Monthly Archives: February 2007

Vancouver Opera's Magic Flute: A journey between cultures to infinity and beyond

Vancouver Opera's Magic Flute: A journey between First Nations  and Western cultures… to infinity and beyond

The Magic Flute – W.A. Mozart
Vancouver Opera
January 27, 30 – 2007
February 1, 3, 6, 8 – 2007
Queen Elizabeth Theatre, Vancouver BC
Director –  Robert McQueen
Conductor – Derrick Inouye
reviewed on Tuesday, January 30

Why would Vancouver Opera take a perfectly good Mozart opera and spend
it's largest single event budget to try to give it a First Nations
twist? 

Why would Vancouver Opera consult with First Nations artists to create
costumes and dances and set designs reflective of First Nations art and
culture, when the Magic Flute was a 1791 production set in a faraway
land, filled with Mozart's newly learned knowledge of Free Masonry and Masonic rituals?

The real question is not simply “why not?” but rather “Why hasn't something like this been done before?”

All the pre-event buzz of a First Nations Magic Flute was worth
it.  All the endless rounds of community and cultural
consultations working with the First Peoples’ Heritage, Language and Culture Council, was thorough on every level.  All the Where Cultures Meet
public presentation/forum events at the Vancouver Public Library and the Chan Centre peaked
people's interest and challenged their notions of opera and culture.  I reviewed the November 8th event
Can Cultures Merge?
 
James Wright, general director for Vancouver Opera, has been making
the company more representative and responsible for the community,
history and culture of Vancouver.  In 2005, “Naomi's Road” debuted
as a 45 minute opera for schools.  It was based on the children's
novel version of Joy Kogawa's award winning novel “Obasan” which told
the story of the internment of Japanese-Canadians during WW2. 
This was only the 2nd original commission in the Vancouver Opera's
history, following The Architect (1994). 

Last fall the Vancouver Opera's Touring Ensemble revealed their 45
minute version of Mozart's Magic Flute. The normally 3 hour long opera
underwent a radical adaptation to become a First Nations story about a
young man who must prove his worthiness to his father, Sarastro, by
finding the “box of shadows” from T'sonokwa, the Wild Woman of the
Woods.  Along the way he meets bird catcher Papageno, and the
beautiful Pamina who are also on their own quests to find love and
family.  A complex Mozart opera became a delightful opera about
the value of family and community.  I loved it immediately when I
saw it performed at the Vancouver Academy of Music in December.

And now the full-length version embraces First Nations culture, while
staying true to original storylines.  A long creative process saw
collaboration and mentorship between First Nations cultural consultants
and artists with the opera company.  Similarties were found in
Mozart's opera between the Masonic spiritual rituals and First Nations
mythology and spiritual values.  An opera representatively set on
the Pacific Coast with a multicultural cast has emerged from the
swirling mists.  Vancouver Opera opened a box of possibilities and
and now give mainstream culture a taste of what has been happening on
the Vancouver cultural arts scene for years on a much smaller and
edgier scale.  This is a rich and worthy project and deserves to
be seen.

Before the opera began on Tuesday night, Chief Leonard George of the
Tsleil-Waututh
Nation (Burrard Band of the Squamish Nation) came out to welcome the
audience to traditional Salish/Squamish lands, and spoke about the
collaboration between Vancouver Opera and First Nations peoples in
creating this production of Magic Flute.  He stated that it was
wonderful that the high culture of of First Nations is now recognized
as  equal with the high culture European opera.  The son of
the late
Chief Dan George, he is also an actor and film consultant as well as a
lecturer,  and First Nations traditional singer and dancer. 
Beating on a hand drum, Chief Leonard George sang a song that helped
prepare the audience for the special cultural journey for the evening.

The overture opens with a film projected onto the vast scrim of the
Queen Elizabeth Theatre.  Images of urban street scenes of
buildings, alleys and cars give way to forest trees and ocean lapped
rocky shores.  This high tech staging device helps to transport
the audience from the traffic hassles of parking the car on the same
night as a Vancouver Canucks hockey game, into the anticipated world of
the First Nations Mozart opera.  And maybe this also explains why
the main characters Tamino and Pamina are wearing contemporary style
clothes, as they too are transported from the contemporary into this
brave new, yet ancient
world.  There are 70 amazing individually designed costumes by
John Powell and Christine Reimer, which provide lots of “ohh factor” for
this production.

In the original Magic Flute production, Tamino is an Italian
prince, attacked by a sea serpent,
before being cast up on the shores of Egypt (spiritual birthplace of
Masonry).  Now he is a First Nations man of noble heritage, who is
attacked by a double
headed First Nations serpent, and landed on the rocky coastline of
the  Coast Salish forest. Phillipe Castagner is a splendid Tamino,
full
of self-determined
bearing and strength of will and song.

The
prone Tamino is discovered by Three Ladies, attendants of the Queen
of the Night who killed the sea serpent to save him.   The
Third Lady is played by mezzo-soprano Marion Newman of
Kwakwaka'wakw/Coast Salish heritage.  The ladies
are dressed in traditionally inspired First Nations styled costumes
that contrast with the urban leather pants worn by Tamion.  The
ladies also have blue skin and bald heads.  It is
apparent that Tamino's journey is truly to a different land.

Papegano is dressed in the wonderful blue and black raven costume that
you see on billboards and ads around Vancouver.  Raven is perfect
for Papegano, as Raven is the classic “trickster” figure in First
Nations culture.  Papageno is the first character that Tamino
meets, and promptly becomes his sidekick and travel companion for
adventure.  Played by Etienne Dupuis, he brings much comic relief
to the opera, stealing many scenes, long before the famouse
Papageno/Papagena duet.

The Queen of the Night is played by Korean soprano Hwang Sin
Nyung.  She is a ravishingly thrilling Queen of the Night hitting
the famous high F note with ease.  Her head is bald and her
costume looks like it was picked out of a Jack Shadboldt painting – a
butterfly on acid, striking with blacks, blues and silver.  Her
wings are used to great effect as she wraps herself in them or they
simply hang or flow, dependent on her movement. 

Instead of visiting a sacred Masonic temple, Tamino
finds himself at a cathedral like forest which itself is sacred in
First Nations culture. 
He is met by “The Speaker” played by baritone Gene Wu, the
Chinese-Canadian last seen in Vancouver as Naomi's father in Naomi's
Road.  Wu is dressed completely in green, with large leaves
evocative of being a tree himself.  His baritone is lyrical as he
challenges Tamino to see past the deception and lies of the Queen of
the Night, and to understand Sarastro as a benevolent and wise man.

Sarastro, is played by African-American Kevin Short, as a dignified
chieftain.  His bass-baritone is strong, and provides a strong anchor
against the other voices, especially with the male chorus or the mixed
chorus, and the finale with the Queen of the Night.  His costume
includes a copper shield breast plate – an artifact of high honour in
West Coast First Nations culture.  From high priest to wise
chieftain, this role easily fits in with the transformation, as he is
surrounded by his tribal council – each dressed in costume
representative of the 12 different West Coast First Nations.

Michel Corbiel is the menacing Monostatos who is threatening Pamina
when we first meet them both. He is dressed as a rat with ears and a
tail, but with knickers remnescient of 18th C. Europe, as are his
followers.  I guess this is the political statement about European
colonialism in North America.

Director Robert McQueen has indeed attempted to embrace the
almost-impossible, balancing political correctness with First Nations
protocol, European opera traditionalism with new creative vision. 
He wisely sticks to the central universal themes of love, and heroic
myth.  We met him during the intermission after he had just been
congratulated by Lt. Governor Iona Campagnolo.  McQueen was still
very actively engaged in tweaking with the production, as there were
still projection problems.  But he was amazingly optimistic and
certainly happy with the production. 

Mozart's Magic Flute score is filled with hummable songs and famous
arias, and easily stands on its own.  Vancouver born conductor
Derrick Inouye writes in the program:

“Great theatrical and musical works
have always been re-invented and re-imagined by adventurous directors
and composers, setting Rigoletto for example in Chicago in the 1930's, or Romeo and Juliet as West Side Story
While not all these creative offshoots are successful, some of the most
inventive re-interpretations can not only spark our imagination but
also bring a new richness to our perception of a familiar work and
evoke the underlying truths of human experience and emotion that can
encompass such an evolution of the original intent.”

And this Magic Flute production indeed sparks our
imaginations.  What if Ballet BC were to do something similar such
as set Swan Lake in First Nations mythology?  What if Vancouver
Opera and other mainstream arts organizations commissioned new original
works with BC's diverse heritage and culture in mind?  Will we see
Naomi's Road blossom into a full scale opera?  Will we see First
Nations stories emerge into the mainstream?  Will we see a Chinese
Canadian opera about building the railroad and paying the head
tax?  The possibilities are infinite and only defined by the
limits of our imagination.

Vancouver Opera's full scale Magic Flute runs until Feb 8th.

But if you can… also check out the 45 minute version that was created
for school children.  While the 3 hour version is amazing with
brilliant moments, there are also scenes that drag a bit.  The 45
minute version sustains “the magic” from start to finish. Melody
Mercredi who plays the Queen of the Night understudy for the Queen
Elizabeth performances, is a frightening wonderful T'sonokwa/Queen of
the Night.  I talked briefly with her in December, and the Metis
native told me that while growing up, she heard many stories
about T'sonokwa, so she felt she could really relate to the First
Nations retelling of the opera.

Feb 9, West Vancouver Memorial Library
April 7 & 8, Firehall Arts Centre

Check out this other links and reviews

Innovative Magic Flute justifies the buzz
www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/arts/

NationTalk – Vancouver Opera Presents A New Production of W.A. Mozart
www.nationtalk.ca

Welcome to the Vancouver Courier

www.vancourier.com/issues07/015107/entertainment

globeandmail.com: Mozart, with a first nation touch
www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20070201.FLUTE01/TPStory/Entertainment


Vancouver Storytelling Festival begins today

Vancouver Storytelling Festival begins today

Check out this weekend's Vancouver Storytelling Festival
February 2nd, 3rd and 4th, 2007

Van Dusen Botanical Garden
5251 Oak Street
at West 37th Ave.

Advance tickets available at www.ticketstonight.ca 24 hours in advance.
or phone 604-231-7535

Tickets also available at the door.  Discounts for members of Vancouver Society of Storytelling.
 

Download the program at:
2007 Vancouver International Storytelling Festival Programme Guide

Chirine el Ansary – Stories from 1001 Nights, Others

Chirine has a very physical approach and explores the way words and
movements combine to create moods, atmospheres and images. She can tell
in English, French, or Egyptian Arabic, and has told internationally
from Sana’a to Nairobi, Zanzibar, Johannesburg, Rome, Napoli,
Rotterdam, Paris and London at the Barbican.
(From Cairo, Egypt)
Jolene Cumming – Stories of Women of Vancouver

Jolene is a local historical interpreter who conducts walking tours,
gallery talks, school tours, and presentations on the history of the
women of Vancouver. Recently Jolene launched her walking tour The Women
of Stanley Park, 1850-1914, an adjunct to her Women of Vancouver: The
Early Years tour. Jolene Cumming will do a walk within the VanDusen
Botanical Garden with stories of the women of Vancouver that relate to
what we are seeing. Bring an umbrella, just in case!
(From Vancouver)
Comfort Adesuwa Ero – Stories from Nigeria

Comfort grew up in Nigeria, the daughter of a chief, and has learned
and told folktales and songs ever since she learned to talk. She
studied languages and drama and became a teacher at a time when it was
very unpopular in Africa to send girls to school. She left her native
land when authorities warned her against telling subversive stories to
her students.
(Originally from Nigeria)
Nan Gregory – Folktales and Fairy Tales, Myths and Legends

Nan
is one of Canada' premier storytellers, and has been spinning tales for
all ages for 22 years. Her first children's book, How Smudge Came,
draws on her storytelling techniques and on her knowledge of story
forms from around the world. She is also an artist who works in
fabrics, paint and cookies.
(From Vancouver)
Bonnie Logan – Stories from rural Saskatchewan & the world, banjo

Bonnie
was born and raised in Biggar, Saskatchewan. Everyone in her
farming/railroading family told stories, and she started in as a
youngster just to get a word in edgewise. Her repertoire is a dog eared
collection of anecdotes, folktales, original and literary stories woven
together with music on banjo, kokorico, cabasa and other odd
instruments.
(From Saskatchewan)
Helen May – Zulu Tales, Stories from Africa

Helen
is a Vancouver-based storyteller. Since her beginnings in South Africa,
where the Zulu people held her in a warm embrace of vivid stories,
teaching-tales, and breathtaking harmony, she has been telling,
listening to, singing and writing stories. She tells tales learned from
her Zulu friends when she was a child.
(From Vancouver, raised in South Africa)
Michael D. McCarty – Multi-Cultural Folk Tales

Michael
is a multicultural teller of African, African-American and
international folk tales, historical tales, stories of science and of
the spiritual, as well as stories of the brilliant and absolutely
stupid things he has done in his life. His style is energetic and
enthusiastic, and his stories inform, educate, inspire and amuse.
(From Los Angeles)
Bill McNamara – Spoken Word, Harleys and such.

Bill
is a Vancouver-based storyteller and spoken word artist who runs
Hogger's Moon Cartage, rides Harleys and wins story slams (last year’s
Story Slam Champ, it was his first year and he won the first four times
he went!). He has worked as a trucker, miner, plumber, film animator
and then went back to tr

Jean Pierre Makosso – African Tales

Jean
Pierre is an internationally renowned actor, storyteller and dancer
from Pointe Noire, Congo Brazzaville in Central Africa. Jean Pierre has
also performed at more than 1,000 schools worldwide as storyteller and
dancer. He can tease the giggles out of grownups and grandchildren
alike!
(From Sechelt, originally from Congo)
James Nicholas – 1st Nations Tales

James
Nicholas is a Cree storyteller born and raised in the Precambrian
Shield territory of Boreal Manitoba., the progeny of shamans, medicine
men and woman, trappers and chiefs. He comes from a family of renowned
orators and storytellers. James has travelled the length and bredth of
North America searching for story and being story.
(From Saskatchewan, originally from Manitoba)
evenSteven – Spoken Word, Creative Tales

evenSteven
is a writer, contortionist and practicing martial artist as well as a
storyteller. He has stories for every grade level, which range from
surreal to absurd to eastern mysticism to world literature to urban and
rural myth and legend. An agent provocateur guaranteed to tickle your
funnybone.
(From Vancouver)
Joujou Turenne – Stories of love, peace, friendship, liberty, dignity, exile

Some
people shape clay, Joujou shapes words. She is inspired by her African
filiations, her Caribbean relations, the thousand textures of Quebec
where she has settled, and the four corners of the world she has
crossed. Also a dancer and actor, Joujou mixes poetry, storytelling,
social commitment, and sass.
(From Montreal, originally from Haiti)
Kira Van Deusen – Tales of Siberian peoples, Tuvans, and Inuit.

Kira
plays the cello and tells shamanistic and animal power tales, which are
full of transformations – a mother turns into a wolf to rescue her
daughter; a tiger turns into a man and teaches a boy how to be a good
hunter. Kira has done extensive research with indigenous people in
Siberia and the Russian Far East, and has performed widely in Canada,
the US, and Russia.
(From Vancouver)

Performers at Gung Haggis Fat Choy 2007 – where to see them next!

It was incredible that so many of our performers were creating ways to
play with each other and be inclusive – just like real interculturalism
– instead of being in little multicultural boxes looking pretty for
multicultural show and tell… You guys make it so dynamic!

Silk
Road with Heather Pawsey & Kathryn Cernauskas performing Mo Li Hua (Jasmine Flower)…
Harry Aoki with Leora Cashe and Jaye Krebs performing Stardust and Chinatown My Chinatown…
Leora &
Jaye with Qiu Xia and Andre performing a jazzy instrumental…
Grace Chin, Zen Shane Lim, Priya Ramu all joining Margaret Gallagher, Heather Pawsey,
and myself on the singalsongs.
Chris Trinidad and Nealamjit Dhillon from Brave Waves joining in bass
and tabla drums on
the Gung Haggis RAP Choy with  No Luck Club's Trevor Chan, while
Todd and Joe McDonald rapped the Robbie Burns verses, with Grace,
Margaret, Heather and Leora joining in on the Chorus. 

Awesome…  I am still trying to
take everything in.

And hopefully more people from the audience will find our 2007 performers:

  • Listen to Priya Ramu, host of CBC Radio's “On the Coast” – 690 AM, 3pm to 6pm 
  • go see Twisting Fortunes with Grace and Zen and Charlie!
  • come out to a traditional Burns dinner (Ian – we can start a “Young Burns Club” as an auxilliary to the Burns Club of Vancouver)
  • see
    Qiu Xia He perform at Capilano College on Feb 2, at “Night Bird Singing”
    concert before Silk Road Music goes for an extended tour in Toronto Feb
    4 to March
  • recognize Heather Pawsey at the Vancouver Opera's Magic Flute, or see her at “Night Bird Singing,” at Capilano College on Feb 2
  • see
    Leora Cashe Feb 11th at Terry Fox Theatre or on March 11  at The Cellar for a
    Joni Mitchell tribute set at The Cellar on March 11… or most Sunday
    mornings with Jaye at the Centre for Spiritual Living, at the Masonic
    Hall.
  • see Margaret Gallagher on “Living in Vancouver” on CBC TV with fello hapa Jennifer Burke.
  • come to see No Luck Club at the Anza Club on Feb 2, for the CJSF Anniversary party!
  • recognize Lensey Namioka's books at the stores, or the libraries!
  • come to Harry's First Friday Forum at the Nikkei Heritage Centre for intercultural music and discussion.
  • say Hi to Carl, when he does his cound gigs at The Roxy or around town.
  • catch Joe McDonald with Brave Waves, Mad Celts or solo around town…