Pages

Sunday, February 28, 2010

Where's Nixon?



Locate Nixon as he makes his appearance at various sites around Vancouver this week and win a Nixon in China grand prize pack!

How it works:

1. VO will tweet out a location and code word each day
2. Participants must go to the location, find Nixon and tell him the code word.
3. Nixon will give the participants a reply code word, which needs to get tweeted back to VO on Twitter. You can also EMAIL us the code word on Facebook.
4. Participant names will be collected and entered into the grand prize draw.

The Grand Prize includes: 2 tickets to Nixon in China for Tuesday, March 16, $150 gift certificate to Chambar Restaurant, Nixon in China memorabilia, VO t-shirt and flashdrive.

Let the stalking begin.

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Friday, February 26, 2010

Get O.U.T.!



Vancouver Opera's Get O.U.T. – Get Opera Under Thirty has now launched.

If you're between 18-29 and love you some opera, call our ticketing centre at 604.683.0222 and give them promo code 2257 to purchase selected seats for our 2009/10 season for a mere $25! That's a savings of up to 75%! Ticket limit is 2 per person.

Designed for a younger audience but not exclusive to students, Get O.U.T. is the first ticket program of its kind for a major arts organzation in Vancouver.

Tickets are only available for pick-up the night of the show at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre. In order to pick up tickets, EACH patron must show valid ID that identifies them as between the ages of 18 – 29.

Buy tickets online or through the VO box office at 604-683-0222 or in person.

Quantities are limited so hurry! Some conditions apply.

*This offer is not valid on previously purchased tickets and cannot be combined with any other offer.

CBC's Alison Smith to Interview Margaret MacMillan



Highly regarded CBC correspondent Alison Smith, co-host of "The World at Six", will interview eminent Canadian historian Margaret MacMillan about her recent book The Uses and Abuses of History and her earlier best-seller Nixon in China: The Week that Changed the World.



*Alison Smith replaces Eleanor Wachtel, who is unable to attend due to a scheduling conflict.

Wednesday, March 17
7:30-9 pm
Granville Island Stage
Tickets $18

Highly regarded CBC correspondent Alison Smith, co-host of "The World at Six", will interview eminent Canadian historian Margaret MacMillan about her recent book "The Uses and Abuses of History" and her earlier best-seller "Nixon in China: The Week that Changed the World."

(Alison Smith replaces Eleanor Wachtel, who is unable to attend due to a scheduling conflict.)
Wednesday, March 17
7:30-9 pm
Granville Island Stage
Tickets $18.

Buy tickets here.

Behind the Scenes with Super Kuei-ming

Feb 20
Today is the first day the supers meet at the Holy Rosary Hall. I enter the humble and friendly rehearsal space, feeling nervous and excited, and am greeted by Sheila, our Stage Manager. She asks me to sign in and gives me a name tag.


As others arrive, we introduce ourselves to each other. Most of the supers already know each other.

Our director Michael Cavanagh gathers us and explains the whole story and the theme to us. He is a very funny man, always cracking jokes and dancing around. As well, the production assistants (Stephen, Beth, Amy and Theresa) are so helpful. I already like the group and the energy in the room.

We walk through 3 scenes and run the movements with piano and a singer. It is fun but we have to stay focused. It is easy to daydream because the music is so beautiful. Luckily, the senior supers like Brett, Jim and Bianca, seem confident in what they are doing.

After the rehearsal, we were asked to walk through the Olympic crowds to the costume shop to take some pictures for a surprise I won't spoil in this entry!

***
Feb 22
Today we rehearse with the chorus. I am amazed how beautiful they sound as a group. Quite angelic.

It is quite a large group today, so we are not yet as open with each other. I am sure we will all warm up to each other as time passed. I still like the way our director humours us. He makes this seems like playing, not working. We run the same scenes we did last rehearsal.

Today is also Jason's (one of the supers) birthday. We sing "Happy Birthday" to him and have brownies and cinnamon swirls at the break. Happy Birthday does sound better with a professional chorus.

***
Feb 24
Today is a gloomy and rainy day, but heading to reheasal cheers me up. The music, the love of performing and the good attitudes of our leaders (Michael, Stephen and others) let me and perhaps others forget the rest of the world hustling and bustling outside and truly be present in the rehearsal hall.

Today we run the banquet scenes again and again. It is a beautifully choreographed scene where move tables around and around like planets and race manically around until we drop dead on the floor. Pretty dramatic! It's all part of the magic.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Chinatown History Hunters

We've reached into our magic hat and randomly pulled ourselves a winner for the Chinatown History Hunt.

*drum roll please!*

Congratulations Deborah Ong! You've won 2 tickets to Nixon in China, $150 gift certificate to Floata Seafood Restaurant and admission for 2 to Dr. Sun Yat Sen Classical Chinese Gardens.



Here are the answers to the clues:

Clue #1: It’s the skinniest building in the world – and the place to go if you need a marriage license.


Sam Kee Building

The Sam Kee Company bought the land as a standard sized lot in 1903. In 1912, the city widened Pender Street and expropriated 24 feet of the lot.

The building was designed by architects Brown and Gillam in 1913. It is 4’11” wide at its ground-floor base and only 6’ wide at the second-story bay windows. There is a basement that extends under the sidewalk, which originally housed public baths, while the ground floor was used for office and shops, and the top story for living quarters.

The rehabilitation of the building was designed by Soren Rasmussen Architect and completed in 1986 for Jack Chow Insurance.

The Guinness Book of Records and Ripley’s Believe it or Not! have both declared it the thinnest commercial building in the world. Recently, though, this status has been challenged by the Skinny Building in Pittsburgh, which is 5’2” wide on all floors.

Clue #2: It’s the first full-size Chinese garden built outside of China and is named in honour of the first president of China.


Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden

The Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Garden consists of a public park (free) and a garden(entrance by admission). It was built between 1985 and 1986, with the park designed by Joe Wai and Donald Vaughan, and the garden by Wang Zu-Xin, with the guidance of experts from the Landscape Architecture Company of Suzhou, China. The garden opened on April 24, 1986, in time for Expo 86.

The mandate of the garden is to “maintain and enhance the bridge of understanding between Chinese and western cultures, promote Chinese culture generally and be an integral part of the local community.

The garden in named in honour of Dr. Sun Yat-Sen, the father of modern China, who had a strong connection to Vancouver. Dr. Sun stayed in Vancouver on several occasions while traveling the world to raise awareness and funding for the Chinese nationalist movement. The large presence of Chinese nationalists in BC helped finance the Chinese nationalist revolution that overthrew the Qing Dynasty in 1911, after which Dr. Sun Yat Sen became the first president of China.

Clue #3: The 3 ½ storey neon rice bowl may be gone, you can still get some mean sticky rice with chicken here!


Foo’s Ho Ho Restaurant/Sun Ah Hotel

This building was constructed in 1911. The Ho Ho Restaurant opened in 1954, in the ground floor of the Sun Ah Hotel, where working-class Chinese men lodged.

The famous Ho Ho’s neon sign was a Vancouver landmark: a 3 ½ storey high bowl of rice, complete with chopsticks and rising steam. Sadly, the sign deteriorated over the years and repair costs were beyond the owner’s means and it was removed in 1997, a few years after the Ho Ho had closed.

In 1998, Foo’s, another nearby landmark restaurant relocated to the old Ho Ho’s location. The new restaurant was renamed Foo’s Ho Ho and continues to serve traditional Chinese village fare. Many groups hold monthly and annual meetings there, including the Chinese Canadian Historical Society of British Columbia.

Clue #4: This "Assocation" is so "Benevolent" it needs two locations! (But you only have to find one for the History Hunt).


The Chinese Benevolent Association of Vancouver

The Chinese Benevolent Association was founded in 1895 as an organization to provide support and leadership within the growing Chinese Canadian community. Since then the CBA has worked to promote equality for Chinese Canadians, as well as reaching out to other community groups.

In 1913, the CBA distributed food to unemployed Chinese Canadians, and in 1924 lobbied for a review of Canada’s immigration laws. In 1947, it launched an appeal to grant Chinese Canadians the right to vote, and between 1947 and 1967 solicited amendments to Canadian immigration laws to facilitate the reunification of Chinese Canadian families.

Since then, the CBA has worked to provide low cost housing, and implemented fund raising campaigns to assist victims of natural disasters in Canada and China. The CBA is also the organizer of the Chinese New Year Parade.

In 2006, CBA was inducted into the Vancouver Board of Trade’s Business Hall of Fame-a first for an ethnic community association.

Clue #5: Visit this "Centre"’s museum & archives to get some "Culture"!


Chinese Cultural Centre

In 1972 at a Wong’s Benevolent Association banquet, representatives of the three levels of government pledged to support the proposal of a community centre in Chinatown. The Chinese Cultural Centre of Vancouver was founded the following year, and a dedicated complex of buildings, spanning a full city block, was completed in 1980. A branch office was opened in Richmond in 1991.

Some of our contestants were kind enough to let us put up their pictures, they had so much fun with our hunt.


Melissa


Nicole

They may have been a wee-bit camera shy, but these hunters were happy for us to put up their pics!


Mini Bree


LJ and Johnny the Bear

Thanks to everyone who had participated in our Chinatown History Hunt!

~ Ling Chan & Selina Rajani

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Nixon Cast Invades SATO

Last Saturday, CBC's Bill Richardson was joined by the fine singers of the Nixon in China cast on Saturday Afternoon at the Opera's The O Word.

Baritone Robert Orth, tenor Alan Woodrow, mezzo-soprano Rebecca Hass and soprano Sally Dibblee took the stage for a light-hearted afternoon of arias and musical word games, which were inspired by the Winter Olympics. The quartet was accompanied by VO's Associate Conductor and Chorus Director Les Dala on the piano.

Here are some pictures for those who were unable to make it. I don't know...something about the Olympic games?


CBC SATO host Bill Richardson


Clockwise from top left: Singers Sally Dibblee, Robert Orth, Rebecca Hass and Alan Woodrow


Who wants to play arias and word games?

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Adams Meet Schoenberg

“I was sitting in my studio, studying the score to Schoenberg’s Chamber Symphony, and as I was doing so I became aware that my seven-year-old son Sam was in the adjacent room watching cartoons (good cartoons, old ones from the ‘50s). The hyperactive, insistently aggressive and acrobatic scores for the cartoons mixed in my head with the Schoenberg music, itself hyperactive, acrobatic and not a little aggressive, and I realized suddenly how much these two traditions had in common.” - John Adams

This led to the creation of his Chamber Symphony in 1992.

On Wednesday, February 24th Vancouver’s Turning Point Ensemble will be performing Arnold Schoenberg’s Chamber Symphony (1906) and the Canadian premiere of John Adams’s Son of Chamber Symphony – Adams’ sequel to his earlier work and a tribute to Schoenberg. Adams’s composition employs the same instruments as Schoenberg’s with the addition of synthesizer, percussion, trumpet, and trombone.

Within this work Adams pays homage to Stravinsky, demonstrates the influence of jazz by incorporating brilliant solo spots for each instrument and “adds one more element to the mix: cartoon music, summed up best by the meticulously intricate arrangements and antic tempi of Raymond Scott, whose brilliant miniatures show up regularly in cartoons.”

Son of Chamber Symphony demands instrumentalists who, in Adams’s words, “are asked to negotiate unreasonably difficult passages and alarmingly fast tempi”. For a taste listen here.

Turning Point Ensemble was formed by its musician members in 2002 to present rarely heard concert music for a large-sized chamber ensemble. Led by co-artistic directors Jeremy Berkman and Owen Underhill, the ensemble’s mandate is to increase the understanding and appreciation of music composed during the past hundred years, linking the music of earlier times to the music of today through innovative programming and outstanding performance.

If you want to learn more about John Adams, check out ‘Inside the Music of John Adams’ on Tuesday, March 2 at the Vancouver Academy of Music with experts Thomas May, editor of The John Adams Reader, John DeMain, conductor for Vancouver Opera’s Nixon in China and Owen Underhill, co-artistic director of Turning Point Ensemble.

All quotes from The John Adams Reader by Thomas May.

~ Jennifer Lord, Special Projects Manager

A Time To Heal



Arts organizations have been offered a unique opportunity to support First United's well-known work on behalf of Vancouver's homeless, raise funds for their own strapped coffers, and support the Alliance for Arts and Culture at the same time.

For every online purchase of the CD A Time To Heal: Moving Beyond Homelessness, the buyer will be able to designate an arts group of their choice and 60 cents from their purchase will be donated to the Alliance and $7.40 will be donated to the chosen arts organization.

Yamana Gold Inc., a Canadian gold producer, has pledged to support this special project. For each of the first 5,000 CD's sold, Yamana will donate $1 to the Alliance for Arts and Culture and $1 to First United Church for its work with the homeless in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

A remarkable collection of inspiring music– from classic to jazz—by renowned musicians from across Canada, A Time To Heal and the enclosed booklet help to raise awareness of the extent of homelessness and of the groups who work with the homeless, helping to respond to their basic needs.

Tracks have been donated by: Dalannah Gail Bowen, Emerson Drive, Jim Byrnes, Linda Lee Thomas and the Vancouver Chamber Choir. Musicians from the National Arts Centre Orchestra and from the Vancouver area have worked together to create this unique musical offering. World-renowned violinist Pinchas Zukerman, Director of the NAC Orchestra, plays the violin solo on Larry Nickel’s “Come Unto Me”.

The cost of the CD is $20 (plus $5 shipping and handling and applicable taxes).

Order A Time To Heal online and at the bottom of the order form indicate the name of the arts organization you would like to have receive a portion of your payment. To ensure proper processing, make sure you enter their full and proper name.

Share this message with your entire network of friends, colleagues, subscribers and arts patrons to ensure that the arts organization of your choice benefits from this remarkable opportunity.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Nixon in China: The Manga

To whet your appetite for the upcoming Nixon in China, feast your peepers on the Nixon in China manga, illustrated by Jerry Cai and edited by Roy Husada.

To see this supersized, click here.













~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Someone To Watch Over Me

Before the curtain even goes up on Nixon in China, audience members will get an eyeful. On the scrim at the front of the house will be hundreds and hundreds of Red Army faces staring right back at them.



This past weekend, a photoshoot took place at our wardrobe department. Nixon in China's Projection Designer Sean Nieuwenhuis snapped headshots of 14 of our costumed supernumeraries, who will become the faces on our custom scrim.

Their faces will then be multiplied electronically so that they cover the entire width and breadth of the scrim.


Projection Designer Sean Nieuwenhuis shooting super Brett Macdonald
Photo courtesy of Terry Harper

The effect is sure to have people talking!

Does it come in a wallpaper too?

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

The Farises Receive the GG Award


From left: Recipients Mohammed and Yulanda Faris, Robin Philips, Francoise Faucher, Yannick Nezet-Seguin, Michaelle Jean, Jean-Daniel Lafond and Walter Homburger
Photo credit: Graham Hughes / The Canadian Press

Among such luminaries as Bryan Adams and Buffy Sainte-Marie, Vancouver philanthropists Mohammed and Yulanda Faris were recently awarded a Governor General's Performing Arts Award: the Ramon John Hnatyshyn Award for Voluntarism in the Performing Arts.

Passionate supporters of the arts scene in Vancouver for the past 40 years, Mohammed Faris helped establish the Scotiabank Dance Centre while Yulanda Faris serves on the Dean's Advisory Board, UBC Faculty of Arts, and is the chair of the Vancouver Opera Foundation. Both are dedicated to arts education, professional training opportunities for young artists and legacy giving.

Congratulations Mohammed and Yulanda on such a wonderful honour!

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Where Are They Now: Mlada Khudoley



Mlada Khudoley was last in Vancouver in May to sing (and dance) the title role in VO’s Salome. Born in Moscow, Ms. Khudoley made her stage debut at St. Petersburg’s Mariinsky Theatre in 1998 and has sung with them on tour to the Metropolitan Opera in New York and London’s Royal Opera, as well as to Tokyo, Israel, Baden-Baden, and Amsterdam.

Usually a resident of Wisconsin, along with her husband Peter and daughter Lisa, Ms. Khudoley has been spending the winter in St. Petersburg, again singing with the Mariinsky. She ended the year with her debut as Cassandre in their production of Les Troyens, and is already well into the role of Kaiserin in their Frau ohne Schatten. Next, Ms. Khudoley will be singing Abigaille in the Mariinsky’s Nabucco, followed by a concert performance of the music of Rimsky-Korsakov and Borodin.

In March 2010 she will return to the USA to sing Salome for the Minnesota Opera before heading to Japan in August. In September she will sing the dual roles of Santuzza and Nedda for the Kentucky Opera’s Cavalleria Rusticana and I Pagliacci.

Looking ahead to 2011, Ms. Khudoley will continue her busy schedule with performances of Katerina in Lady Macbeth of Mtensk at the Komische Oper, Berlin and the Opernhaus Graz, Austria.

~ Selina Rajani, Communications Manager

Friday, February 19, 2010

Mangaka Meng



Check out this radness!

Unstage is a daily blog dedicated to showing off the talents of artists, graphic designers, illustrators, film-makers, photographers, interior designers, architects and web designers.

And who has been featured today but none other than artist Fiona Meng, who has been illustrating our VO manga for the past few seasons!

Here's what Upstage writes:

Fiona Meng is a Chinese Canadian manga artist/illustrator. She is currently studying in Academy of Art University Graduate Illustration program in San Francisco. She became heavily influenced by Japanese manga since her childhood.

In 2004, she immigrated to Canada and attended Emily Carr University, majoring in Animation. For her senior project, she created a 2D animated film based on an old Chinese story. While studying in Emily Carr, Fiona worked on a weekly project for Vancouver Opera, which is creating three seasons of 6-page mangas to promote their upcoming shows.


Congrats to Fiona for being profiled with the best of the best!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Lunch with Margaret and Sacha



Be sure to book your seats for lunch with acclaimed Canadian historian Margaret MacMillan and journalist/filmmaker Alexandre Trudeau (son of Pierre Trudeau), as they talk about Nixon's trip to China and look behind the headlines of history.

This is a rare and unique opportunity! Only 100 seats will be sold.

Moderated by Hal Wake, Artistic Director of VIWF.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010, 12:30 - 2:30 pm
"Seasons" at Four Seasons Hotel, Vancouver
Tickets: $50 available from the VO Ticket Centre at 604-683-0222.

Presented in partnership with Vancouver International Writers & Readers Festival, and co-hosted by the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada.

Inside the Music of John Adams



Whether you’re a fan of John Adams or are interested in learning more about his music, this is an event you won’t want to miss! Presenters Thomas May, editor of The John Adams Reader; conductor John Demain, and Vancouver composer/conductor Owen Underhill will explore the music and career of Pullitzer Prize-winning composer John Adams.

March 2, 2010, 7-9 pm
Vancouver Academy of Music, 1270 Chestnut St.
(parking across the street at the Vancouver Museum/Planetarium )

Admission is free! Refreshments courtesy of Vancouver Opera Guild.

Russell Braun Recital at the Kay Meek


Photo credit: Johannes Ifkovits

Vancouver Opera and the Kay Meek Centre present a special event: Russell Braun, baritone, in recital.

Thrilling, manic, glorious, superbly sung and malevolently acted, rich, powerful, elegant, soft-grained, and spine-tingling are but a few of the epithets the media have used to describe Canadian opera sensation Russell Braun.

In concert, opera and recital, the international stages of the world are his - whether it be the Metropolitan Opera in New York, l’Opéra de Paris, the State Opera in Vienna, the Lyric Opera in Chicago, the Los Angeles Opera, La Scala in Milan, the Salzburg or the Glyndebourne Festival.

Sunday, March 7, 2010
3:00pm
Kay Meek Centre
1700 Mathers Avenue, West Vancouver
$40 for adults
$35 for seniors
Student pricing also available – please enquire.

Tickets are available through the VO Ticket Centre: 604-683-0222 or click here to buy online.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Meet Bill & Julie

Come to the CBC & meet Bill Richardson & Julie Nesrallah



Bill Richardson is a writer and broadcaster. He has contributed to CBC Radio since 1984, and has been the host of a number of programmes, both on CBC Radio One and CBC Radio 2. He is currently the host of Saturday Afternoon at the Opera and Sunday Afternoon in Concert, CBC Radio 2's new forum for classical concerts recorded across the country.



Julie Nesrallah is a mezzo-soprano singing sensation hailing from Ottawa, Ontario. Bringing her stunning voice and presence as a performer to the studio, Nesrallah hosts TEMPO. TEMPO is a fresh, spontaneous and insightful look into the world of classical music in Canada and around the world.

Don't miss your chance to meet Bill Richardson and Julie Nesrallah on the CBC Plaza, Tuesday, February 23rd at 11 am.

Come to the CBC at 700 Hamilton Street and take part in a number of events during the Olympics at the CBC! For more information, please click here.

Veda Hille Trio at Performance Works



Looking to take in some music during the Olympics?

Here's your chance to check out one of Canada's most adventurous musicians!

Veda Hille, who composed and wrote our Jack Pine opera, will be taking the stage with Peggy Lee (cello) and Skye Brooks (drums) for a FREE concert on Saturday February 20 at Performance Works on Granville Island.

Come out and cheer on our hometown gal!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

The Origin of Lillian

When you watch the world premiere of Lillian Alling in October, 2010, you will experience a complete story, told through words, music, drama, and theatre design. You will learn a lot about Lillian, her family, and the people she meets on her epic trek across North America into the wilds of Northwestern B.C. I think you’ll be enthralled with the opera and intrigued by the idea that Lillian’s story may be “true”.

Yes, Lillian Alling is based on an historical figure. There was a woman, claiming to be from Russia, who apparently walked and rode the rails across North American in the 1920s. She was arrested for vagrancy and spent time in Oakalla Prison Farm, near Vancouver. But there are very few other known facts about her life, let alone her character. No one knows for certain where she came from, how she arrived in North America, and whether she completed her journey across the Bering Strait to Russia.



Lillian has inspired novelists, playwrights, filmmakers and historians. Australian writer Cassandra Pybus’s The Woman Who Walked To Russia, describes the author’s largely fruitless search for information about Lillian. American novelist Amy Bloom’s Away follows ‘Lillian Leyb’ from the Yiddish Theatre in New York to Seattle and Alaska. The play All the Way to Russia With Love by Susan M. Flemming was performed at the 2002 Ottawa Fringe festival. A Canadian feature film is currently in development.

Susan Smith, a writer who lives in Quesnel, B.C., is writing a “non-fiction history book” about Lillian. She heard the story two years ago and initially thought it was just another Cariboo tall tale. She did some digging in the library and became deeply fascinated. “Even once I've finished the book, I know I'll always be looking for Lillian,” she says. I feel that many parts of Lillian's story will remain a mystery.”

Librettist John Murrell encountered Lillian about ten years ago, hidden in a few pages of an anthology called Wild West Women, which he bought at a book store in Banff. Intrigued, he pursued her story and, after much searching, discovered how little there is to find. “So,” says Murrell, “at some point, one has to begin to invent, with compassion and a sense of Lillian's time and place, the parts of the story which do not exist factually, and which will probably never be known to us…. In my libretto, I have conjectured a set of possible answers to all the questions we have about Lillian Alling.”

The mystery surrounding Lillian is what attracted Murrell and composer John Estacio and kept them working on the opera. “What drove her, what pulled and pushed her across an entire continent? Why was she so keen to keep these matters secret? What happened to her, why and where, for the rest of her life?” asks Murrell.

You will have to see the opera to learn the answers that Murrell and Estacio have imagined. Susan Smith will be there. “It will be the first time I ‘allow’ myself to see, read, or view a fictional treatment of Lillian. It will be a real treat for me to be able to relax after my book is finished, and to see how other people who love and admire Lillian have interpreted her story.”

~ Doug Tuck, Director of Marketing & Community Programs

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Voices of the Pacific Rim at Surrey Site



Have you checked out the Surrey 2010 Celebration Site yet? VO's Voices of the Pacific Rim, led by Gina Oh, took the stage at 6pm on Valentine’s Day. There were two giant screens on both sides of the stage, for those not quite tall enough to see over the crowd.

And talk about Olympic spirit!

The stage was rocking even before Vancouver Opera took the stage – Alexandre Bilodeau had just won the first gold medal on Canadian soil! So, our performance was delayed by 20 minutes, but everyone was in high spirits.

The artists (from left to right, Andrew Greenwood, John Arsenault, Gina, Lambroula Papas and David Adams with Tina Chang at the keyboard in the corner) gave a solid performance. And they were in the spirit as well – you can see the Canadian hockey jerseys in the photo!

~ Nagisa Inoue, Assistant to the Director of Artistic Planning

Behind the Scenes: Super Keui-Ming



One of our Nixon in China supers, Kuei-Ming Lin, is so excited to be a part of the opera that she wanted to share her behind-the-scenes experience with our readers.

So without further ado, let's welcome Keui-Ming to the blogosphere!

Wow! This was my first time entering the Vancouver Opera costume shop. I have never seen so many clothes from different eras. As I stood enchanted by the room, I was greeted by a wonderful lady, Parvin, who showed me to the change room. She got the costumes that would (cross your fingers) hopefully fit. But they didn't.

I sort of knew it would be hard to find costumes for me because I am so short. And as I feared, the pants were really baggy and so were the shirts. Soon I found myself standing like a statue while two lovely assistants, Josephine and Zoe, pinned and marked. I felt really guilty for giving them so much trouble, but they comforted me by saying "You are perfect the way you are" and "After all this, you will look wonderful!" What sweet people! They were just the most patient and kind.

Finally, after finding shoes and a hat and pinning up all the parts that they were going to alter, I was free to go. I took off the costume, hung it on the rack, and the next person came in for his fitting.


Stay tuned for more from our correspondent Keui-Ming!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

A Keen Sense of Hearing



Now that is some supersonic hearing!

VO's Ticket Centre Manager, Tracey Flattes, was able to spot John Adams' The People are the Heroes in, of all places, the Civilization IV computer game.

The 2005 strategy computer game begins in 4000 BC and has its players build empires, conquer other civilizations, forward their society through scientific and cultural progress, to finally landing a ship in a future star system in the year 2050 AD. Sounds exciting, doesn't it?

As the game takes place over 6000 years, music included in the soundtrack include medieval, renaissance, baroque, classical, romantic, minimalist, world and folk music. Some of the game's music are original scores, while others are variants of famous pieces. Featured composers include Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Dvořák, Mozart and American minimalist composer John Adams!

Not only can you hear The People Are The Heroes Now as the background music in the Modern Age part of the game, you can also hear John Adams' Harmonielehre, Shaker Loops, The Chairman Dances, Two Fanfares and Violin Concerto.


Gamers and opera. Who would've thought that this is yet another coupling that goes together well!

Thanks Tracey for the find!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Now On Tour

Our General Director James Wright has been making the rounds. Since last November, he's been booked solid with speaking engagements, enthusiastically spreading the word about our upcoming Nixon in China. Jim has already spoken to the Burnaby Deer Lake Rotary, Green Culture Club, Sunrise Rotary, Zonta International Book Club and Quadra Rotary Club.

Just last week, Jim presented Nixon in China to the Chinatown Lions Club at Floata Restaurant. I had the opportunity to accompany Jim as he spoke about the music and visuals, and gave a brief history of how John Adams' Nixon in China came to be.


Jim takes the podium


Chinatown Lions Club member Chuck Lew with Barbara Lowy


Chuck Lew, Beverly Nann and Jim

Speaking to the 28 members that night was great, but even better was being served (surprise!) a 10-course dinner before Jim took the podium.

A great way to get out into the community and educate people on this modern operatic masterpiece, Jim's speaking engagements also provide opportunities for questions and conversation.

Jim will wrap up his successful "whirlwind tour" in the next few weeks with visits to UBC and the University Womens Club.

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Monday, February 15, 2010

Snowboard Auction Starts Today!



Vancouver Opera's online auction of custom Prior snowboards, featuring award-winning illustrations by world-renowned artist Edel Rodriguez begins today! Each one of a kind autographed snowboard is listed individually. Bid on one or bid on all!



You can find our snowboard auctions on Ebay for Charity here:

Norma

Nixon in China

The Marriage of Figaro

Madama Butterfly

Proceeds will benefit the Young Artist Coaching Intensive program (YACIN) at Vancouver Opera, a program designed to bring the hottest young opera singers together for a week of intense vocal coaching.

About the artist:

Edel Rodriguez was born in Havana, Cuba in 1971. He majored in painting at Pratt Institute (BFA) and Hunter College (MFA). His work has appeared in five picture books, on stamps for the US Postal Service and on posters for films and Broadway shows. He is a regular contributor to New Yorker magazine and was an art director at TIME Magazine for over a decade. He has won numerous awards for his illustrations.

With only four in the world, these snowboards will certainly appeal to both the snowboarder set and the art collectors. So ride the boards or hang 'em up; that, we'll leave up to you!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager

Bringing Home the Magic Part II

Our Director of Production, Terry Harper, is back from his travels! Ever the trooper, Terry endured winter snowstorms, flight delays and rescheduling to bring us back more snapshots of our Nixon in China set.


Aerial shot of a hanging backdrop and trim for legs


Rolling tower in front of a backdrop


Forbidden City & White House backdrop


Forbidden City & White House backdrop


Set designer Erhard Rom talking to Richard Blankenship


Aerial view of tower, backdrop and red steps used in the ballet scene


Airplane front wheels


Backdrop of the American and Chinese flags

This is better than getting souvenir t-shirts!

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager