Lethbridge Herald

A beast awakens in Ottawa

STREET PERFORMANC­E CELEBRATES CANADA’S 150TH

- Terry Pedwell THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Ottawa is a city used to fire-breathing politician­s wandering the streets.

But tens of thousands of people in the nation’s capital were treated Friday to the awakening of a beast of a different sort.

Long Ma, a giant smoke-billowing, firebreath­ing mechanical dragon from France, gracefully wandered the city’s streets after being “awoken” in a ceremony at Ottawa city hall.

The dragon was part of an elaborate street theatre performanc­e by French production company La Machine, brought to Ottawa for the city’s celebratio­ns of Canada’s 150th birthday, along with a 5.7-metre-high mechanical spider called Kumo.

Guy LaFlamme, executive director of Ottawa 2017, first saw the dragon while in France, where it was created for a philanthro­pist in Beijing.

LaFlamme says he immediatel­y thought of bringing it to Ottawa, since Beijing is a sister city to Canada’s capital.

In addition, Ottawa has its own giant spider, a Louise Bourgeois sculpture called Maman, just outside the National Gallery of Canada.

“So I felt this is a perfect fit, having the dragon Long Ma and the spider, which is becoming more and more a symbol of Ottawa, home to Maman,” LaFlamme said.

City streets were awash with people, including hundreds of families with young children, to witness Long Ma’s awakening and oscillatin­g movements.

While their parents captured the moment with their smartphone­s and cameras, some of the children appeared apprehensi­ve as the dragon spewed a warm mist from its nostrils and speakers bellowed ominous growling sounds.

Others were in awe, including nine-year-old Saul Brown, who said he was amazed by “the attention to details and the movement of the eyes.”

“And it’s just huge,” he added as he and his seven-year-old brother Otto watched the dragon head toward the National War Memorial.

Dubbed by its creators as “travelling urban theatre,” La Machine’s Ottawa performanc­e was a first for North America.

Organizers created an elaborate storyline behind the three-day spectacle, describing Long Ma as “a cosmic creature who is halfhorse, half-dragon” from the ninth level of heaven, robbed of its wings from “a sinister force that has taken the form of a giant spider,” Kumo, who was unearthed from deep beneath the city by crews building Ottawa’s new transit line.

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