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VANCOUVER
- NIGHTLIFE AND ENTERTAINMENT |
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Vancouver gives you plenty to
do come sunset, laying on a
varied and cosmopolitan blend
of both live and dance
music . Clubs are more
adventurous than in many a
Canadian city, particularly
the fly-by-night alternative
dives in the Italian quarter
on Commercial Drive and in the
backstreets off Gastown and
Chinatown. There's also a
choice of smarter and more
conventional clubs, a handful
of discos and a smattering of gay
and lesbian clubs and
bars. Summer nightlife often
takes to the streets in West
Coast fashion, with outdoor
bars and (to a certain extent)
beaches becoming venues in
their own right. Fine weather
also allows the city to host a
range of festivals ,
from jazz to theatre, and the performing
arts are as widely
available as you'd expect in a
city as culturally
self-conscious as Vancouver.
The most comprehensive listings
guide to all the goings-on is Georgia
Straight , a free weekly
published on Thursday; the
monthly Night Moves
concentrates more on live
music. These are available in
larger stores and street boxes
around the city. For detailed
information on gay and
lesbian events, check out X-xtra
, a free monthly magazine
aimed specifically at the gay
and lesbian community, which
is available at clubs,
bookshops and many of the Georgia
Straight distribution
points. Many other free
magazines devoted to different
musical genres and activities
are available at the same
points, but they come and go
quickly. Tickets for
many major events are sold
through Ticketmaster, based at
1304 Hornby St, which has
forty outlets throughout the
city (tel 280-4444 for
concerts, tel 280-4400 for
sporting events and tel
280-3311 for the performing
arts); they'll sometimes
unload discounted tickets for
midweek and matinee
performances.
Live music and clubs
Vancouver's live-music
venues showcase a variety of
musical styles, but
mainstream rock
groups are the most common
bill of fare; the city is
also a fertile breeding
ground for punk
bands, with particularly
vocal fans. Jazz is
generally hot news in
Vancouver, with a dozen
spots specializing in the
genre (ring the Jazz Hot
Line at tel 682-0706 for
current and upcoming
events). And, while
Vancouver isn't as cowpoke
as, say, Calgary, it does
have several clubs dedicated
to country music ,
though many are in the outer
suburbs.
Many venues also double
as clubs and discos, and as
in any city with a healthy
alternative scene there are
also plenty of fun, one-off
clubs that have an
irritating habit of cropping
up and disappearing at
speed. Cover charges are
usually nominal, and tickets
are often available
(sometimes free) at record
shops. At the other end of
the spectrum, the
60,000-seat Pacific Coliseum
is on the touring itinerary
of most international acts.
Performing arts and cinema
Vancouver serves up enough
highbrow culture to suit the
whole spectrum of its
cosmopolitan population,
with plenty of unusual and
avant-garde performances to
spice up the more mainstream
fare you'd expect of a major
North American city. The
main focus for the city's
performing arts is the Queen
Elizabeth Theater (tel
299-9000) at 600 Hamilton St
at Georgia, which plays host
to a steady procession of
visiting theatre, opera and
dance troupes, and even the
occasional big rock band.
Recently it's been joined by
the new Ford Center for
the Performing Arts
opposite the central library
at 777 Homer St (tel
280-2222 or 602-0616). For
information on the Vancouver
arts scene, call the Arts
Hotline (tel 684-ARTS or
684-2787) or visit their
office at 938 Howe St. The
refurbished Orpheum
Theater, 884 Granville
at Smithe (tel 665-3050), is
Vancouver's oldest theatre
and headquarters of the
Vancouver Symphony
Orchestra. There's also a
special line for information
relating to dance (tel
872-0432). Tickets
can be obtained from
individual box offices or
through the Ticketmaster
agency (tel 280-3311).
The western capital of
Canada's film industry,
Vancouver is increasingly
favored by Hollywood studios
in their pursuit of cheaper
locations and production
deals. It's therefore no
surprise that the spread of cinemas
is good. Home-produced and
Hollywood first-run films
play in the downtown cinemas
on "Theater Row" -
the two blocks of Granville
between Robson and Nelson
streets - and other big
complexes, and there's no
shortage of cinemas for more
esoteric productions.
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