Vancouver Magazine

Back to Our Future

The plague years of AIDS in Vancouver’s West End are spotlighte­d on stage this winter.

- By Alyssa Hirose

How do you translate 20,000 pages of transcribe­d interviews into an engaging, dynamic and radical live show? Leave it to Victoria-based playwright Rick Waines. A spark was ignited when Waines was interviewe­d for SFU student Ben Klassen’s oral history research project called HIV in Our Day—a project that focused on the stories of gay men and their caregivers living in Vancouver’s West End from 1981 to ’96, commonly recognized as the “plague years” of the AIDS pandemic. “I’m HIV positive—I found out in

’87,” says Waines, “and I just fell in love with the opportunit­y to revisit those years, and to unpack some of the feelings and the celebratio­ns and the disappoint­ments and the terror that those years were.”

Waines became heavily involved in the project himself, transcribi­ng interviews and working on the community-based research team— and, eventually, he turned those transcript­s into a piece of verbatim theatre. “Because it’s verbatim, you use every um, every ah, and every restart of the sentence to tell the story,” explains Waines. Despite being born from interviews, this play isn’t just talking heads— audiences can expect high-energy scenes in dance clubs, activists protesting on the street, emotional revelation­s in doctor’s offices and cruising adventures through Stanley Park. Bygone locales (like Doll and Penny’s) meet modern references (a fairylike Dr. Bonnie, perhaps) as the show aims to “reactivate the space of HIV advocacy and mutual support through collective action,” according to Waines.

The show, called In My Day, is produced by Zee Zee Theatre and premieres at the Cultch’s Historic Theatre on December 2. And on December 4, organizers are hosting a community event—“an intergener­ational, diverse gathering of folks that are connected to the world of HIV, whether they are HIV positive, from disproport­ionately affected communitie­s or work in HIV,” says Waines—to watch the show, tell stories, build shrines and share food.

In My Day doesn’t shy away from the violent realities of HIV in Vancouver at that time, but it also embraces more uplifting moments. “While there is a lot of death, there is also a lot of celebratio­n and survival and working together,” says Waines. “I think that there will be a lot of feels, but it will be all of the feels, not only the grief.”

I think that there will be a lot of feels, but it will be of the feels, not only the grief.”

IN MY DAY

DATE VENUE COST

thecultch.com

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Curtain Call
features (from left to right) Allan Morgan, Jackson Wai Chung Tse, Scott Button, Patti Allan, Sabrina Symington, Alen Dominguez, Issiah Bull Bear, Ivy Charles and Kelsey Kanatan Wavey.
Curtain Call features (from left to right) Allan Morgan, Jackson Wai Chung Tse, Scott Button, Patti Allan, Sabrina Symington, Alen Dominguez, Issiah Bull Bear, Ivy Charles and Kelsey Kanatan Wavey.
 ?? ?? Verbatim Virtuoso Playwright Rick Waines.
Verbatim Virtuoso Playwright Rick Waines.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada