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Sunday, January 06, 2008

Music: Canada Live Plays Concert From Fire Hall #9


Tonight at 8pm on Canada Live (CBC Radio 2)

You've all seen the Firefighters Calendars! Those boys have nothing on these performers. Multi-instrumentalist Celso Machado, mandolin and guitarist John Reischman and latin percussionist Salvador Ferreras took no chances! They set the stage ablaze at Fire Hall #9 near Commercial Drive, deep in Vancouver's Eastside. The veteran trio blends hip-shaking Central and South American rhythms with the beautiful lyricism of Brazilian and Caribbean melody. From all reports the blaze was deliberately set!

Listen to it at:
http://www.cbc.ca/radio2/mediaPlayer.html?

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Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Local Producer's Documentary To Air On CBC With Music By Monica Lee


If any one missed “A Safer Sex Trade" last year, on CBC, it is airing again tonight (Tuesday Oct 2) and Saturday both at 10pm on CBC Newsworld The Lens.

The documentary features Three songs from local singer/song writer Monica Lee's Season’s Greetings EP are featured in the soundtrack as well as other composed material specific for the film. Listen for “Anticipation” as the opening and closing song, “Judy Lea” with the missing women’s march and “Fall Away” as we visit the preliminary hearing of Robert Picton trail.

Here's the trailer for the film
http://www.cheapanddirty.ca/index_safer.php#


... and here is a news bulletin from the Director and a link to the Lens Program.

As part of the best of the season, CBC Newsworld The Lens is screening A Safer Sex Trade again!
THE LENS
(Tuesday October 2 at 10pm ET/PT on CBC Newsworld)
A SAFER SEX TRADE
Scarlett is a highly successful madam with 30 years experience in the sex trade business; Simone is a high-class sex worker who services wealthy clients in five Western Canadian cities; and Jennifer is a former drug addicted prostitute who now works tirelessly to offer support to sex trade workers on the streets. These women have had different experiences in the sex trade business, but they're united by one concern-the safety of women in their stigmatized industry. The film is Commercial Drive-based Carolyn Allain’s directorial debut. The film premiered at The Whistler Film Festival and received an honorable mention from the Chris Awards in Columbus, Ohio.

http://www.cbc.ca/thelens/program_230107.html
THE LENS on CBC Newsworld - Tuesday & Saturday at 10pmET/PT
www.cbc.ca/thelens
www.cbc.ca/docs
www.cheapanddirty.ca

CBC News: The Lens: Feature Story
http://www.cbc.ca/thelens/prog...
The Lens is CBC Newsworld's showcase of emerging independent filmmakers.

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Monday, September 10, 2007

Theatre In the Raw opens to a Standing-Room-Only Fringe Crowd!

The cast of "You Are What You Eat": Roger Howie, Maria Lakes, and Kevin Sloan.

TITRaw Fringe debut was met with wild applause and a room full of smiling faces at the Agro
Café last Sunday night.

Remounting Patrick Foley’s funny and relevant “You Are What You Eat”, and premiering Manual Kane’s poignant “Duet in The Park”, the “little company that did” has taken “community” theatre to a whole new level and has introduced Vancouver theatre goers to some outstanding local talent.

“You Are What You Eat” features TITRaw veterans Roger Howie, Kevin Sloan and Maria Lakes. The shining star has to be Howie, who has a face like Silly Putty, which he moulds into countless, great comedic expressions. Sloan and Lakes both have to work hard to keep up with Howie’s relentless delivery, and they do. I completely related to their two characters in that type of situation: being cornered by someone who won’t shut up and feels it’s his right to proselytize regardless of whether the other parties are interested or not.

Foley’s script covers a lot of socio-economical and ethical ground, talking about the industrialized food chain we are the end-users of. I thought that setting the play in a café was brilliant; after all, when you think about it, it’s at a restaurant that we are most divorced from our food. We only want to see and enjoy the food, not think about where it came from.

The other one-act, “Duet in the Park” is an intimate tale about two young women – Bubbles, a prostitute caught under her vicious pimp’s thumb, and Florabelle, a “retard” (as the other kids in the foster home she’s left called her) - who find themselves lost together on the same park bench.

Bubbles and Florabelle (played by Julie Cohn and Edwina Cheer respectively) are charming and frank characters who seem destined to run into each other’s arms. The actors do a great job of fleshing out two roles which could easily become stereotypical.

By the way, Cohn looks great in her superhero knee boots and ultra mini-skirt! I mention this only because if you don’t get there early and get a seat up front, you’ll miss out – which is my only complaint about the production. With no raised stage or raked seating, the audience further back gets a slightly limited view of the show.

That aside, I loved the ensemble cast and the intelligent, deceptively simple story-telling.

If you have the chance, come out and see these shows. They alternate nightly with TITRaw’s other darker drama, a radio play by Bill Pollett, “The Toe Cutter”. You can listen to a short audio clip of it which was produced at CBC studios at http://ourmedia.org/node/348623.

For specific dates and times, check out the Theatre in The Raw website at www.theatreintheraw.ca


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