
Announcement on Queen City Ex ‘coming soon'
WATCH: With the Saskatoon Ex lineup announced last week, many are wondering when they'll find out the acts for the Queen City Ex.
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CTV News
6 minutes ago
- CTV News
From the archives to the easel: Mi'kmaq artist Alan Syliboy unveils new series of paintings
Acclaimed Mi'kmaq artist Alan Syliboy unveils a new series of painting at the Prow Gallery in Halifax. Acclaimed Mi'kmaq artist Alan Syliboy unveiled a new series of paintings at The Prow Gallery in Halifax. 'It's a collection of some of his older works all the way up to some of his newer works which he created in 2025,' said Kim Farmer, manager of The Prow Gallery. 'The oldest piece in this collection is dated back to 2002 and there are some drawings on paper.' Farmer says Syliboy uses a lot of traditional imagery in his paintings. 'He has collected a lot of these images from his culture. A lot of them are based on petroglyphs which were found in Kejimkujik National Park in Nova Scotia. The petroglyphs were carved in stone by Alan's ancestors thousands of years ago. So, he has used some of those symbols in his artwork.' Mi'kmaq artist Alan Syliboy Acclaimed Mi'kmaq artist Alan Syliboy unveils a new series of painting at the Prow Gallery in Halifax. Syliboy also likes to use a lot of vibrant colours in his work, says Farmer. 'He is a very vibrant and cheerful person. So I think that comes out in the colours that he chooses,' she said. 'He also has a wide variety of subject matter that he uses, a lot of them are figures and animals. When you see the painting, you can usually recognize an animal that is based in Nova Scotia,' she added. The exhibit is on at The Prow Gallery until Aug. 25. -With files from CTV News Atlantic's Mike Lamb For more Nova Scotia news, visit our dedicated provincial page


CBC
17 minutes ago
- CBC
Where are the older Indigenous theatre actors?
Social Sharing A Port Dover, Ont. theatre company wanted to mount the play Crees in the Caribbean, but they ran into a casting problem. They couldn't find Indigenous actors old enough to play the two main characters, who are a First Nations couple in their 60s. Crees in the Caribbean playwright Drew Hayden Taylor wasn't surprised to hear this. In a recent piece for the Globe and Mail, he explained that finding older Indigenous actors has become an increasingly common issue. Today on Commotion, guest host Ali Hassan speaks with Taylor about what to do in this situation: go on with non-Indigenous actors or scrap the whole thing? We've included some highlights below, edited for length and clarity. For the full discussion, listen and follow Commotion with Elamin Abdelmahmoud on your favourite podcast player. WATCH | Today's episode on YouTube: Ali: When you were told that the play was in jeopardy because of casting issues, what was your instinctual or initial reaction to that? Drew: Well, this isn't the first time it's happened to me. There was one production of that play some time ago that was indeed cancelled because they couldn't find people of the appropriate age for the role. Now, I've done other similar plays in the past. I did an elders love story, farce comedy called The Buz'Gem Blues, with, again, two characters in their 60s. It had been produced a few times. And you had to look long and hard, but we always found people to do the role. So one of the things Jane [Spence, the artistic director of the Port Dover theatre company] did — and was urged to do in order to hopefully avoid this whole issue — was start her search substantially before the actual production. But when I heard this, I was like, "Oh, not again." Because, as I said, I missed one production. There's a very popular Indigenous play called The Rez Sisters, which I believe has three actors in their 60s…. And it's always been a bit of an issue to find age appropriate actors for these roles. Ali: If somebody asks you, what is more important: that the story gets told or that the casting is 100 per cent accurate or precise? Drew: Both. I don't think the two are mutually exclusive. Speaking as an Indigenous person, talking to you from a First Nations community, we have spent the last 30, 40, 50 years, trying to get our voice and our representation included in the larger dominant culture. And I think right now, we've got a glut — not glut, that's a bad term — but we have, we have many, numerous Native performers in their 20s, 30s and 40s and approaching their 50s. And I think now, we are just getting to those actors in that later phase of life. So I think it's both important to get the story correct, and to get the right perspective — the right age and the right performer for each role. The option right now [is that] you take an actor in their 50s — and I think that's what's happening — and you age them up. You give them a little gray in their hair. For the female roles, not so much the graying of the beard. But you do try to make them look older and fit them into that particular scene. I have no problem with that. Ali: I understand that since you wrote that [Globe and Mail] piece — a little bit of hope, a little ray of hope — things have changed. Can you tell us what happened? Drew: The day it came out, she [Jane Spence] says, "Oh, by the way, the play's on life support. We managed to find a Native actor who can do it. Now we're trying to confirm a Native actress to do the role." So there is hope at the end of the tunnel. I believe she's making an offer to two actresses this week.


CTV News
30 minutes ago
- CTV News
Thousands of dogs attend Pawlooza
London Watch Pawlooza, Canada's largest single day dog festival, was back in London this weekend. CTV's Lauren Stallone was there.