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Darin Hagen among winners as Edmonton music, film, books and visual arts awarded $100,000

Darin Hagen among winners as Edmonton music, film, books and visual arts awarded $100,000

Calgary Herald08-05-2025

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The $100,000 annual Edmonton Arts Prizes have been awarded, showcasing an impressive range of local talent and vision!
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Longtime playwright, queer advocate and drag legend Darin Hagen has taken the City of Edmonton Film Prize for his documentary Pride vs. Prejudice: The Delwin Vriend Story, it was announced at a ceremony at Roxy Theatre Wednesday night, while alternative electro-pop artist margø has grabbed its Music Prize cousin for her debut album, who are you when you're alone?
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Novelist, bookseller and Afghanistan veteran Benjamin Hertwig, meanwhile, won the Robert Kroetsch City of Edmonton Book Prize for his tender, battlefront debut novel Juiceboxers.
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Besides the honour of recognition by peers, each category winner is awarded $15,000, with $5,000 apiece going to everyone else on the short list.
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The runners up in each category are Don Depoe/Dept. 9 Studios for Dark Match and Scott Portingale for Emergence for the film prize — the three movies playing NorthwestFilmFest Monday night at Metro Cinema starting at 7 p.m. with Q and As to follow.
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Celeigh Cardinal's Boundless Possibilities and King Thief's self titled album scored the music prize's runners-up spots, meanwhile, while Gail Fraser's By Strength, We Are Still Here: Indigenous Peoples and Indian Residential Schooling in Inuvik, Northwest Territories, and Marilyn Dumont's South Side of a Kinless River rounded up the books list.
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Finally, for visual arts, the runners up were Cheyenne Rain LeGrande for mi^kisak and Heather Shillinglaw's MNIDOONS GIIZIS OONHG – LITTLE SPIRIT MOON (NOVEMBER).
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Last year's winners were HAIDEE's album This Shouldn't Be Typical, Cody Lightning's film HEY, VIKTOR!, Kelsey Stepehnson for Currents — also at Art Gallery of St. Albert, PS — and essayist Jennifer Bowering Delisle for Micrographia.
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The annual awards honouring 12 of our finest is shepherded by Edmonton Arts Council, in partnership with the City of Edmonton and community partners Alberta Media Production Industries Association, Alberta Music, Audreys Books, CARFAC Alberta, Edmonton Community Foundation and Writers' Guild of Alberta.
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Deadlines for the 2026 awards are early December for books, late January for the other three prizes.

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Darin Hagen among winners as Edmonton music, film, books and visual arts awarded $100,000
Darin Hagen among winners as Edmonton music, film, books and visual arts awarded $100,000

Calgary Herald

time08-05-2025

  • Calgary Herald

Darin Hagen among winners as Edmonton music, film, books and visual arts awarded $100,000

Article content The $100,000 annual Edmonton Arts Prizes have been awarded, showcasing an impressive range of local talent and vision! Article content Article content Longtime playwright, queer advocate and drag legend Darin Hagen has taken the City of Edmonton Film Prize for his documentary Pride vs. Prejudice: The Delwin Vriend Story, it was announced at a ceremony at Roxy Theatre Wednesday night, while alternative electro-pop artist margø has grabbed its Music Prize cousin for her debut album, who are you when you're alone? Article content Article content Novelist, bookseller and Afghanistan veteran Benjamin Hertwig, meanwhile, won the Robert Kroetsch City of Edmonton Book Prize for his tender, battlefront debut novel Juiceboxers. Article content Article content Besides the honour of recognition by peers, each category winner is awarded $15,000, with $5,000 apiece going to everyone else on the short list. Article content The runners up in each category are Don Depoe/Dept. 9 Studios for Dark Match and Scott Portingale for Emergence for the film prize — the three movies playing NorthwestFilmFest Monday night at Metro Cinema starting at 7 p.m. with Q and As to follow. Article content Celeigh Cardinal's Boundless Possibilities and King Thief's self titled album scored the music prize's runners-up spots, meanwhile, while Gail Fraser's By Strength, We Are Still Here: Indigenous Peoples and Indian Residential Schooling in Inuvik, Northwest Territories, and Marilyn Dumont's South Side of a Kinless River rounded up the books list. Article content Article content Finally, for visual arts, the runners up were Cheyenne Rain LeGrande for mi^kisak and Heather Shillinglaw's MNIDOONS GIIZIS OONHG – LITTLE SPIRIT MOON (NOVEMBER). Article content Article content Last year's winners were HAIDEE's album This Shouldn't Be Typical, Cody Lightning's film HEY, VIKTOR!, Kelsey Stepehnson for Currents — also at Art Gallery of St. Albert, PS — and essayist Jennifer Bowering Delisle for Micrographia. Article content The annual awards honouring 12 of our finest is shepherded by Edmonton Arts Council, in partnership with the City of Edmonton and community partners Alberta Media Production Industries Association, Alberta Music, Audreys Books, CARFAC Alberta, Edmonton Community Foundation and Writers' Guild of Alberta. Article content Deadlines for the 2026 awards are early December for books, late January for the other three prizes.

Darin Hagen among winners as Edmonton music, film, books and visual arts awarded $100,000
Darin Hagen among winners as Edmonton music, film, books and visual arts awarded $100,000

Edmonton Journal

time08-05-2025

  • Edmonton Journal

Darin Hagen among winners as Edmonton music, film, books and visual arts awarded $100,000

Article content The $100,000 annual Edmonton Arts Prizes have been awarded, showcasing an impressive range of local talent and vision! Article content Longtime playwright, queer advocate and drag legend Darin Hagen has taken the City of Edmonton Film Prize for his documentary Pride vs. Prejudice: The Delwin Vriend Story, it was announced at a ceremony at Roxy Theatre Wednesday night, while alternative electro-pop artist margø has grabbed its Music Prize cousin for her debut album, who are you when you're alone? Article content Novelist, bookseller and Afghanistan veteran Benjamin Hertwig, meanwhile, won the Robert Kroetsch City of Edmonton Book Prize for his tender, battlefront debut novel Juiceboxers. Raneece Buddan's Art Gallery of St. Albert show Adorned in our Thread led to her Eldon and Anne Foote Visual Arts Prize win. Article content Besides the honour of recognition by peers, each category winner is awarded $15,000, with $5,000 apiece going to everyone else on the short list. The runners up in each category are Don Depoe/Dept. 9 Studios for Dark Match and Scott Portingale for Emergence for the film prize — the three movies playing NorthwestFilmFest Monday night at Metro Cinema starting at 7 p.m. with Q and As to follow. Celeigh Cardinal's Boundless Possibilities and King Thief's self titled album scored the music prize's runners-up spots, meanwhile, while Gail Fraser's By Strength, We Are Still Here: Indigenous Peoples and Indian Residential Schooling in Inuvik, Northwest Territories, and Marilyn Dumont's South Side of a Kinless River rounded up the books list. Article content Finally, for visual arts, the runners up were Cheyenne Rain LeGrande for mi^kisak and Heather Shillinglaw's MNIDOONS GIIZIS OONHG – LITTLE SPIRIT MOON (NOVEMBER). Last year's winners were HAIDEE's album This Shouldn't Be Typical, Cody Lightning's film HEY, VIKTOR!, Kelsey Stepehnson for Currents — also at Art Gallery of St. Albert, PS — and essayist Jennifer Bowering Delisle for Micrographia. The annual awards honouring 12 of our finest is shepherded by Edmonton Arts Council, in partnership with the City of Edmonton and community partners Alberta Media Production Industries Association, Alberta Music, Audreys Books, CARFAC Alberta, Edmonton Community Foundation and Writers' Guild of Alberta. Deadlines for the 2026 awards are early December for books, late January for the other three prizes. fgriwkowsky@ @ Latest National Stories

NorthwestFilmFest and Rainbow Visions: A joyful Blur of Texas Chainsaws, Alberta film, Cruising and Andy Kaufman
NorthwestFilmFest and Rainbow Visions: A joyful Blur of Texas Chainsaws, Alberta film, Cruising and Andy Kaufman

Vancouver Sun

time07-05-2025

  • Vancouver Sun

NorthwestFilmFest and Rainbow Visions: A joyful Blur of Texas Chainsaws, Alberta film, Cruising and Andy Kaufman

Action — and how! Canada's oldest and ever-evolving documentary film festival NorthwestFilmFest is back with a brilliant lineup, covering just about anything you might want to point a camera at. Opening with a Blur double feature and closing on a one-two punch of Texas Chain Saw Massacre gushing love, space, ecological issues, the war in Ukraine, and cinematic portraiture, including an Andy Kaufman doc, are all on the weird and wild docket, rolling Thursday through May 15 at Metro Cinema. Then, snugged right up to the tail end, May 16 -18 is NWFF's punchy queer sibling, Rainbow Visions Film Festival , features more docs and plenty of classic narrative fiction films, like the much-lauded doc The Secret of Me, William Friedkin's Cruising and a reprise of local documentary Flashback. Get top headlines and gossip from the world of celebrity and entertainment. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sun Spots will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Individual tickets are available, as well as festival passes for each or a combo pass covering both — head to to find it all, including a detailed schedule with ticket links. Longtime festival director Guy Lavallee was enjoying voice-stifling laryngitis, so we had to skip our lengthy annual state-of-the-world chat. Still, he managed to enthuse and inform… Q: First up, NWFF. How many submissions for year 43 — and what else is new? A: We did a very slight re-brand this year, going from NorthwestFest — or, under its full name, the NorthwestFest International Documentary Festival — to NorthwestFilmFest. Why? We're getting more and more submissions each year, especially from Alberta-based filmmakers. But we were severely limiting our ability to program these films by restricting them to docs. By simply adding the word 'Film' to the title, it tells filmmakers and audiences what kind of festival this is. It now also has a nice rhythm with our genre festival, NorthwestFEARFest. Opening up the parameters a bit resulted in a roughly 65 per cent increase in submissions, with films submitted from 70 countries. Q: Your very global fest has an understandably wide range of topics. A: At the end of the day, our core programming is really all about films that mean something to us, and that we think will mean something to audiences. So you've got pop culture covered by showing films about the Dateline NBC news 'sting' phenomenon, To Catch a Predator with Predators and board game fanatics with The Hobby: Tales From the Tabletop. 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It's going to be an absolute blast! And our major headliner screening on Saturday night, an absolutely hilarious, charming, crowd-pleasing coming-of-age comedy called Griffin in Summer. With supporting turns from such heavyweights as Melanie Lynskey and Owen Teague, it's young star Everett Blunck, who absolutely steals the show with his star-making performance. I absolutely adore this movie. It's going to be an amazing year! PREVIEW NorthwestFilmFest/Rainbow Visions When May 8-15/May 16-18 Where Metro Cinema (8712 109 St.) Tickets $10-$16/show, $22/double feature; passes $99/$79-$129/combo at fgriwkowsky@ @ l Bookmark our website and support our journalism: Don't miss the news you need to know — add and to your bookmarks and sign up for our newsletters here. You can also support our journalism by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribers gain unlimited access to The Edmonton Journal, Edmonton Sun, National Post and 13 other Canadian news sites. Support us by subscribing today: The Edmonton Journal | The Edmonton Sun.

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