Times Colonist

Victoria troupe awarded $375K for opera on missing aboriginal women

- ADRIAN CHAMBERLAI­N achamberla­in@timescolon­ist.com

A new opera about B.C.’s missing aboriginal women and a variety show starring developmen­tally disabled performers are among Victoria projects approved for more than $500,000 in federal grants.

The Canada Council for the Arts awarded Pacific Opera Victoria $375,000 for Missing, a new chamber opera with a libretto by Métis playwright Marie Clements and music by Brian Current.

Set in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside and along the Highway of Tears, the opera will give voice to Canada’s missing and murdered indigenous women. It is a collaborat­ion with Vancouver’s City Opera. Missing will première at Vancouver’s York Theatre in November, followed by a fivenight run at Pacific Opera Victoria’s Baumann Centre.

The Canada Council also provided a $120,000 grant for a theatre project showcasing adult performers with Down syndrome, autism and other developmen­tal disabiliti­es. Producer Kathryn Popham and comedian Wes Borg will oversee the production, tentativel­y titled The Biggest Most Awesome Show Ever.

It will play the McPherson Playhouse for five performanc­es from Feb. 6 to 10, 2018. All the performers will be paid.

“It will be a large-scale musical, variety, theatrical show. It will use people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es as creators and performers,” Popham said.

Since 2015, Popham and Borg have overseen comedy classes for the developmen­tally disabled, hosted by Lifetime Networks. Borg says performing in front of applauding audiences is a boost for these performers.

“That’s called the ‘show juice,’ that powerful, transforma­tive moment,” he said.

The first audition for The Biggest Most Awesome Show Ever is Feb. 16. More informatio­n is available at dramaclubv­ictoria.ca.

As well, Orca Book Publishers received a $50,000 Canada Council grant for a book about aboriginal reconcilia­tion. Speaking Our Truth: A Journey of Reconcilia­tion is by indigenous author Monique Gray Smith.

These grants, three of 52 awarded nationally, are distribute­d through the Canada Council’s New Chapter program, celebratin­g the 150th anniversar­y of Confederat­ion.

 ??  ?? Victoria comedian Wes Borg, centre in a hoodie, leads a comedy class for people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es. The Canada Council has provided a $120,000 grant for a theatre project, overseen by Borg and producer Kathryn Popham, showcasing adult...
Victoria comedian Wes Borg, centre in a hoodie, leads a comedy class for people with developmen­tal disabiliti­es. The Canada Council has provided a $120,000 grant for a theatre project, overseen by Borg and producer Kathryn Popham, showcasing adult...

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