Showing posts with label Events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Events. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 13, 2010

A World Premiere Blogger Night

A new season, a world premiere and Blogger Night at the Opera!

We are beyond thrilled that Stacey Robinsmith, Nik Belonio, Miranda Lievers and Frances Sprout will be joining us on Saturday, October 16 for all the excitement.

The quartet will be sharing their thoughts on the entire experience: from hobnobbing with other opera patrons, seeing the set with its wonderful visual projections and hearing the exquisite music and singing for the very first time.

Follow along the sidebar to the right for their weblinks as they blog pre-show and during the intermission. They may even report from the afterparty too.


Clockwise from top left: Stacey Robinsmith, Nik Belonio, Miranda Lievers and Frances Sprout

Don't be shy! Stop by and say hello to our friendly bloggers on opening night in the main lobby of the QET. They can't wait to meet you!
Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Hotfooting It After Lillian Alling


Photo credit: I Am The Game

Opera Ninja Kimli is back! This Thursday, October 14, Kimli Welsh will be hot on the heels of Lillian Alling as she traverses the continent in search of the mysterious Jozéf.

Her assignment will be to track Lillian from the tenements of Brooklyn, hop the same trains that will take them both cross-country and follow her into the wilderness of British Columbia. All the while, the Opera Ninja is to remain hidden and observing from afar.

But what will happen when Lillian finds Jozéf? Will the Opera Ninja make herself known?

Follow along Thursday night's dress rehearsal at our Twitter: @Operaninja or along the right side-bar of this blog.

The action begins at 7pm.

~ Ling Chan, Social Media Manager
Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Opera Speaks Tonight @ VPL!



Alone in a New Land: The Immigrant Experience in Canada

Wednesday, October 6th, 7:00-9:00PM
Alice Mackay Room, Vancouver Public Library Central Branch
Moderated by CBC Radio One’s Mark Forsythe


The title character in Lillian Alling arrives in North America through Ellis Island, in New York, in 1927. Central to her story - a single-minded quest that takes her across the continent by foot and boxcar - is her experience as an immigrant. Alien, ostracized, exposed to danger and taking immense risk, her immigrant experience is a deeply moving undercurrent throughout the opera.

Join esteemed historian Jean Barman, "Canadian Immigrant" magazine's business development manager Alla Gordeeva, and historian John Belshaw, Dean of Social Sciences and Management at Langara College, as they portray the stories of individuals and families, from many lands, who have arrived on our shores.
Friday, October 1, 2010

Opera Speaks: Alone In A New Land



Wednesday, October 6
Opera Speaks @ VPL: Alone in a New Land: The Immigrant Experience in Canada
Alice Mackay Room, Vancouver Public Library Central Branch
7:00pm – 9:00pm
Free admission. Seating is limited; arrive early!


The title character in Lillian Alling arrives in North America through Ellis Island, in New York, in 1927. Central to her story - a single-minded quest that takes her across the continent by foot and boxcar - is her experience as an immigrant. Alien, ostracized, exposed to danger and taking immense risk, her immigrant experience is a deeply moving undercurrent throughout the opera.

Canada's character has been built with the emotional and spiritual fibre of immigrants such as Lillian. Join a panel of experts and historians as they portray the stories of individuals and families, from many lands, who have arrived on our shores. Panelists include esteemed historian Jean Barman, and eminent historian John Belshaw, Dean of Social Sciences and Management at Langara College.

Moderated by CBC Radio One's Mark Forsythe.
Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Lillian’s Vancouver: The Chung Collection Tour



Saturday, October 2 from 2 – 3pm
Lillian’s Vancouver: The Chung Collection Tour
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre, UBC
1961 Main Mall
Free admission – reservations are required


See a vivid picture of Vancouver as it would have looked to Lillian Alling. Explore the reality of immigrants, especially Chinese, as they arrived and worked here in the early part of the 20th century, with a special guided tour of The Chung Collection by UBC Library Archivist Sarah Romkey.

Click here to register.

A Historic Walk Into Lillian's World


Photo credit: Vancouver Historical Society

Sunday, October 3, 1:00pm – 3:00pm
Saturday, October 9, 10:00am - 12:00pm
Lillian’s world – A Historical Stanley Park Walking Tour
Meet at the Stanley Park Pavilion


Stand where Lillian Alling might have stood when she fell in love with telegraph linesman Scotty Macdonald. Enter Lillian’s world through this historical walking tour of Stanley Park led by historical interpreter Jolene Cumming. Featuring evocative stories and enticing anecdotes, this 2 hour walking tour will focus on the experience of women and will offer rare archival photos of Stanley Park, Vancouver and The Telegraph Trail in the early 1900s.

Historical interpreter Jolene Cumming has been producing and presenting local women’s history programs and special historical events since 2001. A board member of The Friends of the Vancouver Archives and the Women’s History Network of British Columbia, she presents at museums, historical societies, conferences, schools, community and seniors’ centres. Her recent projects include a six-part walking tour series with the Stanley Park Ecology Society and co-founder and coordinator of the monthly Herstory Café.

Two tours will be held: Sunday, October,1:00pm – 3:00pm and Saturday, October 9, 10:00am - 12:00pm, rain or shine. Wear comfortable shoes.

Free admission – limited space. Reservations required. Visit www.vancouveropera.ca for details.

Meet at the Stanley Park Pavilion www.stanleyparkpavilion.com/Pavilion/Welcome.html
Accessible by the #19 bus. Pay parking available.
Monday, September 27, 2010

Opera Speaks: Creating Lillian



Creating Lillian: Inside the Creative Process of Lillian Alling

Thursday, September 30, 2010 7-9pm
Alice MacKay Room, Lower Level
Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street
Admission is free. Seating is limited.


Discover how a large-scale opera is created from scratch. Composer John Estacio, librettist John Murrell, director Kelly Robinson and members of the production team for Vancouver Opera's new commissioned opera Lillian Alling will share their three-year process of writing and producing this dramatic opera that depicts a young Russian woman's epic journey, on foot, across North America in the 1920s. Cast members will perform excerpts from the opera.

Based on a real historical character, Lillian Alling takes us on a journey from Brooklyn, New York to a Norwegian farming community in North Dakota, across the Canadian prairie and into the wilds of northwestern British Columbia. Along the way, Lillian spends time in Vancouver, is jailed in Oakalla Prison Farm, in Burnaby, and walks the famous "Telegraph Trail" to the banks of the Skeena River. Her story is sweeping, personal, romantic, and heart-wrenching. This will be a rare opportunity to get inside the creative process with an extraordinary team of opera artists.

Opera Speaks is an ongoing series of free public events that engage the community in exploring the themes and issues arising from Vancouver Opera's productions. For more information about Opera Speaks, visit www.vancouveropera.ca
Friday, September 24, 2010

Sweet Land & Lillian Alling: Parallels



If you attended the Sweet Land movie presentation at Vancity Theatre last night, you would've heard UBC professor Jean Barman draw parallels between the movie and our upcoming world premiere opera, Lillian Alling.

If you were unable to make it, here is the compelling speech that preceded the featured movie last night, compliments of Ms. Barman.

"It’s a special pleasure to be invited to introduce Sweet Land and also the upcoming Vancouver Opera production of Lillian Alling. Both are satisfying in themselves, but they are also, from my perspective, even more so when experienced together.

Sweet Land and Lillian Alling give us two opportunities to explore a critical component of ourselves as human beings. We are each born with a longing for an identity of our own.

We meet what we come to consider to be our destiny in various ways. Most of us don’t go to quite such extremes as do the protagonists in Lillian Alling and Sweet Land, which is part of what makes the opera and the movie so compelling.

For some of us, this search never much takes us beyond our roots. We are comfortable from an early age with who and where we are, and build on the world into which we were born. For others of us, it’s not possible or easy to take a chance, as we see tonight and in the upcoming production. So a friend explains to Lillian Alling in the opera:

I cannot leave my father,
Though I dream of it all the time.
You have travelled.
Please let me ask you:
Does it feel lonely,
Or does it feel free?
Does every new day fill you with strength,
Or does it fill you with fear? …
I know everything about here
The here and the now
But I would love to learn about what’s out there

In the present day, the search of identity most often begins with moving away from home to university, in search of a job, or simply to find ourselves, so goes the cliché from the 1960s and 1970s. And along the way we make decisions as to what to hold on to and of what to let go.

At some point in our lives most of us reconcile ourselves to who we are as opposed to who we think we want to be. The very first line of Lillian Alling makes this point. An elderly woman named Irene who has lived much of her life in a cabin, to quote the libretto, “somewhere in the mountains of British Columbia” prepares to leave her longtime home. “My life’s all packed up,” she laments.

Over time most of us accept ourselves for what we are with all of our shortcomings and failings, and come to take pleasure in the every day. We realize that our search for identity – our destiny if you will – lies within ourselves as opposed to being out there in some remote location which we have not yet succeeded in reaching. This too is part of what give Sweet Land and Lillian Alling their appeal.

COMPARISON OF THEMES

The movie and the opera are complements of each other in several ways, all linked to their evocations of the search for self that grounds all our lives. Four of these parallels particularly resonate for me.

TIME PERIOD. The first relates to the time period in which the movie and the opera are set. Both stories take place in the 1920s -- in our parents’ or grandparents’ time. By virtue of the time period, they serve an important function, which is to remind us that the desires we have for ourselves, and for our children and grandchildren, are not unique to our own generation.

Both evoke the 1920s as a time of immigration and so of diverse peoples learning to live together. In Lillian Alling we hear a whole number of languages reflecting where it was persons originated and how they still defined themselves, at least linguistically. In Sweet Land it is the protagonist’s initial inability to communicate in English that sets her apart as an outsider who thereby does not belong to the society which an earlier generation of immigrants are attempting to build up around themselves.

One of the strengths of both Sweet Land and Lillian Alling is the way in which they book end the principal story based in the 1920s by moving the time period into the present day. We get to observe not only how identity was pursued in the 1920s, but also how descendants closer to ourselves both fashion their destinies and reflect on their predecessors’ choices. The consequence is much richer productions encouraging us to interrogate our own responses across time even as we observe others’ being played out before us.

GENDER. Secondly, both stories centre on young women, which is a useful reminder that, even though women’s lives were long more constrained than those of men, they nonetheless acted in ways they considered to be in their own best interests.

Thes two female protagonists are counterpoints to each other. Each of their quests we can relate to ourselves, and together they are more powerful than either in isolation.

In Sweet Land, which we are going to see in the next few minutes, Inge Alltenburg seeks her destiny by travelling from Germany to Minnesota as a kind of mail order bride to a Norwegian farmer named Olaf. Her spunk and determination to make things work in adverse circumstances is what gives Sweet Land its power. Despite the local pastor warning her, and I quote, “those who are from outside God judges,” she is not deterred.

In Lillian Alling, which is based on a true story, the central character is also in pursuit of a man, who she must find, for, as she puts it, “my life is bound to his life.” Like Inge, Lillian finds her destiny through surmounting what seem to be at times impossible obstacles. Lillian treks from New York City through Minnesota and eventually through British Columbia on her way to Alaska in her pursuit of a man with whom only an encounter will permit her to become the person she is determined to be.

Lillian’s walking song leave no doubt about her strength of will and the intensity of her search, and likely that of many of us at some point in our lives:

I open my eyes.
I pick up my pack.
I pick out a path.
I never look back.
The answers I lack
Lie further ahead.
I never, I never look back.

Both Inge and Lillian are forced at some points to adapt to circumstances they had not planned on encountering. They have to decide what to hold on to and of what to let go, just as we each do in our lives.

NATURAL WORLD AS FUNDAMENTAL TO OUR DESTINY. The two stories also run parallel in a way we sometimes forgot -- perhaps less so in Vancouver than in many others places in the world -- which is the ways the natural world around us is a fundamental part of the destiny we seek for ourselves. Thus we have the elderly Irene at the beginning of Lillian Alling reminiscing about the beauty of northern British Columbia. Any of us who have lived there or travelled to the north will, I expect, share in what she feels:

The clean cold air
Falling like light through the trees
The winters
When even indoor breath can be seen
The summers
That give new meaning to what we mean by “green.”

Sweet Land similarly draws on the natural world for its authority. As a low-budget independent production, Sweet Land is unequalled for its use of the natural world as its setting. Minnesota farmland across the seasons is front and centre. The amber tones of harvest are particularly striking, so much so they make dialogue gratuitous. Overall, Sweet Land depends more on visuals, principally of the natural world, for its power than it does on words.

METRO VANCOUVER CONNECTIONS. The fourth parallel I want to highlight is the Vancouver connection.

Sweet Land, released in 2005, was financially supported and co-produced by the actor Gil Bellows, who was born and bred in Vancouver and is known, as well as for numerous movies, for his television roles as Ally McBeal’s love interest and as CIA agent Matt Callan in The Agency. While based in Los Angeles, Bellows maintains an ongoing connection with Vancouver and with the Gulf Islands.

Lillian Alling has a multiple Vancouver and also British Columbian and Canadian connection. The Vancouver Opera production opening on October 16 and running to October 23 is the world premier of a consummately Canadian production with a Canadian composer and Canadian librettist. Not only that, much of the action occurs in British Columbia.

The Vancouver region comes to prominence in two important ways. The first is by virtue of Lillian, as pointed out in the promotion for the opera, being “incarcerated in Oakalla Prison Farm near Vancouver.” While this was in the early 1920s, Oakalla, which opened in 1912 only closed in 1991. The site is now condominium development overlooking Deer Lake in Burnaby. The large park like area around Deer Lake includes the Burnaby Art Gallery, Shadbolt Centre for the Arts, and Burnaby Village Museum with its excellent demonstration of live blacksmithing, so I urge you the next time you are there to reflect on Lillian Alling’s incarceration.

The second way in which Lillian Alling links into Vancouver is to the city itself. The librettist has Vancouverites alternatively lamenting and rhapsodizing, and I quote:

We have had the rain and the Lord be praised!
But now it is time for a drop of sun,
A week of sunlight,
Two days,
Or even one!
When the sun shines here,
It is like the first day of Creation.
The green reaches up, the green stretches out!
When the sun shines here,
Smell the earth’s fragrant exaltation,
And recall what the Garden of Eden is all about!

Partially in response, Lillian engages in a typical Vancouver activity, so she says:

On Sunday I will go to the Stanley Park,
To look at the water and the trees.

MY OWN LINKAGE

I would like to think we will each see something of ourselves in these diverse aspects of Sweet Land and Lillian Alling. Let me close on a personal note as to how the movie and the opera resonate for me.

Much like the hero in Sweet Land, my father emigrated from Scandinavia – in his case Sweden rather than Norway – to Minnesota to farm. I grew up in a Minnesota farm house that still stands, and is an almost exact replica of the Sweet Land farmhouse, down to the outdoor clothesline with drying garments always seeming to be flapping on the wind and a prairie view that stretched as far as the eye could see. I used to think that the view went as far as the earth’s curvature, and perhaps it did.

While occurring later in time, I found many echoes of my upbringing in Sweet Land. I grew up drinking bland coffee, and like the pastor in the movie got so used to it I recoiled whenever someone, as does Inge to the pastor, offered me what he disparages as “black coffee.” The Lutheran Church I attended as a child was equally set in its ways to the one in Sweet Land, but – all the same – I got goose bumps when I heard in the movie the congregation lustily singing “A Mighty Fortress is Our God.” Wherever our quest to find ourselves takes us in our lives, some things we never forget.

In the opera Lillian Alling the protagonists treks from Russia to British Columbia very much as I did on seeking my destiny. For me this meant in the first instance escaping from the Minnesota evoked in Sweet Land.

I began what I thought would be my career by doing a graduate degree at Harvard in Russian Studies and then writing for a London-based journal analyzing Soviet foreign policy. I can’t tell you the sense of nostalgia I felt on reading the opera’s libretto with its Russian phrases that is for me about the only remnant of my first career. “Boje moi,” my God! – I had not thought about the phrase in years and look forward to hearing it in the opera.

For various reason, my life took a turn, and this first career I surrendered to changing circumstances And so I made my trek similar to Lillian’s from Russia to British Columbia, and refashioned myself as a historian of the very same place where Lillian finds her destiny in the opera.

CONCLUSION

Most of you will likely not see yourselves quite so literally as I did in both Sweet Land and Lillian Alling, but hopefully you will also be reflected in the search for self in which we all participate by virtue of being human. It is through reducing everyday life to its essentials that the movie and the opera permit us to share in a fundamental component of what it is that makes us who we are. Inge Alltenburg and Lillian Alling each take chances and make sacrifices in search of their destinies and, as Inge reminisces in old age in looking back over her actions and their consequences, there are “different kinds of happy.”

Sweet Land and Lillian Alling give each of us an opportunity to consider the path we have taken – and continue to take -- in search of ourselves. One of the satisfying features of both the movie and the opera is that we not only share in the search for meaning but we also come to understand that, at some time in our lives, the quest ends with ourselves. As we share with these two young women their determination to reach their destiny, whatever may be the cost of doing so, we come to realize, as Lillian puts it at one point:

Your journey is yours,
My journey is mine."

~ Jean Barman, Department of Educational Studies, UBC
Thursday, September 23, 2010

Culture Days With Lillian Alling



In celebration of Culture Days, a limited number of guests will be admitted to an open rehearsal of the VO Chorus led by Associate Conductor and Chorus Director Leslie Dala as they prepare for the World Premiere of Lillian Alling.

Space is extremely limited: admission is first-come, first-served. Call 604-683-0222 to make your reservation!

Friday, September 24
Holy Rosary Hall, 650 Richards Street
7:00pm – 9:00pm
Free admission
Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Lillian Alling Community Event: Sweet Land



Thursday, September 23
Film Screening: Sweet Land
Vancity Theatre, Vancouver International Film Centre
1181 Seymour Street
7:00pm


Director: Ali Selim // USA 2005 // 110 mins
Cast: Elizabeth Reaser, Patrick Heusinger, Alan Cumming, Alex Kingston, John Heard, Ned Beatty, Tim Guinee, Lois Smith

Sweet Land is a poignant and lyrical celebration of land, love, and the immigrant experience, as recollected in a man’s memory of his grandmother’s stories. Inge arrives in Minnesota in 1920 to marry a young Norwegian farmer named Olaf, but the community is suspicious of this German stranger, and the marriage is forbidden. Alone and adrift, Inge goes to live with Olaf’s friend and neighbor Frandsen and his wife Brownie, where she learns the English language, American ways, and a hard-won independence.

Similar in scope but equally as personal, Vancouver Opera’s world-première production of Lillian Alling, by composer John Estacio and librettist John Murrell, is a sweeping story embracing the immigrant experience of the 1920s, the history of British Columbia and the journey of a courageous and driven woman who walked from New York City across North America and along BC’s Telegraph Trail. BC historian and author Jean Barman will introduce the film and offer parallels to consider between these two stories.

Visit www.vancouveropera.ca or http://www.viff.org/theatre/ for details and to book your tickets in advance or you can purchase your tickets at the door.
Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Opera Speaks: Alone In A New Land



Alone in a New Land: The Immigrant Experience in Canada

Wednesday, October 6, 2010 7-9pm
Alice MacKay Room, Lower Level
Central Library, 350 West Georgia Street
Admission is free. Seating is limited.


The title character in Vancouver Opera's world premiere production of Lillian Alling arrives in North America through Ellis Island, in New York, in 1927. Central to her story - a single-minded quest that takes her across the continent by foot and boxcar, into the wilds of northwestern British Columbia - is her experience as an immigrant. Alien, ostracized, exposed to danger and taking immense risk, her immigrant experience is a deeply moving undercurrent throughout the opera.

Canada's character has been built with the emotional and spiritual fibre of immigrants such as Lillian. Join a panel of experts and historians, as they portray the stories of individuals and families, from many lands, who have arrived on our shores. Panelists include Nick Noorani, prominent social entrepreneur, immigrant advocate and author of the best-selling book Arrival Survival Canada.

Opera Speaks is an ongoing series of free public events that engage the community in exploring the themes and issues arising from Vancouver Opera's productions. For more information about Opera Speaks, visit www.vancouveropera.ca
Monday, September 13, 2010

Lillian Alling Community Events



Engage your mind and your imagination in preparation for the world premiere of Lillian Alling, by composer John Estacio and librettist John Murrell. Explore music, film and BC history through VO’s Lillian Alling Community Events series, organized by Vancouver Opera in collaboration with various partners.

Wednesday, September 22, 10:00am – 11:00am
Saturday, October 2, 2:00pm – 3:00pm
Lillian’s Vancouver: The Chung Collection Tour
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre at UBC
1961 Main Mall


See a vivid picture of Vancouver as it would have looked to Lillian Alling. Explore the reality of immigrants, especially Chinese, as they arrived and worked here in the early part of the 20th century, with a special guided tour of The Chung Collection by UBC Library Archivist Sarah Romkey. Two tours will be held: Wednesday, September 22, 10:00am – 11:00am and Saturday, October 2, 2:00pm – 3:00pm.

Free admission – reservations are required for each tour. Visit www.vancouveropera.ca for details.

Presented in partnership with UBC Library Vault. The Chung Collection is the generous gift of Dr. Wallace Chung and Dr. Madeline Chung, longtime patrons of Vancouver Opera.


Thursday, September 23
Film Screening: Sweet Land
Vancity Theatre, Vancouver International Film Centre
1181 Seymour Street
7:00pm


Director: Ali Selim // USA 2005 // 110 mins
Cast: Elizabeth Reaser, Patrick Heusinger, Alan Cumming, Alex Kingston, John Heard, Ned Beatty, Tim Guinee, Lois Smith

Sweet Land is a poignant and lyrical celebration of land, love, and the immigrant experience, as recollected in a man’s memory of his grandmother’s stories. Inge arrives in Minnesota in 1920 to marry a young Norwegian farmer named Olaf, but the community is suspicious of this German stranger, and the marriage is forbidden. Alone and adrift, Inge goes to live with Olaf’s friend and neighbor Frandsen and his wife Brownie, where she learns the English language, American ways, and a hard-won independence.

Similar in scope but equally as personal, Vancouver Opera’s world-première production of Lillian Alling, by composer John Estacio and librettist John Murrell, is a sweeping story embracing the immigrant experience of the 1920s, the history of British Columbia and the journey of a courageous and driven woman who walked from New York City across North America and along BC’s Telegraph Trail. BC historian and author Jean Barman will introduce the film and offer parallels to consider between these two stories.

Visit www.vancouveropera.ca or http://www.viff.org/theatre/ for details and to book your tickets in advance.


Friday, September 24
Open Chorus Rehearsal
Holy Rosary Hall, 650 Richards Street
7:00pm – 9:00pm


In celebration of Culture Days, a limited number of guests will be admitted to an open rehearsal of the VO Chorus as they prepare for the world premiere of Lillian Alling. Space is extremely limited: admission is first-come, first-served.

Free admission – reservations required. Call 604-683-0222 to make your reservation. Space is limited.


Sunday, September 26
The Word on the Street
Mainstage
Library Square, Vancouver Public Library Central Branch
1:00pm – 1:30pm
Free admission


Where is Lillian? Popping up on the main stage at The Word on the Street, that’s where! Hear excerpts from Lillian Alling. Visit www.vancouveropera.ca or http://www.thewordonthestreet.ca/wots/vancouver for more information.


Monday, September 27
Composition Forum with John Estacio
Barnett Hall, UBC
12:00pm – 1:30pm
Free admission


John Estacio, UBC alumnus and internationally acclaimed composer of Lillian Alling, talks about the creation of this new work and the art and craft of composing. Presented in partnership with the UBC School of Music. Visit www.calendar.events.ubc.ca/cal/event/showEventMore.rdo for more information.


Thursday, September 30
Opera Speaks @ VPL: Creating Lillian: Inside the Creative Process of Lillian Alling
Alice Mackay Room, Vancouver Public Library Central Branch
7:00pm – 9:00pm


Free admission

Discover how a large-scale opera is created from scratch. Composer John Estacio, librettist John Murrell, director Kelly Robinson and members of the production team for Vancouver Opera's new commissioned opera Lillian Alling will share their three year process of writing and producing this dramatic opera that depicts Lillian's epic journey, on foot, across North America in the 1920s.

Cast members will perform excerpts from the opera. This will be a rare opportunity to get inside the creative process with an extraordinary team of opera artists.


Sunday, October 3, 1:00pm – 3:00pm
Saturday, October 9, 10:00am - 12:00pm
Lillian’s world – A Historical Stanley Park Walking Tour
Meet at the Stanley Park Pavilion


Stand where Lillian Alling might have stood when she fell in love with telegraph linesman Scotty Macdonald. Enter Lillian’s world through this historical walking tour of Stanley Park led by historical interpreter Jolene Cumming. Featuring evocative stories and enticing anecdotes, this 2 hour walking tour will focus on the experience of women and will offer rare archival photos of Stanley Park, Vancouver and The Telegraph Trail in the early 1900s. Two tours will be held: Sunday, October,1:00pm – 3:00pm and Saturday, October 9, 10:00am - 12:00pm, rain or shine. Wear comfortable shoes.

Free admission – limited space. Reservations required. Visit www.vancouveropera.ca for details.

Meet at the Stanley Park Pavilion www.stanleyparkpavilion.com/Pavilion/Welcome.html
Accessible by the #19 bus. Pay parking available.


Wednesday, October 6
Opera Speaks @ VPL: Alone in a New Land: The Immigrant Experience in Canada
Alice Mackay Room, Vancouver Public Library Central Branch
7:00pm – 9:00pm
Free admission


The title character in Lillian Alling arrives in North America through Ellis Island, in New York, in 1927. Central to her story - a single-minded quest that takes her across the continent by foot and boxcar - is her experience as an immigrant. Alien, ostracized, exposed to danger and taking immense risk, her immigrant experience is a deeply moving undercurrent throughout the opera.

Canada's character has been built with the emotional and spiritual fibre of immigrants such as Lillian. Join a panel of experts and historians as they portray the stories of individuals and families, from many lands, who have arrived on our shores. Panelists include Nick Noorani, prominent social entrepreneur, immigrant advocate and author of the best-selling book Arrival Survival Canada.