PACE (Professional Arts Coalition of Edmonton) spearheads campaign against further arts cuts

Advocacy Initiative from PACE – ACTION requested

Below is a message from PACE (Professional Arts Coalition of Edmonton):

Hello everyone,

You have probably heard that PACE is spearheading a campaign that we are hoping will go viral across Alberta through the involvement of arts organizations and professional artists in our province.  The campaign started in response to very credible rumours you have no doubt already heard yourself – that our provincial government is seriously contemplating further cuts to the arts and culture sector in Alberta.

As you know, another cut like the one endured last year – or worse – will surely mean the death of many valued and innovative arts and culture organizations in our province.

This year, it is our goal to work in a concerted fashion to influence the government and people of Alberta that further cuts to Alberta’s arts and culture sector will hurt the entire province.

The attached postcard is our first step in this advocacy campaign. We have also printed 10,000 hard copies of this postcard for distribution to the public at arts events and performances.  Please contact us if you would like some for your organization, keeping in mind that we expect them to move quickly.

We urge you to include these postcards in your programs and make them available to your supporters electronically. (Please keep in mind that downloaded and signed postcards need to be mailed to us in envelopes, or the post office will not deliver them.)

We are using the I love Alberta Art tag line as a consistent element in the materials we are producing.  We also encourage you to come up with your own postcards using the same message we feature here to increase the impact of the campaign.  Send us an electronic version of your postcard so PACE can feature a link to it on its website at www.pacedmonton.com.  We are hoping to eventually display a fine assortment of these postcards.

Please feel free to contact us at admin@pacedmonton.com or 780-485-3085 with any questions or suggestions you may have.  The present situation affects all of us.

Thank you,

Advocacy Steering Committee

PACE
          Box 11933
          Edmonton, AB
          T5J 3L1
          (780) 485-3085

Visit the PACE website at www.pacedmonton.com

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Catalyst Theatre’s Managing Director Eva Cairns wins John Hobday Award for Arts Management

Canada Council for the Arts Communiqué

For immediate release
Performing arts professionals win John Hobday Awards in Arts Management

Ottawa, January 24, 2011 – The Canada Council for the Arts announced today that former contemporary dancer Mary-Louise Albert, now Artistic Managing Director of the Norman Rothstein Theatre and Chutzpah! Festival in Vancouver, and Eva Cairns, Managing Producer for Catalyst Theatre in Edmonton, are the 2011 winners of the John Hobday Awards in Arts Management. The Awards celebrate established and mid career arts managers.

Ms. Albert’s award will enable her to pursue a mentorship with Howard Jang, Executive Director of Vancouver’s Arts Club Theatre Company. The mentorship will allow them to work together on a series of specific themes such as financial control and budgeting in a large organization, board governance, management of multiple venues, donors programs and corporate sponsor relationship building as well as exploring the executive director’s multifaceted role in supporting artistic vision.

Ms. Cairns’s award for professional development will enable her to take three Leadership Development Programs at the Banff Centre. The programs will focus on effective leadership, how to draw out the best from a team and each individual on it, and on how to nurture a culture of strategic thinking in an organization.

Images of Mss. Albert and Cairns can be downloaded from the Canada Council image gallery.

Read the complete news release here or by copying and pasting the following URL into your web browser’s address bar: www.canadacouncil.ca/news/releases/2011/lf129403543120409563.htm

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Media contact: Carole Breton: 613-566-4414 or 1-800-263-5588, ext. 4523
carole.breton@canadacouncil.ca
Heather McAfee: 613-566-4414 or 1-800-263-5588, ext. 4166
heather.mcafee@canadacouncil.ca

Visit our website at www.canadacouncil.ca.

Tous les documents du Conseil des Arts du Canada sont offerts en français et en anglais.

 

350 Albert Street 350, rue Albert
Post Office Box 1047 Case postale 1047
Ottawa, Ontario  K1P 5V8 Ottawa (Ontario) K1P 5V8
www.canadacouncil.ca www.conseildesarts.ca
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Playwright Marty Chan new Writer in Residence at Edmonton Public Library

Library Welcomes Local Writer and Playwright Marty Chan as 2011 Writer in Residence

Chan promises his residency will be one of the most interactive and accessible to date

The Edmonton Public Library (EPL) is pleased to announce that Marty Chan has been selected as its Writer in Residence (WIR) for 2011.  The local author will begin his 12-month residency this January. Chan will devote 40 per cent of his time to WIR activities and 60 per cent to his own writing projects next year.

The EPL Writer in Residence (WIR) program provides services to aspiring and established writers in the Edmonton area, including individual manuscript consultations, public readings and talks, information on the publishing process and connections to the writing community.

“We are thrilled with this announcement and excited to see what activities this collaboration will present,” said EPL Chief Executive Officer, Linda Cook. “Marty has been very supportive of our Library providing a number of author visits and readings in the past; his enthusiasm to help foster aspiring writers has no bounds.  It’s exactly why our program exists, and why he makes a great choice for our new Writer in Residence.”

Chan’s residency is poised to be one of EPL’s most interactive and accessible as he has agreed to work closely with the Library to create new programs that will showcase a writer’s process.  He will take aspiring writers through the development stages on a number of his writing projects including a new play he is writing for the Fringe festival.   The series is scheduled for this summer and will be a new and fresh addition to EPL’s Behind the Scenes (BTS) series.   Chan’s series will not only take you behind the scenes of the play but will also give the audience a chance to participate in the development process – they will  listen to table readings, provide feedback on the script and attend rehearsals.  For the annual NaNoWriMo challenge next November, Chan will write 50,000 words toward the first draft of a new novel.  The general public will have a chance to watch him in action as he visits a different library branch every day.  He invites budding authors to join in and work on their own novels.

Through the use of social media tools such as Facebook and Twitter, Chan will keep writers and fans abreast of his year.   They will be able to follow his EPL WIR blog and listen to podcasts.  In mid-January, Chan and EPL will host a Meet, Greet and Tweet-up to kick off his residency.

Chan will launch his fourth children’s’ book, The Mystery of the Cyber Bully on December 1 at Audrey’s Books.   The series has been well received with his first book, Mystery of the Frozen Brains, winning the 2005 City of Edmonton Book Prize, and the second book, The Mystery of the Graffiti Ghoul, earning the 2008 Diamond Willow Award. His third book, The Mystery of the Mad Science Teacher, was shortlisted for the Golden Eagle Children’s Choice Award. Chan has also had success in theatre, television and radio. He is best known for his hit play Mom, Dad, I’m Living with a White Girl. The cross-cultural comedy has been produced at theatres across Canada and off-Broadway.  For more information about Chan, please visit www.martychan.com.

About the Edmonton Public Library (EPL)
      The Edmonton Public Library carries everything you care about. We are Edmonton’s largest lender of all manner of information and entertainment. Our professionally trained staff take you beyond Google with the knowledge, discernment and desire to help you navigate a universe of information. Every year, we host over 14 million in-branch and online visits across our 17 branches and website. We deliver our incredible content to you everywhere – in the library, at home, or on your handheld device. Unmatched access and unrivalled value – that is today’s EPL. Spread the words. www.epl.ca.

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CCA Bulletin: Will Ottawa follow U.S. lead and turn up the heat on cultural diplomacy

CCA Bulletin 2/11, January 17, 2011

The US government turns up the heat on cultural diplomacy: Can we hope that Ottawa will do the same?

Just the facts

For the past four years, the Canadian Conference of the Arts (CCA) has deplored the fact that the federal government no longer has a coordinated strategy for the promotion of Canadian artists and cultural works to national and international audiences and markets. Beyond the purely economic aspects, we have also expressed concerns about the fact that Ottawa has all but abandoned cultural diplomacy as part of its foreign policy. This is why we were particularly interested in examining our neighbours south of the border, where the concept of cultural diplomacy seems to be enjoying a revival after having been somewhat cast aside after the end of the Cold War.

On Friday, January 7, the United States Embassy in Ottawa hosted a livestream viewing party and discussion on cultural diplomacy. The presentation, titled “Culture in Diplomacy: A New Era for Arts & Cultural Relations,” was led by Ann Stock, Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs, and broadcast from the annual conference of the Association of Performing Arts Presenters (APAP) in New York City. The panel included the Quebec Minister of Culture and Communications, Ms. Christine St-Pierre.

During her presentation, Assistant Secretary Stock outlined the Obama administration’s efforts to use cultural diplomacy as an important foreign policy tool and emphasized the Department’s mandate to establish more mutually reciprocal relations with foreign cultural groups and programs. She touched on many of the State Department’s flagship cultural program initiatives, including Rhythm Road, DanceMotion, smART Power, Center Stage and Cultural Envoys.

Following her presentation, Stock moderated a panel of international speakers. Christine St. Pierre, Quebec’s Minister of Culture and Communication, discussed the province’s successes and challenges in endorsing its arts and culture both domestically and internationally.  Eugene Downes, Chief Executive of Culture Ireland, spoke about the intricacies of launching and sustaining an Irish cultural diplomacy program with very limited manpower; he stressed the need to maintain a tight focus and simple funding program. For his part, the representative of the British Council accentuated that, in order to develop a mutual level of trust and understanding with foreign countries, cultural diplomacy programs are best served by developing grassroots, dialogue-based initiatives.

Tell Me More

The cultural diplomacy initiatives instituted by the United States and other nations are of particular interest to the CCA insofar as they enhance awareness about the potential benefits of promoting domestic arts and culture internationally.

Although in the mid-90s, the Government of Canada had declared “the promotion of Canadian culture and values” to be the third pillar of Canadian foreign policy, this approach has been all but abandoned over the past seven years. This is despite the strong evidence that it not only contributes to the much needed development of foreign markets for our cultural products, but also plays an important part in shaping our image with other nations while supporting Canada’s other commercial objectives abroad.

As mentioned above, despite several small international programs within the Canadian Heritage portfolio agencies, there is currently no coordinated pan-governmental strategy for the promotion of Canadian artists and cultural works to national and international audiences. The Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT) which formerly had a program devoted to developing cultural markets abroad, now only offers the Global Opportunities for Associations (GOA) contributions program, which generally supports national trade associations to benefit the entire realm of industry. Though the current government has shown an interest in making investments in the creative economy, it has not included a comprehensive program to ensure that our cultural sector can cultivate new markets at home and abroad. Since the abolition of the PromArt and Trade Routes programs in 2008, the Quebec government has stepped forward by adding an annual $3 million to support its cultural sector; however, despite numerous appeals and evidence put forward by the sector, the federal government has yet to repair the damage done.

Beyond the need to develop markets abroad for our artists and cultural industries, it is important that culture be reinserted into Canadian foreign diplomacy. Over the past few years, the CCA has attempted to promote awareness and discussion regarding the crucial contribution artists and cultural institutions can play with regards to the international image and trade objectives of our country.

In November of 2007, the CCA hosted a symposium titled The Role of the Arts and Culture in Canadian Public Diplomacy. Many delegates at the symposium (including former politicians, former diplomats, artists and cultural workers) stressed the need for better coordination between the various players in this field, the importance of maintaining strong networks world-wide, and the necessity to take advantage of new technology. A background discussion paper was published and a working group was established to develop an action plan ensuring greater involvement on the part of the cultural sector in Canadian diplomatic strategy. More immediate concerns and a lack of resources have led to the temporary abandonment of this initiative.

In June 2008, the CCA continued the discussion by hosting a public debate titled Between Public Diplomacy and Nation Branding: a New Way of Thinking the Internationalization of Canadian Culture. Panelists discussed the value of “nation branding,” as well as other perspectives and models as a means of spreading Canadian culture abroad. In its 2009 and 2010 pre-budget submissions, the CCA also encouraged the federal government to invest an additional $40 million per year into the expansion of the capacity of the Canada Council for the Arts to invest in national and international market development. Moreover, it encouraged the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade to collaborate with the Canada Council for the Arts on its cultural initiatives abroad.

      It is interesting to see that other countries share our views regarding the renewed importance of cultural diplomacy within our increasingly globalized world. If Canada can mould its environmental policies on American initiatives, is it too much to hope that it may also finally realize the important role culture can play in its world positioning?

What can I do?

Read our pre-budget submission supporting cultural diplomacy and comment on our blog. Write to your MP and emphasize your desire for arts and culture to be part of Canada’s diplomatic approach abroad.

Alain Pineau
      National Director / Directeur général
      Canadian Conference of the Arts / Conférence canadienne des arts
      406 – 130, rue Slater Street
      Ottawa Ontario K1P 6E2
      Tel / Tél: (613) 238-3561 ext.12 / poste 12
      Fax / Télécopieur: (613) 238-4849
alain.pineau@ccarts.ca | www.ccarts.ca
The Canadian Conference of the Arts (CCA) is the national forum for the arts and cultural community in Canada. It provides research, analysis and consultations on public policies affecting the arts and the Canadian cultural institutions and industries. The CCA fosters informed public debate on policy issues and seeks to advance the cultural rights of Canadians.

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Greg MacArthur appointed as University of Alberta’s new Lee Playwright in Residence

Greg MacArthur appointed as University of Alberta’s new Lee Playwright in Residence

Edmonton, AB – His plays have been produced across Canada, as well as in South Africa, Germany, and the United Kingdom, and now playwright and performer Greg MacArthur has arrived at the University of Alberta this January 2011, as the Department of Drama’s next Lee Playwright in Residence.

Given that MacArthur believes the purpose of theatre is, “to excite, to challenge, to provoke, to affect change, to be sexy, to be dangerous,” and he has described his own work as “contradictory, unclassifiable, [and] vulnerable,” his residency at the University of Alberta promises to be fresh, challenging, and invigorating.

As part of his University of Alberta residency, MacArthur has accepted a new play commission, with the work projected to premiere in the 2012/2013 U of A Studio Theatre season. Greg MacArthur is the third Lee Playwright in Residence, following Kevin Kerr (2007-2010) and Don Hannah (2005-2007). For more information about the Lee Playwright in Residency program, please see http://www.drama.ualberta.ca/About_UofA_Drama/Lee_Playwright_In_Residence.aspx .

More about Greg MacArthur
      MacArthur is known for plays that explore themes of identity and escape, focusing on characters that exist on the fringes of society. Some of his more notable playwriting credits include: Tyland, produced in February 2010 as part of the Alberta Theatre Project’s Enbridge playRites Festival (Calgary); Recovery, commissioned and produced in 2006 by The National Arts Centre (Ottawa) and produced by Rumble Theatre (Vancouver) the same year, garnering six Jessie Richardson Award nominations including Outstanding Production; Get Away, produced at the 2005 Alberta Theatre Projects’ Enbridge playRites Festival (Calgary) earning three Betty Mitchell Award nominations including Outstanding New Play; as well as Snowman and girls! girls! girls!, two plays published together in 2005 in Exposure by Coach House Books.

MacArthur has been Artist in Residence at Playwrights’ Workshop Montreal (2006-2010), Writer in Residence at The Writer’s Network / Centre for the Book in Cape Town, South Africa (2003), and Playwright in Residence at Toronto’s Buddies in Bad Times Theatre (1997 -1998).

Meet MacArthur
      Former Lee Playwright in Residence Kevin Kerr will interview his successor, Greg MacArthur, January 24th at 7 pm in the Timms Centre lobby at the University of Alberta (112 Street – 87 Avenue). All are welcome to this free public event. Light refreshments will be served.

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UNIVERSITY OF ALBERTA
DEPARTMENT OF DRAMA
MEDIA RELEASE
January 11, 2011
Media Contact: Salena Kitteringham
University of Alberta, Department of Drama
Phone: 780.492.8710 email: salena@ualberta.ca

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Stratford Festival mourns the loss of actor Peter Donaldson

Stratford Shakespeare Festival
MEDIA RELEASE

Ann Swerdfager
Publicity Director
1-800-561-1233 x2297 / 519-271-4040 x2297
aswerdfager@stratfordshakespearefestival.com

01/11

Festival mourns the loss of actor Peter Donaldson

January 9, 2011… The Stratford Shakespeare Festival was deeply saddened to learn of the death of actor Peter Donaldson on Saturday, January 8, 2011. Mr. Donaldson was to return to the Festival this year for his 25th season, playing Buckingham in Richard III and Marcus Andronicus in Titus Andronicus.

“Peter was the finest actor’s actor,” says General Director Antoni Cimolino, who worked with Mr. Donaldson on many productions. “He was deeply admired for the conviction he brought to his work and the unsparing truth of his portrayals. He was versatile and able to give outstanding performances in modern plays, musicals and classics. But his home was Shakespeare.

“He spent a lifetime at the Stratford Festival and gave us a world of great performances. His Timon of Athens made a seldom-performed part unforgettable and was a tour de force of virtuosity. But this was only one of many brilliant performances at Stratford.”

Mr. Donaldson was last seen on the Stratford stage in 2008, when he played Rufio in Caesar and Cleopatra and Friar Laurence in Romeo and Juliet, both under the direction of Artistic Director Des McAnuff, and Don Armado in Love’s Labour’s Lost, under the direction of Michael Langham, the Festival’s artistic director from 1956 to 1967.

“I was looking forward immensely to Peter’s return to our company for what was to have been his 25th season, and I am shocked and saddened by his untimely passing,” says Mr. McAnuff.

“He was one of those rare actors who excelled at everything he touched, able to sound the depths of tragic emotion even as he delighted us with his flair for wryly deadpan comedy. No one who enjoyed his stellar performances at Stratford and elsewhere could have doubted that even greater triumphs lay ahead of him, and our sorrow is all the deeper when we think of the King Lear or the Prospero we might someday have seen him play but now have lost forever.

“Peter leaves those of us at the Festival with a tremendous sense of responsibility because we know he held this theatre in the highest possible esteem.”

Mr. Donaldson was born and raised in Midland, Ontario, and attended performances at the Stratford Festival as a high-school student. A graduate of the University of Guelph, Mr. Donaldson began at the Festival in 1977 as a journeyman actor, playing Potpan in Romeo and Juliet and the Page to Bertram in All’s Well That Ends Well. He remained for three seasons, and then moved on to study in New York under Uta Hagen, Stella Adler and Olympia Dukakis, and to perform at a number of Canadian theatres, including the Shaw Festival, Toronto Free Theatre and London’s Grand Theatre.

After a single season at Stratford in 1982, Mr. Donaldson returned in 1986, growing into one of the Festival’s most versatile and admired leading men. Over 12 seasons, he gave such memorable performances as Jaques in As You Like It, both Kent and Edgar in productions of King Lear, Guy Thompson in Homeward Bound, Boy Staunton in World of Wonders and Petruchio in The Taming of the Shrew, opposite Lucy Peacock’s Katherina.

One of his many stand-out performances came in 1994, when he was part of a remarkable ensemble, playing James Tyrone Jr., in Eugene O’Neill’s Long Day’s Journey Into Night, with William Hutt, Martha Henry, Tom McCamus and Martha Burns, under the direction of Diana Leblanc. He reprised the role in a film version, winning a Genie for Best Supporting Actor. After that performance, he appeared in Atom Egoyan’s film The Sweet Hereafter.

From 1995 to 1999, he worked on the television series Emily of New Moon, in which he played Ian Bowles opposite his wife, Sheila McCarthy, who played Aunt Laura. They had also performed together on stage, in the Grand Theatre’s 1992 production of Norm Foster’s Wrong For Each Other.

In 2001, Mr. Donaldson again returned to Stratford to play Malvolio in Twelfth Night (directed by Mr. Cimolino), George in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and Trigorin in The Seagull. The following year, he was joined on stage by Ms McCarthy for the Festival’s 50th season. They performed as husband and wife in two productions, playing Mr. and Mrs. Peachum in The Threepenny Opera and Sir Percival Blakeney and Marguerite in The Scarlet Pimpernel.

Aside from The Threepenny Opera, Mr. Donaldson’s foray into musical theatre, included playing Harry the Horse in 1990’s Guys and Dolls (a production that featured Ms McCarthy as Adelaide), Horace Vandergelder in 2005’s Hello Dolly!, again opposite Lucy Peacock, and the Mysterious Man and Narrator in Into the Woods that same year.

Mr. Donaldson’s position as one of the finest classical actors of his generation was solidified with such significant performances as Mark Antony in the 2003 production of Antony and Cleopatra, featuring Diane D’Aquila as Cleopatra; his unforgettable portrayal of Timon of Athens in 2004, truly a piece of theatre history; Benedick in 2006’s
      Much Ado About Nothing, once again opposite Lucy Peacock; and Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird in 2007.

“Peter’s work and career reminded me of William Hutt,” says Mr. Cimolino. “Like Bill, in his mid-life Peter was now coming into the best, deepest and richest part of his talent. We will not know exactly what we have lost from his sad early passing. We are only left to wonder and mourn.”

Mr. Donaldson died of lung cancer in hospital in Toronto, surrounded by his family and friends. He is survived by his wife, Sheila McCarthy, and daughters Mackenzie and Drew. His loss is deeply felt by members of his extended theatre family, who cherish him as a remarkable talent and friend.

Details of a funeral and memorial celebration will be announced at a later date.

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