Monday, February 25, 2013

Lennoxville Curling Club Juniors to compete in Jeux de Quebec

 
(Lennoxville) - On March 5, at 7 a.m., nine boys and girls from Lennoxville and their parents will board a bus headed for Saguenay, where they will curl for five days straight, sleeping in classrooms and gym floors surrounded by teams from all around the province.
These nine players make up the Junior Boys and Girls curling league of the Lennoxville Curling Club, who are excited to play in the Jeux de Quebec this March.
21 sports will be represented at the Jeux, with approximately 3,000 competitors 15 years old or younger, says junior program coordinator and girls' coach Judith Cassidy. "It's a well-organised event," she goes on. 75,000 spectators, including parents and coaches, are expected.
Girls' skip Meaghan Rivett says her team will "definitely" be trying for the top 10, while the boys are "hoping for the top 8," according to boys' skip Andy Porter.
While some of the players have played in the Jeux de Quebec before, for most of the Lennoxville group, this is their first time at the competition. "[We're] excited," boys' lead Aaron Charron says.
The boys will be competing against 15 other curling clubs, while the girls will be facing 13 rivals.
We wish the Lennoxville Curling Club Juniors good luck in Saguenay. We'll be catching up with them when they get home.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

The Bishop's University Chamber Orchestra is back!

The orchestra will perform at Bandeen Hall.


The Bishop's University Chamber Orchestra has risen from the ashes.
In 2003, the Bishop's music department started the orchestra with direction from professor Andrew MacDonald. However, MacDonald had to give up conducting to work on a composition of his own, and after a few years, the chamber orchestra found itself too low on string players to continue.
"After a break of several years, I'm delighted to return to developing the chamber orchestra at Bishop's," MacDonald says. "We have a really good core of string players and we're very excited about the repertoire we're working on."
The orchestra is still looking for players, especially for the string section. Right now, the orchestra consists of 17 players altogether, including woodwinds and strings. MacDonald is aiming for 25 players for the final concert in April. "Strings sound wonderful in Bandeen Hall," MacDonald says of the chamber's acoustics.
MacDonald would like to welcome players of all ages, whether in attendance at Bishop's or residents of the surrounding community, to rehearse with the orchestra and take part. He describes the chamber orchestra as "good community music-making" and encourages anyone with an instrument to come try it out.
The Chamber Orchestra will make its second debut in concert on April 7 at 3 p.m.. They will play selections from Holst, Grieg, Respeghi, and Mozart. "I've always wanted to perform this music," MacDonald tells us, looking happy to be back up at the stand. "We're going to put on a fantastic concert."
Anyone wishing to join the chamber orchestra should contact Dr. Andrew MacDonald at amcdona@ubishops.ca.
By the end of the interview, he'd convinced me to dust off my violin and get back on stage. We hope to see you too!

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Bianca Letarte, the Lone Wolf Goalie, on Stopping Pucks

The Bishop's University Polar Bears prepare to compete at Fredericton. Letarte centre.
 You can see how important hockey is to Bianca Letarte every time she turns around: the back of her neck is tattooed with a red stop sign with the word 'puck' in all caps. She definitely stops pucks.
The 21-year-old Sherbrooke native is the only goalie of the Bishop's University women's ice hockey team, the Polar Bears. She has played for the Bears for four years, although she has attended Champlain College for three. The Bears have worked hard this season to find the back of the net, struggling with scoring, but have put up a good fight in the Maritime Intercollegiate Women's Ice Hockey league tournaments. Letarte sat down with us and described her passion for the sport.
Letarte started playing hockey at five years old. "I started really young," she tells us with a smile. She started as a forward, but a year later discovered her true passion in the net. Her father played hockey throughout her childhood and she remembers watching his games. She traces her interest in the sport originally back to her father, but she pinpoints the 1996 Winter Olympics as the moment she decided to start playing herself. Goalie Manon Rheaume's silver medal "really made an impression", she recalls.
Even though the Bears practice Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays at 6 a.m., Letarte says that her favourite part of the sport is the training. She loves the "dedication and work ethic" of her teammates and the feeling of improvement, which doesn't come through in a game situation.
Letarte takes us deeper into the mindset of a goalie come game-time. "It's different when you're a goalie," she says, describing herself as a bit of a lone wolf. "It really is a mental game." Letarte's pre-game ritual consists of warming up with her team and then going off by herself to listen to some music. If her team loses the game, she switches up her routine by removing her right pads before her left. "When I was younger, I used to talk to my [goal] posts," she adds with a laugh. "I stopped doing that, though."
Those who have been following the Polar Bears might remember the nine mid-season games during which the team struggled to score. As frustrating as that was for the offensive players, Letarte gives us a different perspective. "I actually like it," she admits. She prefers to have lots of shots to block because it helps her stay focused and "in the zone". If she doesn't have pucks to stop, she can be easily distracted.
The Polar Bears will be headed for Fredericton, New Brunswick on Friday for another Maritime Intercollegiate Women's Ice Hockey League tournament. Letarte says the four member teams are evenly matched. "If everybody plays the game as it should be played, we can win," she says optimistically. "No doubt about it."
So, enough about the Polar Bears. What will Bianca Letarte do next? She outlined her teenage years as background. She was educated at Castleton, Vermont until she finished high school, when she was recruited to be on the Castleton team at the university but couldn't join due to financial complications. After completing high school, she applied to Bishop's University, although she was not accepted, and decided to go to CEGEP instead at Champlain College. When she graduates with a certificate in social science, Letarte plans to apply again to Bishop's and get in this time. Social science is not her passion; she hopes to pursue fine arts at university.
Bianca Letarte cannot leave the ice behind. She plans to stay in the net for a long time. Good luck to the Polar Bears in Fredericton and good luck to Bianca Letarte, wherever she ends up and whatever she decides to do. Whatever the future holds, the past has shown us that she is great at stopping pucks.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

What Would You Have Done?!: Chris Fleming on Gayle


On the set of his popular YouTube sitcom Gayle, Chris Fleming plays a housewife who might have been sane three mid-life crises ago, but that's over now. Gayle Waters-Waters is, among other things, the mother of sensible Terry Gross Waters-Waters, the secretary of Mothers Against Road Head, a partner and owner of Meet Me in Hell Croutons, and a devout stalker of Dr. Bruce, orthodontist-slash-sex-symbol. Gayle snorts a line of Total cereal in the morning and wouldn't be able to stand the public humiliation of taking two trips into the house with her groceries. She hates her husband's legs so much that the camera has never seen his face, focusing on his khaki-clad "milky whites".
However, off the set, Chris is a soft-spoken tutor who has done stand-up comedy in his spare time since high school. His comedy took off when a friend posted a video on popular news and sharing site Reddit. Chris gave us some time in between filming Episode 22 to tell us about himself and his tramp-stamped, couscous-loving alter ego.
We had to know: how on earth does one come up with a character like Gayle? According to Chris, all you have to do is observe people. He tells us that Gayle was inspired by women in his Massachusetts hometown, especially one particular specimen he observed at a Crate and Barrel four years ago.
Chris walked us through a day on the set of Gayle, which is filmed at his childhood home. "By the end of each day I’ve acquired some kind of injury, 'cause I insist on doing stunts," he says, and viewers can vouch for this. Gayle is known for emotional outbursts involving theft, broken glass, and ham. "In one episode I dropkicked a mailbox twice and could barely walk after 'cause I landed so hard on my hip," he adds. However, with a lot of ice kept on set, Chris says shooting is "super fun". "[By this point] we all have a really good foundation of who our characters are, so people just flow right into the scenes."
To add to the hilarity, Gayle's best friend/worst enemy Bonnie is played by Chris's real-life mother. When Chris asked her to be part of the show, "she said okay, but that her name couldn’t be Bonnie, because she has a friend named Bonnie and felt that she would be insulted." Chris adds that his mother's friend is nothing at all like Gayle's Bonnie, but that he insisted on naming the character after her because he wanted to say "You calling me a liar, Bonnie?!"
The fast-paced show is almost Monty Python-esque in its cross-dressing, flagrantly outrageous humour. Gayle's husband is timid and soft-voiced, preferring bird-watching to Gayle's fearless, stop-at-nothing attitude. Dave is the perfect "straight man" foil to Gayle's antics, and yet he has his own flavour of neurosis, stealing his wife's November fleece to watch her go ballistic. The two are at loggerheads for much of the series, but we see a certain affection between them at the end of the Christmas special, when Gayle steals every pair of khakis in Talbots for her husband's gift.
Gayle has already been the subject of critical acclaim. Forbes Magazine decrees that "no major studio has created a stranger, more adeptly archetypal and consistently funnier character than Gayle Waters-Waters." The Huffington Post is confident that the weird among us will "fall in mad, deep love with Gayle".
This June 28 and 29, Chris will take his act to the stage for the very first time in Boston at the Davis Square Theatre. Tickets are selling for $15 each and can be purchased from a link on Chris's Facebook page. I'm already entering my credit card information. As Gayle would ask, what would you have done?!