Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Stickboy Opera Opens In Vancouver To Take On Bullying Based On Poet's Life

The Canadian Press , 30 Oct, 2014 01:54 PM
    VANCOUVER - Adolescence can be full of drama and cruelty. So can opera, making "Stickboy" an artistic expression of both.
     
    The new work about school bullying opened to positive reviews in the city and will run until Nov. 7, with hopes of having the production tour high schools throughout British Columbia.
     
    It tells the story of poet Shane Koyczan, who wrote the libretto based on his experience of being tormented and belittled at school before eventually becoming a bully himself.
     
    Composer Neil Weisensel, who was commissioned by Vancouver Opera to write the score, said his job was to tell the story musically. He wrote the score in just seven months.
     
    "I do write quickly," he said. "I moved everything else I was doing off to the side and concentrated on this. The libretto leant itself very easily to being set to music. I had three weeks to come up with the first act. Then I had another two months to come up with acts two and three."
     
    He delivered the finished score, with orchestration and arrangements, on his Aug. 11 deadline.
     
    Kids picked on Koyczan from the age of 10 when he lived in Yellowknife, N.W.T. By the time he had moved to Penticton, B.C., he was the bully. His grandmother, who raised him, is one of the few sympathetic characters in a harrowing story. The opera's title refers to an imaginary being made of sticks of dynamite, embodying the central character's rage.
     
    "Stickboy" is a landmark undertaking in a couple of ways. Few opera companies commission new work, relying on proven crowd-drawing favourites for most of their repertoire. Its subject matter is also new. Both are aimed at getting new audiences for the art form.
     
    "I had a friend fly in from Winnipeg who's a naturopathic doctor, kind of an everyday joe," Weisensel said. "He is my target audience — somebody who's never been to theatre before. He had an incredible theatrical experience."
     
    But there's also something there for the opera diehards — beautiful Puccini-like melodies and big voices singing together with an orchestra, Weisensel said.
     
    "My daughter is eight. She's coming. There's one bad word, said twice. I think there's a whole new audience that could potentially be interested in opera because of this work."
     
    Weisensel had to create more than music for the production.
     
    "There was a sound design, which I did as well. It was like writing an opera and scoring a film at the same time. All the animations in the show lend themselves to a cinematic treatment, so I provided a soundscape and sound design, on top of what the orchestra was doing."
     
    Writing a new opera let Weisensel draw from a wider range of sources than most composers because of the opera's subject matter and the musical history preceding it.
     
    "As composers today, we're lucky," he said. "Fifty years ago, you couldn't have written a score like this. Your contemporaries would've ostracized you. It had to be avant garde, it had to be serial. You couldn't write anything that had a tune. Now we've moved even beyond the post-modernist.
     
    "I think Vancouver Opera is a visionary company in Canada for doing a work like this," Weisensel said. "They're swinging for the fences with this production, putting everything they have into it, and I really appreciate that. I think the public will appreciate that, too."
     
    Vancouver Opera spokeswoman Selina Rajani said the company would like to see the work go beyond concert halls or theatres and into high schools. 
     
    "We're looking at putting together a road company and editing it down," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Today on the Hill: Diplomats, academics talk about Harper at the UN

    Today on the Hill: Diplomats, academics talk about Harper at the UN
    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Stephen Harper is in the Big Apple today, where he'll speak to the United Nations General Assembly this week for the first time in four years.

    Today on the Hill: Diplomats, academics talk about Harper at the UN

    Analysis of Russia sanctions: Canada's toughest, but not when it comes to oil

    Analysis of Russia sanctions: Canada's toughest, but not when it comes to oil
    NEW YORK - For all its much-touted toughness in imposing economic sanctions against Russia, Canada has been significantly more timid against one particular target: the oil industry.

    Analysis of Russia sanctions: Canada's toughest, but not when it comes to oil

    Vancouver Restaurateur To Be Sentenced After Pleading Guilty To Using Hidden Camera

    Vancouver Restaurateur To Be Sentenced After Pleading Guilty To Using Hidden Camera
    VANCOUVER - The former co-owner of a now-closed Vancouver restaurant will be sentenced in December after pleading guilty to one count of secretly observing nudity in a private place.

    Vancouver Restaurateur To Be Sentenced After Pleading Guilty To Using Hidden Camera

    Sister Kathryn Ford Says She Smoked Crack With Rob Ford

    Sister Kathryn Ford Says She Smoked Crack With Rob Ford
    Rob Ford's sister told police the Toronto mayor was smoking crack cocaine with her one night in late April in the company of a drug dealer and a friend of Ford's who is facing criminal charges, according to newly released documents.

    Sister Kathryn Ford Says She Smoked Crack With Rob Ford

    You Can Have Site C or LNG But Not Both: First Nation tells B.C. government

    You Can Have Site C or LNG But Not Both: First Nation tells B.C. government
    VANCOUVER - With a decision imminent on the Site C hydroelectric project in northeastern British Columbia, area First Nations have delivered a message to the provincial government: You can have the dam or you can have liquefied natural gas but you will not get both.

    You Can Have Site C or LNG But Not Both: First Nation tells B.C. government

    Doug Ford Echoes Rob Ford In Toronto Mayoral Debate

    Doug Ford Echoes Rob Ford In Toronto Mayoral Debate
    TORONTO - Rob Ford wasn't there in person, but the controversial Toronto mayor's presence loomed large Tuesday night as his older brother firmly took his place in the city's mayoral race.

    Doug Ford Echoes Rob Ford In Toronto Mayoral Debate