Category Archives: Uncategorized

Eye Spy: Ecology Ottawa & Sandy Hill come together Tonight

ecologyEcology Ottawa would like to invite Sandy Hill residents to learn more about the Ecology Ottawa Community Network and our campaigns. If you’re interested in getting involved or just curious, please join us on Tuesday, March 3rd at 7 pm.

WHEN
March 03, 2015 at 7pm – 9pm
WHERE
Sandy Hill Community Centre
250 Somerset East
Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6V6
Canada
Google map and directions
CONTACT
Diane Beckett · dianebeckett@hotmail.com · 613-231-6274

After five years in suspended animation, Rake-star, Ottawa’s Sun Ra tribute project, returns

Rake-Star a Sun Ra Tribute at MugShots Saturday night.
See you there ~ Local awesomeness

Illuminated: @centre454 shines a light on vulnerable neighbours

This year marks the 60th anniversary of Centre 454 and their outreach to Ottawa’s vulnerable community.

Tonight to celebrate this landmark of caring for the community Centre 454 will be presenting a free photo exhibit by Onno Kremers at Ottawa City Hall from 4PM.

ILLUMINATEDbanner2

Photo: Onno Kremers Courtesy Centre 454 website

“Illuminated” is a black and white exhibit of photographs and words that strips away the often harsh environmental backdrop from these neighbours and focuses in on their face, their lives and their humanity.

Join Centre 454, Mayor Jim Watson and artist Onno Kremers at tonight’s exhibition and silent auction that will include refreshments and story-telling.

This event is free but donations to those who give so much to our neighbours and community are being accepted.

Ottawa City Hall – Jean Pigott Place
110 Laurier Avenue West
4-8PM

An Evening Pulling Pints down the Gladstone with “Two”

An edited version of this review has been published at Apt613.ca
Set in a northern UK town Jim Cartwright’s Two features Michelle LeBlanc and Richard Gelinas in not only the roles of husband and wife publicans, but also as the dozen or so characters that pop in for a drink over the course of an evening down the pub.

Two_vThis inventive two-hander opens with the landlord and lady deftly serving imaginary customers whilst biting and snapping vicious asides – the play slowly reveals clues to this brewing storm. Laughingly they pull pints as she rolls her eyes and snarls at his tired banter while he berates her for wasting profits by sitting a drink to a regular. They’ve no social life and no family life as all is “pulled” from behind the bar.

Via swift changes Leblanc and Gelinas take the audience through a cast of characters rich in human emotion as they paint a vivid picture of a community populated by lively and varied regulars. For anyone who has lived in the UK, Cartwright’s writing is bang on as are the portrayals of the very real and penetrative stories that lie behind the everyman down the local. While certain moments may teeter on the verge of saccharin or melodrama, the stories seem penned from real lives and this keeps the narrative solid.

Two invites its audience, some literally on stage, to inhabit the pub as an old dear, “regular as clockwork,” enters stage left. She takes her quiet Guinness and shares that the booming laughter of the butcher down the shops and her drink are the small daily respites from the onerous burden of being the sole aging carer for her ailing husband. The beating heart of her reality lingers as she finishes up and slowly shuffles off.

The characters come and go, some successful and others less so. The lecherous Moth and girlfriend Maudie seem a tired effort; caricature rather than character. While the couple that come to watch the telly and eat packets of crisps prompted spontaneous pleasure and mid-act applause.

LeBlanc is more consistent with greater endurance in maintaining the marathon demands of these performances. The accents are at times slippery as eels with some clearly antipodean moments but there are a few good “loves” that wouldn’t be out of place in Sheffield. In the whole LeBlanc & Gelinas do not disappoint as they populate this pub with the bereft, the angry, the cowed and the hopeful.
When the root of the disharmony between the pub owners is revealed, it’s a sobering coffee at the end of a long night leaving a sharp taste that concludes the evening with the sense of a journey still to be taken.

Finally it’s the collective of portraits that lingers gently, emphasised by Cartwright’s landlord and lady remaining nameless to the end. And that’s the success of this production, some sketches outshine others but it’s the collective that makes it work. Everyday lives publicly moving forward while challenges are privately waged within. These ordinary, even common, lives will undoubtedly leave some uncomfortable and others cold –but to people watchers, voyeurs and those that enjoy social commentary, these curious characters and John P. Kelly’s subtle direction will sing.

Two
The Gladstone Theatre
until January 31, 2015.

Eye Spy: The Human Scale Free Screening at The ByTowne

Well worth the walk – Thursday, January 29th, The Human Scale will be screened FREE at the ByTowne Cinema on Rideau St. This film is one not to be missed by anyone who wants their neighbourhood and Ward to be the very best it can be. This movie is nothing short of informative, interesting and this screening will be followed by an expert panel discussion and Q&A.

the human scaleThe Human Scale examines how public spaces are used and designed – a particularly relevant discussion in Ottawa at the moment with the City’s desire to increase core density. The documentary poses the question of how city’s would look and work if they were designed for humans rather than for traffic. Exercises are performed whereby spaces are reclaimed; cars which allow personal property to occupy huge swaths of public space are displaced to accommodate individuals. In particular Time Square re-imagined provokes the shockingly obvious realisation in locals that there is indeed no “Square” at this world famous landmark!

the_human_scaleDanish Architect and Professor Jan Gehl who has inspired city planning in Copenhagen for 40 years argues that cities must be built to encourage human interaction, inclusion and intimacy.

Let’s hope this international movement inspires Ottawa to recognise the importance of incorporating the required space for cyclists, pedestrians and infrastructures that encourage human interaction alongside traffic planning to create a more attractive, vibrant and liveable Capital city.

ByTowne Cinema,
Thursday January 29th 6:30pm: doors open 6PM
Free: on a first-come basis

Sandy Hill Fun in Winter

Thanks to all the organisers of the Sandy Hill Winter Carnival that was a cracking good time for kids of all ages. We can barely wait til next year’s fun!

Winter Carnival Organizers Geri Blinick, Christine Aubry and Catherine Fortin-LeFaivre flank Mayor Jim Watson with Sandy Hill Seen's Jennifer Cavanagh

Winter Carnival Organizers Geri Blinick, Christine Aubry and Catherine Fortin-LeFaivre flank Mayor Jim Watson with Sandy Hill Seen’s Jennifer Cavanagh

Je Suis Charlie / Je Suis Ahmed

Nous sommes tous. We all are.

je suis

Centre ice: Ottawa Senators considering move to LeBreton Flats

Ottawa Senators eye a potential move to Lebreton Flats. Looks like the Sens are recognizing what so many of us already know – downtown is truly the place for events and happenings. Glebe has got Landsdowne place but this location will beat everything with great transit links to boot. Like a proper world class city. Let’s root for this to happen!

NAC faces front with new entrance on Confederation Square: Feds invest $110 M

We’ve long been saying that not having a glass entrance on Elgin so that guests can gaze toward Parliament is such a missed opportunity – but one that is about to be set right. Be great if they could incorporate a passage to both the Rideau Centre and to Sparks St. Liveable, walkable Ottawa.

Eye Spy: Great news for a #local favourite as Dalhousie St qualifies as Trad #Mainstreet

Wonderful news just in from the planning dept that Dalhousie St home to such local gems as Cylie Chocolates, Das Lokal, Mellos, Wunderkammer and more will be designated as a traditional main street.

I hope our councillor takes it a step further and throws in a couple of parklets and bike corrals to further enhance the charm of this stretch.

Read more here in today’s Citizen article