t say it by mistake,� he says. “It would be a very disingenuous apology, I think. It’s not like I blurted that out and I was drunk. No, I said that 150 times on tour and then you got offended when you saw it.� It seems to be a ritual in the British press and online. Carr thinks nobody’s really all that offended over his work. And there are more practical

reasons for not heeding the torch mob. “If I started going around apologizing for jokes and taking them out of my set, I’d have to go back to doing five minutes, wouldn’t I?� That said, he likes the fact that, thanks to social media, the general public now has a voice to air its grievances. “It’s nice that people can kind of come directly and say something to you and comment and you’ll see it,� he says. “But that isn’t to say that you have to then change what you do. There’s no amount of signatures that can stop me doing what I do. I have the right to free speech, but they have the right to free speech. So I’m allowed to say that thing and they’re allowed to say they don’t like it. I think where things get complicated is where they’re trying to stop you from saying the thing that you want to say.� He believes the customer is always right, to a point. “Three jokes into my set, you kinda go, ‘Oh yeah, I like this.’ If you think I’m funny, you’re right. If you think I’m not funny, you’re right. There’s no definitive answer, is there? If it tickles you, then great.� Jimmy Carr’s Funny Business tour plays the Vogue Theatre on Saturday (May 7).

The Arts Council of New Westminster, New Westminster Public Library, Douglas College and the Royal City Literary Arts Society present:

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“Bostridge sings as if from inside the music, as if he has found a way to produce pure, disembodied emotion.�

MAYOR JONATHAN X. COTÉ • UJJAL DOSANJH • JOE WIEBE • STEPHEN QUINN GRANT LAWRENCE • ART BERGMANN • JOE KEITHLEY • CAROLYN MARK • D. TREVLON EDEN FINE DAY • SEAN NELSON • LORI HENRY • POET LAUREATE CANDICE JAMES MICHELLE DEINES • DAVID BLINKHORN • SYLVIA TAYLOR • BENNETT R. COLES • BONNIE NISH RUTH KOZAK • TREVOR CAROLAN • GAYLE MAVOR • JACQUELINE ROLSTON BETSY WARLAND • ESMERALDA CABRAL • BEN NUTTALL-SMITH • KATHLEEN FORSYTHE KEVINSPENST•JANEBYERS•KURTISFINDLAY•CHIEFRHONDALARRABEE•ARIADNESAWYER YILIN WANG • DR. AJAY K. GARG • LUCY ORTIZ • TOMMY K. TAO • SELENE BERTELSEN JACQUELINE MAIRE • HAE YOUNG KIM • ANITA AGUIRRE NIEVERAS • YAMAN SALEH SATTAR SABERI • MOVIN SABERI • WORLD POETRY • NEW WEST WRITERS STEEL & OAK • FOUR WINDS • DAGERAAD

- Los Angeles Times

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Readings / Interviews / Performances Discussions / WORKSHOPS Multilingual Poetry / Marketplace Community Events / MUSIC

Wed May 18 at 7:30pm I VANCOUVER PLAYHOUSE

New Westminster Public Library Douglas College The Gallery at Queen’s Park Anvil Centre Century House

In this recital of unflinching clarity, Mr. Bostridge’s tenor becomes a weapon itself, revealing the emotional savagery of World War I in a program that includes Mahler, Stephan, Butterworth, Weill, and Britten.

LITFESTNEWWEST.COM

IAN BOSTRIDGE tenor

WENWEN DU, piano

$25

SONGS OF WORLD WAR 1

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MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 37


ARTS

UPCOMING CONCERTS

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SIMMONS SYMPHONIC SHENANIGANS SUNDAY, MAY 8, 2PM Orpheum

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Children will celebrate the music of many lands, through the marimba, WLPSDQL DQG RWKHU IXQ SHUFXVVLRQ LQVWUXPHQWV b TINY TOTS SERIES SPONSOR

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SATURDAY & MONDAY, MAY 14 & 16, 8PM SUNDAY, MAY 15, 2PM Orpheum SCHNITTKE Moz-Art à la Haydn MOZART Piano Concerto No. 24 in C minor* VALENTYN SILVESTROV The Messenger BEETHOVEN 6\PSKRQ\ 1R LQ % Ŵ DW 0DMRU Joshua Weilerstein conductor

Joyce Yang piano*

Virtuoso pianist Joyce Yang performs one of Mozart’s most important piano concertos, and one of his greatest works, a concerto that greatly influenced Beethoven and foreshadowed the Romantic era of composition to come, and conductor Joshua Weilerstein leads the orchestra in Beethoven’s beautiful Symphony No. 4. PRE-CONCERT TALK May 14 & 16, 7:05PM, FREE TO TICKETHOLDERS. MASTERWORKS DIAMOND SERIES SPONSOR

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THE ELUSIVE IMAGINARY FUTURE

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38 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016

the most expectation—not just for the showstopping “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina”, but for its Broadway-scale glamour and emotion. Happily, on this front, Vancouver Opera’s rendition of the hit musical delivers. When Argentine president Juan Perón steps aside at the beginning of the second act, the Presidential Palace’s shutter-style doors seem to be blown open by the sheer fabulousness of Eva Perón— Caroline Bowman, radiant in the iconic, sequined white ball gown, and belting her ballad out as she emerges. There’s big feeling, but also the necessary duality here— the slight suggestion of a manipulator justifying her jewels and designer clothes to the poor. The fact is, no matter how you feel about Perón’s ambitious wife, her rags-to-riches story, or even the thought of a revived Andrew Lloyd Webber musical, that song will sink its talons into you and stick with you for days. Written by Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice in the 1970s, post–Jesus Christ Superstar, the work still has strong tunes, driven as often by catchy tango rhythms as by rock ’n’ roll attitude. Evita isn’t the deepest exploration of politics, history, or the cult of personality you may ever see, but that’s allowable. What it can’t be is flat (as we all saw in a certain fi lm version in the 1990s). Thankfully, this production captures all of the title character’s colourful contradictions. Iranian-Canadian West End star Ramin Karimloo provides a bitingly sardonic narrator in Che, constantly reminding Eva of her hypocrisy. And Bowman feistily captures Eva’s conflicting personalities. Watch her turn her back on her poor date and flash a 1,000-watt smile when she meets Juan Perón at a party, the way she inhales and steels herself before shooing away his mistress, or the way she erupts in rage when British royalty have the audacity to meet her anywhere other than Buckingham Palace. Her singing scales the different demands of the role too, from the rangy, rawer numbers of the first act to the crystal clarity of “Lament”, as Evita faces early death.

Caroline Bowman’s feisty Eva Perón rallies the crowd in Vancouver Opera’s Evita. Tim Matheson photo.

Die-hard opera audiences can revel in the stunning tenor of John Cudia, a former Broadway Phantom who’s equally adept at Verdi, making a regal and mellifluous President Perón. The opera chorus, too, shows the musical depth of the score, making the repeating “Perón” chants of the second act truly hypnotic. The production is not as flawless as its heroine’s blond chignons and white silk suits. There are a few places, particularly in the first act, during Eva’s arrival in busy “B.A., Buenos Aires, Big Apple” at just 15, where the score feels a bit rushed—though elsewhere, the more famous numbers are unhurried. And the set’s steel scaffolding and hanging spotlights sometimes look more Squamish Valley Music Festival than colonial Buenos Aires—although the multiple projection screens produce some smashing effects, memorably multiplying archival black-and-white shots of Evita’s adoring crowds across the stage’s many levels. And who is Evita amid all this—heroine, feminist, socialist, gold digger, master propagandist, political pawn? Sixty-five years or so after her death, and almost 40 years after Lloyd Webber’s musical first hit the stage, you’ll probably feel more conflicted than ever. But it speaks to her, and the show’s, lasting power that you’ll go home pondering her legacy—and humming “Don’t Cry for Me Argentina”. > JANET SMITH

Facing East gets stuck in grief T HEAT RE FACING EAST Directed by Ryan Mooney. Produced by Fighting Chance Productions and Nathan Gardner. At the Jericho Arts Centre on Thursday, April 28. Continues until May 14

Do you have a minute? Can I

EDGARD VARÈSE Octandre MELISSA HUI From Dusk to Dawn GABRIEL DHARMOO the fog in our poise (World Première) KATIA MAKDISSI-WARREN Parade JULIA WOLFE The Vermeer Room

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A Vancouver Opera production. At the Queen Elizabeth Theatre on Sunday, May 1. Continues May 5 to 8

2 tell you how sick I am of plays

SUNDAY, MAY 22, 7:30PM Annex

GORDON GERRARD

EVITA

Can you judge an Evita by its fabled balcony scene

JUNO® Award-winner Al Simmons is a creative genius whose highly original performances of profound wackiness and of off-the-wall inventions have taken the arts of music and comedy to unparalleled heights of hilarity. Al’s humour touches a responsive chord in people of every age — join Al and the VSO for a highenergy show that’s fun for the whole family!

AL SIMMONS

M U S IC

2 alone? Probably not, but it’s the moment that holds

Gordon Gerrard conductor Al Simmons children’s entertainer

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Evita captures contradictions

in which gay people have to die in order to make a point about the evils of homophobia? Let me be clear: I am not diminishing the tragic reality of queer suicide—especially among our youth. I just don’t think that maudlin presentations of gay victims are helping anybody out. Based on Carol Lynn Pearson’s play, David Rigano and Mark Eugene Garcia’s musical tells the story of Andrew, a young, gay Mormon. Andrew is in love with Marcus, who made the mistake of opening both his door and his heart to a religious canvasser. Marcus is a sweetheart, albeit a bit of a dope: he asks, of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, “Is this something

a gay man can join?” Unable to accept what Marcus offers, Andrew commits suicide, convinced that his sexuality is irreconcilable with his love of God, and with his father’s career as a conservative radio personality. In the first scene of Facing East, Andrew is already dead: Marcus accidentally meets Andrew’s parents, Alex and Ruth, at the graveside. From there, the play launches into a long, largely event-free flashback, in which the text mostly just sits in a puddle of grief in which queer experience is tragically problematized and Mormon homophobia, especially as embodied by Ruth, gets more airtime than it deserves. Playwright Pearson is Mormon, and a major problem with Facing East is that it fails to acknowledge Mormonism’s history of racism, homophobia, polygamous marriage, and questionable revelations. In an attempt at subtlety that is partly successful, Facing East shows us Ruth’s unhappy marriage. But the musical would have been more helpful, in my view, if it had said to Andrew and others like him, “That woman is

batshit crazy. Get the hell away from her and live your life.” Structurally, the story is repetitive: Andrew is endlessly conflicted, Marcus is endlessly patient, Alex is all about his job, and Ruth moans about her marriage. Rigano’s score also repeats itself. Unmelodic and undynamic, except when it tips into overstatement, it never varies from its moderate pace. Matt Montgomery, who plays Marcus, delivers the most satisfying performance in this production. Montgomery finds Marcus’s humour and offhand charm—and he consistently sings on-pitch, which is a blessing. Mandana Namazi also sings well, and she treats her unattractive character, Ruth, with respect. Francis Boyle delivers an honest and touching emotional performance as Alex but, on opening night, his pitch was often iff y. Playing Andrew, Jesse Alvarez does his best, but like all of the performers, he is restricted by the cliché-ridden material. What I learned from this production: I shouldn’t date Mormons. But I knew that already. > COLIN THOMAS


straight choices

ar ts/ timeout THEATRE DANCE MUSIC COMEDY LITERARY EVENTS ET CETERA GALLERIES MUSEUMS OUT OF TOWN

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THEATRE 2OPENINGS MISSING FROM ME Some Assembly Theatre Company presents a play about 11 travellers at a train station, written and performed by local youth. May 4-7, Roundhouse Community Arts & Recreation Centre (181 Roundhouse Mews). Free admission, info www.someassembly.ca/. THE 2016 LAWYER SHOW: HAIRSPRAY Carousel Theatre for Young People presents a musical based on John Waters’s 1988 film. Proceeds go to Carousel Theatre for Young People and Touchstone Theatre. May 4-7, 8 pm, Waterfront Theatre (1412 Cartwright St., Granville Island). Tix $80/75, info www.touchstonetheatre.com/ the-lawyer-show/. ALWAYS ... PATSY CLINE Claude A. Giroux directs Ted Swindley’s musicaltheatre tribute to ‘60s country icon Patsy Cline. May 5-21, 8 pm, Deep Cove Shaw Theatre (4360 Gallant Ave., North Van). Tix Info www.firstimpressionstheatre.com/. STILL/FALLING Rachel Aberle’s play tells the story of a girl who struggles with anxiety and depression. May 6, 7 pm, Anvil Centre (777 Columbia St., New Westminster). Tix $12-17, info www.ticketsnow.ca/. AWKWARD CONVERSATIONS WITH ANIMALS I’VE F*CKED Stages Theatre Co. presents Rob Hayes’s darkly funny and disturbing psychological examination of mental illness and loneliness, starring Chris Lam and directed by Cory Haas. May 10-14, 8-10 pm, Studio 16 (1545 W. 7th). Tix $25, info www.facebook.com/ stagestheatreco/.

on the web!

For up-to-the-minute, searchable Arts listings on your phone, visit

www.straight.com

REVOLVER THEATRE FESTIVAL 2016 Theatre festival features an eclectic mix of mainstage, site-specific, and cabaret shows, including works by Cause & Effect Circus, Delinquent Theatre, Hong Kong Exile, May Can Theatre, and Urban Ink Productions. May 11-22, The Cultch (1895 Venables). Tix $20/15, info www.revolverfestival.ca/. THEATRE AND MUSIC EXPRESSIONS 2016 Arts Umbrella’s annual showcase features five diverse productions performed by young actors in the preprofessional theatre program. May 11-22, Waterfront Theatre (1412 Cartwright St., Granville Island). Tix from $10, info www. artsumbrella.com/expressionstheatre/.

2ONGOING THE VALLEY The Arts Club Theatre Company presents Joan MacLeod’s play about the aftermath of a teenage boy’s arrest on a SkyTrain platform. To May 7, Granville Island Stage (1585 Johnston, Granville Island). Tix from $29, info www. artsclub.com/. ITHAKA Canadian premiere of Andrea Stolowitz’s play about a woman who returns from combat to find that nothing makes sense. To May 14, 8-10 pm, Havana Theatre (1212 Commercial). Tix $22-25, info www.facebook.com/ITHAKA2016/.

DANCE 2THIS WEEK RENAISSANCE Ballet Kelowna presents a mixed program with choreography by Simone Orlando, Heather Myers, James Kudelka, and John Alleyne. Presented by the Chutzpah Festival. May 4-6, 8 pm, Norman Rothstein Theatre (950 W. 41st). Tix $29/25/21, info www.chutzpahfestival. com/performances-tickets/dance/balletkelowna/. PACE + KALEIDO OURO Collective presents PACE and Kaleido. Guest visual artist Laura Bucci presents Cultivate a Spot. May 5-8, 7:30-9 pm, Studio 1398 (1398 Cartwright, Granville Island). Tix $25/22, info www.ourocollective.com/. COMPAGNIE THOR/THIERRY SMITS The Dance Centre’s Global Dance Connections

TALENT TIME To everything there is a season. After this month, talent will take a break until the fall. At least that’s the case with Paul Anthony’s Talent Time, the monthly feel-good fun-times show at the Rio Theatre. Anthony and cohost Ryan Beil present some of the best entertainers you won’t see anywhere else, along with top-rung comedians. Their season-ender on Thursday (May 5) goes out with some oldtimey bonhomie. On-stage will be the Vaudevillians, billed as “B.C.’s #1 seniors entertainment troupe”, the Myrtle Family Band, featuring washtubs and jugs, some rare 78s played on a vintage gramophone, and the comedy of Alicia Tobin and Camiel Pell. Plus, the usual assortment of mirthful mayhem. Miss it and you have to wait four more months— and that’s too many sleeps.

The Show at Emily Carr University New Adventures in Design, Media & Visual Arts Exhibition Hours 8–22 May 2016 10am–8pm Weekdays 10am–6pm Weekends Details at ecuad.ca

PRESENTING SPONSOR

PLATINUM SPONSOR

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series presents ReVoLt by Belgian choreographer Thierry Smits. May 5-7, 8 pm, Scotiabank Dance Centre (677 Davie). Tix $14/12, info www.thedancecentre.ca/ events/global_dance_connections/.

MUSIC 2THIS WEEK EVITA Vancouver Opera presents Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Tony Award– winning musical. Stars Ramin Karimloo and Jenn Colella. To May 8, Queen Elizabeth Theatre (650 Hamilton). Tix from $45, info www.vancouveropera.ca/. A GERMAN REQUIEM The Dunbar Heights United Voices and Voices Chamber Orchestra perform Schubert’s Stabat Mater and Brahms’s Geistliches Lied and Ein deutsches Requiem. May 6, 7 pm, Dunbar Heights United Church (3525 24th Ave. West); May 8, 3 pm, Ryerson United Church (2195 W. 45th). Tix $20, info www.dunbarheightsuc.ca/brahmss-agerman-requiem/. M IS FOR MUSIC IN MAY BY MOZART, MECHEM & MORE EnChor Choir presents musical selections from Renaissance, Baroque, classical, Romantic, and contemporary repertoire. May 6, 7:30 pm, Ryerson United Church (2195 W. 45th). Tix $20, info www.enchor.ca/concerts/. BROADWAY ROCKS! Conductor Steven Reineke leads the VSO, the UBC Opera Ensemble, and vocalists LaKisha Jones, Christiane Noll, and Rob Evan in a program of favourites from Broadway musicals such as Dreamgirls, Phantom of the Opera, Hairspray, Chess, Mamma Mia, The Lion King, and Jersey Boys. May 6-7, 8 pm, Orpheum Theatre (601 Smithe). Info www.vancouversymphony.ca/.

ART! VANCOUVER INTERNATIONAL ART FAIR VANCOUVER CONVENTION CENTRE VANCOUVER, CANADA MAY 26 - 29, 2016 FOR INFORMATION ABOUT ATTENDING VISIT:

WWW.ARTVANCOUVER.NET

IN THE ABBEY GARDEN The Elektra Women’s Choir and the Borealis String Quartet perform Holst’s Ave Maria, Rachmaninoff’s Six Choruses for Women’s Voices, and Brahms’s Psalm 13. May 7, 7:30 pm, Ryerson United Church (2195 W. 45th). Tix $15-30, info www.elektra.ca/. TELL ME YOU LOVE ME The Phoenix Chamber Choir presents a concert of music exploring various notions of love. May 7, 7:30 pm, Oakridge United Church (305 W. 41st). Tix free to $25, info www. phoenixchoir.ca/. THE FRANCO-FLEMISH SCHOOL The Gallery Singers present music by Ockeghem, Josquin, Clemens non Papa, Lassus, and Vaet. May 8, 3 pm, Holy Trinity Anglican Church (1440 W. 12th). Tix $18/9/ kids under 12 free, info www.gallery singers.ca/. JAMES EHNES IN RECITAL Violinist James Ehnes, the VSO, and pianist Andrew Armstrong perform Handel’s Sonata in D Major, Beethoven’s Sonata in F Major, Op. 24, “Spring”, and Bramwell Tovey’s Stream of Limelight. May 9, 8 pm, Orpheum Theatre (601 Smithe). Info www. vancouversymphony.ca/. ONE NIGHT STAND: CAROLINE SHAW Music on Main presents a chance to delve into composer in residence Shaw’s arresting, physical, and open-hearted work. May 10, 8 pm, Fox Cabaret (2321 Main). Tix $29/15, info www.musiconmain.ca/.

SKYLA WAYRYNEN, CONNECTIONS, 2016 PRESENTED BY:

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MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 39


Arts time out

from previous page

COMEDY 2ONGOING THE COMEDY MIX 1015 Burrard, Century Plaza Hotel & Spa, 604-684-5050, www. thecomedymix.com/. Comedy club with pro-am night Tue at 8:30 pm, showcase Wed at 8:30 pm, and featured headliners Thu at 8:30 pm and Fri-Sat at 8 and 10:30 pm. Cover $8 Tue, $10 Wed, $15 Thu, $18 Fri, $20 Sat. 2MARK FORWARD May 5-7 2BEN GLEIB May 12-14 2IVAN DECKER May 19-21 2GABRIEL RUTLEDGE Jun 2-4 2CHAD DANIELS Jun 9-11 2DEANNE SMITH Jun 16-18 2CHRIS LOCKE Jun 23-25 YUK YUK’S COMEDY CLUB 2837 Cambie, 604-696-9857, www.yukyuks.com/ vancouver. Comedy club with Top Talent Tue at 8 pm, amateur night Wed at 8 pm, and professional headliners Thu-Fri at 8 pm and Sat at 7 and 9:30 pm. Cover Tue $10, Wed $7, Thu $10, and Fri-Sat $20. VANCOUVER THEATRESPORTS LEAGUE Some of the world’s most daring and innovative improv. Improv After Dark (every Fri and Sat, 11:15 pm); Off Leash (every Wed and Thu, 9:15 pm); Rookie Night (every Sun, 7:30 pm); TheatreSports (every Wed, 7:30 pm; every Fri and Sat, 9:30 pm); Throne and Games: A Chance of Snow (every Thu, Fri, and Sat 7:30 pm). May 4-11, The Improv Centre (1502 Duranleau, Granville Island). Tix $8-22, info www.vtsl.com/.

2THIS WEEK

JIMMY CARR FUNNY BUSINESS

LIVE IN CANADA

JIMMY CARR: FUNNY BUSINESS Just for Laughs presents two shows by English standup comedian, TV host, and actor. May 7, 6:30 & 9 pm, Vogue Theatre (918 Granville). Tix $45.50, info www.hahaha. com/jimmycarr/.

LITERARY EVENTS 2THIS WEEK REVEREND BILLY: THE EARTH WANTS YOU Performance artist and eco-activist Reverend Billy launches his new book The Earth Wants YOU. May 6, 6:30-8 pm, Banyen Books and Sound (3608 W. 4th). Free admission, info www.banyen.com/ events/reverend-billy/. CANADIAN WOMEN SHAPING DIASPORIC RELIGIOUS IDENTITIES Book launch and panel discussion with editors and authors Becky Lee, Kate Power, and Tak-Ling Terry Woo. May 6, 7-9 pm, SFU Harbour Centre (515 W. Hastings). Free admission, info www.sfu.ca/

“A COMEDY HERO \eh ekh j_c[iD¬ - The Guardian

straight choices

GALLERIES

TAKING THE THRONE Snow doesn’t mean the white stuff to a Game of Thrones fan. Jon Snow, the Bastard of Winterfell, is a major character on the HBO series. But you don’t need to know that—or anything else—to enjoy Vancouver TheatreSports’ parody Throne and Games: A Chance of Snow. Unlike the deadly serious TV show, this improvised fantasy journey is full of larfs. You’ve got your usual assortment of improv games—and some you’ve never seen before—performed in gothic costumes of characters you’ve grown to love from television. Or not. As we said, it doesn’t matter. You’ll figure it out. Throne and Games: A Chance of Snow runs every Thursday through Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the Improv Centre on Granville Island until May 28.

BILL REID GALLERY OF NORTHWEST COAST ART 639 Hornby, 604-6823455, www.billreidgallery.ca/. 2THE SERIOUSNESS OF PLAY (Haida Manga artist Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas has created an artistic practice celebrated for its vitality and originality) to Oct 2 VANCOUVER ART GALLERY 750 Hornby, 604-662-4719, www.vanartgallery.bc.ca/. 2MASHUP: THE BIRTH OF MODERN CULTURE (exhibition offers an international survey of mashup culture, documenting the emergence and evolution of a mode of creativity that has grown to become the dominant form of cultural production in the early 21st century) to Jun 12

MUSEUMS MUSEUM OF VANCOUVER 1100 Chestnut Street, 604-736-4431, www.museumof vancouver.ca/. 2YOUR FUTURE HOME: CREATING THE NEW VANCOUVER (major exhibition engages visitors with the bold visual language and lingo of real-estate advertising as it presents the visions of talented Vancouver designers about the cityscapes of the future) to May 15

ET CETERA

THE MUSEUM OF ANTHROPOLOGY AT UBC 6393 NW Marine Drive, 604822-5087, www.moa.ubc.ca/. 2IN THE FOOTPRINT OF THE CROCODILE MAN: CONTEMPORARY ART OF THE SEPIK RIVER, PAPUA NEW GUINEA (exhibition features the carvings of Papua New Guinea’s Iatmul people) to Jan 31, 2017 2LAWRENCE PAUL YUXWELUPTUN: UNCEDED TERRITORIES (Vancouver-based artist is showcased in a presentation of works that confront the colonialist suppression of First Nations peoples and reflect the ongoing struggle for indigenous rights to lands, resources, and sovereignty) May 10–Oct 16

2THIS WEEK

OUT OF TOWN

STRATHCONA ART PHOTOWALK This photowalk will take you back in time to admire beautiful details and learn how to use your camera to create stunning photographs. May 7, 10 am–12 pm, Benny’s Market (598 Union). Tix $99, info www.vancouverphotowalks.ca/photo walks/strathcona/.

2UPCOMING HIGHLIGHTS

humanities-institute/public-events/publicevents/2016/women-identities.html. TOSHIKO Graphic novelist Michael Kluckner discusses the challenges and opportunities of the graphic-novel format. His latest novel Toshiko is about a young Japanese-Canadian woman in B.C. during World War II. May 11, 7-9 pm, Alice MacKay Room (Vancouver Public Library, 350 W. Georgia). Free, info www.vpl.ca/.

HERE’S TO THE LADIES WHO LAUGH Bridget Ryan’s cabaret blends musical theatre with comedy in an evening of vignettes from her vast repertoire of performing in over 70 musicals. Includes a dessert buffet. May 8, 2 pm, Anvil Centre (777 Columbia St., New Westminster). Tix $50, info www.ticketsnw.ca/.

THIS WEEKEND!

THE OKANAGAN FLOW FESTIVAL Highlights of the flow-arts retreat includes over 40 workshops and two nights of performances. May 13-15, 12-6 pm, Green Bay Bible Camp (1449 Green Bay Rd., Kelowna). Tix $249-299, info www.okanaganflowfestival.com/.

TIME OUT ARTS LISTINGS are a public service provided free of charge, based on available space and editorial discretion. Submit listings online using the event-submission form at straight.com/AddEvent. Events that don’t make it into the paper due to space constraints will appear on the website.

Shelley Stefan

Lesbian Family Heraldry: An Achievement of Arms

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MUSIC

Ellinor Miranda Salome Olovsdotter

BY MIKE US IN G ER

isn’t quite a household name yet, but she’s spent the past few years attracting plenty of attention from those who are. EDM giants Skrillex and Diplo are not only professed fans, but favoured collaborators with the Stockholm-spawned 30-year-old known to her fans as Elliphant. When not producing her songs, TV on the Radio guitarist Dave Sitek loves hanging out with the singer at his Los Angeles home, the two happily sitting around and discussing art as friends. Katy Perry has weighed in as a high-wattage admirer, Tweeting—unprompted— her admiration for Elliphant’s visually stunning “Down on Life” from 2013 with “One of the most bad ass music videos I’ve seen in a long time!” Building her street cred to unassailable levels, Elliphant has appeared in songs and videos alongside genre-mashing Scandinavian renegades like Tove Lo and MØ. But she’s also worked with the kind of songwriting giants that only A-listers usually get access to, the shortlist including professional hitmaker Dr. Luke and ever-outspoken rapper Azealia Banks. What might be coolest about all of this is that, as Elliphant gets ready to hit the road to promote Living

A personality larger than life

Elliphant decided to re-create the infamous cover of Roxy Music’s Country Life, only with her and a very chill dog instead of two almost-naked fashion models.

not to Kingston, but instead the Far East. “The first time I had the chance to do music was in a reggae bar in Bangkok,” Sweden’s beyond-outgoing Elliphant uses music to she says. “I was waiting on a connect with people, including a few famous ones visa so I had to stay in BangLife Golden—her sophomore album and first true as- kok for two weeks, and I was going there to the bar a sault on the American charts—none of this appears lot because it was by my hotel. Bangkok was liberatto have gone to the singer’s head. When she’s reached ing for me. When I grew up I was a very pretentious in a New York City hotel room, the first thing she child who only listened to Bob Dylan and Leonard does is apologize for seeming unfocused at the top of Cohen. I never gave myself that smiley music moment. When I had the chance to get into the roots of the interview, admitting that’s because she often is. “I’m becoming professional with the packing Jamaican music, the whole dancehall thing—all the because I’m constantly packing and unpacking,” beautiful pop melodies, but with subjects I could reElliphant says, speaking with a pronounced but late to—that’s where my interest started.” If Elliphant is relentlessly interesting, it’s becharming Swedish accent. “But everything is messy in my hotel. I’m good at making everything cause so is her story. She was labelled ADHD organized inside the bag, but as soon as I open it in school, and with that label came self-esteem up… Well, it’s like a nuclear bomb went off in here.” issues. The singer for the longest time was conThat Elliphant is surrounded by something vinced that she wasn’t really good at much beyond that looks like a Big Apple hotel-room version of working in restaurants, at which she excelled due to her beyond-outgoing personality. Hoarders doesn’t bother her. “The cleaner I am in my head, the messier that I “I have an artist’s soul—I’ve always been makget in my life,” she says philosophically. “When I am ing things ever since I was a kid,” Elliphant says. clean and pure in my head, I’m able to really focus on “But the first time that I ever got something back what I have to do in my life: get out there, meet people, from my art was when music came into my life. talk, make art. All this other bullshit, things like tak- Music isn’t coming from someplace where it’s like ing care of the laundry, becomes second place.” I have to sing. I never had some feeling of ‘I have Elliphant is in New York rehearsing for a tour to bring this to the world.’ It’s more about how I that will see her play intimate clubs, somewhat was looking for friends as a human being. When surprising considering her various YouTube vid- I realized that people wanted me, wanted to be eos mostly have views that are in the millions. around me, that was a big relief. And if people (Shot at stunning locales in Iceland, “Down on want more, I’m going to give it to them.” Life” has been seen over five million times; lensed Angry and almost antisocial in her teens, she was in Jamaica, the ganja-scented dancehall jam eventually saved by a love of travelling. As anyone “Music Is Life” has eclipsed two million views.) who’s ever gotten on a plane and pushed themselves Despite various boosters and heavy YouTube out of their comfort zone knows, there’s nothing exposure, Elliphant is in many ways just start- more life-changing than immersing oneself in other ing to make herself known as a live entity. Boding cultures, no matter how foreign they may be. Raised well for getting her name out there as a performer as something of a wild child by a former wild-child is that—like many of those who find superstar- mom, the singer had her outlook on life rocked when dom—she’s got a larger-than-life personality. her grandmother took her to India in her mid-teens. Ask, for example, how it is she sings in JamaicaIf travelling did anything for her, it was teach via-IKEA-accented English on many of her songs— her that the most important thing we can be as including those that make up Living Life Golden— humans is empathetic, embracing differences and she launches into a story as unlikely as it is rather than being afraid of them. It would also awesome. The dub-heavy bass lines and reggaefied teach her to expand her horizons, to always be guitars that buoy dance-floor-detonating tracks like open to new things. Which brings us back to that “Love Me Badder” and “Step Down” can be traced Bangkok bar, which in many ways served as the

CHECK THIS OUT

DISAPPEARING ACT Radiohead fuelled rumours of a new-album announcement by blanking out its website and erasing all of its Facebook and Twitter posts. Now, if only Thom Yorke and company could erase all memory of The King of Limbs…

KID CONGO POWERS Long-time Straight readers

know that we’re massive fans of Brian Tristan, better known to disciples of the American underground as Kid Congo Powers. Chances are you first got to know the guitarist as an early member of (take your pick) the Gun Club, the Cramps, or Nick Cave’s Bad Seeds. In recent years, Powers has been fusing trash-tastic glam with gothic Americana and deathmarch country under his own name, with the Pink Monkey Birds serving as his backing band. We could rave about why you need to see Kid Congo & the Pink Monkey Birds at the Rickshaw on Saturday (May 7). -

Elliphant plays Alexander Gastown on Saturday (May 7).

in + out

Elliphant sounds off on the things that enquiring minds want to know.

On life goals: “My only mission is to look for truth and ask questions. That’s all. I knew I was going to do it through some kind of art, and it ended up being music. I think it’s really annoying when people go ‘Oh, yeah, patois artist.’ My Jamaican friends would never say that I speak patois. They’d say I sing in English with a Swedish accent.” On being labelled: “I get really upset when people call me an MC. They put me in a bag. I’m not an MC. If you are a hip-hopper or a rapper, that’s a culture, that’s something that you have grown up with and are really into. You have idols and respect for the art of hip-hop. I don’t have that. I’m not an MC. Sometimes I rap a little bit, but only because it sounds cool in a song. There’s nothing deeper.” On famous friends: “Because I am such an in-the-moment person, it’s only when I’m really shit-faced and so excited about life that I’ll be ‘Oh my god—can you imagine that he called me.’ People like Sitek and Skrillex aren’t so much into beautiful stuff. It’s more about my personality and something original for them.”

MUSIC Let’s talk about

You gotta see

springboard to where she is today. “There was a cute guy there,” Elliphant continues, “and I wanted to make out with him, but he didn’t want to make out with me. He didn’t even care about me. So one day I took the mike and sang to him, a poetry thing that I freestyled on the reggae beat. He was like, ‘Wow, this is so good.’ In the night we went to some really sleazy studio in Bangkok, went through a bottle of whiskey, and jammed. They put up a MySpace for me with the really weird, sloppy stuff that I did that night. It all kind of started there. Later on, when I started to sing, that’s the kind of stuff that I did. If it had been a rock bar in Bangkok, probably I’d be singing rock now.” -

PUMPKIN BILE When a fan jumped on-stage during a Smashing Pumpkins gig in Memphis last week, frontman Billy Corgan reacted with “Get the fuck off my stage before I punch you in the fucking face.” The appropriate response would have been “Thanks for coming to see a band no one cares about in 2016.” EDGY PERFORMANCE On April 30, the Edge became

the first rock musician to play the Sistine Chapel. We’ll use this as a chance to recall when Homer Simpson called the chapel’s famous painted ceiling “the Pope’s private naked-dude mural”.

RED HOT TRASH The Red Hot Chili Peppers have promised to debut a new song called “Dark Necessities” this week. Which reminds us of this Nick Cave quote: “I’m forever near a stereo saying, ‘What the fuck is this garbage?’ And the answer is always the Red Hot Chili Peppers.’” -

Fresh and local SECONDHAND HABIT CHINESE WHISPERS Victoria-based Secondhand Habit likes distortion. A lot. This is clear right from the opening bars of “Rosemary’s Garden”, where Valentine Vandal sounds like he’s singing through a bullhorn into an old rotary telephone that has been jacked into a blown 15-watt guitar amp. Scott Weiland would have dug it. Since making this five-track EP, Vandal has left the band, but presumably Secondhand Habit’s blues-rock-meets-grunge sound remains intact. “Tik Tok” is, sadly, not a Kesha cover, but an oddball raunch-disco number, complete with strings. MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 41


MUSIC

The Range plumbs YouTube’s depths After putting together one of

2 the most innovative records the

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world will hear this year, James Hinton began doing some worrying. The producer’s motives were pure when he started working on Potential, his third full-length under the name the Range. Building on a template set up by 2013’s breakthrough full-length, Nonfiction, he spent endless hours scouring the deepest recesses of YouTube for clips by beyond-underground singers and MCs. Hinton sampled their work and set it to Sominexed hip-hop, microchip-powered R&B, and chilledout EDM, creating a sprawling triumph in the vein of Moby’s landscape-shifting Play. But as great as Potential is, there were sleepless nights for the producer, who’s also a university physics graduate. “My biggest worry was that people would misunderstand what I was going for,” says the engaging and thoughtful Hinton, on the line from New York. “Misunderstood in the way that people might say, ‘So what? You used all these YouTube vocals and I don’t see any strain of narrative, or any sense of weighing in on things in terms of the lyrics you chose.’ ” But that couldn’t be further from the truth. Right off the top, the 27-year-old

James “The Range” Hinton’s goal was simple: to pose awkwardly.

gives listeners a window onto his own fears about choosing art as a career with “Regular”, which samples a YouTube clip where London MC SdotStar intones, “Right now, I don’t have a backup plan for if I don’t make it.” “I had a theoretical ambition for this record, and I’m so happy that that’s been talked about so much,” Hinton says. “It was important to me that this is a great record and that I’ve made something very musical and very complete. But the fact that the record is

released in 2016 is not an accident, because I was trying to comment on the state of how people think about virality and how people approach pop music in particular. There are expectations that come with that, and I was trying to peel that away. That was an ambition, and it’s been a bit of a surprise that it’s been so well understood.” Using algorithms designed to go into far corners of YouTube, he set himself strict guidelines, with viral videos, of course, immediately out of the running. Even if he was blown away by a YouTube performance, he wouldn’t use it if he got an unlikablehuman-being vibe from the clip. If one were to extrapolate anything from this, it’s that Hinton hoped to make the world a better place with Potential. Indeed, the album’s very name says something about his admiration for the obscure artists whose work he unearthed. That list includes young West Londoner Kruddy Zak, who posted a video of himself freestyling (pint-size hype man in tow) back in 2011. His lines “Everything’s changed/My life’s like a book but the page still remains” are set to swelling ’80s gauze synths in Potential’s inspirationally soulful “Copper Wire”. Kai Mars’s stunning

a cappella cover of Ariana Grande’s “You’ll Never Know”, meanwhile, was spun into the sparkling, sun-flooded meditation “Florida”. “What I’m hoping to expose with this record was the idea that not everyone wants to be a super-famous star,” Hinton says. “A lot of people just like to make their works, and it doesn’t mean that they aren’t good at it if they don’t have ambition. Or maybe the stars unlock on their ambitions. In the case of Kai from ‘Florida’, I can see how from prerelease to postrelease, how her whole tenor has changed, how she’s really excited about the possibility of ‘What will that song do?’ “Something has changed in her life,” he continues, “and there’s something special about that. If that at all kicks off something where other people start digging into YouTube the way I’ve done, I wouldn’t be mad at all. As much as I think I got good at algorithms to really see everything that’s good at this level, I’m sure I’m missing some search term out there. There’s just so much material—honestly, it’s a sea.” > MIKE USINGER

The Range plays the Alexander Gastown on Saturday (May 7).

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Hall (3214 W. 10th). Tix $24/20, info www. roguefolk.bc.ca/concerts/ev16050620/. SAID THE WHALE Vancouver-based indierock band road tests material for upcoming album. May 7, doors 8 pm, show 9 pm, Fox Cabaret (2321 Main). Tix $25 (plus service charges and fees) at www.livenation.com/.

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ELLIPHANT Swedish electronica singersongwriter tours in support of latest release Living Life Golden. May 7, doors 7 pm, show 8 pm, Alexander Gastown (91 Powell). Tix at www.ticketweb.ca/. AVISHAI COHEN QUARTET Israeli jazzfusion band, led by trumpeter Avishai Cohen. Presented by the Chutzpah Festival. May 7, 8 pm, Norman Rothstein Theatre (950 W. 41st). Tix $29/25/21, info www.chutzpahfestival.com/.

CRYSTAL SHAWANDA First Nations blues-roots singer-songwriter tours in support of new album Whole World’s Got the Blues. May 13, 9 pm, At the Waldorf (1489 E. Hastings). Tix $10, info www. atthewaldorf.com/.

KATCHAFIRE New Zealand roots-reggae band performs on its Burn It Down Tour 2016, with guests Mystic Roots Band. May 7, doors 7:30 pm, show 8:30 pm, Venue (881 Granville). Tix at www.ticketweb.ca/.

BETTYE LAVETTE American R&B vocalist performs hits from her over-50-year musical career. May 17, 8 pm, Kay Meek Centre (1700 Mathers Ave., West Van). Tix $55/48/25, info www.kaymeekcentre.com/.

THE RANGE AND ROME FORTUNE American electronica and hip-hop musicians coheadline. May 7, doors 10:30 pm, show 11 pm, Alexander Gastown (91 Powell). Moved from original venue of Biltmore. Tix at www.ticketweb.ca/.

CRYSTAL CASTLES Experimental electronic band from Toronto. Jul 23, doors 8 pm, Commodore Ballroom (868 Granville). Tix on sale May 6, 10 am, $30 (plus service charges and fees) at www.livenation.com/. MARISSA NADLER American singersongwriter tours in support of upcoming release Strangers, with guests Wreckmeister Harmonies and Muscle and Marrow. Aug 7, doors 7 pm, show 8 pm, Cobalt (917 Main). Tix on sale May 6, 10 am, $13 (plus service charges and fees) at Red Cat, Zulu Records, and www.ticketweb.ca/. MIIKE SNOW Swedish indie-pop band tours in support of latest full-length album iii. Aug 12, doors 7 pm, show 8 pm, Orpheum Theatre (601 Smithe). Tix on sale May 6, 10 am, $39.50/25 (plus service charges and fees) at www.livenation.com/. PARQUET COURTS New York–based indie-rock band tours in support of latest release Human Performance. Aug 27, doors 8 pm, show 9 pm, Vogue Theatre (918 Granville). Tix on sale May 6, 10 am, $23 (plus service charges and fees) at Red Cat, Zulu Records, and www.ticketfly.com/. JAKE BUGG English indie-rock singersongwriter and guitarist tours in support of upcoming release On My One. Sep 7, doors 7 pm, show 8:15 pm, Commodore Ballroom (868 Granville). Tix on sale May 6, 10 am, $39.50 (plus service charges and fees) at www.livenation.com/. KEITH URBAN Australian country star, with guests Dallas Smith and Maren Morris. Sep 10, 7:30 pm, Rogers Arena (800 Griffiths Way). Tix on sale May 6, 10 am, from $69.50 to $109.50 (plus service charges and fees) at www.ticketmaster.ca/. BLINK-182 American punk-pop trio tours in support of upcoming full-length release California, with guests A Day to Remember, All American Rejects, and DJ Spider. Sep 18, doors 6 pm, show 7 pm, Abbotsford Centre (33800 King Rd., Abbotsford). Tix on sale May 6, 10 am, $79.50/75/59/35 (plus service charges and fees) at www.livenation.com/. DOLLY PARTON American country singer and actor (“Nine to Five”) performs on her Pure & Simple Tour. Sep 19, doors 6 pm, show 7:30 pm, Rogers Arena (800 Griffiths Way). Tix on sale May 7, 10 am, $97.50/67.50/39.50 (plus service charge and fees) at www.livenation.com/. GOJIRA French heavy-metal band tours in support of new LP MAGMA, with guests TesseracT. Oct 9, doors 7 pm, Vogue Theatre (918 Granville). Tix on sale May 6, 10 am, $39.50 (plus service charges and fees) at Red Cat Records and www.ticketfly.com/.

2THIS WEEK CLOUD CITY FT. ABJO & SLIMKID3 Seattle-based hip-hop collective, with guests Body of Work and the X Presidents. May 5, 8 pm, Rickshaw Theatre (254 E. Hastings). Tix $15, info www.face book.com/events/1053903551298586/. POKEY LAFARGE American country-blues singer-songwriter tours in support of latest release Something in the Water, with guests the Cactus Blossoms. May 5, doors 8 pm, show 9 pm, The Imperial (319 Main). Tix at www.ticketweb.ca/. RYAN HEMSWORTH Canadian multigenre musician, with Ryan Playground and Harrison. May 6, Fortune Sound Club (147 E. Pender). Info www.fortunesoundclub.com/. HAR MAR SUPERSTAR American R&B singer-songwriter tours in support of upcoming album Best Summer Ever. May 6, 7-10:30 pm, Cobalt (917 Main). Tix $15, info www.facebook.com/ events/818826668222808/. CALEB KLAUDER Oregon roots singersongwriter performs with bassist Jesse Emerson, drummer Ned Folkerth, vocalistguitarist Reeb Willms, guitarist Russ Blake, and fiddler Sam Weiss. Presented by the Rogue Folk Club. May 6, 8 pm, St. James

44 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016

KID CONGO & THE PINK MONKEY BIRDS The Georgia Straight presents psychedelic swamp-rock band featuring Gun Club founding member Kid Congo Powers. May 7, doors 8 pm, Rickshaw Theatre (254 E. Hastings). Tix at www. ticketfly.com/.

COASTS U.K. rock band tours in support of debut self-titled release, with guests Knox Hamilton and Symmetry. May 8, doors 7 pm, show 7:30 pm, Biltmore Cabaret (2755 Prince Edward). Tix at www.ticketweb.ca/. LUCA TURILLI’S RHAPSODY AND PRIMAL FEAR Italian and German power-metal bands coheadline. May 9, 7 pm, Rickshaw Theatre (254 E. Hastings). Tix $35, info www.rickshawtheatre.com/. MAYER HAWTHORNE American R&Bsoul singer-songwriter tours in support of latest release Man About Town. May 9, doors 8 pm, show 9 pm, The Imperial (319 Main). Tix at www.ticketweb.ca/. LUCIUS American pop band tours in support of upcoming release Good Grief. May 10, doors 8 pm, show 9 pm, The Imperial (319 Main). Tix at www.ticketweb.ca/. MICHAEL CLEVELAND AND FLAMEKEEPER In collaboration with the Pacific Bluegrass and Heritage Society, the Rogue Folk Club presents American bluegrass fiddler and his band. May 11, 8 pm, St. James Hall (3214 W. 10th). Tix $30/26, info www.roguefolk.bc.ca/ concerts/ev16051120/.

CLUBS & VENUES ALEXANDER GASTOWN 91 Powell, 778-379-0407. 2ELLIPHANT May 7 2THE RANGE AND ROME FORTUNE May 7 2LEFT RIGHT TOUR May 14 2BREAKBOT May 28 2JMSN Jun 20 2JESSY LANZA Jun 21 2BAS Jun 23

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AT THE WALDORF 1489 E. Hastings, 604253-7141. Woo Hoo Simpsons Trivia every third Mon, Tank Gyal and guests Thu; three-room party with Vinyl Ritchie, Casual Encounters, and ping pong/arcade games Fri; Tiki Bar Sat. 2A PINEAPPLE DISCO May 6 2CRYSTAL SHAWANDA May 13 2BLOWPONY! May 14 2AN EVENING WITH May 19 2HIATUS MUSIC FESTIVAL Jul 23 BACKSTAGE LOUNGE Arts Club Theatre, 1585 Johnston, Granville Island, 604-6871354. Vancouver’s only live-music venue on the water, with music nightly. Hot Jazz Jam night on Tue. BELMONT BAR 1006 Granville, 604-6054340. Fresh and local fare, craft beer and wine on tap, and live entertainment nightly. Open daily at 5 pm. BILTMORE CABARET 2755 Prince Edward, 604-676-0541. 2ECHO NEBRASKA May 6 2COASTS May 8 2THE BILTMORE CABARET EIGHT-YEAR ANNIVERSARY May 11 2CATE LE BON May 12 2DAMIEN JURADO May 14 2FMLYBND May 15 2BIG BLACK DELTA May 19 2THE TOURIST COMPANY May 26 2LA LUZ May 27 2WE LOVE DRAKE III May 27 2TITUS ANDRONICUS May 28 2ISLANDS Jun 4 2KATHRYN CALDER & THE BURNING HELL Jun 25 2DAVID BAZAN Aug 28 2THE BOXER REBELLION Oct 23 BIMINI PUBLIC HOUSE 2010 W. 4th, 604733-7116. Twenty-four taps of rotating and interesting craft beers. Pub trivia Mon; beer club Tue; Wing Wed; dance party Fri-Sat; happy hour 3-6 pm. COBALT 917 Main, 778-918-3671. 2HAR MAR SUPERSTAR May 6 2THE PACK A.D. May 12 2NO SINNER May 20 2JOSEPH ARTHUR May 21 2THE SO SO GLOS May 29 2ADIA VICTORIA Jun 12 2THE FLATLINERS Jun 16 2NORTHCOTE Jun 25 2YOU WON’T Jun 26 2WE ARE SCIENTISTS Jul 10 2MITSKI Jul 12 2MARISSA NADLER Aug 7

COMMODORE BALLROOM 868 Granville, 604-739-4550. 2DANIEL WESLEY May 14 2VIOLENT FEMMES May 15 2AMON AMARTH May 16 2CHARLES BRADLEY AND HIS EXTRAORDINAIRES May 20 2BLACK MOUNTAIN May 21 2THE BRIAN JONESTOWN MASSACRE May 23 2MATT CORBY May 26 2OH WONDER May 28 2BARONESS May 29 2THE KILLS May 31 2AT THE DRIVE-IN Jun 7 2TOOTS AND THE MAYTALS Jun 23 2TIGER ARMY Jun 24 2ECCW WRESTLING: BALLROOM BRAWL VI Jul 16 2BIG WRECK Jul 22 2CRYSTAL CASTLES Jul 23 2QUEER AS FUNK! Jul 29 2THE CAT EMPIRE Aug 2 2THE MAVERICKS Aug 4 2FOALS Aug 7 2EXPLOSIONS IN THE SKY Sep 4 2JAKE BUGG Sep 7 2ECHO & THE BUNNYMEN Sep 24 254-40 Oct 7 2THE PROCLAIMERS Oct 11 2I MOTHER EARTH Oct 14

straight choices

DYLAN CRAMER Saxophonist Dylan Cramer’s quartet gig at Frankie’s Jazz Club this Friday (May 6) isn’t just a welcome replay of his standing-room-only appearance there in January. Also to be celebrated is the return to the stage of ace bassist Rene Worst, following successful cataract surgery—all the better to read Cramer’s elegant, bebop-inflected charts. DOOLIN’S IRISH PUB 654 Nelson, 604605-4343. Live music Sun-Thu, with acoustic soloist or duo Sun-Wed and live band Thu DJ Fri-Sat. FORTUNE SOUND CLUB 147 E. Pender, 604-569-1758. 2RYAN HEMSWORTH May 6 2BIG WILD May 7 2BOEHM May 12 2SMASH BOOM POW/YOUNGBLOOD AND PASSIVE May 13 2DJEMBA DJEMBA AND GANZ May 13 2YOUNG EMPIRES May 19 2LOUIS THE CHILD May 20 FOX CABARET 2321 Main. 2SAID THE WHALE May 7 2ONE NIGHT STAND: CAROLINE SHAW May 10 2ALBERTA CROSS May 14 2ARCHYTAS QUARTET May 17 2ART BERGMANN May 20 2RAPP BATTLEZ WEZT COAZT May 21 2KAKI KING Jun 6 2SHRILL Jun 8 FRANKIE’S 765 Beatty, 778-727-0337. 2LARRY FULLER TRIO Jun 24 2ANDRE LEROUX QUARTET Jun 26 2STEVE KALDESTAD AND THE RENEE ROSNES TRIO Jun 27 2TWO MUCH GUITAR AND MIKE RUD MINIATURES Jun 29 2AMANDA TOSOFF Jun 30 2CORY WEEDS QUINTET Jul 1 2JACLYN GUILLOU Jul 3 FUNKY WINKER BEANS 37 W. Hastings, 604-764-7865. 2REDS, SECONDS FLAT, WAR AMP May 6 2KILLING MACHINE (JUDAS PRIEST TRIBUTE), MAIDEN BC (IRON MAIDEN TRIBUTE) May 7 2SO HIDEOUS, BOSSE-DE-NAGE, FINITE, SEVEN NINES AND TENS May 13 2GALGAMEX, GROSS MISCONDUCT, CADAVERIC LIVIDITY, BUSHWHACKER May 14 2THAT FILTHY SHOW May 19 THE IMPERIAL 319 Main, 604-868-0494. 2POKEY LAFARGE May 5 2MAYER HAWTHORNE May 9 2LUCIUS May 10 2SAINT MOTEL May 22 2NOTHING BUT THIEVES May 25 2SAVAGES May 27 2YEASAYER May 28 2CHELSEA WOLFE May 29 2DIRTY RADIO Jun 3 2PLANTS AND ANIMALS Jun 16 2BENJAMIN CLEMENTINE Jun 25 2THE WHITE PANDA Sep 3 IVANHOE PUB 1038 Main, 604-608-1444. 2CHRISTINE & THE KISILTONES May 6 2BEAVER T & THE DIVAS May 7 2SONS OF THE HOE May 8 268 LIPS May 13 2CHRIS NEWTON BAND May 14 2SONS OF THE HOE May 15 2RHYTHM ST. May 20 2HONEYBOY WILSON May 21 LAMPLIGHTER PUBLIC HOUSE 92 Water, 604-687-4424. Pub trivia with Nice Guys Inc. Tue; bourbon and bingo Wed; Rocksteady with DJs Arems, Hoppa & Rexx Thu; FKYA DJs Fri; DJ Antonia & Friends Sat. MEDIA CLUB 695 Cambie, 604-6082871. Live music most nights. 2SHAUN RAWLINS EP RELEASE PARTY May 27 2VAN DAMSEL May 28 2KEVIN MORBY Jun 7 2BENJAMIN FRANCIS LEFTWICH Jul 22 MOLSON CANADIAN THEATRE AT HARD ROCK 2080 United Blvd., 604-5236888. 1,000-seat entertainment venue showcases leading Canadian and international acts. 2ROGER HODGSON Nov 25 ORPHEUM THEATRE 601 Smithe, 604-6653050. 2ANDREW BIRD May 21 2FLIGHT OF THE CONCHORDS Jun 23 2MIIKE SNOW Aug 12 QUEEN ELIZABETH THEATRE 650 Hamilton, 604-665-3050. 2PAUL SIMON May 26 2LAMB OF GOD Jun 1 2JOE JACKSON Jun 24 2MS. LAURYN HILL Jun 26 2SARAH MCLACHLAN Jun 27 2TEDESCHI TRUCKS BAND Jun 28 2CASE/LANG/VEIRS Jun 29 2BRIT FLOYD Jul 16 2SIGUR ROS Sep 18 2TEGAN AND SARA Oct 5 2ALICE COOPER Oct 19 2IL DIVO Nov 6 REPUBLIC 958 Granville, 604-669-3214. House, hip-hop, EDM, chart, and reggae. Open nightly from 10 pm to 3 am. RICKSHAW THEATRE 254 E. Hastings, 604-681-8915. 2CLOUD CITY FT. ABJO & SLIMKID3 May 5 2KID CONGO & THE PINK MONKEY BIRDS May 7 2LUCA TURILLI’S

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RHAPSODY AND PRIMAL FEAR May 9 2LA CHINGA May 13 2MOLOTOV CARAVAN 5 May 14 2DIANA ARBENINA & THE NIGHT SNIPERS May 19 2BUZZCOCKS May 21 2CARAMELOS DE CIANURO May 22 2KING GIZZARD AND THE LIZARD WIZARD May 28 2THE SADIES Jun 3 2GONDWANA Jun 4 2DAGOBA Jun 10 2VOIVOD Jun 13 2ILL NIÑO Jun 15 2LEVITATION VANCOUVER LAUNCH PARTY Jun 16 2LEVITATION VANCOUVER Jun 17-18 2THE BLACK SEEDS Jun 24 2PICKWICK Jul 8 2LETLIVE. Jul 26 2PIGS Jul 29 2PIGS Jul 29 2DAVID LIEBE HART Sep 29

2PARQUET COURTS Aug 27 2BOYCE AVENUE Sep 10 2GOJIRA Oct 9 2TERRI CLARK Nov 12

OUT OF TOWN 2UPCOMING HIGHLIGHTS PEMBERTON MUSIC FESTIVAL Huka Entertainment presents Canada’s biggest camping, music, and comedy festival. Headliners includes Pearl Jam, J. Cole, Kaskade, and Snoop Dogg. July 14-17, Pemberton Valley (Pemberton, B.C.). Info at www.pembertonmusicfestival.com/.

RIVER ROCK SHOW THEATRE River Rock Casino Resort, 8811 River Rd., Richmond, 604-247-8900. 2CHICAGO Jun 16 2DIANA ROSS Jun 30 ROGERS ARENA 800 Griffiths Way, 604899-7400. 2THE WHO May 13 2SELENA GOMEZ May 14 2HEDLEY May 20 2CITY AND COLOUR Jun 3 2JAMES TAYLOR AND HIS ALL-STAR BAND Jun 11 2DIXIE CHICKS Jul 7 2ADELE Jul 20 2DEMI LOVATO AND NICK JONAS Aug 24 2GWEN STEFANI Aug 25 2DURAN DURAN Aug 28 2KEITH URBAN Sep 10 2DRAKE Sep 17 2DOLLY PARTON Sep 19

ST. JAMES HALL 3214 W. 10th, 604736-3022. 2CALEB KLAUDER May 6 2MICHAEL CLEVELAND AND FLAMEKEEPER May 11 2SONGWRITER’S NIGHT May 12 2STEPHEN FEARING May 28

THE ROXY 932 Granville, 604-331-7999. House band Tattoo Alibi Sat & Mon; counVENUE 881 Granville, 604-646-0064. try band Locked & Loaded Sun; the Bulge 2LEMAITRE May 5 2KATCHAFIRE May 7 and DJ Joe Pound Tue; Troys ‘R Us Wed-Thu. 2BIF NAKED May 12 2NADA SURF

May 17 2AUTOLUX May 28 2PRONG May 29 2CHUCK RAGAN Jun 10 2LEFTOVER CRACK Jul 1 2SWANS Sep 6 2PETER HOOK & THE LIGHT Nov 1 2SONATA ARCTICA Nov 28

VOGUE THEATRE 918 Granville, 604-5691144. 2SANTIGOLD May 12 2LIGHTS May 14 2CHE MALAMBO May 20 2MODERAT May 23 2THE SMOKERS

CLUB TOUR May 31 2HIROMI: THE TRIO PROJECT Jun 24 2OLIVER JONES TRIO Jun 25 2THE LEGENDARY DOWNCHILD BLUES BAND Jun 27 2JOE LOVANO CLASSIC QUARTET Jun 28 2GREGORY PORTER Jul 2 2JOHN PRINE Jul 9 2BROODS Aug 16 2COLVIN & EARLE Aug 20 2FITZ AND THE TANTRUMS Aug 24 2THE GIPSY KINGS Aug 26

BUMBERSHOOT Seattle’s 46th annual music and arts festival features live music, comedy, theatre, film, visual arts, and children’s programming. Sep 2-4, Seattle Center (Seattle, Wash.). Passes on sale Apr 29, 10 am, at www.bumbershoot.com/.

TIME OUT MUSIC LISTINGS are a public service provided free of charge, based on available space and editorial discretion. Submit listings online using the event-submission form at straight.com/AddEvent. Events that don’t make it into the paper due to space constraints will appear on the website.

MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 45


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enovictions might become more com- est with her answer. Callaway appealed, relying monplace in New Westminster, city on another court ruling, which provided that a staff fear. Although evictions under vendor’s answers in a property-disclosure statethe guise of renovation do not seem ment should be accurate. widespread as yet, staff convinced council in The appeal court rejected this argument, a meeting on Monday (May 2) to adopt meas- noting that the case cited by Callaway involved ures to address the issue. a seller who knowingly lied. These include ensuring that landlords have According to the ruling, a vendor is “not rethe necessary building permits before issuing an quired to warrant a certain state of affairs but eviction notice. Another action is to respond to only to put prospective purchasers on notice of requests for information from tenants who have any current known problems”. received notices of eviction. THE FORMER location of “We’re going to use the shuttered World Journal everything we can to try Vancouver, a Chinese-lanand slow this,” Coun. Lorrie Carlito Pablo guage daily that ceased operWilliams told the Straight in ations in January of this year, has been sold. a phone interview. A block south of the famous East Van cross, Williams described renovictions as a “silent tragedy” because tenants often have “no voice”. 2288 Clark Drive was offered on the market “These are tragedies, and these people just for $6.3 million by Cushman & Wakefield, the melt away. They’re absorbed either into the commercial real-estate services firm engaged homeless bunch or they’re out of town. We lose by the defunct paper’s parent company. Cushman & Wakefield vice president Bob them,” Williams said. According to Williams, half of New West- Iravani declined to reveal the fi nal price until the transaction closed. Iravani told the Georminster residents are renters. Council also agreed with a recommendation to gia Straight in a phone interview that the industrial advocate for changes to the Residential Tenancy property at Clark and East 7th Avenue (near the Act. A proposed amendment would grant ten- VCC-Clark Station of SkyTrain’s Millennium Line) ants the right to return to their renovated units is not being contemplated for future residential use. The 17,200-square-foot lot is at the western at a rent no higher than what the landlord could edge of Grandview-Woodland, a neighbourhood have charged if there had been no disruption. whose community plan is being updated by city SELLERS ARE asked about the condition of staff. Council previously convened a citizens’ astheir homes in a property disclosure state- sembly to offer nonbinding suggestions to guide ment. Most of the questions start: “Are you future developments. This followed strong comaware of...?” munity opposition to initial ideas offered by city According to the B.C. Court of Appeal, staff, which included 11 high-rise towers around “awareness is inherently subjective.” the Commercial-Broadway SkyTrain station. According to Iravani, the buyer of 2288 Clark “A vendor is only obligated to disclose his or her current actual knowledge, not to warrant Drive intends to renovate the existing building, keep that knowledge is correct,” states a Tuesday (May the land’s industrial zoning, and use the property for business purposes and to create employment. 3) ruling written by Justice Anne MacKenzie. The regional-context statement adopted by Her decision was issued on the appeal brought by Ian Callaway, who purchased a Vancouver council in 2013, which outlines the city’s plans and policies in support of Metro Vancouver’s townhouse from Helga Hamilton in 2004. In the property-disclosure statement, Hamil- growth strategy, reiterated Vancouver’s comton answered no when asked if she was aware of mitment to protect industrial lands. A report included in the Friday (May 6) agenda any problems with the plumbing system. The trial judge determined that there were no sys- of Metro Vancouver’s regional planning committemic or structural issues, although there were some tee noted that from mid-2011 to the end of 2014, previous problems due to the settling of the buildings. the Lower Mainland lost 63 hectares of industrial The judge found that Hamilton was hon- lands to other uses like residential. -

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46 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016


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EMPLOYMENT

HELP WANTED HIRING 2 Full Time Farm Supervisor @ $ 18.00/hourMain duties include: Supervise and Coordinatethe activities and workers on shifts. Resolve work related problems, prepare, submit progress and other reports. Required education and experience: High School or equivalent. Must have experience with Gerberas for at least 6months Work is at least 40 hours/week from 7am to 4pm May work on weekends at times To apply please send resume to: hollandiagreen@yahoo.ca

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DOMESTIC/HOME SUPPORT Full time in home care giver for a 350 lb., 69 year old male with a disability. Caregiver must help with clients personal care, day to day duties and have patience as client has short memory difficulties. Hourly wage 13$ an hour. 2 year experience is a must. Live-in/live-out options at the choice of caregiver. Location: Maple Ridge, B.C. Contact: Macrina Aird 604-460-0132 renren16v@ymail.com

HOSPITALITY/FOOD SERVICE Hiring one full-time Cook $17/hr, 3 yrs exp. Speak basic English/Thai-an asset Duties: prepare and cook complete Thai meals, oversee kitchen operations, supervise & train kitchen staffs, maintain inventory & records of food, supplies & equipment Thida Thai Restaurant 1193 Davie St. Vancouver BC V6E 1N2 Email: wanchawee_t@hotmail.com

4 COOKS Needed for PinPin Restaurant Fraser, Vancouver At least HS Grad with 2 yrs. Experience. Permanent F/T, $16.00 per hour Duties: Prepare/Cook complete meals or individual Filipino/Chinese dishes & Supervise kitchen helpers. Maintain inventory, Records of food, Supplies and Equipment. May help clean work area. To apply please send resume to jlee_pinpin@yahoo.ca

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Male Dance Partner Required for educated female (young retiree), strictly platonic. Pay $25.00 per hour (minimum 2 hours), twice weekly. Criteria: non-smoker, 6 Ft. tall & up, 60-70 years, well groomed. Metro Vancouver: Interview granted to each respondent at a location convenient for you and me. Pls. call 778-968-5466

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MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 47


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MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 49


savage love I’m a 31-year-old

straight woman. I have a good job, great friends, and average attractiveness. I’ve dated close to 30 men at this point, and I can’t wrap my head around this: I’ve never had a boyfriend or dated anyone for more than a couple months. It’s really starting to wear on my self-esteem. I don’t believe anything is wrong with me, but the more time goes on, the more I think I have to be doing something wrong. The guys ghost me or things fi zzle out or we’re not at the same point in our lives. Th is is particularly true for one guy I’ve remained friends with (common social circle) who is struggling with his career, though things are still awkward because it’s clear there’s still something there. Another area of concern: I’m still a virgin. Catholic guilt resulted in me being a late bloomer, with my fi rst kiss at 21. Once I got more into dating, my low self-esteem coupled with the fact that I’ve basically decided I want to be in a monogamous committed relationship with a guy before having sex, relationships just never happened. I don’t have unrealistic expectations that I’ll marry the fi rst dick that sticks itself into me—but I’ve waited this long, so I’m not going to jump into the sack with just anyone without knowing that I can at least trust them. The only guy I really do trust is Somewhat Depressed Guy, but propositioning him could further complicate our already awkward friendship. Is something wrong with me, and what the hell should I do?

I get variations on the first half of your question—is something wrong with me?—all the time. But it’s not a question I’m in a position to answer, WWWM, as I would need to depose a random sampling of the guys you’ve dated, interrogate your friends, and grill you under a bare light bulb for a few days to figure out what’s wrong with you. And you know what? Nothing could be wrong with you. You may have pulled the short straw 30 times in a row, and you just need to keep getting out there and eventually you’ll pull a guy who won’t ghost or fizzle on you. As for the second half of your question… What the hell should you do? Well, gee. What you’ve been doing hasn’t worked, WWWM, so maybe it’s time to do something else. Like fuck some dude on the first date. Or if that’s too drastic, fuck some dude on the second date. Or, better yet, go to Somewhat Depressed Guy and say: “I don’t think you want a relationship right now, and I’m not sure I do either. But I like you and trust you, and I could really use your help with something…” While the commitment-and-monogamy-first approach has worked for some, WWWM, it hasn’t worked for you. And being a virgin at 31 isn’t boosting your self-esteem. There are lots of people out there who jumped in the sack and did a little dick-sticking with people they barely knew but had a good feeling about. The jumping/sticking/dicking approach doesn’t always lead to committed and/or monogamous relationships, > WHAT’S WRONG WITH ME? but it can and it has and it does.

> BY DAN SAVAGE Somewhat Depressed Guy might be somewhat less depressed if he was getting some, you might have higher self-esteem if you finally got some, and dispensing with your virginity might make dating after you part ways—if you part ways with him (you never know)—seem a lot less fraught.

I’m a virgin in my late 20s. I’m not waiting until marriage, just for the right person. I’ve dated enough and had enough fun to continue being a happy, normal, socially competent guy, much to the disbelief of my various knuckle-dragging, vagina-blinded pals. I’ve been dating this gal for a few months. She’s special—we have tons of chemistry and she cares about me. We had a brief conversation about my lack of sexperience when we first started dating, and she was very cool about it. I really like this girl, but I’m not sure yet if she’s the future Mrs. I am a worrier (thanks, Mom!), and I fi nd myself thinking that if I share this with her and somewhere down the road we end up breaking up, she’s going to be even more devastated because I shared my first time with her. Am I just having silly virgin worries? Not only am I concerned about her feelings if things don’t work out but I’m also concerned that I might become vagina-blinded—that I might immediately tell this girl I want to spend my life with her just because she’s having sex with me only to find myself a few years down the road feeling trapped. What should I do? > VERY INDECISIVE, REALLY GETTIN’ NAUGHTY

“It was one of the hardest

You should fuck this girl already— provided, of course, that this girl wants to fuck you. You could wind up saying things you come to regret or have to walk back—her vagina might be that bedazzling—but that’s an unavoidable risk, and not one that’s unique to virgins. The right vagina, ass, face, skill set, or bank balance can blind a fucker with decades of experience. The only way to avoid vagina blindness—or ass blindness, et cetera—is to never have sex with anyone. And I don’t think you’re interested in celibacy, so stop freaking out about the risk that you’ll imprint, like a duckling, on the first vagina your pee-pee sees the inside of. You must also eliminate “sexperience” from your vocabulary, VIRGN, as it’s equal parts cloying and annoying.

I’ve been with

my boyfriend for more than a year. He’s the fi rst person I’ve had sex with. Four times now while we were having passionate sex, he has slipped out of my vagina and accidentally penetrated me anally. That shit hurts, and I can’t help but cry. I know he feels super guilty each time. I love sex, but I’m kind of scared every time we have it now. We’ve engaged in a little anal play before, and I wasn’t really a fan. But I’m not averse to the idea of using a butt plug. Do you think this would work? Surely other people have this problem too, right? > WRONG HOLE, ANAL TORMENT

accidental anal penetration, WHAT, as anal penetration always required focus, precision, and proper breathing techniques—in my own sexperience. But listeners of the Savage Lovecast schooled me in Episode 340, and I’m now convinced that accidental anal penetration is something too many women have sexperienced. (Do you see how annoying that is, VIRGN?) A strategically deployed butt plug sounds like a sexcellent solution to the problem, WHAT, but get yourself a plug with a wider-than-usual base to prevent your boyfriend’s misdirected cock from pushing the plug, base and all, all the way in you (ouch) or his misdirected cock from sliding in alongside the plug. (If you hate single penetration, you’ll really hate double penetration.) If the problem persists even with a plug—if your boyfriend’s cock is constantly slamming into the plug in a way that you find uncomfortable— a thumbtack glued to the base of the plug will inspire your boyfriend to be more focused and precise. And speaking of the Savage Lovecast, we’re coming up on our 500th episode, which is a significant milestone for this relatively new genre/platform/doohickey. If you’re not already listening, find it here: savagelovecast.com. And a big thanks to Nancy Hartunian, the Lovecast’s producer since Episode 1, and to the techsavvy, at-risk youth who pushed me to start podcasting before it was cool. Email Dan at mail@savagelove.net .

My own personal sexperience with Follow Dan on Twitter at www.twitter. anal led me to doubt claims of com/fakedansavage/.

The Georgia Straight Confessions, an outlet for submitting revelations about your private lives—or for the voyeurs among us who want to read what other people have disclosed.

phone calls I ever made, but it saved my marriage” “I had no idea my regular use of porn was a problem. But it was. It caused me a lot of shame and suffering. It almost destroyed my marriage.

Scan to confess License To Believe

Then one day I made a call to Sex Addicts Anonymous®, a fellowship of men and women who are overcoming their sexual addiction. It helped transform my life for the better.

I think that people shouldn’t be allowed to be part of a religion until they are the age that they are allowed to drink and vote (think critically for themselves).

Over the years, I’ve met men and women who lived in destructive relationships, had constant affairs or paid for sex. But the SAA program helped them stop the compulsive behaviour that was damaging their health and well-being.”

I adore

I try to eat as much with my hands as I can so I can avoid dishes. Also eat out of the pot and keep one mungish mug going on.

my co-workers who don’t take shit.

Mixed messages I thought this guy really liked me (recently invited me to spend the whole day together) and then today he totally ignored me. What an asshole.

Just a reminder

To learn more, call or text:

604-260-4866 It’s free, local, and confidential

www.saavancouver.org/get-help SAA welcomes newcomers of any sexual orientation or identity, whether they are gay, lesbian, straight, bisexual or transgender.

Canadian Red Cross / Croix-Rouge Canadienne

50 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016

When you’ve got your health, you have everything. Have a great weekend people!

I’m amazed at how much Love I feel for my neighbor that never talks to me, never comes to my door and I never hear her and when I see her she is polite and our interactions minimal if at all. This person is the Best Lovely Neighbor I ever had and if I ever come into money she will get a big chunk of it.

Visit

to post a Confession

RED CROSS

www.redcross.ca


straight stars May 5 to 11, 2016

F

> BY ROSE MARCUS

Pluto next Thursday/Friday end the Monday through Friday, you’ll make making great headway with someone or something important. excellent strides. week as it began, on the gain.

riday’s super new moon in Taurus finishes the workweek on a profit and pleasure upswing. By all means, show Mom extra love and appreciation, but don’t stop there. Gift everyone an extra dose of your best and watch it circle back to you with a bonus cheque. Mercury retrograde continues to May 22. Double-check everything; don’t underestimate a thing; don’t overproject; and don’t let the little things or annoyances get the better of you. Develop the art of listening. Are heart and head speaking as one? If not, keep the conversation going until they are. The end of next week can get you there. Early Monday, Jupiter in Virgo ends retrograde. Increasing the scope on something specific over these past five months, Jupiter’s job has been to point out what is in need of correcting, fi xing, repairing, healing, or upgrading. The weeding-out process now moves to the resolve-it track. Also on Monday, a rare Mercury transit occurs. For seven-and-a-half hours, we’ll see Mercury moving across the sun like a dot. We’re on the receiving end of a major creative infusion or revitalization. Watch for news, an event, an information download, or a key person or circumstance to mobilize. Outwardly eventful or not, the transit marks a turning point for what’s already in the works. Tuesday, Venus trines Jupiter while the Cancer moon makes a number of planetary aspects. It’s huge; it’s opportune; it’s lucrative; it pours forth. Favourable aspects between Mercury, Venus, and

‫ﺎ‬

ARIES

March 20–April 20

A fresh investment and/ or moneymaking opportunity holds good promise thanks to Friday’s supermoon in Taurus. Work, creative undertakings, and reward should continue to hit a great stride over this next week. Monday/Tuesday can bring news, a better solution, inspiration, insight, or romantic opportunity. Next Thursday/Friday are optimum for a presentation, meet-up, money talk, or intimate encounter.

‫ﺏ‬

TAURUS

April 20–May 21

Better and more is coming your way thanks to Friday’s super new moon providing a fresh-page turbo boost. You are in a powerful state of attraction over this next week, so by all means, stand where the light is right and play up what you have. Monday/Tuesday, emotions drive the bargain. If you need to, play the sympathy card.

‫ﺐ‬

GEMINI

May 21–June 21

Whether you feel the effects of the stars as a subtle, background influence or whether they thrust an action switch, family, real estate, home, and money matters should hit a positive upswing. Stay focused; aim for quality over quantity or speed. Thursday/Friday, gift yourself and/or your lover; relax and enjoy. Saturday/ Sunday, it’s one thing, then another.

‫ﺑ‬

CANCER

June 21–July 22

A new lifestyle, financial track, professional venture, or love prospect: you have more than the usual riding on it now. Venus in Taurus and Friday’s super new moon set a promising platform. Monday/ Tuesday could bring good news or catapult you in some lucrative, inspiring, and heartwarming way. Use these “in your element” days and the week ahead to create and conquer.

‫ﺒ‬

LEO

July 22–August 23

Thursday/Friday is great for socializing, moneymaking, or romance. Even though Mercury is retrograde, the stars generate better-thanaverage yields regarding career, money matters, fresh starts, official undertakings, and pushing past limitations. Start of the week, Venus/Neptune inspires you; Venus/Jupiter inundates you. Monday onward is optimal for pursuit of love, money, an air-clearing, upgrade, personal reward, and pleasureseeking. A relationship bond grows.

‫ﺓ‬

VIRGO

August 23–September 23

Even though there are a significant number of retrograde planets right now, you are likely to feel on the verge of a momentous new chapter. You are. A confidence-building, good-news, good-feedback week lies ahead. Put your feelers out; try your luck. Friday, Monday, and Tuesday are optimum for

‫ﺔ‬

LIBRA

September 23–October 23

Spend, sell, or refinance; now through next Friday can be huge for money dealings. New or existing, an intimate relationship is an action focal point also. Mercury retrograde asks you to double-check with your heart first. While added investment, more negotiation, and extra courage are called for, it comes easily. Auspicious/facilitating stars are on your side—Venus/Jupiter earlier in the week and Venus/Mercury/Pluto later.

‫ﺕ‬

SCORPIO

October 23–November 22

Who, what, where, and when: yes, you have a lot to evaluate. Look to Friday’s supermoon and Monday’s Mercury transit to provide a fresh perspective, insight, or solution, or to start a new dialogue. Opportunity abounds. A remeet or revisit gives you a chance to speak your heart, to fill in or top up. Advice or a second opinion is worth considering.

‫ﺖ‬

SAGITTARIUS

November 22–December 21

‫ﺊ‬

CAPRICORN

‫ﺋ‬

AQUARIUS

‫ﺌ‬

PISCES

December 21–January 20

Th is week’s transits give you the Midas touch regarding relationship and money matters. Thanks to the Mercury transit, Venus, and Jupiter, you’ll naturally get a very good read on another’s thoughts, feelings, and motives. Creativity is another area where you’ll shine. Use it on a project, a negotiation, or your lover. Friday and Monday onward, you rock/it rocks. January 20–February 18

A new home and family chapter gets a big boost from Friday’s super new moon and Monday’s Mercury transit. Despite the retrograde planets, the stars give you a green light to move ahead with an investment, renovation, redecoration project, or refinancing. Monday begins a big week for relationships, romance, reconnections, or money dealings. February 18- March 20

Mother’s Day weekend isn’t only for that one special lady. Friday’s super new moon kicks off a great weekend to spend more quality time with the people you adore. Selfpampering, dining out, and shopping make for good entertainment, too. Monday/Tuesday can be especially rewarding in the affairs of the heart or the wallet. Soak it up! -

Yes, the effort and investment are worth it. Now through next weekend can be an especially productive/lucrative time for work or working it out. Monday’s Mercury transit and the end of Jupiter retrograde could spark a new solution or prospect. Tuesday, a gentle touch, hint, or prod is all B o o k a re a d i n g o r s i g n u p f o r it takes to open the floodgate. Wednes- Rose’s free monthly newsletter at day through Friday, you’ll strike gold. www.rosemarcus.com/astrolink/.

> Go on-line to read hundreds of I Saw You posts or to respond to a message < PACIFIC CENTRE CONTRACTOR WHO HELPED WITH DIRECTIONS

s

r

UNEXPECTEDLY NICE CUSTOMS OFFICER

s

r

I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: MAY 2, 2016 WHERE: Pacific Centre, W. Georgia St

I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 30, 2016 WHERE: Truck Crossing in Blaine

We both were waiting at the elevator and you asked if I needed some help with my directions; you also were so kind to tell me how to get where I needed to go! You were so sweet and handsome; I was kicking myself for not saying more than “thank you”. You appeared to be working as a contractor and walked thru Pacific Centre. Dark hair and features with a killer smile

You were the awesome Canadian customs officer at the far right side of the border crossing. I think I was there around 11:30am. I remember you because of your eye colour, which were way too mesmerizing light in colour to look at. Not sure if you could tell but I was trying my hardest to avoid eye contact without looking like a suspicious person. I was the one telling you about rock climbing in Leavenworth and you had no idea what bouldering was. And I think you were surprised that a female would climb and camp on her own but we do! Anyway, you are way too good looking to be a customs officer but thank you for being so nice and pleasant about my trip down into the States. Cheers!

SAW YOU IN THE WAITING ROOM AT THE COPEMAN CLINIC...

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: MAY 2, 2016 WHERE: Copeman Clinic Monday early afternoon... me... black shirt, black shorts, crutches. You... pretty hat, lovely face, radiant smile and a warmth of energy that’s hard to describe. I was trying not to stare but every time I looked, you were looking my way, with that gorgeous smile. Our staring got interrupted and you were gone when I came out. You have questions and I have answers. And some questions of my own. Jeez, I hope you see this.

LEATHER JACKET ON LONSDALE

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: MAY 1, 2016 WHERE: Lower Lonsdale You: tall, wearing a leather jacket, and holding a video camera with a group of other guys on Lonsdale Avenue. Me: curly hair, blue headphones, and standing beside you at the crosswalk. Too shy to say hi in the moment, but noticed you sneaking looks. Just letting you know, you seemed like my type :)

LOTTIE FROM OXFORDSHIRE

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: MAY 1, 2016 WHERE: Stanley Park by the Marathon Route Lottie, you enchanted me with your beauty, intelligence, warmth and sweetness. We met at Stanley Park during the marathon... I wanted to ask you out but, 1. I was on duty and 2. it appears you have a boyfriend? Nonetheless, you made me something simple yet beautiful and it really touched me. What’s going on? I really would love to get to know you...

TWO GIRLFRIENDS WALKING ON DAVIE

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 26, 2016 WHERE: Davie Corner Denman You the two hotties wearing black walking in front of me from Denman to Cardero on Davie. You commented on how my cuties were so adorable. I overheard you talking about your Lhasapoo Rolstan. I was a bit distracted dealing with work stuff over the phone and thinking about what should I cook that night‚ but now in hindsight, I still can’t forget your smiles and fragrances. When do we meet again?

DIOR GIRL

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 28, 2016 WHERE: Dior at Holt Renfrew You used to work at Dior at Holts. Beautiful blonde skinny girl with big red lips. I always wanted to talk to you but was always too shy, even to be around you, I hope you read this some day, or perhaps I run into you. May I take you out sometime?

ANXIETY ATTACK BROADWAY ST.

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 17, 2016 WHERE: Broadway and Granville St. Hi, we saw each other when I had an anxiety attack on Broadway St. You were there, rubbing my arm :) You said you experience the same thing. Let’s meet and talk.

GRANVILLE ISLAND MARKET.

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 27, 2016 WHERE: Granville Isl Market between Apples, Candy and Chicken... I am a redhead that was standing in front of a candy making place talking to an older lady I had just met in the market. You walked past with short dark hair, a sleeve and eye contact that gave me temporary conversational black out. My left hand rings are NOT wedding related. I wonder if you saw me? Coffee or a cocktail? Hopelessly optimistic...

PUNK GUY HELPS OLD DRUNK GUY

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 29, 2016 WHERE: Heatley and Pender I was in the number 7 Dunbar and we had stopped at Heatley and Pender. And an old drunk man stumbled and fell underneath the parked bus. You had long dark hair and lip piercings. Wearing all black. You jumped to action to help the man up and offered to take him to the triage where you worked to sober up and have a bite to eat. You really tried to take him with you and help him out. But he refused. I was the punk chick with the punk mohawk who thought it was absolutely heartwarming to see such kindness. I thought you were really handsome. I’d like to see you some time. Maybe over a beer?

PUNK ROCK GIRL

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 27, 2016 WHERE: The Charlaton

I went to the Charlaton for a pint after work. I thought I saw you checking me out but I left without saying hi. Later I felt a real pang of regret (I’m too polite) You had beautiful black hair and a nose ring and your friend was wearing a skinny puppy tshirt. I was the scruffy construction worker sitting alone. Anyway, you’re totally my type of crush.

BEAUTY IN RED NEAR KINGSGATE MALL

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 27, 2016 WHERE: Broadway and Prince Edward You were the super cutie with dark hair, a red top, and army green pants twirling an earbud as you walked West on Broadway. I was the tall guy sitting at the bus stop wearing a green coat and black jeans. You smiled at me and I thought about it all day at work. Can I buy you a beer sometime?

WOMAN HOLDING VIOLIN CASE

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TALL DARK HANDSOME

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 27, 2016 WHERE: West Broadway

I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 24, 2016 WHERE: Davie Street

Sat next to you at a bus stop bench last week and was really consumed by your appearance. Ginger shoulder length hair, a nice form fitting dress, tights, ballet flats. You were holding a soft violin case, had a striking face and a great perfume. More than anything, I just wanted you to know how gorgeous you looked.

You: walking up Davie corner Broughton, talking with your friends, hands in your pockets. You had short dark hair, late 30’s, wearing jeans and a wind jacket. You looked at me while I was walking towards you, playing with my keys. Me: wearing all black sportswear with a high ponytail.

BATHROOM CONSTRUCTION ADONIS

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 5, 2016 WHERE: Bathroom Construction This was a few weeks ago I can’t remember the exact date. You were at my place of work looking over the construction on the bathroom. You introduced yourself to me and asked if I was such and such... I was not... but you were very attractive... and then you were gone

HYPNOTISED BY YOUR EYES

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 21, 2016 WHERE: The Tap House Surrey Last Thurs. at the Tap House you went up on stage but the hypnotist couldn't put you under. I watched you shyly too long and by the time I got close enough to talk you were wasted and having a mini meltdown. You still looked beautiful however and I was definitely hypnotised by you.

BEAUTIFUL CURLS

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 25, 2016 WHERE: Walking Home

I’ve seen you on your way home from work several times now. We’ve always shared a smile, today was no different. Next time I’ll say hello but on the off chance that you read this maybe we can use this to break the ice. :)

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 24, 2016 WHERE: Moja Cafe on Commercial Saw you at the Moja on Commercial. You: brunette wearing a denim jacket. Me: sitting across from you wearing a beige/ brown sweater. We kept glancing at each other. I wanted to talk to you, but I was with a friend... I guess you like coffee...

TALL BEAUTY WAITING AT THE KEG ON 82ND

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 21, 2016 WHERE: Keg

You waiting in lobby of the Keg Thursday April 21 630ish. Our eyes locked we seemed familiar to us both. I walked by lost for words not knowing if you were waiting on a date or... as I turned for one last look you had turned and again our eyes locked. Have no stopped thinking of you. Let's meet same spot and have a drink.

TWO FOR ONE TUESDAY’S ON BOWEN

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 23, 2016 WHERE: Bowen Island

You: Torontonian who cracks great jokes while giving kayak paddling demos on Bowen Island. Me: Tall, curly haired girl who forgot to return the ziplock bags (and feels so guilty!). I had to run to catch the ferry before asking... would you like an adventure buddy?

CUTE POLICE OFFICER, RYAN, AT MOVIE SHOOT

STUNNING ASIAN

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SAW YOU AT MOJA ON COMMERCIAL

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 25, 2016 WHERE: #22

I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 22, 2016 WHERE: Movie Shoot

You were on the #22 this afternoon and got off at 1st and Knight. I had sunglasses on but kept catching you on the reflection. As you got off and walked away we finally shared a look. Would love to get to know you, you’re absolutely gorgeous.

We were working at a movie shoot together. I thought you were super cute and really enjoyed talking to you... I didn’t see a ring on your finger? You left before I got back to the meeting area... I’d love to go for drinks? Lemme know what my name is so I know it’s you ;-).

BRUNETTE AT CHICK COREA & BELA FLECK ORPHEUM 22.4.2016

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 22, 2016 WHERE: Orpheum

I saw you, brunette, accompanied by your Asian male date (and another guy) at the Chick Corea concert on April 22, 2016, at the Orpheum. After both of us moved from the upper balcony closer to the stage, my party sat just a few empty rows in front of you. You seemed to have a lot of fun, but our eyes and smiles met several times that evening (in the stair case, before the second set etc.) and just before you left. Despite your rather fun company, you obviously were a little distracted. So was I. If you read this, you certainly will know who is behind this post. Interesting company is hard to find. Let’s meet for a coffee and discuss your impressions of Chick Corea and Bela Fleck.

TALL BEAUTY IN SCRUBS!

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 22, 2016 WHERE: BC Children’s Hospital We meet in the corridor while you were pushing a cart. My eyes immediately locked in you when I saw you. You gorgeous red head with hair tied back and shaved sides. Followed you and wish I said something before you hopped onto the elevator. Hope to bump into you and your sweet smile again soon...

SERVER AT THE DUHB LINN

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 22, 2016 WHERE: Duhb Linn Gate Pub, Vancouver Last night I came into the pub with a large crowd for a birthday party. We chatted a little while you served our table. I would have liked to exchange numbers but I never got the chance to ask before I had to go. I think you’re super cute and I’d like to meet up.

#321 BUS DRIVER IN SURREY

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I SAW A: I AM A: WHEN: APRIL 18, 2016 WHERE: Newton Exchange Shout out to the Amaranthe hoodie bus driver I met in January or February boarding the #321 at Surrey Central, and then again this week on Monday April 18. I was wearing a Xandria t-shirt as I boarded your bus at Newton Exchange just after 5pm & we discussed Leaves’ Eyes. I am open to a message from you if you’re interested. :)

Did you see someone? Go to straight.com to post your FREE I Saw You _ MAY 5 – 12 / 2016 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT 51


52 THE GEORGIA STRAIGHT MAY 5 – 12 / 2016


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