Archive for the ‘Outreach’ Category

Free performances of Get Stuffed, May 15 in the Distillery District!

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Christopher Ryan in Get Stuffed. Photo (c) Meghan Hall

Great News! We’ve been touring Get Stuffed, a new opera for children set in the school cafeteria for 2 years in schools across Ontario. We’ve been trying to find the best way to bring this super fun show to a larger, public audience and we are thrilled to partner with the Distillery Historic District to end the 2010 tour on May 15, 2010 with a free family day including 3 outdoor performances and fun food workshops and activities. Visitors will also have the opportunity to help fight hunger by dropping off a non-perishable food donation to support the Daily Bread Food Bank and to collect information and parent resources from ChildFind Canada who assist in the search for and prevention of missing children.

May 15, 2010
PEFORMANCES
11:00am, 1:00pm and 3:00pm in Trinity Square in the Distillery Historic District

55 Mill Street (north east of Parliament St. and Lakeshore Blvd) Toronto, ON.
An onsite indoor location will be available in case of rain.

Written by Toronto composer Richard Payne and Montreal writer Alexis Diamond for 5 singing actors and 2 musicians, Get Stuffed is about a timely message, making healthy food choices. Developed with Words in Motion and the Canadian Diabetes Association, Get Stuffed promotes environmentally-friendly, healthy food choices inspired by the Canada Food Guide, with special prominence for fruits and vegetables grown in Ontario.

Includes a food fight!!!

Get Stuffed is supported by the Ontario Trillium Foundation, the Ministry of Health Promotion, Ontario Agri-Food Education Inc. and Loblaws Canada.

For more information on Get Stuffed and the 2010 company please visit getstuffed.ca

Artist Pictured: Christopher Ryan. Photo © Meghan Hall

Opera to Go – Volunteer Opportunity

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

We are looking for volunteers to help in various positions throughout run of Opera to Go taking place March 24, 25 & 26, 2010.

As a volunteer you will assist Tapestry as we present the Opera to Go revival at the Fermenting Cellar in the Distillery Historic District. Experience some of Tapestry’s favourite short operas from the past 8 seasons in one of Toronto’s most exciting venues and be a part of the action as we use the entire space to create 5 different worlds full of comedy, drama and suspense.

Opera to Go Volunteer Positions available:
Tour Guides
This will be an evening that the audience will never forget and in order to pull it off we need a team of volunteers to assist in seamlessly leading the audience around the space in between the short performances.
Bartenders (must be 19 + and Smart Serve certified)
Coat Check
Box Office Table

Time Requirements
Volunteers will be required to arrive at 7:00pm to prep for an 8:00pm performance time. Individuals volunteering as Tour Guides will be require to attend the Opera to Go dress rehearsal taking place March 23, 2010 at 8:00pm to learn the route.

If you are interested in volunteering please contact Amber Ebert, ambere@tapestrynewopera.com or 416.537.6066 x224 to sign up.

Get Stuffed has its own website

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Christopher Ryan in Get Stuffed (c) Meghan Hall, 2009

Please visit www.getstuffed.ca for info. and updates on our world premiere children’s opera which is supported by the Ontario Trillium Foundation, the Ministry of Health Promotion, Ontario Agri-Food Education Inc. and the Ontario Arts Council.

PHOTO: Christopher Ryan in Get Stuffed (c) Meghan Hall, 2009

Students show McIntosh Apple some love & Get Stuffed with the Good Stuff

Friday, November 7th, 2008

Check out the great images below and see some of the awesome response we received from students of Rose Avenue Public School who saw Get Stuffed during our GTA preview tour.  Some of the writing might be too small to read but take a look at some pretty fabulous drawings.  Get Stuffed’s wisest character and leader of the Vitamins A-B-C, McIntosh Apple (aka Neema Bickersteth), is a fan favourite, as is the infamous “french fry toss”.

Just click on the photo to advance the slide.

Get Stuffed in the GTA

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

Get Stuffed image 1

Our preview tour of Get Stuffed (by Alexis Diamond & Richard Payne) is underway in the Greater Toronto area.  Last Friday Oct. 17th we began a 10 show tour to schools around the city in anticipation of our premiere tour which launches in spring 2009.  We will be visiting schools and community centres all around the province of Ontario, with support from the Ontario Trillium Foundation, including northern Ontario in spring 2010.

So far feedback has been fantastic and a huge help as we continue to develop this new work before the premiere.  Developed by Tapestry & Words in Motion in association with the Canadian Diabetes Association, Get Stuffed is a comic children’s opera about serious decisions – making healthy food choices inspired by the Canada Food Guide. The rise of type 2 diabetes, especially among children, is a huge concern.  With Get Stuffed we hope to use opera – a most inclusive art form – engage young people with this important issue and of course with the performing arts.  Like Elijah’s Kite, Get Stuffed will include a Study Guide and interaction between the audience and artists.

Click here to learn more about Get Stuffed.

Click here to learn more about Words in Motion

Click here to learn more about the Canadian Diabetes Association and the rise of type 2 diabetes.

Here’s what some audience members had to say about the Get Stuffed preview performance:

West Preppers wowed by wonderful world of veggies! Adults and children alike were entertained by big voices and splendid soundscapes at the performance of “Get Stuffed”, definitely not an ordinary opera. The primary students were mesmerized by the complex yet accessible medley of voices and veggies as well as instruments (where did that sound come from?) provided by a stellar cast of musicians and vocal artists. The children were completely engaged by the dramatic performances and responded enthusiastically to the non-stop, ever-changing musical smorgasbord of continually surprising and often amusing rhythms and sounds. Adults were moved to laughter by the nuances of the script but nothing was lost on the children who sat up taller and craned their necks, anxious to see if their fallen diva would revive.  All this and learning, too! Canada’s Food Guide never had it so good. Oh, did I forget to mention that all of this creativity is the vehicle for a lesson on the benefits of good nutrition.  A lesson they’ll always remember joyfully!
Thank you.

West Prep Public School

So…we are well on our way and very excited for the spring premiere!  Here are a few shots from rehearsals in the Ernest Balmer Studio at Tapestry.

Just click on the photo to advance the slide.

ARTISTS PICTURED: Neema Bickersteth, Catharin Carew, Cory Knight, Keith O’Brien, Justin Welsh.  PHOTOS (c) Tapestry

INside Opera – St Jamestown

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

From July 21 to August 1st, the children of the City Hope Summer Camp teamed up with composer Glenn James, librettist Dave Deveau and Tapestry to create and perform their very own opera. The children came up with the characters, the story, and the music, and everyone had tons of fun combining these elements in different ways over two weeks. As the end of the second week neared, the brainstorming, exploring, singing and skits had formed an opera titled “The Secret Within.” On the last day of camp the children performed their opera about a prince’s quest to find the wizard that has stolen all the beauty away from the town, aided by the queen and a group of animal sidekicks. The opera was a huge hit, and for those that missed it, there are some pictures below.

Just click on the photo to advance the slide.

INside Opera News

Monday, August 11th, 2008

Insidetoronto.com recently interviewed Amber Ebert, Outreach and Education manager at Tapestry and Chiara Lara, leader of the City Hope Summer Camp, for an article on how children in St Jamestown are spending their summer. To read the full article just click on the link below.

Insidetoronto.com interviews INside Opera 

INside Opera

Monday, July 14th, 2008

From July 6-11, 12 fabulous students from the Regent Park School of Music wrote and rehearsed their own original opera, titled Underdogs. With the help of Sandy Pool (librettist) and Glenn James (composer) the students developed characters, dialogue, songs, and music, and then performed the whole opera for an audience! Here are pictures of rehearsals and the final show for anyone who missed meeting these rising stars.

Just click on the photo to advance the slide.

Opera…to Go & Network

Tuesday, February 12th, 2008

The Emerging Arts Professional Network is an online community for arts professionals across Canada. The EAP provides online career resources and a community network for arts administrators, managers and artists who are at the start of their careers and looking for opportunities to gain valuable access to online mentors and insight into the possible directions in which to forward their careers.

We look forward to sharing an evening of New Opera with New Arts Professionals.

Opera...to Go & Network Image

From Peter Rabbit to Outreach and Education Manager

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

Inside Opera RPSM 2007I remember the first play that I was ever in. I out hopped my classmates in my Junior Kindergarten to earn the coveted role of Peter Rabbit in our end of year production. I also vividly remember the first time that my elementary school brought in a professional theatre company to perform in our school gym. I grew up in a small town in Southern Ontario and my elementary school was tiny, 150 kids from JK to Gr. 8, I’m talking small and having a professional theatre company perform in our undersized little gym was, to me, a really big deal. I can remember these memories with exact detail, and I believe these two experiences are the catalyst which set me on a path that has lead me to my current position as the Outreach and Education Manager at Tapestry.

I take a lot of pride in the fact that Tapestry is an organization that is dedicated to the creation of new work and is a company that places value in the integration of the community within the artistic process. As the Outreach and Education Manager, I get to work closely with the creative artists in the development of the outreach programmes and productions and have the privilege of meeting the members of the community in which we implement our programmes such as INside Opera and our operas for young audiences like Elijah’s Kite, and Sanctuary Song.

This spring we have the opportunity to bring Elijah’s Kite, an opera that shares a bullying prevention message, to students across Ontario. Thanks to the support of the Ontario Art Council we will be taking a message of caring and cooperation and introducing professional opera to the underserviced students in Northern Ontario. And maybe a small number of the students that see Elijah’s Kite will only remember Billy’s ultimate burp, or the fact that they were able to miss class for the a part of the day. But hopefully, and most likely, the impact of experiencing a live opera performance and the fact that Tapestry brought the art to their small country schools will have a lasting effect on the young students.

I came across a new study online called Assessing the Intrinsic Impacts of a Live Performance. It is a substantial read but if you are interested in learning the effects the arts have on communities and individual participants it is worth a look. http://www.wolfbrown.com/index.php?page=books

-Amber

Photo: Students from the Regent Park School of Music participate in INside Opera 2007