"We are proud and grateful," said City Opera Vancouver President Janet Lea, "to advise that the Vancouver Foundation has made a grant of $127,000 in support of our next commission, MISSING WOMEN.

"This new chamber opera will tell a story everyone knows, from the vantage of a woman no one remembers. It is set in Vancouver, and along the Highway of Tears.

"This extraordinary grant will allow City Opera to research, commission and create, test and workshop, the new opera.

"It is a three year grant that will conclude with performance in November 2017, followed by a detailed analysis of its reception, its weaknesses and strengths, and further revision. The work is designed to be portable, intended for a subsequent tour along the Highway of Tears, and back East," Lea said.

The librettist has already been chosen. "She is the distinguished First Nations playwright, filmmaker and performance artist Marie Clements," Lea said.

"Marie brings a unique combination of great artistry, poetic imagination, command of theatre, and fundamental knowledge of the core issues we are confronting. She is also a wonderful colleague and partner."

Earlier this year Clements was engaged to write a Scenario, outlining the characters and narrative of the proposed chamber opera.

City Opera asked outside readers Lorna Brown, a renowned First Nations artist and curator; stage director, dramaturge, and winner of the Siminovich Prize Keith Turnbull; and, the Honorable Steven Point (Xwe li qwel tel), former Chief of Skowkale First Nation; former Tribal Chair of Sto:lo Nation; former Chief Commissioner of BC Treaty Commission; former chair of Advisory Committee on security of vulnerable women; and, former Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia, to review the Scenario.

"Our Outside Readers unanimously recommended we proceed with the project, and with Marie Clements' draft scenario," added Lea.

"We thank Tomson Highway for his consultations regarding MISSING WOMEN, and for his strong recommendation of Marie Clements," she said.

[BCBW 2015]