Emergency Room series premiere is a matter of life and death
Transcription
Emergency Room series premiere is a matter of life and death
SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 2014 WESTCOAST NEWS || A17 | BREAKING NEWS: VANCOUVERSUN.COM TOWN TALK Emergency Room series premiere is a matter of life and death Starts Jan. 21: First episode has man with knife in abdomen arrive at VGH Malcolm Parry I N THE BALANCE: Sirens sounded this week when Vancouver General Hospital’s emergency-medicine chief, Dr. Doug McKnight, and other emergency physicians, nurses and paramedics visited a neighbourhood that sends them much business. However, they were at Main off Hastings Street not to save lives but to see themselves larger than life on screen. That was at the private Imperial Theatre, where Knowledge Network president/CEO Rudy Buttignol hosted a premiere of the six-times-one-hour series Emergency Room: Life and Death at VGH, which will air Jan. 21. Made by Louise Clark’s Lark Productions firm and directed by Kevin Eastwood, its first episode opens to a man arriving at the ER with a hefty kitchen knife buried in his abdomen. Eastwood knows all about dire peril, having suffered a cardiac arrest that dropped him technically dead in Los Angeles International Airport. “This show changed my life,” he said of Emergency Room. “I couldn’t be more proud of it.” • SPARKLE PLENTY: That’s in the job description for Maison Birks managers like Yvonne Zawadzki. It certainly applied to a $126,000 Panthere Divine she modelled at a Cartier timepiece launch where a diamondencrusted panther’s head all but hid the face’s tiny hands. Adding even more glitter, Zawadzki wore a diamond Riviere bracelet and huge, diamond-surrounded, sapphire ring from the Birks Vintage collection. • DRINK TO THIS: Vancouver International Wine Festival executive director Harry Hertscheg was as effervescent as all 13 sparkling wines served at a Forage restaurant kickoff party for the glugathon’s 36thannual running. Fifty-four events will draw 178 wineries from 14 countries — including theme nation France — when the festival (vanwinefest.ca) runs Feb. 22 to March 2, Hertscheg said. Its own fizzle was imperilled when its charitable beneficiary, the Vancouver Playhouse Theatre Co., succumbed in 2012. Bard On The Beach swiftly took its place, and Hertscheg toasted that company’s newly arrived managing director, Claire Sakaki, at the reception. Among other tasks, Kamloops-raised Sakaki will address a $5.8-million campaign for Bard and Arts Club Theatre to occupy a $20.4-million South False Creek facility. Wall Financial Corp built the 44,000-square-foot space, to include a 250-seat theatre, under a community-amenity agreement with city hall, which has committed up to $7 million to the project. • CIRQUE DE 1000 BLOCK: Shenanigans on late-night Granville Street can resemble a circus. Now the real thing goes on indoors. That’s at Vancouver FanClub, where an aerialist, balancer, contortionist, singers, burlesques and even a jellyfish impersonator are staging the Friday-to-Sunday show Night Circus Atlantis — with or without dinner — until Feb. 2. What a smart move. • STRINGS ATTACHED: Janey Harper heard Happy Birthday played on her own violin recently. It was the instrument’s birthday, too. Made 300 years ago in Paris, it still visits Europe. Next month it should sound in Dublin’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral and Ireland’s presidential palace, then at the Vatican City’s St. Peter’s Basilica and Sistine Chapel. Harper’s designated player, Rosemary Siemens, co-founded the Rosemary & Roy duo after she and pianistsinger-orchestrator Roy Tan played a 2007 charity gig Donny and Marie Osmond staged at Disney World, Florida. Siemens will play Carnegie Hall on March 9. At the Fairmont Pacific Rim hotel Jan. 26, she and Tan will serenade Paolo Fazioli, whose firm makes pianos incorporating spruce from a grove favoured by violin maker Antonio Stradivari. While here, he’ll inspect the $500,000 10-foot concert grand recently installed in Zhao Zai Chen’s Shaughnessy mansion. • VIVA: Every nation seemed to hold a film festival here except the homeland of directors Michelangelo Antonioni, Bernardo Bertolucci and Federico Fellini, and stars Gina Lollobrigida, Sophia Loren and Marcello Mastroianni. That’s been remedied. Italian consulate cultural director Alberta Lai put a pulce in the ear of Italian Cultural Centre executive director Mauro Vescera, and their festival debuted at the Vancity Theatre recently with a screening of Fellini’s Amarcord, wine, chow and nine more flicks to follow. • NOT SO VIVA: Former MP Anna Terrana and supporters of the Italian Cultural Institute in Vancouver are petitioning Italy’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs regarding the local facility’s impending closure. They claim that merging it into consular offices here would maintain its promotion of Italian language and culture while achieving budget reductions the ministry desires. • CHEF’S SURPRISE: Those dining at Gastown’s Secret Location until Feb. 15 shouldn’t ask for what they had the night before. After rehearsing this week, executive chef Jefferson Alvarez vows to serve 10 different plates a day for 30 consecutive days without repeating any. • BRIGHTER IDEA: Paul Wong turns another commonplace into art with his new exhibition at Jennifer Winsor’s East-of-Main gallery. Although inventive enough, it’s not the wall of 40 video screens showing episodes from his three-decade career. Nor is it the wall-sized projection of a Downtown Eastside alley filmed in a daylong sequence of fractionalsecond frames. It’s actually a multiimage video that was not only shot on his mobile phone but edited and compiled on it, too. Wong still thinks so far out of the box, he likely couldn’t say where he left it. [email protected] 604-929-8456 Vancouver International Wine Festival chief Harry Hertscheg toasted Bard on The Beach managing director Claire Sakaki at a kickoff reception for the 36th running of the festival from Feb. 22 to March 2. Rosemary Siemens of the Rosemary & Roy duo will play Janey Harper’s 300-year-old violin at the Vatican City and Carnegie Hall soon. Kevin Eastwood directed the sixepisode Emergency Room series Knowledge Network head Rudy Buttignol debuted for a Jan. 21 airing. Sylvain Drolet, Sylvia Louis and Jamaal Von Parker perform in the Night Circus Atlantis show at Vancouver FanClub to Feb. 2. Maison Birks manager Yvonne Zawadzki’s diamond bracelet and sapphire ring complemented the $126,000 Cartier Panthere Divine watch she unveiled. Paul Wong’s videos at the Winsor Gallery include a whole day at a Downtown Eastside alley and a multi-image piece shot and edited on his phone.