Media Design for Lepage/Ex Machina & The National Ballet of Canada

Q & A with Media Effects Designer Laurie-Shawn Borzovoy at the C.O.C.

Media Design & Stage Effects Q & A

THE LAB

Backstage Tour
– MEDIA EFFECTS Q&A with Media Effects Designer Laurie-Shawn Borzovoy
Bluebeard’s Castle / Erwartung working rehearsal

Tuesday, April 28, 2015
5 to 9:30 p.m.

THE DRESS REHEARSAL

Participation in the lab earns you two FREE tickets to the dress rehearsal of Bluebeard’s Castle / Erwartung.
Monday, May 4, 2015
7:30 p.m.

Registration for the MEDIA EFFECTS & STAGE DESIGN Youth Opera Lab opens Monday, April 6, 2015 at 10 a.m. 

 

Laurie-Shawn named Cultural Champion for City of Toronto

 Celebrating Cultural Champions

Laurie-Shawn is one of twelve local cultural champions honoured at the launch of the Celebrate 27 Arts Fest on March 31, 2011 at Brookfield Place, Toronto.

laurie-shawn_borzovoy  The Celebrate 27 Arts Festival launched on Thursday, March 31st, 2011

 

 

 

 

The Celebrate 27 Arts Fest Community Cultural Champions project recognizes the significant contribution that cultural champions make in our communities. There are many people in Toronto’s diverse neighbourhoods and in the community arts sector who have given of themselves to enrich their communities through the arts. Twelve local cultural champions were honoured at the launch of the Celebrate 27 Arts Fest on March 31 at Brookfield Place. Through our partnership with the Toronto-based company Joy Apparel, the images of the community cultural champions were artistically rendered on t-shirts and scarves, in recognition of their efforts. A run of these limited edition t-shirts/scarves will be available by donation in April. Revenue from these donations will go back to the organization that selected the local champion to be used for community arts programming.

2011: Celebrate 27 Arts Fest

C27poster

Michael Jackson and his fans

Notes given to his fans in November.


From:Michael Joseph Gross

“The girls would huddle outside the hotel gate that was closest to Jackson’s bungalow, sitting very quietly so that security would not find them. And sometimes Michael would come out and say hello. One time he handed out five handwritten letters that said things like ‘I can feel your energy through the walls. You inspire me so much. I love you all. Thank you for being there. Thank you for being my friend. Thank you for loving me. With all the love in my heart, Michael Jackson.’ I was always impressed by that, how deeply he seemed to care for these girls. When he hugged one of them, he would put one hand on her neck, behind her head, that extra-comforting move like you would do to a person you know. The writing in those letters had a style that was personal, deep, flowery, ornate. It was not ‘Thanks guys. Have a good night. I hope you like the music.’”

This, too, may sound like a sentimental exaggeration, but it is not. I spent a week with the women that Weiss and Evenstad are talking about, while researching Starstruck, a book I wrote about relationships between celebrities and fans. No star was more generous to fans (every member of the core group of Jackson fans that I met had, at some point, been invited into his house to have dinner or to watch movies and hang out), and no group of fans treated one another with more generosity than these women.

“To figure out who would get the letters that Michael wrote to the group,” Weiss says, “the girls would draw straws. They would write their names on pieces of paper and throw them in my camera bag, and I would reach in and draw names. The girl who got the letter would take it and make photocopies and give them to all of the others.”