Spring Break Festival March 10-12, 2015 Evergreen Cultural Centre

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Spring Break Festival March 10-12, 2015 Evergreen Cultural Centre ____________________________________________________________________________________ Spring Break Festival March 10-12, 2015 Evergreen Cultural Centre COQUITLAM, BC (February 13, 2015) – Be prepared for three days of fun as the annual Spring Break Festival rolls into Evergreen Cultural Centre with shows for the whole family. Wonder at Monster Theatre’s magical production of The Little Prince on Tuesday, March 10, be captivated by the upbeat grooves of the Afro-Brazilian Carnaval on Wednesday, March 11, and laugh along with The Purple Pirate in Message in a Bottle on Thursday, March 12. All three shows have two performances each day at 11am and 7pm to give families lots of flexibility. First up, the classic tale by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry is given the inimitable Monster Theatre treatment in a performance that is fun and engaging for all ages. Meet talking roses and foxes, venture out on interplanetary travel and learn about true love and loyalty. Join the Little Prince on a spectacular adventure as he celebrates open-mindedness, open-heartedness and the beauty of imagination. With puppets, masks, original music and a little theatre magic, Monster Theatre’s storytelling experts will capture children’s hearts and funny bones as they bring the cherished novella to life. On Wednesday, experience the history, music, art and culture of Brazil with Grupo Axé Capoeira. The “Afro” style of dance originated among the slaves in colonial Brazil. Its vitality comes from the mixture of steps and rhythms comprising a combination of African, Indigenous and European influences. Featuring traditional capoeira music as well as upbeat Brazilian vocals and instrumentals, their performances showcase captivating professional capoeiristas and dancers at the height of their skill. Plus, join the performers for a fun and energetic Family Dance Workshop at 2pm to learn how to dance in the Carnaval. Finally, Message in a Bottle is a mesmerizing dramatization of a personal experience with bullying, featuring The Purple Pirate: transformational theatre artist Dustin Anderson. The story begins aboard a MEDIA CONTACT: [email protected] | DIRECT LINE: 604.927.6566 pirate ship where the protagonist is pressured by the crew to bully his good friend. When he learns that hurting her feels terrible, he stands up for her and is forced to walk to the plank – until he is rescued by the same friend he bullied! Demonstrating the redemptive power of forgiveness, Message in a Bottle will transport you to a magical realm where the power of good prevails. The Spring Break Festival plays at Evergreen Cultural Centre from March 10 – 12 with shows at 11am and 7pm. Tickets start at just $12 each with three show packages available from only $27! Tickets can be purchased at the Evergreen box office by calling 604-927-6555 or online at evergreenculturalcentre.ca. -30- For high resolution images and more info, contact: Gabriel Kirkley, Marketing Coordinator [email protected] 604-927-6566 About Evergreen Cultural Centre The centre houses a 257-seat, flexible black box theatre and a 1500 square foot public art gallery. The Rehearsal Studio and several art or meeting studios provide an additional 5000 square feet of space for Evergreen’s classes, workshops and rentals while the spacious glassed-in Lobby offers a spectacular view of Lafarge Lake. The Evergreen Cultural Centre presents a variety of arts programs including professional theatre, dance and music presentations, art exhibitions, arts education programs, and public programs for both children and adults, including arts camps. For young audiences it also produces its own family series and spring break festival. In addition, the centre is a venue for numerous community-based arts groups providing much needed rehearsal, performance and teaching space. In 2013, over 70,000 visitors came to the Evergreen Cultural Centre to participate in the many offerings throughout the year. Website: evergreenculturalcentre.ca Twitter: @EvergreenArts Facebook: facebook.com/evergreenculturalcentre Instagram: EvergreenArts MEDIA CONTACT: [email protected] | DIRECT LINE: 604.927.6566 .
Recommended publications
  • Summer Reading List 2013
    Hemingway, Ernest, For Whom The Bell Tolls, A Farewell to Arms, or others Hesse, Hermann, Siddartha or Demian Hurston, Zora Neale, Their Eyes Were Watching God Huxley, Aldous, Brave New World James, Henry, The American, Wings of Dove, Portrait of a Lady or others SUMMER READING LIST Joyce, James, The Dubliners or Portrait of the Artist a Young Man Please note: This list is always available on the Kafka, Franz, The Castle or Metamorphosis Students page on our website, www.waldorfhigh.org. Kazantzakis, Nikos, Zorba the Greek Kesey, Ken, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest 1.) Please read two (or more) of the following books Kidd, Sue Monk, The Secret Life of Bees this summer. You may also read books that are not on Kingsolver, Barbara, Bean Tree or others the lists. Check any selections that do not appear Kosinski, Jerzy, Being There or others below with Ms. Robbins, Ms. Eliot, or Mr. Sagarin. Krakauer, John, Into Thin Air or others Lee, Harper, To Kill a Mockingbird 2.) Or choose from this list: www.waldorflibrary.org/ L’Engle, Madeleine, A Wrinkle in Time Journal_Articles/hsreadlist.pdf Mann, Thomas, Magic Mountain, Budenbrooks or Joseph in Egypt Adams, Douglas, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Marquez, Gabriel Garcia, One Hundred Years of Galaxy Solitude Adams, Richard, Watership Down McCourt, Frank, Angela's Ashes or others Angelou, Maya, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings Morrison, Toni, Beloved or The Bluest Eye Atwood, Margaret, The Handmaid’s Tale Nabakov, Vladimir, Short Stories or others Austen, Jane, Pride and Prejudice or others O'Brian,
    [Show full text]
  • VIEW Nominates Its Keynote Speakers!
    This page was exported from - Digital meets Culture Export date: Wed Sep 29 3:14:46 2021 / +0000 GMT VIEW nominates its keynote speakers! Pixar's short "Lava" Italy's premiere computer graphics conference proudly announces: Mark Osborne, director of "The Little Prince" and two-time Oscar nominee Randy Thom, director of Sound at Skywalker Sound and two-time Oscar winner Jorge R. Gutierrez, director of "The Book of Life", Annie and Emmy award winner Shannon Tindle, director of the Google Spotlight Story ?On Ice? and a Primetime Emmy award winner. Turin, Italy, September 2, 2015 ? «We are honoured and thrilled to welcome these four amazing artists to Turin for the VIEW conference» Professor Maria Elena Gutierrez, director of the annual conference, declares. «I know their presence will inspire our audience of students and professionals». The VIEW conference will take place on October from 19 to 23 in Turin, Italy. The curated conference, which celebrates its 16th year, features talks, panel sessions, workshops, awards for outstanding work and this year four remarkable keynote speakers: ?Mark Osborne, multiple award-winning director of a beloved animated feature film, recently directed the animated feature film version of a beloved novel. Osborne received Oscar nominations for directing the animated feature film "Kung Fu Panda" and for the short animated film "More". He also won an Annie award for directing "Kung Fu Panda" as well as many film festival awards. His latest film is "The Little Prince", based on Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's novel. After initial screenings, the animated story of a pilot who meets a little boy from another planet received a 100% approval rating from critics, tallied on the Rotten Tomatoes website.
    [Show full text]
  • Dear Soon-To-Be Fifth Grade Families
    Dear Soon-To-Be Fifth Grade Families, Middle School is a wonderful time and we hope that you are as excited about being in the fifth grade as we are about you joining the middle school community. Your time at the “Hollow” will be full of new experiences. It is a time for students to become increasingly independent, to grow, and most of all to learn. We would like to start the new school year by getting to know you better. In order to do that, we are asking you to compare yourself to a character in your summer reading book. Many times we read a book and feel that the main characters are very much like we are - they may act the same way, do similar things, or have the same feelings as you. If the reader admires the characters, the reader may want to act like the characters or may imagine living his/her life in a similar. On the other hand, sometimes we may feel as if the main characters are very different from us. If this is the case, we may feel that the main characters are acting in a way that we could never act, and we may even disapprove of their choices. ASSIGNMENT: Use the main character(s) in your summer reading book to introduce yourself to your teachers and fellow classmates. You will do this by comparing yourself to the character(s) in the book. This a short writing piece using examples from the book and from your own life to compare/contrast yourself to a main character in the book, showing how you are alike or different.
    [Show full text]
  • The Little Prince'
    The Bomoo.com Ebook of English Series Antoine de Saint-Exupér y The L ittle Prince 2003. 7 ANNOUNCEMENT This ebook is designed and produced by Bomoo.com, which collected the content from Internet. You can distribute it free, but any business use and any edit are prohibited. The original author is the copyright holder of all relating contents. You are encouraged to send us error messages and suggestions about this ebook to [email protected]. More materials can be found at the site http://www.bomoo.com. The America Edition’s Cover SAINT-EXUPÉRY, Antoine de (1900-44). An adventurous pilot and a lyrical poet, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry conveyed in his books the solitude and mystic grandeur of the early days of flight. He described dangerous adventures in the skies and also wrote the whimsical children's fable 'The Little Prince'. Antoine-Marie-Roger de Saint-Exupéry was born on June 29, 1900, in Lyon, France. In the 1920s he helped establish airmail routes overseas. During World War II he flew as a military reconnaissance pilot. After the Germans occupied France in 1940, he escaped to the United States. He rejoined the air force in North Africa in 1943. During what was to have been his final reconnaissance mission over the Mediterranean Sea, he died when his plane was shot down on July 31, 1944. Saint-Exupery's first book, 'Southern Mail', was about the life and death of an airmail pilot. It was published in French in 1929. Other books include 'Night Flight' (1931), about the first airline pilots, and 'Wind, Sand, and Stars' (1939), in which he describes his feelings during flights over the desert.
    [Show full text]
  • Seed: Banned Books
    SEARCH & FIND SEPTEMBER - BANNED BOOKS Seed- Page 1 ■ ■ AN TO I NE DE SA I NT - EXUPERY r' ,.;, 1. Where the Wild Things Are. 2. Le Petit Prince. 3. Aesop's Fables. Clue: This beloved children's book by Clue: Le Petit Prince (The Little Prince) Clue: Aesop, a Greek slave, originally Maurice Sendak was published in 1963. follows a young prince on his adven­ compiled his collection of fables At the time of its publication many tures in space. It was banned in France between 620 and 564 B.C. The fables people felt the book was dark and until 1945, two years after its original have been translated into various frightening for children and was publication, because author Antoine de languages and banned by governments subsequently banned in many libraries Saint-Exupery was exiled by the French because many viewed them as anti­ and schools. government. authoritarian. Image: By Maurice Sendak; Wikimedia Commons; ©Harper Image: By Antoine de Saint-Exupery; Creativity Post; Public &Row Domain 4. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. 5. Gulliver's Travels. 6. William Shakespeare. Clue: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Clue: Jonathan Swift wrote Gulliver's Clue: Wi 11 iam Shakespeare authored 37 written by Lewis Carroll, follows a young Travels in the late 1720s. The book was plays in the late 16th and early 17th girl, Alice, on a fantastical journey in censored and banned due to the centuries. Since its original publication, another land. This book has been inclusion of controversal issues and The Complete Works of William Shake­ banned repeatedly since its publication topics.
    [Show full text]
  • Asfacts Oct19.Pub
    doon in 2008. His final story, “Save Yourself,” will be published by BBC Books later this year. SF writers in- Winners for the Hugo Awards and for the John W. cluding Charlie Jane Anders, Paul Cornell, and Neil Campbell Award for Best New Writer were announced Gaiman have cited his books as an important influence. August 18 by Dublin 2019, the 77th Worldcon, in Dub- Dicks also wrote over 150 titles for children, including lin, Ireland. They include a couple of Bubonicon friends the Star Quest trilogy, The Baker Street Irregulars series, – Mary Robinette Kowal, Charles Vess, Gardner Dozois, and The Unexplained series, plus children’s non-fiction. and Becky Chambers. The list follows: Terrance William Dicks was born April 14, 1935, in BEST NOVEL: The Calculating Stars by Mary Robi- East Ham, London. He studied at Downing College, nette Kowal, BEST NOVELLA: Artificial Condition by Cambridge and joined the Royal Fusiliers after gradua- Martha Wells, BEST NOVELETTE: “If at First You Don’t tion. He worked as an advertising copywriter until his Succeed, Try, Try Again” by Zen Cho, BEST SHORT STO- mentor Malcolm Hulke brought him in to write for The RY: “A Witch’s Guide to Escape: A Practical Compendi- Avengers in the ’60s, and he wrote for radio and TV be- um of Portal Fantasies” by Alix E. Harrow, BEST SERIES: fore joining the Doctor Who team in the late ’60s. He Wayfarers by Becky Chambers, BEST GRAPHIC STORY: also worked as a producer on various BBC programs. He Monstress, Vol 3: Haven by Marjorie Liu and illustrated is survived by wife Elsa Germaney (married 1963), three by Sana Takeda, sons, and two granddaughters.
    [Show full text]
  • Covington-Douglas Public Schools Regular Meeting September 8, 2015 7:30 P.M
    Covington-Douglas Public Schools Regular Meeting September 8, 2015 7:30 p.m. – School Library 400 E. Maine, Covington, OK 73730 AGENDA I. Call to order and Notation of Compliance with the Open Meeting Law II. Roll Call III. Superintendent’s Report: (Discussion may occur but no action will be taken on items listed on superintendent’s report) A. OSSBA Annual Conference Recap B. Facility maintenance and improvement C. Financial Update D. Special Meeting Estimate of Needs E. Superintendent Meeting F. Teacher contracts review and signing IV. Consent Agenda: All of the following items, which concern reports and items of a routine nature normally approved at board meetings, will be approved by one vote unless any board member desires to have a separate vote on any or all of these items. The consent agenda consists of the discussion, consideration and approval of the following items: A. Approval of the August 3, 2015 Regular Board Meeting Minutes. B. Approval of General Fund Encumbrances #134-158 in the amount of $55,867.09 and #70013-70044 in the amount of $1,224,219.00 C. Review the Investment of School District Funds D. Review of Calendars E. Approval of Activity Funds. V. Business Items: A. Discussion/Action concerning declaring items listed on appendix A as surplus B. Discussion/Action on fund raisers C. Discussion/Action concerning marquee sign for the highway D. Discussion/Action concerning a declaration that Jamie Bowen is highly qualified to teach one hour of Anatomy/Physiology as an adjunct instructor. E. Discussion/Action concerning a declaration that Jeremy Harper is highly qualified to teach one hour of 7th grade science as an adjunct instructor.
    [Show full text]
  • Portland Daily Press: November 28,1882
    _PORTLAND DAILY PRESS. JUNE 23, 1862-~YOL. 20. PORTLAND, TUESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 1882. ^ESTABLISHED 28, fggfiaaiaSgSt ~VHICE i CENTS. THE PORTLAND DAILY PRESS, WASHINGTON. NEW A issue Published every day YORK. DELIBERATE MURDER. policies through their agents. It is but (Sundays excepted,) by thi THE PRESS. Pantomime in a Court Room. (*r» in iTInrnct. just that companies paying tax to our State PORTLAND CO PoBriAKt), Not. 27. PUBLISHING and with our Tfco of Melville's Mr. Will complying laws, should be pro- following qnotationjl Grelo ware rese nd AT »7 Buchans* TCESDAI ROVEXBEB 28. Beading Testimony. Folger Not Resign. Narrow Escape of the Murderer. St., Me MORHVO, tected and there can be no by from Chicago today by 9. H. Larmlnia Pobtlanp, Not. 27,-The Jeannette board of New Yohk, Nov. 27.—The New York World Nov. 26.—Th< of doubt that the How a Youthful Won a Suit over telegraph Taa-ts: TVasbixotob, l2n>iANAPOLr9, body Taylor Lawyer & Co., 167 ijoimnerolal meet, Portland. Sight Dollars a Year To man aibnmb enquiry was occupied today with reading Melville’s prints the following: Mr, baa offered and Dunbar, a of coun- opinion referred to by “D” is well founded. ait Folger grocer, Darlington, Montgomery an Chicago.-Wheat- .-Com-, oati. Seven DcSlart a the President has bis as Sere- “D” that Experienced Adversary. Year.tfgSd tatdmnee METEOROLOGICAL testimony. accepted resignation ty» State, was found last Friday in a cornfield says truly “insurance agents have no Time. Dec. ,lan. Nov. Year. tan of the to take the of “Js May. Year. Ordered to the Albatros.
    [Show full text]
  • Dear Mayor Miller
    The Prince Dances! By Adam Gopnik Award-winning writer and essayist Adam Gopnik was born in Philadelphia and raised in Montréal. He is a staff writer for The New Yorker, contributing non-fiction, fiction, memoir and criticism since 1986. His book Paris to the Moon is a New York Times bestseller. Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s Le Petit Prince is perhaps the best Most of us know the basic bones of the story: an aviator, downed loved modern book, a hit in English, French and countless in the desert and facing long odds of survival, encounters a strange languages beyond, and it has been dramatized, danced and young person, neither man nor really boy, who, it emerges over musicalized many times since its first publication in 1943. To name time, has travelled from his solitary home on a distant asteroid, only two earlier efforts, the great Brazilian songwriter Antonio Carlos where he lives alone with a single rose. He is instructed by a wise Jobim wrote a too-little-heard musical version in Portuguese, if cautious fox, and by a sinister angel of death, the snake. Saint- O Pequeno Príncipe, while the story became the vehicle for the Exupéry’s own 1935 experience of being lost for almost a week in equally great Lerner & Loewe’s last collaboration – a filmed version the Arabian desert, with his memories of loneliness, hallucination, directed by Stanley Donen whose mostly unhappy history is impending death (and enveloping beauty) in the desert were one of recounted in Lerner’s autobiography. Many another dance and the many episodes of his life realized in Le Petit Prince.
    [Show full text]
  • Recommended Reading
    Recommended Reading 1. An English-English Dictionary - the first book you should buy in Chicago. Buy one. Now. Very Easy-to-Easy (Fiction/ Novels): Fiction featuring child characters 2. The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros- set in Chicago; easy-to-read with short chapters 3. The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery- a timeless classic by a famous French author 4. Holes by Louis Sachar-young kids find an adventure after digging holes for punishment 5. Esperanza Rising by Pam Munoz Ryan-deals with Mexican immigration 6. The Pigman by Paul Zindel- two young people learn to appreciate life from an old man 7. Frannie and Zooey by J.D. Salinger- the story of a young brother and sister 8. Superfudge by Judy Blume-a young boy’s adventures and troubles; a very funny book 9. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie- a funny book with cartoons 10. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl- the inspiration of two different movies,(Johnny Depp) 11. James and the Giant Peach by Roald Dahl-a small orphan boy has many magical adventures 12. The Single Shard by Linda Sue Park-a story of Korean history 13. Wringer by Jerry Spinelli-a story of young boys and peer pressure 14. Bridge to Terebithia by Katherine Paterson-a sweet story about a friendship 15. The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton-a story of friendship, murder, gangs and social status 16. The Pearl by John Steinbeck-a Mexican folktale about a poor fisherman and a pearl 17.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ideas of Jean Piaget: Using Theory to Better Understand Theory and Improve Learning
    Swiss American Historical Society Review Volume 48 Number 3 Article 3 11-2012 The Ideas of Jean Piaget: Using Theory to Better Understand Theory and Improve Learning William E. Herman Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/sahs_review Part of the European History Commons, and the European Languages and Societies Commons Recommended Citation Herman, William E. (2012) "The Ideas of Jean Piaget: Using Theory to Better Understand Theory and Improve Learning," Swiss American Historical Society Review: Vol. 48 : No. 3 , Article 3. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/sahs_review/vol48/iss3/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Swiss American Historical Society Review by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Herman: The Ideas of Jean Piaget: Using Theory to Better Understand Theor The Ideas of Jean Piaget: Using Theory to Better Understand Theory and Improve Learning Jean Piaget by William E. Herman Perhaps the most incomprehensible thing about the world is that it is comprehensible. - Albert Einstein M ost readers will note the irony embedded in the title of this paper and the Einstein quote. There is an obvious and important thread of truth derived from such premises. Is it prudent and scholarly to em­ ploy Jean Piaget's theory in order to more deeply explore the meaning of Piaget's theory? Biblical scholars have long been known to use the writings of the Apostles and other Biblical voices as tools to understand sacred text.
    [Show full text]
  • The One Book You Must Read This Summer! Bingley Grammar Teachers Give Their Recommendations
    The one book you must read this summer! Bingley Grammar teachers give their recommendations. 'Sophie's World' by Jostein Gaardner is the story of a fourteen-year-old girl who tries to solve a mystery. However, the twists and turns in the plot raise much bigger questions about who she is and, ultimately, the meaning of life. It's a fascinating book that will introduce you to all sorts of philosophical ideas. https://us.macmillan.com/author/josteingaarder/ Recommended by Ms Nawaz When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit - Judith Kerr and The Borribles - Michael de Larrabeiti. https://www.sevenstories.org.uk/collection/collection-highlights/judith-kerr https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/211036.Michael_de_Larrabeiti Recommended by Ms Cartledge The Magic of Reality by Richard Dawkins (suitable for aged 14+ readers). As someone fascinated by science but with a limited grasp of its complexities I found this book a wonderful, rich and entertaining introduction to the magical world of scientific reality. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/11256979-the-magic-of-reality Recommended by Mr Crawford My favourite book is The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald... because it's perfect. http://www.fscottfitzgeraldsociety.org/ Recommended by Ms Lazenby I recommend Sophie's World by Jostein Gaarder - it's a great introduction to philosophy for teenage readers. It's a great book! https://us.macmillan.com/author/josteingaarder/ Recommended by Ms Wright A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness https://patrickness.com/ Recommended by Ms Mawson The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman where Bod is an unusual boy who grows up in an unusual place - he's the only living resident of a graveyard.
    [Show full text]