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Parading without a Permit

Michelle Reid: For the readers who haven’t picked up a copy of Sad Mag #6 yet, who is Rob Fougere?

Rob Fougere: I’m a photographer, artist and archivist.

MR: What’s it like seeing yourself on the cover of a magazine?

RF: The Sad magazine cover was actually the second time I’ve been photographed for my moustache. The first was in New York magazine a few years ago on a trip. Sad was cool because it has national distribution, so I had friends in Toronto call me to tell me that they saw it.

MR:
How did you get started as a photographer?

RF: I’ve enjoyed taking pictures always, and used to walk around with a digital point-and-shoot camera taking movies of the strange things I’d see going about my day-to-day. It wasn’t until I discovered the magic of the darkroom that photography took over my thought processes.

MR: What is the best photograph you have ever found?

RF: That’s a very tough question. I’ve got some really great found negatives and it’s honestly too hard to choose or describe them in words. The one photo that I’ll always hang on my wall no matter where I live is a shot of my father from when he was 17 or 18 in a suit and tie with his hair combed over his ears. It’s a great studio shot and in the perfect brown cardboard frame with gold trim.

MR: Tell us about your upcoming show, Parading Without a Permit. How did you curate the selected images? How long did you spend collecting them?

RF: I’m always really happy anytime that I can have my photos seen outside of the digital realm. My practice as a whole explores the photograph as cultural artifact and aesthetic object. For this show I wanted to put together a set of images that captured a spirit of beauty and self-reliance. It includes some of my best shots from the last three years of shooting and some found negatives to fill in the gaps and give them some context in terms of recent history and the nature of people, like “Some things don’t change!”.

MR:
What’s the advantage of having an exhibition at Collage Collage versus a mainstream gallery space?

RF: Collage Collage will let me! When I start showing at bigger galleries, I want to make sure I’m ready and that the shows are really good, and right now I still have too much to learn! The downside to Collage Collage is that I have to make the show age appropriate, since it’s a kid’s art shop.

MR: What local photographers do you admire?

RF: Scott Pommier and Bentley Wilks take great photos, both in terms of subject matter and style.

MR: Has anyone ever contacted you about a found negative with its origin story?

RF: Nope, although it’s going to be the first time most of the found photos my Collage Collage show are seen in public… for the first time in fifty-years anyways.

MR: What are you working on now?

RF: June is a busy month! Sarah Holtom and I are showing a different set of work at Boucherat Gallery in Victoria the day after Parading Without a Permit opens. Sarah has painted some amazing oil-on-wood portraits in black-and-white to complement my vintage pin-ups. We’re both also happy to be taking part in the Cheaper Show again this year. I’ve also started a framing business called PlainWoodFrames.com that is the official framing shop of the Cheaper Show, so I expect to be very busy with that in the next few weeks!

Parading Without a Permit

Collage Collage (621 Kingsway)

June 9th, 7:00PM – 9:00PM

RSVP on Facebook

With a dark hum, an anti-arts and anti-humanitarian cloud has seemingly materialized over Canada. The next four years may be bleak, but that won’t stop artists and sisters Kasey and Korey Moran from donating their art to help women in Africa.

Goat Money is an art auction held at the Baron Gallery in Gastown this Thursday, May 5th. “When my sister came to my birthday party this year, she brought along a jar with a label that said ‘Goat Money’ and had a hand-drawn picture of a goat,” Korey says.

“Her request was for friends to throw their pocket change into the jar as a way of raising enough money for her Biology instructor, Catherine Glass, to buy one goat for one woman in the small village of Olkoroi, Kenya.”

They made enough money—about $20—to purchase one goat for the Kenyan women, but weren’t ready to stop there. “With the help of friends, volunteers, donations, and the community, we would like to raise as much as possible for Catherine’s next trip to Kenya,” Moran says.

Show your support, pick up some great art, and help buy goats. Easy, right?

Goat Money: An Art Auction
Baron Gallery
Thursday, May 5th, 7:00 pm
RSVP on Facebook

Painting: Korey Moran

DOXA, Vancouver’s annual festival presented by the Documentary Media Society, brings documentaries from around the world to some of the coziest independent theatres in Vancouver for you to enjoy. While I am as excited as the next 14-year-old boy to see Fast Five (I really am), contributing to a conversation with, “I just saw this great documentary…” has somewhat more cachet and class. If you are overwhelmed by the sheer volume of great-looking films, here is a short-cut to some of my festival picks. Click for full details, including times & locations.

Raw Opium The world premiere of this heroin documentary, partly filmed in Vancouver’s DTES, looks at the international impact of the opium trade and the complexities of addressing drug trafficking and addiction. With the future of Vancouver’s own Insite threatened by the Conservative government, this is a film for anyone with an interest in our local community issues.

Detroit Wild City The rise and fall of Detroit may be a harbinger of things to come for other major cities in a post-recession era, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing in this film, which follows the new generation of artists and innovators who are revitalizing Motor City.

Louder than a Bomb Can’t think of anything cuter than Chicago teens getting ready for a slam poetry competition.

!Women Art Revolution Forty years of filming political, outspoken women in the arts went into the making of this film, accompanied by an incredible soundtrack of female artists.

Cave of Forgotten Dreams Legendary Werner Herzog finally uses 3D technology for something other than exhausting your visual cortex in this documentary the oldest preserved art in the world (32,000 years old!) in Chauvet-Pont-d’Arc in France. If you like art, history, humanity, or the eccentricities of Herzog’s often imitated but never duplicated voiceovers, don’t miss it.

DOXA Documentary Film Festival

At theatres around Vancouver

May 6- May 15, 2011

Full festival details here.

Local comedian Kevin Lee (you might remember him from the the first Sad Comedy Show!) answers Michelle Reid’s questions about Shit Harper Did, a brilliant push to defeat voter apathy through a combination of humour and cold, hard facts. Margaret Atwood tweeted about it so you know it’s good. Tomorrow, May 2nd, is the general election, and if you’re feeling undecided, visit Shit Harper Did and get informed.

Michelle Reid: Who are the mas­ter­minds behind Shit Harper Did?

Kevin Lee: We are a col­lec­tion of Van­cou­ver film­mak­ers, come­di­ans, actors, activists and artists inter­ested in remind­ing peo­ple why Cana­dian pol­i­tics should mat­ter to Cana­di­ans. You know, obvi­ous stuff.

MR: Did you do a lot of research before launch­ing the site or were you all pretty well-versed in the shit Harper has done?

KL: There was plenty of shit that sat, still steam­ing, right on the sur­face (e.g. con­tempt of Par­lia­ment), and other shit that had to be dug up (e.g. cuts to women’s advo­cacy) and plenty of shit that was handed to us in lit­tle plas­tic bag­gies by the peo­ple who sup­ported the site. Shit party!

MR: Are you find­ing that a lot of peo­ple were unaware of just how ter­ri­ble he is, or does the pop­u­lar­ity indi­cate that a lot of peo­ple have been unhappy with the gov­ern­ment for awhile?

KL: A bit of both. The news cycle moves so quickly and is pitched at such a dull drone that most peo­ple either miss or ignore these things. That and the politi­cians are experts at dou­bling the drone so no one cares any­more about their expla­na­tion of their con­tro­ver­sial or plain hor­ri­ble deci­sions.

Also, many peo­ple hear some­thing Harper did that they don’t agree with, add a drop to “dis­like Harper” bucket and for­get it. These peo­ple end up being unhappy with Harper, but not know­ing why, they just accept that they don’t like him and so they can often feel unmo­ti­vated to do any­thing about it.

Both groups found some­thing ben­e­fi­cial out of our web­site which we feel pierced the drone with com­edy (and, yes, pro­fan­ity), and served up a plate of hot steam­ing facts. I real­ize I might’ve con­jured the image of hot shit on a plat­ter, and I’m okay with that, because that’s what it is.

MR: Any response from Harper responders?

KL: On the first day of the website’s launch, crash, and sub­se­quent relaunch, I made the mis­take of delv­ing into the locus of all Intel­li­gent Dis­course known as YouTube com­ments, and boy howdy I learned never to do that. But sev­eral Harper sup­port­ers would occa­sion­ally post to the Face­book page and stir up dis­cus­sion and that’s all part of the healthy demo­c­ra­tic dia­logue, no mat­ter how much name-calling and child­ish vit­riol get spread around by both sides. Peo­ple are talk­ing? Good.

The Geor­gia Strait implied (and then retracted!) that Shit Harper Did was an ad agency stunt. Have you encoun­tered any other skep­ti­cism about the moti­va­tions behind the site?

There seem to be a few peo­ple with the impres­sion that we’re some sort of com­pany, run­ning focus groups and call­ing cast­ing agents to pop­u­late the videos. Oth­ers claim we’re a Lib­eral con­spir­acy unit. If we were launch­ing the site today (the week­end before Elec­tion Day) those same peo­ple would be call­ing us an NDP con­spir­acy unit. Really we’re just a bunch of scruffy hip­sters who started a band, and our band web­site, which fea­tured a few facts about Harper, blew up, so we just went with that instead.

MR: Where do the ideas for the videos come from?

KL: So many videos of celebri­ties urg­ing youth do to some­thing. Why should we believe them more than the youth themselves?

Also, Air Bud 4: Sev­enth Inning Fetch.

MR: Who did that draw­ing of Harper hold­ing a kit­ten? Why does it scare me?

KL: Because he has that look, you know, the look. Like you just walked in the room and he was hunched in the cor­ner, lips smack­ing and talk­ing like Gol­lum and you acci­den­tally knock a book off a desk and he spins around hold­ing the tiny kit­ten, smil­ing like noth­ing was up. You just leave the book on the floor and back out of the room slowly, and back all way to your near­est voting place.

Check out Shit Harper Did here. And don’t forget to vote, Monday, May 2nd!

As playwright Dave Deveau’s original work, My Funny Valentine, hits the PAL Theatre for an extended run, Sad Mag chats with Deveau, director Cameron Mackenzie and actor Kyle Cameron about the play revolving around the 2008 California shooting of Lawrence King, an eccentric and publicly gay teenager who was shot in the head by a classmate whom he had given a valentine to days before. My Funny Valentine is simultaneously intense and light-hearted, looking at the murder of the 15-year-old through seven extremely different characters with varying degrees of separation from King and his murderer, Brandon McInerney

Sad Mag: Dave, for those who aren’t familiar with the story of Lawrence King, why did you decide to write this play?

Dave Deveau: I had been sitting on a binder of research about this case since it happened. I never intended to write a play about it. There was a monologue contest I wanted to submit something to and I had nothing, so two days before the deadline I started writing this teacher character who had possibly taught this gay student who was dead. She was basically hosting a parent council night and wanted to create some sort of documentation about protecting students. It was really rough, and I handed it in to the contest, and it did not remotely win. It was me as a playwright, onstage, trying to have a conversation with an audience because I don’t understand [the murder] and I’m enraged by it, and I have a hard time imagining I am the only person who is this fucked up by it.

SM: Kyle, there are moments in between your embodiment of each of the characters in this story where you appear to be another person all together. You’re actually billed as “The Collector” in the program guide. Who was that?

DD: Ah, there is an 8th character in the play…

Kyle Cameron: The script that Dave wrote is just a collection of monologues. The character I am in between the other characters is not in the script. It was a struggle to find some sort of through-line or framework that you could present these monologues within on stage.
One day in rehearsal we were talking about it and I brought it back to the idea of what the play was before, which was that the central characters is Dave Deveau standing on stage as Dave Deveau saying, “What the fuck happened here, I’m obsessed with this, is there any way I can make sense of this at all?” I’m not playing Dave anymore, I’m kind of playing Kyle on some level.

Cameron Mackenzie: It does become a person, an individual, who is obsessed with something, who has amassed this information, this stuff – so the shrine that is featured in the middle of the stage throught the play became more of a working instrument, rather than an obsolete thing that is put together and that you step back and worship.

SM: Being so emotionally attached to the subject matter of this play, were there any characters that posed a challenge when trying to connect to them or have the audience connect to them?

CM: I had a really hard time with Roger, [a teacher at King’s school who is slightly apathetic toward the murder]. That idea of decorum, the idea of, “Oh, if you just weren’t so gay you’d have been fine,” really grates on me. I realized I had to step back from that a little bit and let my collaborators Kyle and Dave step in. Kyle understands that side of the argument whereas I sort of rail against it.

KC: It doesn’t hit a chord with me the way it does with you.

CM: Once you step back and the character has been built a little bit and the voice starts coming from the actor, the director brain kicks in and I can tweak some things here and there.

SM: It was evident that you wanted to show all the sides of this story and not just portray Lawrence as a martyr. Why was it important to you to show that he did have flaws?

DD: Because we all walk into the show – I don’t think you’re going to find anyone in any audience who’s going to be thinking, “A kid is dead? I don’t give a shit.” It’s going to be sad whether you know the details of the case or not. Nobody’s coming in from the perspective that children deserve to be murdered. So we have that.

So why am I demanding someone’s attention for 80 minutes If I’m not giving them anything new that’s not going to challenge their own politics? Larry wasn’t a martyr. I think what makes him interesting is that he’s deeply flawed like everyone else. It’s the difference between a feel-good piece and journalism. You actually dig in to what’s going on—and I mean, there are a lot of details that came up in the earlier production that aren’t in the production anymore. The nitty-gritty. Like the fact that Larry was living in a group home because he’d accused his father of sexually molesting him. At the time of his murder, he was living in a group home. We don’t go there.

Nobody spoke at this funeral apart from a priest that hardly met him. Totally fucked-up to me. And there are more fucked-up things around the case, but I can only take an audience on so much of a fucked-up ride until they’re like,nope, I’m done, my brain and my heart are full and I just can’t.

SM: Has anything struck you in terms of feedback from the audience?

DD: No, not really. But what I love is that, especially opening night, everyone wants to come up and talk about the show and tell me their favourite character. I heard every character’s name multiple time and I was like “fuck yes.” That, to me, feels like part of my job has succeeded.

CM: And also the exact opposite, people who find the difficult characters, people that are who really couldn’t get behind that one character, that’s really interesting to me even more so than them having one that they do like.

SM: Now with Brandon McInerney’s trial date set, what do you think the legacy of this case could be? Or will this just go down in history as another shooting?

CM: I think it’ll just go down as just another shooting, to be quite honest. The fact that we don’t hear in the media that the trial date has been set. We had to hunt to find the trial date being set.

DD: I think there’s so much discussion about the difficult relationship between the idea of a child and the idea of an adult and where one kicks in and where the other takes over. I think there’s going to be a lot of interesting discussion that’s possibly precedent setting.

The fact that there is now hate crime legislation in the U.S. was just passed in 2009 and has added charges to Brandon’s case retroactively is going to be the first really headline-grabbing hate crime case to be tried post-Matthew Shepherd act.

KC: I don’t have a whole lot to say since I’m certainly the most removed from the case—I’ve done the least research and I know the least—which is somewhat ironic since I’m the one who’s talking about it onstage.

SM: Which almost makes sense, since some of the characters are so peripheral and are almost blasé (like Roger) about the murder.

KC: I think what can be difficult about it is what Helen [King’s compassionate teacher and the only recurring character in the play] struggles with: once we get the hate crime legislation then it’s like, “Great, this has happened. My little student is still dead.” It’s that weird thing of being an activist. People are spurred to activism often through some sort of terrible act, and they work tirelessly to get something to change, but on some level they may never be satisfied because that thing that spurred them will not change. They can look around like Helen does and see in the face of the students that something in the universe has changed, and that can be some comfort, but that thing that happened in the first place will never be undone.

My Funny Valentine runs every night at the PAL theatre on Georgia and Cardero until April 30 at 8pm, with an additional matinee showing April 30 at 2 pm. Tickets available here.

Hot on the heels of our first comedy production, Sad Mag presents Sad Comedy Show 2, an evening of stand-up, improv and sketch comedy.

Featuring:

Charles Demers
Pump Trolley
Devon Lougheed
Jane Stanton
Simon King
Alicia Tobin
Emmett Hall

Hosted by Pat Kelly!

Stick around after the show for drinks and music.

The details:
Doors 8:00 PM, show starts at 9:00 PM
The Cobalt at 917 Main Street
$10 at the door, which includes a Sad Mag subscription!
(If you already have one, it will extend into the next year.)

All proceeds will go to fund the production and printing of Issue 7.

RSVP on Facebook.

I am an Alicia Tobin fan forever: not only did she provide my favourite excerpt in Charlie Demers’ Vancouver Special, but she is also the Vancouver performer most likely to talk about sharks on stage. If you’ve never had the pleasure of seeing Alicia transform a crowd from semi-normal individuals to a uniformly hysterical (laughing and crying) mass, be sure to catch her at the Sad Comedy Show 2, happening Thursday, April 28th, at the Cobalt.

Alicia Tobin loves sharks

Who is Alicia Tobin?

I am your friendly neighbour who wants to say hello but looks down instead, I want to be your friend, but I also want to be alone with a large bag of ginger snaps. I like how they are spicy and sweet and crunchy all at the same- not a lot of snacks can do that.

How did you get into comedy?

When I was really small- maybe 8 pounds- my parents would dress me in a little tuxedo, push my body into a doll stand, and tape a tiny microphone to my little baby fist. I was doing stand up before I could stand up- my head was still soft and it smelled like the best thing ever- so if I bombed I just let people smell my baby head.

What do you love best about performing?

I like it when I am on stage and I look into the crowd and I can see all of the people who like sharks too.

What is the worst place you have ever performed?

My brand of comedy does not lend well to the annual soccer league spaghetti dinner. No one said that there would be children there- and nobody said there would be parents there.

What is it about Vancouver that produces so many funny people?

I dunno, the kind of funny people we have here is magic. Mostly white magic- but some people are so good you know it’s black magic.

Where do you get your inspirations?

Just every day stuff. Mostly watching people in the grocery store while I punch loaves of bread.

Funniest thing you have ever seen?

Once, I saw someone that had a huge bandage around their ear, but it was round and puffy- like a hamburger bun. So, it looked like the person had taped a hamburger bun to their ear. The tape was also all over their head to keep the bandage in place. I think I fell down I was so excited. I laughed until I cried, drew pictures of this person, and told everyone I met that day about hamburger bun ear. I bet their ear was actually really badly hurt. I think this was in 1992. I remember it like it was yesterday.

I hear you like animals. What would be your ultimate animal hybrid?

Oh this is easy- I would be a Gowl: an owl, cause I like eating mice and a little goat because I’m a good jumper.

Sad Comedy Show 2

The Cobalt

917 Main St

8:00PM – 1:00AM

$10 at the door (includes a year subscription to Sad Mag!)

Have you ever gone to Science World and thought, “This would be more fun if there weren’t any children?”

You can admit it, there’s no judgment here. Adults need time to play too without a legion of squalling infants underfoot. So on May 6th you’ll be delighted to know that you can party like it’s 1986 (important: you don’t have to dress like it’s 1986) in honour of the 25-year anniversary of the Expo, and enjoy an all-adult evening at Science World

It’s not just a party for those of us who go nuts for physics games and logic puzzles: Amanda McCuaig, communications coordinator for Science World, thinks anyone with a passion for the arts will be inspired by the science too.

The original name of the Science Centre is the Arts, Science and Technology Centre. The arts comes first in it because being creative and thinking creatively is a huge part of innovation. I think that it goes both ways– there’s a huge creative group in Vancouver who can benefit from thinking about things differently, and getting a different angle on approaching things creatively, from science.

Between exploring the exhibits you can rock out to 80s covers, screen print the Expo 86 logo or famous Science World dome (BYO t-shirt!), watching special films created for the Expo, and see Hubble on the IMAX screen. I’ll be camped out all night in the Eureka Gallery, playing with the light-wave harp.

Expo 86′ Quarter-Century Lookback

Science World

1455 Quebec St

Friday, May 6 7:00PM-10:30PM

Full details on Facebook. Tickets available here.

Special thanks to Bob Kronbauer for demanding a party to make up for his missing out on Expo 86, because his parents went without him.

The new adaptation of George Orwell’s 1984 that just closed its ever-so-brief run at The Cultch is nothing short of a visual feast.

The show is presented by The Virtual Stage and Studio 58, one of the country’s finest incubators of theatre practitioners. Rarely do Vancouver audiences get to experience 26 people onstage in impeccably executed sequences.

Clocking in at two and half hours, the show could afford to lose some scenes, but thanks to nuanced performances by some standouts including Andrew Wheeler, Joel Ballard and Noah Rosenbaum, the urgency and panic of the world are palpable. Then there is the design wizardry – a cumulative result of Drew Facey’s mammoth technological set, Naomi Sider’s stark costumes, Thompson and Corwin Ferguson’s haunting video designs, paired with spectacular lighting (Adrian Muir) and eerie soundscapes (Brian Linds), all but one Studio 58 grads themselves.

Though the attempts at British accents meet varied levels of success, director Ron Jenkins (Bash’d, The Trespassers, The Black Rider) serves up stage picture and continuous action like few directors can. The man has clear vision, and combined with Andy Thompson’s whip-smart adaptation, the show is sure to resurface in a more substantial run.

If you enjoyed The Sad Comedy Show, or like to laugh in general, you will also enjoy A Beautiful Podcast – a zany, hilarious monthly podcast created by Vancouver comedy group The Sunday Service.

Sad Mag: What is The Sunday Service?

Sunday Service: The Sunday Service is a Vancouver based comedy group. For over four years the group has established its roots and loyal following with their live improvised performances. Then we discovered that the internet finally exists and seized the opportunity to expand our comedic vocabulary into the medium of podcasts. Beautiful ones.

SM: Who is The Sunday Service?

SS: The group is made up of six gentlemen. Tasman VanRassel, Ryan Beil, Kevin Lee, Aaron Read, Craig Anderson and Emmett Hall. Most of them are extremely funny.

SM: What is a Beautiful Podcast?

SS: It’s a forty minute audio comedy podcast released once a month consisting of an amalgam of sketches, radio plays, songs and silly interviews.

The show meanders through a variety of written and improvised material tied loosely with a theme established by the six members off the top of the episode.

SM: What inspires you to come up with a sketch for the podcast?

SS: All six of the members have eclectic interests and backgrounds, so the sketches are often steeped in the performers’ quirky perspectives. That will generally create a weird, fun context for the piece that we can all agree is hilarious.

Also – the constant need for content. We always seem to be behind, so whoever shows up with a half baked concept is pretty much immediately “okayed” and thrown into the pot.

SM: How do you start an improv scene on the podcast?

SS: Whatever we happen to be joking about five minutes before we record will usually be the jumping off point for an improvised scene. Emmett will press record and say, “go.” Then he and Kevin will gut it out in editing, so all that remains is the delectable morsels of funny.

The theme of the intro and outro often inspires a lot of the improvised elements as well.

SM: What’s your favourite part of creating the podcast?

SS: The excuse to hang out while under the guise of generating precious, precious comedy.

SM: What do you like best about working together?

SS: All the fellows seem to have a comparable need for attention and boisterousness. When we work together, we can hone those cravings into a very creative outlet. And we get rewarded at the end with a very well constructed, unique and original quality product: A Beautiful Podcast!

Check out the podcast on iTunes or on The Sunday Service’s website!

Also, you can check out The Sunday Service’s live show every Sunday at 9:00 pm at The Hennessy!