Edward Willett

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My preview of the ballet Don Quixote…

...being presented this week by Class Act Performing Arts Studio and Do It With Class Young People's Theatre (and in which, full disclosure, my daughter Alice is playing a chicken), is in today's Regina LeaderPost. An excerpt: Eduardo Ventura, one of the ballet instructors at Class Act and Do It With Class, will dance Basilio. "He's a poor barber in the village," Ventura explains. "Kitri and him have known each other since they were kids, and they love each other, but her father doesn't want any penniless suitor for his daughter. He's planning to marry her with the rich Gamache (Kent Wolkowski). They have to fight for their love." The role of Kitri is being danced by Jacqueline Burtney, a former student who ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 9:48, June 15th, 2009 under Art Columns, Blog, Columns | Comment now »

My preview of Regina Little Theatre’s Local Talent…

...was in today's LeaderPost. It begins: Women today are expected to be beautiful and thin, wonderful mothers and wives, and dedicated to their careers -- all at the same time. Those unrealistic expectations drive the plot of Local Talent, Regina Little Theatre's final production of the season, June 10-13 at the Regina Performing Arts Centre. But while the underlying issue is serious, the play is anything but. Instead, says director Mark Claxton, "it's really funny." Read the whole thing, but note there's a phrase missing in the fourth paragraph, which should read: Local Talent, by Montreal playwright Colleen Curran, is Claxton’s first full-length directing venture for RLT, which gave him with ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 23:24, June 4th, 2009 under Art Columns, Blog | Comment now »

Virtual reality

My first novel is coming out next month. Entitled Soulworm, it's a young adult fantasy set mostly in Weyburn--sort of. For plot purposes, I moved the hospital of my fictional Weyburn up onto South Hill. With just a few words, I created an artificial reality, distinguishable from the real thing only by those who have actually been to Weyburn. Storytellers have been creating artificial realities for as long as humans have had speech. In this century, movie makers have taken those artificial realities and made them visible. And now, there's a new device for creating artificial realities: the computer. We call this computer-generated artificial reality "virtual reality" (VR). What distinguishes virtual reality from the artificial ...

Posted by Edward Willett at 14:47, April 1st, 1997 under Blog, Columns, Science Columns | Comment now »