28 - Friday, September 16, 1988 -- North Shore News entertainment save te ae al Opry opens season inNV NEWS photo Cindy Bellamy SUZAN BADGLEY (rear) Rob Santo and Carol-Ann Mitchell get ready for the North Vancouver Community Players’ latest produc- tion, Phantom of the Opry. Kids! Learn to draw THE WEST Vancouver Community Arts Council is offering art classes for children and teenagers. The programs are designed to enhance creativity in young peo- ple, and teenagers can now join in a special new program of drawing and design. Classes run Sept. 17 to Nov. 19 at Klee Wyck in West Vancouver. For more details call Daun Casey-Yorke at 434-3234. ae For those more inclined to sing- ing, the Lynn Valley Recreation Centre’s Community Choir kicks off Sept. 19 with a season that will see the group singing a variety of selections at different venues throughout the year. For the younger set, the centre’s Children’s Choir also begins that same day, with youngsters singing their favorite melodies and learn- ing to harmonize among the activ- ities. The Community Choir meets from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m., while the Children’s Choir meets from 6:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. For more details, call 984-9341, Arts festival kicks off MUSIC AND artworks form the cornerstone of the festival of Christianity and the Arts running at the Gloria Dei Lutheran Church Sept. 18 to 25. North Shore musicians Patricia Shaw, Karen Koch, Brenda Fedoruk and David Overgaard will perform the music of Bach, Haydn, Telemann and Vivaldi Sept. 25 in the highlight to the musical part of the festival. Artists including Luts Haufschild and North Vancouver's Fred Peter have been invited to submit works for the festival, which will showcase fabric art, paintings, calligraphy, stained glass, sculpture and pottery. The festival art display is open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m, and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Festival opening is Sept. 18 dur- ing the 10 a.m. worship service. All are welcome to attend the festival at the 1110 Gladwin Dr. church. For more details, ca!l 988-5838 or 984-7334. Playwright’s group formed NORTH VANCOUVER playwright Peter Raabe is looking to form a new playwrights’ discussion group open to professionals, serious amateurs or students. “Writing plays is a solitary oc- cupation,”” said Raabe, whose re- cent work is the 1988 Fringe Festi- val production Taking Care of Business. ‘But that doesn’t mean playwrights have to spend their lives locked away in their rooms.” With meetings tentatively slated for once or twice a month, the group wil! discuss techniques, trends and survival tactics, among other topics. To become part of this fledgling group, call Raabe at 986-9446. ” Fieay SUIS sis. =r NA IS ELVIS really dead, or is he just taking a break from. star- dom? Local theatre-goers can find out when The King appears among the versions of special celebrities in the North Van- couver Community Players’ season-opener and = annual revue, The Phantom of the Opry. Joining the revue — in char- acter if not in person — will also be fim and Tammy Faye Bakker, Tammy Whynott, k.d. lang and Honk Williams. Following Phantom of the Opry will be the company’s production of Harold Pinter's Hothouse in late October and early November; an adaption of Oliver Twist will be the annual Christmas offering for children. In the new year comes The Dresser, The Club (A Musical Diversion) and if all goes well another production of John Cleese’s Fawlty Towers. Ticket vouchers last year proved so successful that they are being introduced again this year. Phantom runs at North Van- couver’s Hendry Hall ~ the Players’ home base — at 11th and Hendry until Oct. 1. For reservations or informa- tion: 687-3529 or 980-3473. As well, the group is always interested in new members — with experience or without — to work on-stage or backstage. For details: 984- 9833. PIZZA & CHINESE FOOD ® TAKE OUT® DELIVERY e |985-ssss| DINNERS FOR 2 @ Choose any 3 separate dishes ff B * Chicken Chow Mein ”@ ° Mushroom Fried Rice 4” * Beef Chop Suey #) © Sweet and Sour Pork 4 © Almond Chicken H © Deep Fried Shrimp ONLY $Q% Expires September 22/88 {Net valid with other offers) small large PIZZA UP TO 5 TOPPINGS Artist shows works VICTORIA-BORN artist Janet Fruchtmann has brought a host of art works to the Jacqueline M Gallery in Vancouver in the latest in a long line of exhibitions. Staying on the North Shore until the show ends Sept. 28, the artist is showing approximately 70 works, including paintings, draw- ings and collages. Living in Bremen, Fruchtmann has shown her works in many ma- jor art galleries, including those in her home town, West Berlin, Hamburg and Sweden. Recently, the artist became the first woman and the first painter to receive the prestigious Culture Peace Prize, awarded within the artistic community. The gallery is located at #302- 560 Beatty St. For info: 684-2253. Healing in the NewAge HEALING IN the New Age is the theme of this year’s Psychic Holistic ESP Fair, running Sept. 16 through 18 at the Pacific National Exhibition Forum building. On hand will palmists, astrologers, be psychics, numerologists, crystals, mediums, healers and auras as well as free lectures and demonstrations. Main speakers at the annual fair — that begins Sept. 16 at 4 p.m. — will be modern-day witch Jean Kozacari and well-known author Norma Crowie. For more information, call 536- 1220. Fresh Saimon Festival This September we think you'll be hooked. We've devoted the month of September to bring in the freshest salmon from the B.C. Coast waters. Feast on Chef Gerard Page Creations! $8.95 Salmon En Papillotte Salmon Wellington Served with a Champagne Sauce$8.95 Salmon Stuffed with Crab Mousse and Lobster Sauce $8.95 Salmon Medallion with a Red Pepper Sauce $8.95 Grilled Salmon and Prawns with Sauce Bearnaise $8.95 The fresh caught salmon run is on... Come to BARCLAY’S 1348 ROBSON STREET. FOR RESERVATIONS 688-8850 OPEN DAILY for Lunch and Dinner. SUNDAY BRUNCH 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.