43 ~ Wedn rch 3, 1893 — ype ag! 38 Wai * EUS ot NEWS photo Brad *.sdwidge LARRY HILL. (left) as Duke and Wilf Wedding as King prepare for the openina of The Cave Dwellers this Friday at Hendry Halli. Presented by the North Vancouver Community Players and directed by Bob Weakes, the piay follows a colortus collection of actors living in an abandoned theatre. Tickets can be obiained from 983-2633. The Cave Dwellers runs until March 20. ARLO & JANIS® ay Jimmy Johnson SERIOUSLY, 1M BURE I'M SURE, BECAUSE ARLO APPRECIATES YOU! | | KNOW ARLO-HE'6 NO FOO. © (083 by HEAL ne ‘THE BORN LOSER® by Art and Chip Sansom PUT 1 FIGURE IT WORTH IT! WAY NOT PAMPER. YOURSELF 2 YOU HAVE BN 479 ADTORATIC yup. 1 FINALLY BROKE DOAN S53) THIS YEAR AND GOT AN AUTOMATIC. TRANSMISSION WAY WOLD ANHOUE WAST TO CO A DOU DRAMA ABOUT SOU GUYS 7 ITS CHEAPER TO DO THAN OTHER. RELATIONSHIPS... SOME HOLIMWOOD PRODUCER, WAKTS TO BO A DOCU-DRAMA AGOUT MY LONG RELATIONSHIP WITH MOMIQUE... © 1903 dy NEA, Inc, " L'VE INCLUDED SOME DNA ‘GENET! GENETIC NE FROM MADONNA... : — rAm RESEARCH ge > ~_. Lm HOFING TO OV Ay > & om GET A BANANA ; 3). THAT. PEELS ®© 1923 by NEA, Inc. THAVES 1-18 page 20 Spay ae wii Boye MEI S oy: is 4 , , percocet sevens The Coach House: Ray Carroll's The Platters, March 6, Doors open 8 p.m. Show begins at 8:30 p.m. Tickets: $12.50, North Shore Seymour Art Gallery: Paintings by North Vancouver artist and Emily Carr College instructor David Mayrs, To March 8, Gallery hours: Tues.-Fri, from 12 10 4 p.m. Thursdays to 9 p.m; Sat. and Sun. 1-4 p.m. Gallery gift shop is featur- ing work by crait-artist Barb Mat- thews. Ferry Building Gallery: Brian Williams. Images from the Auvergne. Watercolor memories of the artist's travels through southern France. To March 7. Fire and Water, Marcus Bowcott. Elemental images in off, acrylic NV violinist re COREY CEROVSEK is happy to be back in Vancouver. “When Vancouver looks this pretty | do’miss it, There's few places which can compare,” says the former North Vancouver resi- dent and one of the world’s most accomplished young violinists. The virtuoso returned to his home town last Thursday to team up with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra at the Orpheum Theatre for a program of Strauss, Stravin- sky and Elgar — one of many stops. on what has become an increas- ingly busy concert schedule. At only 20, Cerovsek has played with the world’s © greatest or- chestras and “given solo perfor- mances in Europe, Asia, and the U.S. This fall, he and older sister: Katja, a talented pianist, wil! be making their first official perfor- mance together on the New York “stage. “S hear that New York critics are a pack of wolves,” laughs the good-natured musician, not soun- ding the least bit nervous. ‘‘! hope a!l goes well.’’ . Cerovsek is currently completing his PhD in music and mathematics at Indiana University in Bloom- ington — a place he’s called home since the mid ’80s. : “Our main claim to fame,’’ he says of his adopted home, “aside from our music school, is we're the No. 1 college basketball team and wate’color. March 9-21, Presentation House Gallery: Judith Barry: Projections, March 3-April 4. North Vancouver Mtiseum and Archives: Moodyville: Milltown and Mystery. Exhibit explores the long-lost beginnings of North Vancouver, The Ambitious City . and Images af North Vancouver. Surveys @ century of settlement and growth on the north shore of Burrard Iniet, G.G. Nye: A sampl- ing of turn-c?-the-century camera equipment aud images by North Vancouver's first professinnal pinotographer. Silk Purse: Tourandokht Sanii. Russian-born artist's ‘floral and fruit paintings are on display until March 14, Sponsored by the West Vancouver Community Arts Council, Centennial Theatre Lobby: Jollean T, Matsen. To March 15, Viewing hours 12 10 4 p.m., Mon.,- Sat. Harrison Gallery: New work by watercolor artist Brent Heighton. - To March 6, Ler ei eli FORME ‘resident Corey .Cerovsek returned to . Vancouver. this past weekend to perform: with the Vancouver chestra. with a coach whe likes to throw chairs across the court.’’ : On combining: music and math, ©” he says: “I'm toying with the idea of doing my thesis on something that would: combine the two. Semething no one would stand,”’ he laughs. . While he’s had plenty of offers, Cerovsek says he’s holding off on recording an alburn of his. own, at least for now. “I’m kind of old fashioned that way," he says. Kosio began career in Edmonton From page 22 could create characters as full and as exciting.”’ Having grown up in an artistic househo fig Kosio’s mother is a watercolorist and all three of her brothers are involved in the arts — you'd think she was born to act. But the theatre wasn’t her first love. She wanted to be a musician. That quickly changed in Grade 12 when she got a job as a front- of-house technician at Edmonton’s’ Theatre 3 (now the Phoenix Theatre). “One day they needed a piano player-in a play called The Hostage. | sort of fell into it that way.” But even accomplished thes- pians have their moments of inse- , curity. After 13 years on the stage, Koslo says she sometimes feels as if she were just making her first entrance. “4 love it and wouldn't give it up for the world, and yet there are days when you wonder what it all , adds up to. “Your relationships take more | work when you're in and out of town. (Husband Gavin Bakewell is the stage manager for the Barenaked Ladies.) “And then there are days when . you're in a show and everything is working ~~ the director is brilliant and you’ re getting a great response from the audience. “The actual craft of acting, I’ve learried, takes years to understand (‘ve bean a professional actor for : 13 years and sometimes |! feel as if I'm just at the doorstep and reaily haven't figured out what actors call ‘a process,’ ”’ While there haven’t been many low points in the last 13 years, Koslo says there's no escaping the lows, . . “I've beea stuck in places for - weeks in the pouring rain with a broken-down van. .., i've been in plays where | didn’t know how I'd get to the end of the run. ... It’s part of the thrill and the hell,’’ she laughs. Symphony Or-. . » under-