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Cultural Olympiad

Hot Entertainment: Cultural Olympiad 2010

The Talking Stick Festival celebrates aboriginal performance and art

While some of the world’s best athletes compete for top spot on the podium, some of the world’s best artists are flexing their creative muscles at the Cultural Olympiad 2010 (to Mar. 21). This festival features both home-grown and international talent that ranges from traditional theatre and dance to cutting-edge digital media experiences. An opera about Richard Nixon, the Talking Stick Festival (pictured), pop-star concerts and a searchlight show above English Bay are just a few of the diverse performances taking place at various venues from Vancouver to Whistler.—Leszek Apouchtine

What’s Hot in January Across Canada

Halifax

Roots-rock legends Blue Rodeo return to the Halifax Metro Centre on January 28, performing concert classics like “Hasn’t Hit Me Yet” and “Diamond Mine,” along with their newest material.

Vancouver & Whistler

The 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games are almost here, and they’re bringing a lot more than just sports to Vancouver and Whistler. The Cultural Olympiad 2010 (Jan 22 – Mar 21) is the culmination of three years of Cultural Olympiads on the West Coast, and it features some of the world’s best artists, musicians, dancers, actors and performers. Vancouver highlights include Joni Mitchell’s The Fiddle and the Drum at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre (Jan 22 – 24), Nevermore: The Imaginary Life and Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe at the Granville Island Stage (Jan 21 – Feb 6), and Steve Earle and Joel Plaskett at The Orpheum (Jan 23).

Whistler highlights include Canada’s first theatre of snow and ice, Nix (Jan 22 – Feb 27), Corb Lund at Whistler Village Square (Feb 19), and the Nunavut-based circus Artcirq at the Squamish Lil’Wat Cultural Centre (Feb 20).

Ottawa

During the Carleton Cup Triathlon on Jan 30, fearless participants—athletically inclined or otherwise—skate for nearly 7km up and down the Rideau Canal, run through the ByWard Market, then slide into The Aulde Dubliner & Pour House to pound back a drink. First one in gets the bragging rights, but the real winner is the Canadian Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Led by controversial-yet-charismatic frontman Axl Rose, the newest incarnation of Guns N’ Roses will tour to promote Chinese Democracy, an album that was 15 years in the making.  They stop into Ottawa Jan 31.

Calgary

Known for its memorable songs like, “Matchmaker, Matchmaker,” the Tony Award-winning musical, Fiddler on the Roof plays at the Jubilee until Jan 17. Throughout the month of January, One Yellow Rabbit’s High Performance Rodeo offers theatre-lovers innovative plays, skits and acts from around the world. Highlights include Kawasaki Exit, a play about the dark-side of Japanese social networking sites and The Pajama Men, a comedy duo who perform their act in their pjs.

Winnipeg

World-class men’s curling talent sweeps into Winnipeg for the BDO Canadian Classic Open Jan 20 – 24. Top names like Canada’s Olympic representative Kevin Martin and Scotland’s reigning World Champion David Murdoch are expected to participate.

Edmonton

Coleman Lemieux & Compagnie, one of Canada’s most accomplished dance organizations, brings three brilliant performances to Edmonton Jan 20: In Paradisum; Soudain, l’hiver dernier; and Fifteen Heterosexual Duets, all choreographed by James Kudelka.  Artistic Director Laurence Lemieux promises “an exhilarating voyage to the heights of paradise and the depths of the heart.”  Edmontonians revel in the winter months at the Winter Light Festival. Every weekend brings a blizzard of family fun with many events such as ice carving, ice-skating, art shows and much more. On until Mar 12, free admission.

Canadian Rockies

The Olympic Torch Relay comes through Banff Jan 20 and the town is celebrating outdoors with live music. Watch as teams carve massive blocks of ice into glittering sculptures at the Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise during the Ice Magic Festival, Jan 22 – 24 (if you can’t catch the carving, admire the art until it melts away in a few months). Or hit up Jasper in January for ski lift ticket and hotel discounts, plus fun events like the polar bear dip, Taste of the Town, music and skating parties, Jan 15 – 31.

Toronto

Important figures of history continue to draw crowds in the present. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart looms large over the city on select dates between Jan 13 and 24 as the Toronto Symphony Orchestra presents the Mozart@254 Festival, its annual concert series commemorating the 1756 birth of the Classical Era’s greatest composer. This year’s program features guest artists including famed baritone Russell Braun, violinist Pinchas Zukerman and many others. Or, have an archeological encounter with the great rulers of Egypt, by visiting the Art Gallery of Ontario’s ongoing exhibit, King Tut: The Golden King and the Great Pharaohs. The massive display showcases rare artifacts from the days of Khafre, Amenhotep IV, Rameses II and other significant monarchs, as well as more than 50 exquisite treasures from the tomb of Tutankhamun. On until Apr 18.


The Final Countdown

By Jennifer Patterson

The Olympic Countdown Clock in downtown Vancouver. Photo by KK Law

The Olympic Countdown Clock in downtown Vancouver. Photo by KK Law

Practice your cheering and dust off your national flag: there’s only one month to go before the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games take over Vancouver and Whistler. It’s been a long time coming, but finally the hustle and bustle is seen and felt around the city.

We’re ready to welcome the 60,000 to 135,000 visitors expected in Vancouver each day during the Games. Athletes—easily spotted in their national team apparel—are already arriving, settling in and training for their big day. Hard-to-miss bright-red Olympic mittens from The Bay are keeping the hands of both locals and visitors toasty during the cold West Coast weather. The Cultural Olympiad 2010 begins Jan. 22 and features indoor and outdoor concerts, theatre performances, visual arts and films. Buildings are wrapped with decorative banners, an early favourite being the larger-than-life Canadian flag on the corner of Georgia and Howe streets. After a 10-year absence, the outdoor skating rink at Robson Square—right in the heart of downtown—has reopened; admission is free and skate and helmet rentals are available. An unavoidable sign the 2010 Winter Games are just around the corner: the start of road closures and designated Olympic traffic lanes.

As the Olympic Countdown Clock outside the Vancouver Art Gallery marks the remaining days, Olympic spirit is building. It’s just a taste of what’s to come.

The Games Are Here

Live it up in the host mountain resort for the 2010 Winter Games

By Lucas Aykroyd

In Whistler Olympic Park, ski jumps form the backdrop for an inukshuk rock sculpture. Photo courtesy Tourism British Columbia

In Whistler Olympic Park, ski jumps form the backdrop for an inukshuk rock sculpture. Photo courtesy Tourism British Columbia

Whether you visit Whistler before, during or after the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, you’re in for a gold-medal experience. It’s been a jam-packed calendar since July 2, 2003, when the International Olympic Committee (IOC) chose Whistler to co-host the 2010 Winter Games along with Vancouver, beating out Pyeongchang, South Korea and Salzburg, Austria. With Alpine skiing, Nordic skiing and sliding events on the menu, Whistler has solidified its reputation as a must-visit sporting destination. Remarkably, all three Whistler competition venues—Whistler Creekside, Whistler Olympic Park and the Whistler Sliding Centre—were completed years early.

Key dates? The Olympic Torch Relay lights up Whistler on Feb. 5. If you’re arriving in time to catch the world’s top winter athletes, go to the official Vancouver 2010 website (www.vancouver2010
.com) for tickets to Olympic events (Feb. 12 to 28) and Paralympic events (Mar. 12 to 21). The Cultural Olympiad (Jan. 22 to Mar. 21) features several free concerts in Whistler Village Square.

All winter long, participate in downhill skiing and snowboarding at Whistler, enjoying the 88 lifts, 200-plus runs and 3,307 ha (8,100 acres) of diverse terrain—over 90 percent open during the Games. See it all from a bird’s-eye perspective in the recently launched Peak 2 Peak Gondola, which offers a magnificent trip between Whistler and Blackcomb mountains.

Alternatively, go cross-country skiing amid the snow-dusted spruce, fir, hemlock and cedar trees of Whistler Olympic Park, where about 55 km (34 mi) of trails will remain open, along with 42 km (26 mi) of the adjoining Callaghan Country this winter (Nov. 21 to Jan. 31 and Mar. 1 to May 2). Or check out the Whistler Sliding Centre, where daredevil lugers and bobsledders exceed speeds of 150 kph (93 mph).

The great thing about visiting the host mountain resort any time of year is that you don’t need to be a world-class athlete to have fun. Those who prefer culture or shopping are in for a treat, too.

Fascinated by aboriginal culture? Two of the official Four Host First Nations, the Squamish Nation and the Lil’wat Nation, have their traditional territories overlap in Whistler. The spectacular Squamish-Lil’wat Cultural Centre, which seamlessly blends glass, Douglas fir timbers and Native artwork in its three-storey, 2,824-sq-m (30,400-sq-ft) layout, offers a great introduction and provides special programming during the Cultural Olympiad.

A Canada flag waves above the spectators in Whistler Olympic Park. Photo courtesy Tourism British Columbia A Canada flag waves above the spectators in Whistler Olympic Park. Photo courtesy Tourism British Columbia

Shoppers can attempt to set a world-record pace. Buy Olympic souvenirs such as jewellery, clothing and mascot toys at The Olympic Store, The Trading Post, The Bay stores, Zellers stores, Vancouver International Airport (www.yvr.ca) and online (www.vancouver2010.com). Head to local liquor stores to pick up 2010-branded Jackson-Triggs wines or Tribute, the commemorative sparkling wine by Sumac Ridge. Games-themed stamps and coins are available from Canada Post (www.canadapost.ca) and the Royal Canadian Mint (www.mint.ca), respectively.

Long after the Olympic flame has been extinguished, retooled competition venues open to the public will foster a lasting legacy. For instance, the Whistler Sliding Centre has already been chosen to host the 2013 FIL World Luge Championships. So beyond golden memories, there will always be Olympic-calibre reasons to keep coming back.

Hot Dates

By Kristina Urquhart

Crowds gather at the TELUS World Ski and Snowboard Festival. Photo by Joern Rohde/insight-photography.com, courtesy Tourism Whistler

Crowds gather at the TELUS World Ski and Snowboard Festival. Photo by Joern Rohde/insight-photography.com, courtesy Tourism Whistler

Movie buffs star-spot at the Whistler Film Festival (Dec. 3 to 6; 604-935-8035; www.whistlerfilmfestival.com), which screens more than 90 Canadian and international films. A bevy of parties, an outdoor screening and a celebrity ski race round out the event.

The West Coast Railway Heritage Park (604-898-9336; www.wcra.org) hosts two events over Dec. 5 and 6. All Aboard The Polar Express is a one-hour train ride complete with music, stories  and hot chocolate. Stay to see brilliant bulbs during the 10th Annual Christmas Lights in the Park, which is sure to put you in the seasonal spirit.

Entertain energetic youngsters with free mini golf and bouncy castles during Whistler Holiday Experience (Dec. 18 to 24 and Dec. 26 to 30; www.whistler.com). Santa visits on Dec. 19 to 20 to find out who’s been naughty or nice.

Daredevil skiers and snowboarders soar through a ring of fire in the 7-Eleven Fire and Ice Show (every Sun., Dec. 20 to Apr. 4, plus daily Feb. 13 to 27 and Mar. 13 to 20; www.whistlerblackcomb.com), while fire dancers light up the night.

It may be an alcohol-free evening, but Whistler First Night (Dec. 31; www.whistlerfirstnight.com) is anything but dry. Ring in 2010 twice, starting with a kid-friendly, 9:30 p.m. countdown. Live music, street performers and fireworks amuse you into the wee hours.

Thousands of bald eagles migrate in record numbers to the Sea-to-Sky corridor between Nov. and Feb. to feast on spawning salmon. Throughout Jan., the Brackendale Winter Eagle Festival and Count (604-898-3333; www.brackendaleartgallery.com) pays homage to the raptors with talks, tours and art exhibits.

See Spot run in the Winter Purina Incredible Dog Challenge (Jan. 8 to 9; www.whistler.com), where canines compete in skijoring, avalanche rescue and pole weaving. Dogs who resemble their handlers enter a look-a-like contest, and an award is given for best costume.

Bring warm clothes to the NiX Theatre of Snow and Ice (Jan. 22 to Feb. 27), which is part of the arts celebration Cultural Olympiad. Music fest Whistler Live! includes performances by Montreal indie darlings Karkwa (Feb. 14) and European songstress Valérie Sajdik (Feb. 15), among others. Check www.vancouver2010.com for more events.

Gay pride at the top of Whistler Mountain. Photo by Dave Stamp, courtesy gaywhistler.com

Gay pride at the top of Whistler Mountain. Photo by Dave Stamp, courtesy gaywhistler.com

WinterPRIDE (Mar. 1 to 8; www.gaywhistler.com) keeps the party going between the Olympic Games and the Paralympic Games (see below). Gay-pride activities include skiing, cultural events and lively nightlife. PRIDEHouse is the hip hangout for gay athletes and friends.

For young ski stars, there’s the Whistler Cup, a contest for kids aged 11 to 14 (Apr. 9 to 11; www.whistlercup.com). Nearly 400 athletes from 20 countries participate in the races.

Capping off Whistler’s most exciting winter ever is the TELUS World Ski and Snowboard Festival (Apr. 16 to 25; www.wssf.com). Pro athletes wow the crowds with races and tricks, and the activities continue with film screenings, live entertainment and, of course, parties-a-plenty. Snow bunnies, rejoice.

Don’t forget to visit again when the weather heats up. For those who can’t get enough of the white stuff, glacier skiing on Blackcomb Mountain continues into July. A sneak peek of what events lie ahead this summer: farmers’ markets, art festivals, a plethora of bike races and outdoor activities galore.

2010 WINTER GAMES

Locals will tell you Whistler was made for the Olympic Games. In 1962, developers transformed the rugged terrain with hopes of hosting the 1968 Winter Games. Now, after two unsuccessful attempts to welcome the world, this resort town is finally fulfilling its destiny. Whether you hold a coveted Games ticket or not, you’ll be kept busy in Feb. and Mar.