Song, Satire & Solidarity

Posted April 2nd, 2008

With her wicked wit and piano stylings, Adi Sara Kreindler evokes Tom Lehrer, only prettier. Join her as she skewers Alberta Oil, bourgeois hypocrisy, postmodern love, and unusual dietary options. Plus: haunting ballads and sultry jazz! Co-produced by the Winnipeg Folk Festival. Sara’s profits will go to Local Investment Toward Employment [LITE].

The Folk Exchange, 211 Bannatyne Ave.
8 p.m. | Tickets: $10 advance; $12 at the door. For tickets and information call 231-1377

S.M.I.L.E. while you D.I.E. or Eve Rae Mann’s Pursuit of Happiness

Posted April 2nd, 2008

S.M.I.L.E. while you D.I.E. chronicles the life of Eve Rae Mann, a telephone customer service representative. The relentless dehumanization of the profit-seeking corporate world brings Eve to the brink of madness in this absurdly surreal dark-comedy, providing insights into the human consequence of being a cog in the corporate machine. Produced by Theatre Serendipity, Written and Performed by Rachelle Fordyce.

Ragpickers Annex, 216 McDermot Ave.
8:00 p.m. | Tickets: $10 in advance at Mondragón or at the door. For more information contact Rachelle at 474-1569.

Zuken Foundation Citizen Award Evening

Posted April 2nd, 2008

Presentation of the annual Citizen Award. Guest speaker: Whose Law and What Order? by Elizabeth Comack, Professor of Sociology, University of Manitoba and Research Associate, CCPA-Manitoba. Co-sponsored by the Joe Zuken Memorial Foundation and Canadian Centre for Policy Alterntives-Manitoba

Union Centre, 275 Broadway Ave
7:00 p.m.

Colonization And The Left

Posted April 2nd, 2008

Grassroots Women Manitoba are hosting a workshop about challenges faced by Aboriginal workers. Facilitator: Leslie Spillett.

Kani Kanichihk, 455 McDermot Ave
7:00 p.m.

The Price Of Sugar – Film Screening

Posted April 2nd, 2008

When a priest arrives in the Dominican Republic and ventures into the plantations, he discovers thousands of dispossessed Haitians working the cane fields under backbreaking and inhumane conditions. Lacking both Haitian and Dominican citizenship, the labourers are legally invisible, and are frequently denied even the most basic human rights.

Cinemateque, 100 Arthur St. (Artspace Building)
7:00pm | Admission $7 general / $6 students/seniors / $5 Cinematheque members