July 7, 2006
Admission fees not
popular at Alianait fest
"We really need
a place where we can put on shows"
JACKIE
WALLACE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Break-dancers
work out at a hip-hop demonstration on the evening of July 1. (PHOTO BY JOHN
THOMPSON)
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This year's expanded Alianait
Arts Festival drew more than 1,000 people over 10 days, with most people attending
free events rather than paying for entertainment at opening and closing concerts.
The festival set out to
push the boundaries of what audiences may expect from a typical northern arts
festival.
While traditional throat
singing, storytelling and drumdancing were part of the program, so too were
a hip-hop concert, a film screening, a multi-cultural coffee house and a closing
concert that ended with a heavy metal band playing under the midnight sun on
Canada Day.
"People from around
the world and from across Canada live in Iqaluit," said Sylvia Cloutier,
a committee member of the festival who taught throat singing workshops, sang
at the coffee house and helped organize the popular hip-hop night. "It's
an opportunity for all kinds of different artists to get exposure for their
work and to celebrate diversity and talents of all sorts."
For Cloutier, it was exciting
to see northern artists perform at home rather than take their talents south,
and for artists from across the territory to come together.
With a large number of
non-traditional performances in the lineup, Alianait president Heather Daley
was pleased to see that the audience was always overwhelmingly Inuit.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Heather
Daley, the president of Alianait, leads a choir in the singing of O' Canada
this past July 1. Canada Day festivities this year were tied into the Alianait
Arts Festival. (PHOTO BY JIM BELL)
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At most events the crowds
were also full of young people, which is exactly what Jonathan Cruz, a break
dancer that festival organizer's brought up from Ottawa for the hip-hop concert,
wanted to see. "I'm grateful to have the opportunity to come up here and
give energy to the kids," he said. "It's a good way for people to
express themselves and it's a great way to kick off the summer."
While the hip-hop concert
and dancing workshops that Cruz participated in were free, he thought that charging
money for the opening and closing ceremony wasn't a good idea. "You want
everyone to be able to come out," he said.
This is a criticism that
Daley heard more than once over the course of the festival. "You don't
want to seem elitist and you want to be inclusive to the community, but we need
to pay for everything somehow," she said. "I mean, it's only $15 and
people spend $10 on a pack of smokes."
About 300 people attended
the opening concert, short of Daley's goal of 400, and although attendance to
the free events in the afternoon on Canada Day was strong, the number of people
dwindled to about 200 when the time to show tickets for the closing concert
came around.
The money raised through
ticket sales went toward covering the festival's $200,000 budget. With a grant
from Heritage Canada, corporate sponsors and lots of support and freebies from
the local business community, the festival came close to covering costs, although
Daley said a little extra fund raising may be needed.
According to Cloutier,
the festival also fell a little short on staff. "We relied on volunteers
and it's a lot to ask of the same people to be there every day for the whole
festival," she says. "I also think it really shows that we really
need a theatre, or an art house, or place where we can put on shows."
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