e tuesday, november 20, 2007 the daily news, · pdf fileian guitarist/composer sergio assad,...

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A13 The Daily News, Kamloops TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2007 565783 Wednesday, November 21 @ 7pm Tickets start at $19.00 (plus s/c) and are available at the Interior Savings Centre box office or online at www.ticketmaster.ca or call 250-374-9200. To purchase group or scout tickets, please visit www.harlemglobetrotters.com for more info. TOMORROW NIGHT Finnie TUESDAYS at the Paramount ALL SEATS $ 5 00 It’s a fin to get in! www.landmarkcinemas.com CINE - INFO 372-3911 MOVIES “FINNIE” TUESDAY... ALL SEATS $5.00 –“SUPER SAVER” MATINEES – ADULTS & YOUTH $5.00 • SENIORS & CHILDREN $5.00 567733 Paramount theatre 503 VICTORIA STREET EVENING ADMISSIONS ADULTS $8.50 & YOUTHS (13-17) $6.00 SENIORS & CHILDREN (UNDER 12) $5.00 INTO THE WILD - Tues & Wed at 7:30pm Only! Thurs at 9:00pm only! (148 mins) AUGUST RUSH - Starts Wednesday / 21 st Wed & Thurs at 7:00 & 9:10pm (112 mins) DAN IN REAL LIFE - Tuesday at 7:00 & 9:00 pm Tuesday is the last run of this show. (98 mins) 566749 DIGITAL SOUND CINEPLEX.COM 567688 SAW IV – 7:20, 9:30 B.C. Warning: Explicit violence AMERICAN GANGSTER – 6:50, 7:35, 9:50 B.C. Warning: Violence, drug use, coarse language MR. MAGORIUM’S WONDER EMPORIUM – 7:00, 9:15 NO ADVISORY BEOWULF – 7:25, 9:55 B.C. Warning: Violence BEE MOVIE – 7:05, 9:20 NO ADVISORY LIONS FOR LAMBS – 7:10, 9:25 B.C. Warning: Coarse language, violence FRED CLAUS – 7:15, 9:45 B.C. Warning: Violence STARS & STROLLERS - TUES. NOV. 20TH AT 1PM - BEE MOVIE & MR MAGORIUM’S WONDER EMPORIUM AMERICAN GANGSTER SHOWS AT 7:35 ONLY WED. AND THURS. ENTERTAINMENT FIND THE PICK OF THE LITTER IN THE DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIEDS! The Kamloops Pipe Band Society is holding their Annual General Meeting, on November 21, 2007, at the North Shore Community Center on Cottonwood Ave. it will start at 6:30 pm. All members welcome, please come out and have your voice heard. We will be voting in a new executive, and discussing events and new business, for the upcoming year. Hope to see you all out! For more info., please call 573-2544. 568223 By MIKE YOUDS Daily News Staff Reporter A bout 1,500 concertgoers in White Rock and Kamloops queued up to hear Kamloops Symphony Orchestra’s Spanish Flair in concert with classical gui- tar soloist Daniel Bolshoy over the week- end. Both concerts were virtual sellouts, a testament to the broad appeal of music that wears its heart on its sleeve and a soloist who thrives in the spotlight. The genial Bolshoy — an Israeli-Cana- dian of Russian extraction — introduces his pieces with a casual demeanour. He blends humour with history, cutting through the usual formality of symphonic tradition to help audiences better appreciate the mu- sic. Musical director Bruce Dunn, who nor- mally does the same, thrust the micro- phone straight to his soloist to usher in Concerto #1 in D for guitar and orchestra by Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco. The Jewish composer wrote the serene concerto in homage to his native Tuscany when persecution forced him to leave Italy under Fascist rule. Bolshoy offered the alternative concert title of “Don Quixote meets Star Wars,” a reference to the influence on contemporary film com- poser John Williams (Star Wars, Fiddler on the Roof), who was a student of Castelnuovo-Tedesco’s. Careful attention to acoustical balance and amplification evidently paid off. Every note was resonant and defined as Bolshoy’s hands massaged his guitar strings. He immerses himself in the mu- sic, physically projecting the depth of its emotion with reverie while his virtuosity flows as though it were an instinctive force. The concert opened with orchestra only playing Sinfonia a Gran Orquesta by Juan Crisostomo De Arriaga, a Spanish com- poser and child prodigy often compared to Mozart. He was just shy of 20 when he died. What makes Arriaga’s musical legacy all the more remarkable is that it sounds classically European, not Spanish. His overture, Los Esclavos Felices (The Happy Slaves), which opened the second half of the concert, was simply beautiful, again a richly cosmopolitan mixture of influ- ences. He wrote the opera at age 13 and only the overture survives. Joaquin Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aran- juez, perhaps the best known piece in the concert, was also a highlight of the evening. Bolshoy’s solo during the second movement, Adagio, was filled with a pathos spoken through the universal lan- guage of guitar. Received a standing ovation, the soloist returned to perform two encore selec- tions, ending with a jazzy waltz by Brazil- ian guitarist/composer Sergio Assad, and a friendly farewell wave from the edge of the stage. Right on the heels of this success, the KSO presents Viennese Landscapes, the second in its chamber series, on Saturday at Calvary Community Church. Bolshoy earns bravo with Spanish Flair DANIEL BOLSHOY REVIEW By LEE-ANNE GOODMAN The Canadian Press TORONTO — The ongoing screen- writers strike in the United States has had an undeniable impact in Canada — American shows filming here are shutting down due to a lack of scripts, throwing hundreds out of work amid fears that a prolonged strike could damage the entire North American film and TV industry. But there’s been one bright spot on an otherwise bleak horizon: Ameri- can broadcasters are eagerly eyeing Canadian shows as diverse as Little Mosque on the Prairie, Durham Coun- ty and The Border, a new CBC drama that premieres in January. “We’ve actually had inquiries from the U.S. networks about shows that we’ve either produced or are going in- to production on, so it’s been interest- ing — they’re looking for alterna- tives,” Kirstine Layfield, head of net- work programming for CBC, said Monday. “The U.S. is the hardest nut to crack. They are the most parochial of markets in the world — they buy no British, no Canadian, no anything. Be- cause they’re so obviously self-reliant, when this happens they all of a sud- den have to look outside themselves, and that’s what’s happening right now.” Except for The Border, Layfield did- n’t want to name the CBC shows piquing the interest of American broadcasters due to ongoing negotia- tions. But Mary Darling, head of West- wind Productions, says Little Mosque is getting some attention. She disputed a recent assertion by the president of the Writers Guild of Canada that Canadian producers are “dreaming in Technicolor” and enter- taining some “weird pipe dream” if they think American networks are go- ing to buy their shows. “It’s not a pipe dream,” Darling said, adding that the longer the strike drags on, the more it could benefit Canadian producers eager to crack the massive and lucrative American market. “In fact, the possibility does exist. There are two different networks looking at Little Mosque right now. We’ve heard from people I never ex- pected to hear from directly … there’s been a definite increase in interest since the strike.” CTV programming president Su- sanne Boyce said American broadcast- ers have long been interested in Cor- ner Gas, and says negotiations are continuing throughout the strike. Where does that leave the writers for some of those Canadian shows? The Writers Guild of Canada and the Writers Guild of America share 265 dual members — mostly Canadian writers in the U.S. who are now on strike. Hundreds of other WGC mem- bers in Canada are standing in soli- darity with their American counter- parts. In Vancouver, the Writers Guild of America is striking against television shows being shot there, including Bionic Woman, Battlestar Galactica — both of which have ceased production — and Smallville. Those shut-downs have put about 200 people out of work. LONDON — Heather Mills McCartney got steamed up over milk and other dair y products while her estranged husband, Paul McCartney, joined a more modest effort to save a local post office. Mills McCartney, 39, fo- cused on the environmental impact of deforestation and livestock on global warming, citing figures from animal rights group Vegetarians In- ternational Voice for Animals (Viva!). “When (Viva!) told me it was 18 per cent, that’s more than all global transport, I was in shock. Airplanes only bring three per cent, while they are being picked on with taxes,” she said Monday. She asked people to “cut down on one or two meat and dairy and fish dishes a week.” “We are the only species that drinks another person’s milk, so why aren’t we drink- ing rat’s milk, or dog’s milk, or cat’s milk, that’s how crazy it is,” she said. “It’s mad that we are having cow’s milk. Even cows don’t drink it after one year but we continue forever.” She has posed for a poster for the Viva! campaign, head- lined: “Hey, Meaty, you’re making me so hot!” Meanwhile, Paul McCart- ney, 65, threw his support to a campaign to prevent the closing of a post office in Low- er Heswall, five kilometres southwest of Liverpool, near one of his homes. “This village post office is a vital part of local community life and as such should be saved for future generations to cherish. Its 100-year histo- ry should not be cast aside lightly,” the ex-Beatle said in a message read outside the post office by his brother Mike. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SYDNEY, Australia — Nicole Kidman told a courtroom Monday how she was reduced to tears and feared a car acci- dent after a celebrity photog- rapher pursued her two years ago. Kidman, who divides her time between Los Angeles and her hometown of Sydney, Aus- tralia, was testifying in the photographer’s defamation suit against a Sydney newspa- per that slammed him for al- legedly hounding the Oscar- winning actress. Kidman wore a grey knee- length skirt, cream-coloured blouse and pale pink cardigan. She had her long, curly hair drawn up in a loose bun and appeared calm and composed during the session in the New South Wales state Supreme Court. Her poise contrasted sharply with her description of the ride from her house in Sydney to her parents’ home in another part of the city for dinner on Jan. 23, 2005. Kidman described hunker- ing down in a car’s back seat — leaning over in her chair in the witness stand to demon- strate — to try to avoid being spotted by photographer Jamie Fawcett. She said the trip quickly turned into a hair-raising chase as a vehicle carrying Fawcett and another vehicle, believed to contain his assis- tant, lurched through traffic around Kidman’s car. “I was frightened and I was worried there was going to be an accident,” Kidman said. Kidman said she was “really, really scared” during the car ride and that she was “in tears and distressed” by the time she reached her parents’ house. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS American networks eye shows in Canada WRITERS’ STRIKE McCartney’s ex calls for cutting out meat, dairy HEATHER MILLS Kidman says paparazzi left her in tears KIDMAN

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A13The Daily News, Kamloops TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2007

5657

83

Wednesday, November 21 @ 7pm

Tickets start at $19.00 (plus s/c) and are available at the InteriorSavings Centre box office or online at www.ticketmaster.ca

or call 250-374-9200. To purchase group or scout tickets,please visit www.harlemglobetrotters.com for more info.

TOMORROW NIGHT

FinnieTUESDAYS

at theParamount

ALL SEATS$500

It’s a finto get in!

www.landmarkcinemas.com

CINE - INFO 372-3911

MOVIES

“FINNIE” TUESDAY... ALL SEATS $5.00–“SUPER SAVER” MATINEES –

ADULTS & YOUTH $5.00 • SENIORS & CHILDREN $5.00 5677

33

Paramount theatre503 VICTORIA STREET

EVENING ADMISSIONSADULTS $8.50 & YOUTHS (13-17) $6.00SENIORS & CHILDREN (UNDER 12) $5.00

INTO THE WILD - Tues & Wed at 7:30pm Only!Thurs at 9:00pm only! (148 mins)

AUGUST RUSH - Starts Wednesday / 21st

Wed & Thurs at 7:00 & 9:10pm (112 mins)

DAN IN REAL LIFE - Tuesday at 7:00 & 9:00 pmTuesday is the last run of this show. (98 mins)

5667

49

������������������ ���������������������������� ������������ DIGITAL SOUND CINEPLEX.COM

5676

88

SAW IV – 7:20, 9:30B.C. Warning: Explicit violence

AMERICAN GANGSTER – 6:50, 7:35, 9:50B.C. Warning: Violence, drug use, coarse language

MR. MAGORIUM’S WONDER EMPORIUM – 7:00, 9:15NO ADVISORYBEOWULF – 7:25, 9:55B.C. Warning: Violence

BEE MOVIE – 7:05, 9:20NO ADVISORY

LIONS FOR LAMBS – 7:10, 9:25B.C. Warning: Coarse language, violence

FRED CLAUS – 7:15, 9:45B.C. Warning: Violence

STARS & STROLLERS - TUES. NOV. 20TH AT 1PM - BEE MOVIE & MR MAGORIUM’SWONDER EMPORIUM

AMERICAN GANGSTER SHOWS AT 7:35 ONLY WED. AND THURS.

ENTERTAINMENT

FIND THE PICK OF THE LITTER IN THE DAILY NEWS CLASSIFIEDS!

The Kamloops Pipe Band Society isholding their Annual General Meeting,on November 21, 2007, at the NorthShore Community Center on CottonwoodAve. it will start at 6:30 pm.All members welcome, please come outand have your voice heard.We will be voting in a new executive,and discussing events and newbusiness, for the upcoming year.Hope to see you all out!For more info., please call 573-2544.

5682

23

By MIKE YOUDSDaily News Staff Reporter

About 1,500 concertgoers in WhiteRock and Kamloops queued up to

hear Kamloops Symphony Orchestra’sSpanish Flair in concert with classical gui-tar soloist Daniel Bolshoy over the week-end.

Both concerts were virtual sellouts, atestament to the broad appeal of musicthat wears its heart on its sleeve and asoloist who thrives in the spotlight.

The genial Bolshoy — an Israeli-Cana-dian of Russian extraction — introduces

his pieces with a casualdemeanour. He blendshumour with history,cutting through the

usual formality of symphonic tradition tohelp audiences better appreciate the mu-sic.

Musical director Bruce Dunn, who nor-mally does the same, thrust the micro-phone straight to his soloist to usher inConcerto #1 in D for guitar and orchestraby Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco.

The Jewish composer wrote the sereneconcerto in homage to his native Tuscanywhen persecution forced him to leaveItaly under Fascist rule. Bolshoy offeredthe alternative concert title of “DonQuixote meets Star Wars,” a reference tothe influence on contemporary film com-poser John Williams (Star Wars, Fiddleron the Roof), who was a student ofCastelnuovo-Tedesco’s.

Careful attention to acoustical balanceand amplification evidently paid off.Every note was resonant and defined asBolshoy’s hands massaged his guitarstrings. He immerses himself in the mu-sic, physically projecting the depth of itsemotion with reverie while his virtuosityflows as though it were an instinctiveforce.

The concert opened with orchestra onlyplaying Sinfonia a Gran Orquesta by JuanCrisostomo De Arriaga, a Spanish com-poser and child prodigy often comparedto Mozart. He was just shy of 20 when hedied.

What makes Arriaga’s musical legacy allthe more remarkable is that it soundsclassically European, not Spanish. Hisoverture, Los Esclavos Felices (The HappySlaves), which opened the second half ofthe concert, was simply beautiful, again a

richly cosmopolitan mixture of influ-ences. He wrote the opera at age 13 andonly the overture survives.

Joaquin Rodrigo’s Concierto de Aran-juez, perhaps the best known piece in theconcert, was also a highlight of theevening. Bolshoy’s solo during the secondmovement, Adagio, was filled with apathos spoken through the universal lan-guage of guitar.

Received a standing ovation, the soloistreturned to perform two encore selec-tions, ending with a jazzy waltz by Brazil-ian guitarist/composer Sergio Assad, anda friendly farewell wave from the edge ofthe stage.

Right on the heels of this success, theKSO presents Viennese Landscapes, thesecond in its chamber series, on Saturdayat Calvary Community Church.

Bolshoy earns bravo with Spanish Flair

DANIEL BOLSHOY

REVIEW

By LEE-ANNE GOODMANThe Canadian Press

TORONTO — The ongoing screen-writers strike in the United States hashad an undeniable impact in Canada— American shows filming here areshutting down due to a lack of scripts,throwing hundreds out of work amidfears that a prolonged strike coulddamage the entire North Americanfilm and TV industry.

But there’s been one bright spot onan otherwise bleak horizon: Ameri-can broadcasters are eagerly eyeingCanadian shows as diverse as LittleMosque on the Prairie, Durham Coun-ty and The Border, a new CBC dramathat premieres in January.

“We’ve actually had inquiries fromthe U.S. networks about shows thatwe’ve either produced or are going in-to production on, so it’s been interest-ing — they’re looking for alterna-tives,” Kirstine Layfield, head of net-work programming for CBC, saidMonday.

“The U.S. is the hardest nut tocrack. They are the most parochial ofmarkets in the world — they buy noBritish, no Canadian, no anything. Be-cause they’re so obviously self-reliant,when this happens they all of a sud-den have to look outside themselves,and that’s what’s happening rightnow.”

Except for The Border, Layfield did-n’t want to name the CBC showspiquing the interest of Americanbroadcasters due to ongoing negotia-tions. But Mary Darling, head of West-wind Productions, says Little Mosqueis getting some attention.

She disputed a recent assertion bythe president of the Writers Guild ofCanada that Canadian producers are“dreaming in Technicolor” and enter-taining some “weird pipe dream” ifthey think American networks are go-ing to buy their shows.

“It’s not a pipe dream,” Darling said,adding that the longer the strikedrags on, the more it could benefitCanadian producers eager to crackthe massive and lucrative Americanmarket.

“In fact, the possibility does exist.There are two different networkslooking at Little Mosque right now.We’ve heard from people I never ex-pected to hear from directly … there’sbeen a definite increase in interestsince the strike.”

CTV programming president Su-sanne Boyce said American broadcast-ers have long been interested in Cor-ner Gas, and says negotiations arecontinuing throughout the strike.

Where does that leave the writersfor some of those Canadian shows?The Writers Guild of Canada and theWriters Guild of America share 265dual members — mostly Canadianwriters in the U.S. who are now onstrike. Hundreds of other WGC mem-bers in Canada are standing in soli-darity with their American counter-parts.

In Vancouver, the Writers Guild ofAmerica is striking against televisionshows being shot there, includingBionic Woman, Battlestar Galactica —both of which have ceased production— and Smallville. Those shut-downshave put about 200 people out ofwork.

LONDON — Heather MillsMcCartney got steamed upover milk and other dairyproducts while her estrangedhusband, Paul McCartney,joined a more modest effortto save a local post office.

Mills McCartney, 39, fo-cused on the environmentalimpact of deforestation andlivestock on global warming,citing figures from animalrights group Vegetarians In-ternational Voice for Animals(Viva!).

“When (Viva!) told me itwas 18 per cent, that’s morethan all global transport, Iwas in shock. Airplanes onlybring three per cent, whilethey are being picked on withtaxes,” she said Monday.

She asked people to “cutdown on one or two meat anddairy and fish dishes a week.”

“We are the only speciesthat drinks another person’smilk, so why aren’t we drink-ing rat’s milk, or dog’s milk,or cat’s milk, that’s how crazyit is,” she said.

“It’s mad that we are havingcow’s milk. Even cows don’tdrink it after one year but wecontinue forever.”

She has posed for a posterfor the Viva! campaign, head-lined: “Hey, Meaty, you’remaking me so hot!”

Meanwhile, Paul McCart-ney, 65, threw his support toa campaign to prevent theclosing of a post office in Low-er Heswall, five kilometressouthwest of Liverpool, nearone of his homes.

“This village post office is avital part of local communitylife and as such should besaved for future generationsto cherish. Its 100-year histo-ry should not be cast asidelightly,” the ex-Beatle said ina message read outside thepost office by his brotherMike.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SYDNEY, Australia — NicoleKidman told a courtroomMonday how she was reducedto tears and feared a car acci-dent after a celebrity photog-rapher pursued her two yearsago.

Kidman, who divides hertime between Los Angeles andher hometown of Sydney, Aus-tralia, was testifying in thephotographer’s defamationsuit against a Sydney newspa-per that slammed him for al-legedly hounding the Oscar-winning actress.

Kidman wore a grey knee-length skirt, cream-colouredblouse and pale pink cardigan.She had her long, curly hair

drawn up in a loose bun andappeared calm and composedduring the session in the New

Sout h Walesstate SupremeCourt.

H e r p o i s ec o n t r a s t e dshar ply wit hher descriptiono f t h e r i d efrom her housein Sydney toh e r p a r e n t s ’

home in another part of thecity for dinner on Jan. 23,2005.

Kidman described hunker-ing down in a car’s back seat— leaning over in her chair in

the witness stand to demon-strate — to try to avoid beingspotted by photog rapherJamie Fawcett.

She said the trip quicklyturned into a hair-raisingchase as a vehicle carryingFawcett and another vehicle,believed to contain his assis-tant, lurched through trafficaround Kidman’s car.

“I was frightened and I wasworried there was going to bean accident,” Kidman said.

Kidman said she was “really,really scared” during the carride and that she was “in tearsand distressed” by the time shereached her parents’ house.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Americannetworkseye showsin Canada

WRITERS’ STRIKE

McCartney’sex calls forcutting outmeat, dairy

HEATHER MILLS

Kidman says paparazzi left her in tears

KIDMAN