{"id":4095,"date":"1975-10-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1975-10-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-56-no-10-october-1975-the-community-festival-idea\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:23:30","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:23:30","slug":"vol-56-no-10-october-1975-the-community-festival-idea","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-56-no-10-october-1975-the-community-festival-idea\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 56, No. 10 &#8211; October 1975 &#8211; The Community Festival Idea"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Like every other good idea, the                     proposal to organize a community festival of the arts may                     seem slightly ridiculous, but many communities are proving                     that it is possible, pleasurable and profitable.<\/p>\n<p> People are not satisfied in these days to pass time idly.                     They want to have their minds and imaginations stimulated,                     and the community festival fills these needs. In a land where                     all men and women share the material good things in life,                     it is equally important to their satisfaction in living that                     they have the opportunity to share in what is beautiful and                     to have a part in creating it.<\/p>\n<p>The question is: what can your community do in the way of                     building a festival that will provide entertainment for citizens,                     including those who participate in it, and visitors. The festival                     can be a show-case for local musicians, vocalists and dancers.                     It can present programmes that show what people are doing                     culturally. It can bring back as entertainers local people                     who have made successful artistic careers elsewhere.<\/p>\n<p>Someone will ask the question: how highbrow, middle-brow,                     or lowbrow should a festival be. A community festival should                     not be addressed to any given part of the population. It should                     cater to a wide range of people of all ages, highbrow and                     lowbrow, and their varied interests.<\/p>\n<p>The planning of a festival requires wide support. No group,                     however enthusiastic and qualified, can make a festival successful                     if the people in the community are apathetic. A festival must                     embrace a spirit, a feeling of involvement. It will rekindle                     the flame of community spirit.<\/p>\n<p>A festival attracts visitors who inject money into the economy,                     resulting in benefit to the service and hospitality industries,                     and for this material reason it deserves the support of local                     business people and the municipal administration. But there                     is something beyond money-making involved. The festival should                     strengthen interest in more than mundane things. It should                     help us to improve the quality of our lives.<\/p>\n<h3>What is a festival?<\/h3>\n<p>A festival is a time for happiness and rejoicing. To trace                     the festivals of the world through all their variations would                     be to trace the entire history of human religion and human                     civilization. It is noteworthy that the Greeks, to whom we                     owe so much of our culture, began building their towns by                     laying the foundations of a theatre.<\/p>\n<p>Today, Canada has many heavy-weight festivals: at Niagara-on-the-Lake,                     Charlottetown, Lennoxville, Orford, Quebec, and at Stratford                     where the Shakespearean Festival had its 23rd season this                     year. Festival Canada, a month-long exhibition of talent,                     ranges through opera, ballet, folk singers, drama, orchestra,                     movies and poetry.<\/p>\n<p>Community festivals are not in that league, but some add                     noticeably to the gaiety of both spectators and participants,                     and to the cultural riches of the country.<\/p>\n<p>They may commemorate an historical event, such as the anniversary                     of the founding of a village or a city. They may be built                     around the birth-place or home or centre of activity of a                     famous person &#8211; a Stephen Leacock, economist and writer; a                     Robert Service, poet; a Mrs. Louise McKinney, first woman                     to be elected to a legislative assembly; a Laura Secord, heroine                     of the war of 1812; or a Simon Newcomb, world-renowned in                     mathematics and astronomy.<\/p>\n<p>A festival may stem from the ancestral origins of citizens.                     For more than eighty years people from thousands of miles                     away have been drawn to the Icelandic Festival at Gimli, a                     Manitoba town of 2,000 population. Altona, with about the                     same population, has drama and other attractions marking the                     arrival in 1874 of Mennonite settlers.<\/p>\n<p>A festival may be centred upon a speciality of the district                     or its ethnic culture. For example, the Gaelic Mod at St.                     Ann&#8217;s, Cape Breton, has as its centre the only Gaelic college                     in North America.<\/p>\n<h3>Coping with difficulty<\/h3>\n<p>Many difficulties will become immediately apparent when                     your planning begins. You must subscribe to the validity of                     Murphy&#8217;s Law: &#8220;If anything can go wrong, it will.&#8221; There are                     various sub-divisions listed in the Ontario <em>Provincial                     Judges Quarterly <\/em>in April 1973: &#8220;Nothing is ever as simple                     as it seems; If you have a foolproof method of trying to please                     everybody, somebody is not going to like it; If you explain                     something so clearly that no one can misunderstand it, plenty                     will.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There will be critics. Bohemia is a state of mind inhabited                     by people who, whether or not they are creative or particularly                     intellectual, like to stand on the side-lines and scoff at                     those who do things.<\/p>\n<p>Some will say that there are no facilities for a festival.                     A concert hall is a nice thing to have, but a school auditorium                     or a marquee will serve, and what better setting can there                     be for a Bach recital than a church?<\/p>\n<p>The Nova Scotia Festival of the Arts started in a tent community                     on the grounds of the rural high school at Tatamagouche. Its                     purpose was &#8220;to provide a showcase of the things we can do                     and enable Nova Scotians to see what other Nova Scotians have                     done with training.&#8221; There were dance groups and singing groups                     performing on open-air stages, recitals and singsongs in church                     and school halls, plays in the school auditorium, and marquees                     filled with art and museum pieces.<\/p>\n<p>This example emphasizes the fact that it is not necessary                     to produce an extravaganza with elaborate trimmings. Great                     wealth of stage scenery and props is not necessary. Shakespeare                     did not do badly in his time without any. A potted plant might                     represent a forest and a basin of water the Atlantic Ocean.                     The chorus introducing act three of <em>Henry V<\/em>, calls                     upon the audience to use its imagination: &#8220;Play with your                     fancies and eke out our performance with your mind.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Launching a festival<\/h3>\n<p>The launching of a festival is not difficult. Collect a                     group of people you expect will become enthusiastic supporters                     and workers. Set up a committee to find out the community&#8217;s                     resources in the way of historic events and sites. Make a                     list of beauty and recreation spots: even devoted addicts                     of opera and symphony require physical diversion. Tabulate                     the community&#8217;s resources in the performing arts. Frame a                     programme, offering either variety or a well-developed speciality.                     Select a dynamic leader, someone who is accustomed to getting                     things done. Make sure that your organizing board has representatives                     of all arts disciplines.<\/p>\n<p>The committees on which these people sit should have room                     for residents and organizations who reflect all community                     interests and who get involved in the decision-making and                     the planning. Young people should be involved from the very                     beginning, not just to take part in performances but to invent,                     to explore, to venture into arts old and new. They will produce                     many lively suggestions.<\/p>\n<p>Talk over proposals with existing arts and crafts organizations,                     and with cultural groups and ethnic groups, and with clubs                     and associations of every kind. Many questions will arise,                     and no one has a monopoly on the right answers.<\/p>\n<p>Listen to the stories of a local historian or an enthusiastic                     museum buff so as to gather ideas to make the festival more                     meaningful locally, but do not get side-tracked from the big                     objective&#8230; do not look for a needle when it is really the                     haystack you want.<\/p>\n<h3>Building a programme<\/h3>\n<p>Once the framework of the festival has been constructed,                     groups go to work on their specified tasks, every group establishing                     its goals and deadlines.<\/p>\n<p>Every group should determine what is involved in the doing                     of a job, what time and energy will be needed, and assign                     duties to those most competent to carry them out. The organizer                     must see the enterprise as a whole and keep a finger on its                     pulse.<\/p>\n<p>Sparking a festival requires exercise of your imagination                     to picture and present the sort of events that will give the                     greatest satisfaction. Imagination is an inventor. It entertains                     possibilities. You can be creative: having ideas is not a                     monopoly of a few. And as Anne remarked in her <em>Green Gables                     <\/em>days: &#8220;It&#8217;s delightful when your imaginations come true.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Think always about the audience you expect to attend the                     festival. Some people like <em>King Lear <\/em>and others prefer                     <em>Peter Pan<\/em>. One audience will applaud heartily a juggler                     who leaps through a ring of knives, while another audience                     will give an ovation to the singer of a lullaby.<\/p>\n<p>To attract people you must have something special to offer,                     something that they do not see or hear every day. Your audience                     is free to attend or to stay away, to sit through the programme                     or walk out. You must keep them interested.<\/p>\n<p>We all have the urge at times to do something original.                     If you wish to produce an event that has features differing                     from other similar events, you need to put your imagination                     to work. The act of creation does not make something out of                     nothing; it uncovers, selects, shuffles, combines and synthesizes                     already existing facts and ideas.<\/p>\n<p>The ability to originate is a very great quality to have.                     A little originality will add colour and attractiveness to                     your production. You will give people not only what they want,                     but something better than they thought they wanted.<\/p>\n<h3>Involve local talent<\/h3>\n<p>Frame the festival so as to give significant places to local                     musicians, classical and popular, to ballet and dance groups,                     to theatre clubs, and to ethnic groups. Encourage local events                     and workshops.<\/p>\n<p>A community festival anywhere in Canada is not concerned                     with masterpieces only, but also with plays and musical compositions                     that give competent local people a chance to perform.<\/p>\n<p>Every community has musicians, singers, actors, and artists                     whose presentations will give flavour to a festival. People                     can go from church to church, enjoying organ and choral recitals.                     Many towns have madrigal singers, folk, classic, and chant                     singers. Theatrical groups present a variety of drama, musical                     comedy, opera and modern plays.<\/p>\n<p>Not everyone is interested in performing before audiences.                     Many prefer to use their talents in building stage sets, handling                     publicity, making costumes, directing, or producing. The skills                     of carpenters, technicians, handy men and women are an intrinsically                     necessary part of the festival.<\/p>\n<p>Give the Department of National Defence a showcase for its                     forces. Every community where there is even a small militia                     detachment has the opportunity to mount a display that will                     interest spectators. A sunset ceremony is a colourful item,                     consisting in lowering the national flag, the ancient ceremony                     of beating retreat, and tattoo.<\/p>\n<p>Communities that are in touch with Indians and Eskimos have                     at hand a treasury of art testifying to the creativeness of                     Canada&#8217;s native people, and a repertoire of sacred and tribal                     dances and songs. All of the ethnic groups making up Canada&#8217;s                     population can add their distinctive cultural contributions.<\/p>\n<p>Communicate your enthusiasm to the many community special                     groups: church and school orchestras, choirs and drama clubs;                     and ballet and other dance groups, including those of children.                     Boy Scouts, Girl Guides and their junior branches, Wolf Cubs                     and Brownies, have picturesque drills and ceremonies. Universities                     can provide advisory service and talented students. Hobby                     associations will set up demonstration booths. Civic-minded                     groups such as Kiwanis, Daughters of the Empire, Kinsmen,                     Rotary, Lions, Home and School Associations, the National                     Council of Women, and the many music and dramatic organizations                     &#8211; all these can be invited to participate in your festival                     by assisting in administration or by organizing programmes.<\/p>\n<p>If desired, you may look outside the community for some                     parts of your programme. Provincial arts councils or boards                     can provide touring dramatic productions and orchestras; arrangements                     may be made with the National Film Board to show Canadian-made                     film productions that have won international awards; the aid                     may be invited of the Canadian Craftsmen&#8217;s Association, a                     professional association concerned with the development of                     fine crafts and quality design; a National Touring Office                     was opened in Ottawa a couple of years ago to ensure greater                     access to the performing arts by the widest segment of the                     public.<\/p>\n<h3>Highlight variety<\/h3>\n<p>A festival may be devoted to one theme or one type of music                     or one type of entertainment, or it may place side by side                     jazz, chamber music, pop groups, poetry, Gilbert and Sullivan                     opera, experimental theatre workshops, ethnic folk dance groups,                     an orchestra, films, exhibitions of paintings, sculpture,                     ceramics and wood carving. The variety is limited only by                     the interests of the people in the community.<\/p>\n<p>In art, to compose is to arrange unequal things. As Ruskin                     advised: &#8220;Have one large thing and several smaller things,                     or one principal thing and several inferior things, and bind                     them well together.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There may be a solid central programme and several fringe                     programmes involving many interests and many performers: puppeteers,                     student film makers, one-act plays, old-time fiddling, talks,                     discussions, and poetry reading.<\/p>\n<p>Festivals encourage cross-fertilization of the arts. The                     fine arts are those in which the mind and imagination are                     chiefly concerned.<\/p>\n<p>In its chapter entitled &#8220;The Fine and Lively Arts&#8221;, written                     by Walter B. Herbert, formerly Director of The Canada Foundation,                     the issue of <em>Canada <\/em>marking Canada&#8217;s Centenary said:                     &#8220;Strict definitions of &#8216;the fine arts&#8217; and &#8216;the lively arts&#8217;,                     or attempts to establish distinctions between them, are impossible                     and useless. Often the fine arts are lively, and equally often                     the lively arts are fine. So, let it be understood that hereafter                     we are referring to music, painting, drama, literature, the                     dance, sculpture, architecture, handcrafts, cinema, opera,                     drawing, engraving, and television broadcasting when reference                     is made to the cultural pattern.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A festival need not be a giddy whirl, but it needs to be                     interesting to many sorts of people. It should slay the spirit                     of solemnity that clouds much of our lives. Mary Renault asks                     in <em>The Last of the Wine <\/em>&#8220;Without laughter, what man                     of sense could endure either politics or war?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Humour is medicine for many a trouble, and a dose of laughter                     is good for most of our ills. It relieves nervous tension                     and acts as a shock-absorber for the bumps of life.<\/p>\n<h3>Programme suggestions<\/h3>\n<p>Here, in alphabetical order, are some of the elements of                     a community festival.<\/p>\n<p><em>Craft exhibitions<\/em>. The festival will have exhibitions                     to show what people do best and like to do in the arts and                     crafts. Fine arts include tapestry, enamels, work in precious                     metals, ceramics, weaving, pottery, stained glass, and batiks.<\/p>\n<p>Ruskin remarked in <em>The True and the Beautiful<\/em>: &#8220;Any                     material object which can give us pleasure in the simple contemplation                     of its outward qualities, without any direct and definite                     exertion of the intellect, I call in some way, or in some                     degree, beautiful.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Exhibitions that meet this criterion will include, besides                     those mentioned, paintings, carving in wood, soapstone and                     ivory, embroidery, design, sewing, glass, and leather. There                     is a wealth of such materials in every community.<\/p>\n<p><em>Dance<\/em>. A festival could have traditional, modern                     square, ballroom, country, folk dancing and ballet. There                     are fewer ballets than square dances, but both are part of                     art. Ballet has been a matter of interest in this country                     only since the 1930&#8217;s but today there are three or four top-ranking                     professional companies. They are backed up by many small groups,                     amateur and semi-professional, and many towns have ballet                     schools or classes. Public appreciation of ballet is increasing                     rapidly.<\/p>\n<p><em>Drama<\/em>. Community theatre is not a synonym for the                     gathering place of the cultural elite. It incorporates the                     talents of many persons, and dramas are being presented successfully                     by community groups.<\/p>\n<p>A production does not have to be big. There are beauty and                     satisfaction in little efforts. Young people&#8217;s drama performances                     serve to stimulate interest and develop the skills of students                     in the art of theatre. They encourage new talent, offer a                     show-case for playwrights, and provide entertainment.<\/p>\n<p>A festival play should have quality. There is no great virtue                     in a play in which the actors keep tumbling up and down flights                     of steps, or when the lighting is so artistically done that                     you cannot see what is going on. As to violence, an unbreakable                     canon of stagecraft in the great days of Greek tragedy was                     that violence could not be committed on the stage. Murders                     had to be committed off stage. Instead of seeing the action,                     the audience was told about it.<\/p>\n<p><em>Folk-songs<\/em>. A group of folk-songs or ballads makes                     an acceptable break in a programme devoted to other forms                     of music. There are ballads and ballad poems that are tragic,                     amusing, romantic; ballads of the sea, of Robin Hood, and                     of events in history.<\/p>\n<p>Selected Canadian folk-songs were collected by Marius Barbeau                     with the collaboration of Arthur Lismer and Arthur Bourinot,                     and published by the National Museum of Canada, in 1947.<\/p>\n<p><em>Music<\/em>. There is widespread yearning for more serious                     musical presentations in addition to crowd-pleasing popular                     entertainment.<\/p>\n<p>There is great power in music. It pats our heads when we                     are in sorrow or pain, and it is able to magnify our happiness                     and joy. When the inexpressible had to be expressed, Shakespeare                     laid down his pen and called for music.<\/p>\n<p>Music education from the primary grades through to the top                     reaches of post-graduate study is available in Canada. The                     Federation of Canadian Music Festivals encourages the study                     and performance of music at the amateur level. Its graduates                     include Robert Goulet and Gordon Lightfoot, both of whom got                     their start singing with Canadian music festivals.<\/p>\n<p><em>Poetry<\/em>. Only three or four in a thousand read poetry                     today, though a couple of generations back poetry stood in                     high and universal esteem. Parents used to read poetry to                     their children, and children recited poetry to their parents                     and at school concerts.<\/p>\n<p>There is a spreading interest in the reading of poetry aloud                     in groups. The poet is a manufacturer of images, and auditors                     at a poetry reading enjoy intense pleasure.<\/p>\n<p>In listening to poetry we are supporting a necessary ingredient                     of the good life. If we should ever lose completely our feeling                     for verse, we should at that moment have cut ourselves off                     from a part of our origins, for we sang and chanted long before                     we reasoned and persuaded.<\/p>\n<p><em>Workshops<\/em>. Finally in this array consider workshops.                     Teen-agers and young adults seek workshops where they can                     work out ideas with group participation. A workshop is a seminar,                     discussion group, or the like, which emphasizes the exchange                     of ideas and the demonstration and application of techniques,                     skills, etc.<\/p>\n<p>You may have workshops on legend, costume, cookery, customs,                     drama, opera, film, jewellery making, and any other hobby                     or pursuit citizens are interested in.<\/p>\n<h3>What is needed<\/h3>\n<p>What really matters to a mature person is not merely what                     he sees with his eyes but what he sees in things with his                     mind &#8211; not just eyesight but insight. He has passed from the                     immaturity of being attracted, as young children are, to anything                     that glitters. He seeks subjects and objects that have aesthetic                     appeal.<\/p>\n<p>Standards of aesthetic taste differ from age to age, from                     place to place, and from person to person. When we say of                     a person that he has good taste we mean that he has the facility                     to receive the greatest possible pleasure from things which                     he perceives to be good &#8211; good in themselves or good because                     of inspired craftsmanship.<\/p>\n<p>Special interest groups, such as those in music or drama,                     find their activities pleasing and engrossing. They need to                     keep in mind this imperative: when they come before the public                     it is the <em>public <\/em>that must be pleased and satisfied.                     Good taste will reject anything that is shoddy, grotesque                     or inartistic. What is offered at a festival must be first-rate                     in the judgment of the audience.<\/p>\n<p>To be attractive, a festival need not have too much of the                     carnival spirit. It may be a place of unhurried charm, with                     time to linger listening to g6od music and enjoy the civilities                     of life.<\/p>\n<p>To stage a community festival requires year-round planning,                     the help of business people, educationists and local organizations,                     and the services of a dynamic director.<\/p>\n<p>The festival must pay attention to the fitness of things                     and show respect for the beliefs and customs of the community.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[55],"class_list":["post-4095","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-55"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 56, No. 10 - October 1975 - The Community Festival Idea - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-56-no-10-october-1975-the-community-festival-idea\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 56, No. 10 - October 1975 - The Community Festival Idea - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Like every other good idea, the proposal to organize a community festival of the arts may seem slightly ridiculous, but many communities are proving that it is possible, pleasurable and profitable. 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People are not satisfied in these days to pass time idly. 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