Monday, December 23, 2019

dec 23 | christmas presence | set list


act one

brett | christmas song
dilliard | feast days
garth | god rest ye/star of wonder
dowie | three wise men - jesus my boy
katie | light of the stable
irving | a prayer for owen meany
spencer | polka
maki | suitcase stories
katie | pilgrim
shaw | christ in you, the hope of glory
garth | huron carol
colhoun | christmas poem
oliver | finding christmas
brett | jesus, what a wonderful child
jon | rescue me


act two

spencer | ashokan farewell
odegard | on buses
katie & kira | emmanuel
donahue | no room at the inn
garth | silent night
klug | joseph's lullaby
ian | joseph's song
boychuk | jesus freak
kira & katie | wexford carol
garber | always winter
lewis | lion, witch and the wardrobe
spencer | new 5 cent piece
buechner | annunication
garth | go tell it on the mountain
stevenson | christmas prayer

singers and musicians

Katie Green
Kira Fondse
garth bowen
Spencer Capier | stringed things
peter abando | keyboards
kenton wiens | drums
mark bender | bass
brett ziegler | additional keyboards, accordian


readers
kaitlin williams, ian farthing, matthew simmons, chris lam, maki yi, jade munsie

links to some of the readings can be found here

dec 21 | christmas presence in the valley | set list


act one

carolyn | christmas must be tonight
dilliard | feast days
michael | wexford carol
anon | ukrainian grandma
spencer | polka
holland | dark, then light
jon | christmas town
mason | the real santa
spencer | hector the hero
oliver | christmas poem
carolyn | holy night
colhoun | creche
michael | little drummer boy
anon | blessing for travelling in the dark
garth | go tell it on the mountain

act two

donahue | no room at the inn
jon | magic
lewis | lion, witch and the wardrobe
garth | god rest ye merry gentlemen
anon | ukrainian grandma part two
carolyn - is bethlehem too far away
mason | miles
michael | make it christmas day
l'engle | tree at christmas
garth | christmas song (alleluia)
buechner | don't be afraid, mary
jon | mary take your child
shaw | mary considers her situation
klug | joseph's lullaby
carolyn | do not be afraid
anon | christmas prayer


singers and musicians
michael hart
jon ochsendorf
garth bowen
spencer capier | stringed things
chris hawley | keyboards


readers
kaitlin williams, erla faye forsyth, ken hildebrandt, phil miguel

links to some of the readings can be found here

dec 22 | christmas presence | set list


act one

rachel | let it snow
farrar capon | advent
peter la grand | angels we have heard on high
donahue | no room at the inn
michael | little drummer boy
graves | god's christmas party
jon | christmas town
maki yi | suitcase stories
rachel | what must it be like
buechner | annunciation
michael | wexford carol
oliver | poem
nelson | finding christmas
peter la grand | king of kings

act two

michael | three generations
odegard | on buses
peter la grand | zion
boychuk | jesus freak
jon | rescue me
blase | a little christmas
michael | make it christmas day
garber | always winter
lewis | lion, witch and the wardrobe
jon | magic
shaw | mary considers her situation
rachel | first noel
klug | joseph's lullaby
peter la grand | come to us emmanuel
richardson | blessing for the dark

singers and musicians
michael hart
jon ochsendorf
peter abando | keyboards
mark bender | bass
byron abando | drums
chris hawley | additional keyboards


readers
kaitlin williams, joel stephanson, cate richardson, maki yi

links to some of the readings can be found here

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

dec 17 | christmas presence | set list


act one

nelson and the boschmen | christmas jazz
dilliard | feast days
the kwerks | god rest ye/star of wonder
dowie | three wise men - jesus my boy
spencer | wassailing
gibson | butterfingers angel
spencer and nelson | red apple
shaw | mary considers her situation
jon | mary take your child and run
shaw | christ in you
the kwerks | all that I want
colhoun | creche
nelson | finding christmas
rosen | no safe place
jon | rescue me
holland | 25th december
nelson | I saw three ships

act two

spencer | hector the hero
nicholson | shadowlands - drinks party
jon | magic
boychuk | jesus freak
nelson | o come, come emmanuel
blase - noel
the kwerks | into the forest
garber | always winter
nelson | yule carol
blase | a little christmas now
lewis | lion, witch and the wardrobe
spencer | new 5 cent piece
blase | a little christmas now
the kwerks | carry me
stevenson | christmas prayer

singers and musicians
nelson boschman
jon ochsendorf
the kwerks
Spencer capier | stringed things
rick colhoun | drums
becca birkner | bass
chris hawley | additional keyboards


readers
kaitlin williams, ian farthing, matthew simmons, chantal gallant

links to some of the readings can be found here

dec 16 | christmas presence | set list


act one

nelson and the boschmen | christmas jazz
blase | a little christmas now
the kwerks | god rest ye/star of wonder
farrar capon | advent
bre | song of the magi
winchester press | southern magi
garth | huron carol
dilliard | god in the doorway
nelson | finding christmas
shaw | christ in you, the hope of glory
garth | god rest ye
buechner | don't be afraid, mary
rosen | no safe place
klug | joseph lullaby
bre | silent night
holland | december 25th
the kwerks | carry me

act two

nelson | christmas jazz
sedaris | front row centre with thaddeus bristol
jon | christmas town
graves | god's christmas party
the kwerks | into the forest
boychuk | jesus freak
nelson | o come, come emmanuel
garber | always winter
the kwerks | all that I want
Lewis | lion, witch and the wardrobe
jon | magic
stevenson | a christmas prayer

singers and musicians
nelson boschman
garth bowen
the kwerks
bre mcdaniel
jon ochsendorf
spencer capier | stringed things
rick colhoun | drums
becca birkner | bass
brett ziegler| additional keyboards


readers
kaitlin williams, ian farthing, kenton klassen, rebecca deboer

links to some of the readings can be found here

dec 15 | christmas presence | set list


act one

nelson and the boschmen | christmas jazz
farrar capon |  advent
katie | light of the stable (alleluia)
anon | christmas wreath
spencer | polka
nicholson | shadowlands
zaac | maybe this christmas
shaw | christ in you, the hope of glory
kira & katie | wexford carol
graves | god's christmas party
nelson | christmas time is here
mason | myles
zaac | oh what night
holland | 25th of december
jon | magic

act two

nelson | christmas jazz
sedaris | front row centre with thaddeus bristol
spencer | wassailing
boychuk | jesus freak
nelson | o come, come emmanuel
rosen | no safe place
katie | pilgrim
garber | always winter
jon | christmas town
blase | a little christmas now
kira & katie | golden cradle
stevenson | a christmas prayer
zaac - finding christmas

singers and musicians
nelson boschman
katie green
kira fondse
zaac pick
jon ochsendorf
pencer capier | stringed things
rick colhoun | drums
becca birkner | bass
chris hawley | additional keyboards


readers
kaitlin williams, ian farthing, nicola shannon

links to some of the readings can be found here

Thursday, December 12, 2019

dec 21 | chor leoni + ian farthing | angels dance

This seems to be the year of choral music around Pacific Theatre! Last year's apprentice Kira Fondse is singing with a couple local choirs, including Musica Intima, and Ian Farthing has joined our staff as Interim Executive Director - and Ian has sung with the renowned men's choir Chor Leoni for years. One of the Chor Leoni Christmas concerts is already sold out, but there are still tickets left for what sounds like a remarkable collaboration between the choir and dancers from Arts Umbrella...


Christmas with Chor Leoni: Angels Dance
Sat Dec 21, 4pm + 8pm
Orpheum Theatre, 601 Smithe St

Chor Leoni’s world-renowned sound and the beauty of elite dancers from Arts Umbrella’s Performance Research Project will come alive on the Orpheum stage in what will surely be the collaborative holiday event of the season. Traditional Holiday music from the Southwest, Appalachia, Europe, and Canada, sung by the men of Chor Leoni, and supported by an extraordinary instrumental ensemble will set the brilliant emerging professional dancers soaring into the sky in a stunning and seasonal feast for the senses.

tickets + info

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

dec 13 15 17 20 21 | musica intima + kira fondse | sing lullabye

Kira Fondse was an apprentice with Pacific Theatre last season, and a glorious singer. You may remember her from Christmas Presence, and she'll be part of my production of THE TRIP TO BOUNTIFUL at the end of this season. Kira is now singing with one of Vancouver's pre-eminent professional choirs, Musica Intima, and tells me that their series of Christmas concerts are pure Soul Food, with a repertoire of songs that all connect with the nativity. She says it's been an extraordinary experience, being immersed in the beauty of this music, and the events surrounding the birth of Christ.



SING LULLABYE
"O Radiant Dawn, shine on those who dwell in darkness..."

Grounded in the British choral tradition, this concert features seasonal music from Herbert Howells and Kenneth Leighton, as well as the newer generation of English composers, such as Jonathan Dove and James MacMillan. Also on the program are works by Canadian composers Kristopher Fulton and John Burge. Join us for the lush warmth of the Christmas season!

December 13, 7:30pm - Brentwood Presbyterian Church, Burnaby
December 15, 3:00pm - St. Philip’s Anglican Church, Vancouver
December 17, 7:30pm - Knox Presbyterian Church, New Westminster
December 20, 7:30pm - Shepherd of the Valley Church, Langley
December 21, 7:30pm - Christ Church Cathedral, Vancouver

tickets + info

Thursday, December 05, 2019

a christmas carol | photos

"Marley was dead, to begin with."


"Belinda Cratchit ran into her father's arms."


"Once or twice when there were angry words
between some dinner-carriers who had jostled each other
he shed a few drops on them,
and their good humour was restored directly."


"Come in and know me better, man!"


Fezziwig

Tuesday, December 03, 2019

dec 13-20 +24 + 26 | the two popes | viff


THE TWO POPES
dir. Fernando Mereilles (City of God)

VIFF
Dec 13-20, two shows daily
plus matinees Dec 24 and 26

It’s 2013 and the winds of change are blowing through the Vatican. Having lived his life to the letter of the gospel, conservative Pope Benedict (Anthony Hopkins) prepares to cede the papacy to Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio (Jonathan Pryce), who aims to take a more progressive approach in leading the Catholic Church and its flock of over a billion faithful. These two men of the cloth are, well, hardly cut from the same cloth, ensuring that this transfer of power will be a bumpy ride as they weigh in on - and butt heads about - their respective stands on what their fellowship requires in an era of epochal change.

Demonstrating both a keen understanding of, and deep respect for, the responsibilities that accompany such a hallowed station, director Fernando Meirelles and screenwriter Anthony McCarten (Darkest Hour) succeed in humanizing the film’s central figures, reminding us at every turn that these are fallible men trying to balance doctrine with their own world views. Unsurprisingly, much of the credit for the film’s success rests with the titanic talents occupying the headlining roles. As Hopkins and Pryce spar over the respective merits of integrity and adaptability, divinely comic sparks fly, lending the film’s insights an incandescent glow.

"Dramatic and moving... Hopkins and Pryce's finely tuned performances illuminate Benedict's shrewd intelligence and Francis's deep humility." Kate Taylor, Globe and Mail

"What makes "The Two Popes" so delightful, other than the very funny script, is watching two seasoned actors play off each other for two hours. Both Hopkins and Pryce illustrate what the craft of acting is really about." Sasha Stone, The Wrap

dec 18 | metropolitan at viff

I do love Whit Stillman, and his three films about what he dubbed the Urban Haute Bourgeoisie. They're droll and witty and all that good stuff, but also much More. The first of the three is at VIFF on Wed Dec 18 at 10am.


METROPOLITAN (1990, USA, Whit Stillman)
Of course there’s a God! We all basically know there is.
I know no such thing.
Of course you do! When you think to yourself — and most of our waking life is taken up thinking to ourself — you must have that feeling that your thoughts aren’t entirely wasted, that in some sense they are being heard. I think it's this sensation of silently being listened to with total comprehension that represents our innate belief in a supreme being, an all–comprehending intelligence. What it shows is that some kind of belief is innate in all of us. At some point most of us lose that, after which it can only be regained by a conscious act of faith.

And you’ve experienced that?
No, I haven’t. I hope to someday.


It is a truism universally acknowledged, that Whit Stillman is the Jane Austen of indie film. But truisims only become truisms because they're at least partly true, and this one most certainly is. Both Austen and Stillman bring an affectionate irony to their carefully observed studies of romance and social ritual among the young and privileged, whether in rural Britain around the turn of the eighteenth century or in uptown Manhattan at the end of the twentieth.

We don't want to like these people: they have too much, they are too full of themselves. We delight in the author's gentle skewering of their pretensions, the understated portrayal of their follies and the quietly relentless exposure of their casual cruelties. All too eager to see the high and mighty fall, we intuitively trust Stillman and Austen to be our guides in these exotic locales: their knowing attention to detail proves them to be insiders, their ironic distance shows them to be like us.

Little do we know, it's all authorial strategy. These writers love the worlds they describe, love the characters they create, and in spite of ourselves we find before long that we've been won over. That sort of affection is contagious, and we end up bigger-hearted people for the experience.

In METROPOLITAN, we enter the world of debutante balls and exclusive Park Avenue afterparties through the character of Tom Townsend, a bookishly intelligent and humorless young man who is inadvertently drawn into "The S.F.R.P." (the Sally Fowler Rat Pack) when a party of preppies mistakenly conclude that they've commandeered his cab. Tom disguises his inability to afford cabfare (or a decent overcoat) with high-sounding principles, they (approvingly) label him a "public transit snob," and he's in – all the while hiding his desperate loneliness and desire to fit in behind a deliciously transparent intellectual posturing, his attendance at the social functions he pretends to disdain cloaked in a condescending quasi-anthropological curiosity.

But his disdain and ours begins to fall away as the outspokenly snobbish Nick takes Tom under his wing, tutoring him in such matters as detachable collars and "the standards and ideals of the UHB" (the Urban Haute Bourgeoisie, which they prefer to terms like "preppie" or "yuppie."). The artistry in the way Stillman crafts his story is seen most clearly in the way he shapes our perception of Nick (brilliantly played by Chris Eigeman, who became a fixture in Stillman's films), as an initial impression of grating arrogance gives way to genuine respect and affection. Nick may not be like us, but by the end of the film we may wish we were more like Nick.

In his introduction to the Penguin edition of Pride And Prejudice, Tony Tanner calls the story "a drama of recognition," which is to say, of re-cognition: as events unfold, not only the characters are called on to change their initial judgments of other characters, but so too the reader. Just as Elizabeth Bennet must revise her original assessment of the "proud" Mr. Darcy, and, in the process, expand her view of the world, so are our perceptions – indeed, our prejudices – challenged.

There is something significantly Christian in this shift from judgment to understanding, affection, even respect. One might call it the perspective of grace. In fact there are any number of other little markers that seem to hint at the writer-director's transcendent intentions. The opening credits are heralded by "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God," the opening phrase elegantly rendered by piano and string quartet before a sassy segue into the film's neo-Jazz Age theme. We are introduced to Audrey (the film's Fanny Price, a virtuous heroine whose favourite novel is Mansfield Park), then the title card "Manhattan – Christmas Vacation – Not so long ago" gives way to a shot of the Pan Am building, its office windows illuminated in the shape of a cross. Tom is swept up into the Sally Fowler afterparty, and we reach what Stillman describes as "the original beginning of the film": an intense after-midnight conversation about the existence of God. "And you’ve experienced that?" "No, I haven’t. I hope to someday." Which certainly tells us much about the essence of these characters, the gap between their sophisticated theories and their meagre life-experience, but which also seems to be the culmination of a whole sequence of references to Something Beyond the narrow concerns of the debutantes and their escorts.

One recurring motif in the film is the tendency of these naïve sophisticates to resolve any conversation about another character's short-comings or questionable moral behaviour with some variation of "Well, he's basically a good person." Only the brash, truth-speaking liar, Nick, sees further into things. We take as essentially comic his early instructional monologue to Tom:

You haven't seen this? Detachable collar. Not many people wear them anymore, they look much better. So many things which were better in the past have been abandoned to supposed convenience. It's a small thing, but symbolically important. Our parents' generation was never interested in keeping up standards. They wanted to be happy. Of course, the last way to be happy is to make it your objective in life.
I wonder if our generation is any better than our parents'?
Oh it's worse. Our generation's probably the worst since… the protestant reformation. Barbaric. But a barbarism far worse than the old-fashioned straightforward kind. Now barbarism is cloaked with all sorts of self-righteousness and moral superiority.
You're obviously talking about a lot more than just detachable collars.
Yeah, I am.
Yet this is very much of a piece with his much more costly admission of personal guilt later in the film;
Charlie: So you're just another hypocrite!
Nick: That's not hypocrisy. It's sin.
For all Cynthia's dismissive response that "It's hardly that," we feel that a deeper, starker truth has been spoken than we've heard in all the earnest self-disclosures and intellectual theories that comprise the bulk of the film's dialogue. And later, when an evocative return to "A Mighty Fortress" underscores one of the film's most touching (yet understated) scenes, that ancient hymn almost becomes Nick's theme.

It would be a mistake to read METROPOLITAN as essentially a religious film, yet there's no denying that faith – Protestant Christian faith, in particular – is part of the essential fabric of Whit Stillman's world. As his characters move from the debutante balls of METROPOLITAN to the dance clubs of THE LAST DAYS OF DISCO to overseas careers in BARCELONA, the childhood protections of naivete and privilege erode: Stillman's characters are increasingly confronted with their own limitations and mortality, and find themselves reaching for something beyond what money, youth, and social standing can provide.

Fundamentally, though, these are not message movies. If there is serious spiritual intent beneath these delightfully comic surfaces, fear not – it's cleverly concealed, if indeed it is there at all. Whatever these films may intimate about eternity, the chief pleasure they offer is the opportunity to spend time in the company of the gracious, erudite Whit Stillman and his earnest, bright, "basically good" young friends – however filthy rich they may be.

It bears mention that not everyone ends up liking these characters: for some viewers, the initial perception of pettiness, arrogance and self-preoccupation is only confirmed by ninety minutes spent in their presence. If Audrey alone is hard to fault on these grounds, her attraction to Tom may nonetheless baffle: what is there in his clued-out prickliness to win her love beyond a poorly disguised insecurity? But whether or not one finds her fondness for the wounded outsider sweet or admirable (or even an embodiment of grace), it is nonetheless entirely believable, played to understated perfection by Carolyn Farina, a non-actress discovered working the Macy's perfume counter. I think one of the film's real achievements is that it leaves room for us to draw our own conclusions, observing its characters acutely but never dictating our response – much in the manner of Jane Austen herself, or Noel Coward, even Oscar Wilde, who may not always like their characters, but always enjoy them. Whether or not we share Whit Stillman's author's affection for Audrey, Tom, Charlie and Nick, we can still delight in their wit – and in their witlessness, wittily observed.

CLUELESS


There is a very fine Austin Bramwell article on all three Whit Stillman films at "First Things," a Catholic journal of "religion, culture and public life" (though I'm not nuts about his last paragraph).

The Criterion DVD of METROPOLITAN is available as part of the Videomatica collection, on loan at the UBC Koerner Library.