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Twilight Saga gives young Vancouver actors a taste of celebrity

Photo: Handout

Feature published in the Vancouver Sun February 24, 2011.

BY AMANDA ASH, VANCOUVER SUN

“It’s a little bit strange sometimes when you’re not expecting it,” 16-year-old Jodelle Ferland giggles. “You’re just walking down the street and somebody comes up to you and knows who you are.”

For the Vancouver-based, Nanaimo-born actress, playing Bree Tanner in The Twilight Saga: Eclipse has turned her into somewhat of a teenage celebrity.

Ferland is just one of many B.C.-based actors who have seen a boost in their profiles — and careers — thanks to the vampiric pop-culture phenomenon, which was filmed in B.C.

Based on Stephenie Meyer’s four teen romance novels, the Twilight movie adaptations showcase some of B.C.’s considerable acting talent, as well as its natural beauty. The franchise, which has achieved epic commercial success since its inception, has spawned everything from life-size Edward Cullen wall decals to an official Twilight Convention Tour to a cult of crazed fans, often referred to as “Twi-hards.”

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Watch for these B.C. actors in the Twilight series

Jodelle Ferland, a Nanaimo-born and Vancouver-based actress, appears in the third Twilight film, Eclipse. She plays Bree Tanner, a young girl turned vampire by the vengeful Victoria in order to fight the Cullen clan …

Cameron Bright is a Nanaimo-based actor who plays the role of Volturi vampire Alec in The Twilight Saga. He can be seen in New Moon, Eclipse, and the newest instalment, Breaking Dawn …

Leah Gibson is a Victoria-raised and Vancouver-based actress who appears in the third Twilight film, Eclipse. She plays the seductive vampiress Nettie, who ultimately turns Jasper (Jackson Rathbone) into a vampire …

Tyson Houseman was born in Edmonton and moved to Vancouver in 2008. He stars as the werewolf Quil Ateara in New Moon, Eclipse and the forthcoming Breaking Dawn …

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Christine Fellows—Femmes de chez nous

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Review and interview published in Exclaim!

By Amanda Ash

Take a black-and-white photograph and bring it to life — that’s what Winnipeg, MB’s Christine Fellows did with her fifth and most innovative release, Femmes de chez nous. The 13-track record and accompanying DVD, Reliquary/Reliquaire, were written during, and inspired by, Fellows’ six-month residency at Le Musée de Saint-Boniface. Femmes de chez nous, which translates to “our gals,” celebrates Franco-Manitoban history, delving into the lives of nuns, a mermaid, a troubled runaway and a small-town stenographer crowned beauty queen. Some characters are real, some imagined, but all are connected through their experiences. Fellows memorializes her characters, telling their stories of strength and fortitude via brilliant, theatrical instrumentals. The lyrics of “Dragonfly” unsettle the soul, while the title track announces Fellow’s sympathy; she holds these women close to her, as if they’ve been placed in a locket and worn around her neck. On “Reversed Arrow,” Fellows sings: “We trip and cringe and cry/We hold our hands up to the light/We speak in languages and gestures just like yours.” Her loving voice rises above the background gang vocals and serenading violin, bringing together two languages and listeners through songs of decidedly different natures yet universally similar sentiments.

Who are the femmes de chez nous?
That’s why I wrote the record: to express these people, real and imagined, in song instead of writing stories about each or making up people. Femmes de chez nous is actually based on a book of the same name, published by a small house here in Manitoba. It’s this fantastic book; it’s basically a photograph, with a little caption and a brief history on all of these women from the French community here. I just took that format and borrowed some of the real women’s names and captions that went with them.

What kind of connection did you feel with these characters?
The museum [I spent a six-month residency at] used to be a convent. It was the home of these incredibly strong women. The first four nuns came by canoe from Montreal in the 1800s, so I felt the spirit of that building was very female and I wanted to locate the work right from that point — from those first four nuns. It’s funny because my last record was all about solitary characters and playing on that word spinster, and this was a happy accident, coming upon the idea of working on the history of nuns. I’m a completely secular person. I wanted to memorialize these women before we forget.

As you mentioned, your last album,
Nevertheless, drew from the overarching theme of spinsters. Why the focus on women?
When I was in my 20s, I rejected the idea of being a feminist. I thought we were post-feminist, and by saying that it felt like a step backward in time. In my wise old years, I’ve come to realize that being a feminist is more necessary now than ever. I never, ever would’ve predicted that we would be going backwards instead of forwards, as far as women and their sense of self and empowerment. Especially in music, women are infantilized. [My music] is not a confrontational thing; it’s more about me and my work and the way I present myself, musically. It’s more from a position of strength.

Did you initially attempt to tell the stories lyrically and then add the arrangements or was it the other way around?
It’s never the same — each song comes from its own place. This project was very much research-inspired. In fact, the very first day of my residency, going to the museum, I was on the bus and I wrote a list of everything that I was interested in that I might want to write about and damned if I didn’t write about 12 of the 15 things I wanted to research. I feel like half of the work is being done by your subconscious all the time. Most of the residency, I just sat there in the building. There was a lot of research and reading, but everything just kept springing out. Writing songs is just sitting there, waiting for them to show themselves. There is no first, but you know when you’re on the path.

Your album has an accompanying DVD, Reliquary/Reliquaire, inspired by, and filmed at, Le Musée de Saint Boniface, where you also did your six-month residency. What is a reliquary?
Reliquaries are actual physical remains, like bones, teeth or hair of the saints, if you have a saint that is your primary [object of] worship. You actually carry a piece of them with you, either in a locket or a little shadow box. Most of these, in the Catholic tradition, are super-decorated, and in the centre is this tiny fragment of bone. It’s really fantastical [to be] around something so earthly or grotesque. That’s why I called [the DVD] that. At the heart of everything I love, whether it’s visual art or books, there is something about it that is absurdly human, tactile and kind of grotesque.

Why did you decide to make it a bilingual album?
This is the first time for me. I’m not a native French speaker, but I spent part of my childhood living in the south of France. I hadn’t actually spoken French in years, so this was very amazing to go back into that as an older person; it was a great experiment. The museum is in one of the oldest French Canadian settlements in Winnipeg, so I had to do it. I knew right from the outset and I was totally terrified. But I love it when people who come from other language backgrounds speak English to me, because it’s so surprising and amazing to me how people use languages that aren’t their own. They come up with amazing ways of saying things and expressing them. Whatever, we’re just all communicating.

History is a point of interest for you. Do you see yourself continuing to explore other facets of history on future albums?
I don’t know. I wouldn’t even say it’s history that’s the primary focus; it’s the people. I will probably continue to write about people. I’m really fascinated by them. Maybe there will be people who are no longer living, which will make them historical, but definitely the humans, I’m going to keep writing about them.
(Six Shooter)

Twilight stars Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart arrive in Vancouver

Photo courtesy of Ken Redekop

Story published in the Vancouver Sun February 21, 2011.

BY AMANDA ASH, VANCOUVER SUN

Local Twihards can start swooning again after Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart, the two stars of the blockbuster vampire series The Twilight Saga, flew in Monday afternoon to Vancouver International Airport.

The two onscreen lovebirds — and rumoured real-life couple — were spotted in the international terminal, arriving to film the latest instalment of the Twilight series, Breaking Dawn.

They flew in on a private jet and were escorted to customs.

After some 30 minutes, Stewart, who plays Bella Swan, was first to leave the terminal. She was wearing sunglasses and looked casual in jeans. She ran out to her waiting vehicle, shielding her head from waiting paparazzi with a jacket.

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Melissa Etheridge’s fearless love captivates her devoted fans

Photo courtesy of the Vancouver Sun

Story published in the Vancouver Sun February 18, 2011.

BY AMANDA ASH, VANCOUVER SUN

Melissa Etheridge isn’t afraid to put fear in its place.

Of course, we’ve known this since the early ‘90s. Ever since the raspy-voiced Kansas native rocked her way onto the charts in 1993 with her breakthrough recording Yes I Am, fans and critics alike have known she packs no-nonsense punch in her songs and personal beliefs.

Over the years, however, the openly gay American artist and gay rights activist has stumbled upon a few concrete roadblocks. Etheridge was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2004. She battled Proposition 8 in 2008, which banned same-sex marriages in her current home state of California. And last spring, she split from her longtime partner, Tammy Lynn Michaels.

Some may question whether such a world of pain would soften the Grammy Award-winning artist’s defiant vocals, or dampen her triumphant stage presence.  If Etheridge beckons us to “come to her window,” will we still feel compelled to go?

The answer is yes.

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Vancouver Wellness Show offers solace to a stressed out planet

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Feature published in the Vancouver Sun February 16, 2011.

BY AMANDA ASH, VANCOUVER SUN

If you can’t live without checking Facebook, Twitter or your email every few minutes, then the 2011 Wellness Show might be for you.

This year marks the 19th anniversary of the annual health- and holistic-oriented trade show, but instead of celebrating with a congratulatory social media status update, producer Jeanette Savard hopes patrons will disconnect the BlackBerry for a few hours and connect with themselves instead.

“I think that we lead much more stressful lives today, and we have to look at ways of incorporating various lifestyle components to de-stress ourselves and maintain a more balanced lifestyle. I think we shouldn’t lose track of that,” Savard says.

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Vancouver Wellness Show: Health is just a tweet away

The kitchen can be a scary place for some families, but Theresa Albert hopes she can banish the Boogeyman from home cooking and personal nutrition.

According to the Registered Nutritional Consulting Practitioner, who is also the author of multiple cookbooks and host of Food Network Canada’s show Just One Bite, there is a lot of food information and misinformation out there that can become overwhelming.

The Toronto-based chef says good eating may sound daunting, but in reality, it’s not that hard to be healthy. At the Wellness Show, Albert plans to demonstrate on the Celebrity Cooking Stage that turning on the stove can be fun, fast, nutritious, affordable and, yes, still taste good.

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Vancouver Wellness Show: Finding tranquility on a karmic journey

Zhi Gang Sha believes we can heal ourselves, and each other, with the help of a few simple words.

Sha is a medical doctor in China, a doctor of traditional Chinese medicine in China and Canada, a Grandmaster of Tai Chi, Qi Gong, I Ching and Feng Shui. He’s also a certified acupuncturist in Vancouver, and a New York Times best-selling author.

According to the world-renowned spiritual teacher, the Divine Soul Song called Love, Peace, and Harmony, which he will teach during his workshop at The Wellness Show, can transform every aspect of our lives.

“This Divine Soul Song carries a divine frequency and vibration to transform the frequency and vibration of humanity and Mother Earth,” he explains. “It carries forgiveness which brings inner joy and inner peace; carries divine compassion which boosts energy, stamina, vitality and immunity; and it carries divine light, which heals, prevents sickness and transforms relationships and finances.”

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Success is the icing on the Cake

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Story published in the Vancouver Sun on February 4, 2011.

BY AMANDA ASH, VANCOUVER SUN

“I can’t tell you how happy I am that we weren’t squashed like a bug.”

John McCrea sounds thrilled. Over the phone from a hotel room in Memphis, Tenn., the vocalist for the Sacramento-based alt-rock band Cake is taking in the latest news surrounding their new album, Showroom Of Compassion.

The disc, which features Cake’s famously eclectic and minimalist sound, reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200 charts in its debut week. Sure, the band knocked Taylor Swift down a notch, but that’s not really McCrea’s cause for celebration.

Cake has what McCrea calls the “dubious” honour of being the lowest-selling debut album to claim the top spot ever, with a mere 44,000 copies sold.

“I think it’s perfect in some ways, because we’ve never been about bigness or No. 1 or anything, so I think it’s a perfect No. 1 that also sets the record for smallest No. 1 album,” he says with a laugh.

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PIC: Suri Cruise tries on lipstick!

Article features reporting by myself.

Vancouver singer-songwriter Louise Burns sets a new musical fire

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Story published in the Vancouver Sun on February 1, 2011.

BY AMANDA ASH, VANCOUVER SUN

Louise Burns has played sidekick for pretty much her entire musical career. She’s Batman’s Robin. Maverick’s Goose. Han Solo’s Chewbacca. From the age of 11 when she co-founded the all-girl, Juno-nominated band Lillix to her present day involvement in groups such as The Blue Violets, the Vancouver-based singer-songwriter has floated by relatively unnoticed, happily slapping her bass while dancing on the fringes of the spotlight.

Burns is the ultimate wingwoman, but with the release of her debut solo album Mellow Drama, she’s ready to graduate from Tonto to Lone Ranger.

“It’s a bit nerve wracking. I haven’t ever had this much attention paid to just me before,” Burns says with a laugh. “It kind of freaks me out. But it’s new and interesting and it’s fun; I love being in control as far as music goes. Now I’m in charge of my own stuff.”

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Pan-global music scales cultural walls

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Story published in the Vancouver Sun on January 26, 2011.

BY AMANDA ASH, VANCOUVER SUN

Cultural boundaries don’t exist within Kiran Ahluwalia’s music.

The India-born, Canadian-raised vocalist and composer holds four releases under her belt, which creatively melt sounds ranging from Portuguese fado to Celtic fiddle with her traditional Indian ghazals and Punjabi folk songs.

The Juno Award-winning artist’s fifth and latest album, Aam Zameen: Common Ground, is no different. With Common Ground, Ahluwalia continues to knock down the partitions that separate us from each other, all while connecting audiences with new amalgamations of music.

“I don’t adhere to the rules and boundaries of my own genre,” says an assertive Ahluwalia, who now lives in New York. “I’m a person who has citizenship in two cultures, India and Canada, but I’m not bound by those two cultures. I’m a citizen of the world and the entire world is there for me to be influenced by.”

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Us Weekly’s Hot Pics!: Suri Cruise

Published in Us Weekly, issue 832, January 24, 2011. Features reporting by myself.