Manitoba

Folklorama from home: Winnipeg multicultural festival goes virtual

Folklorama will offer three days of online programming, from Aug. 6 to 8, organizers announced Tuesday.

Festival will take place digitally Aug. 6-8, showcasing different continents each night

Dancers with the Korean pavilion perform at Folklorama in 2017. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, this year's festival will be online only, but festival organizers say they plan a return to in-person events next summer. (Submitted by Folklorama)

Winnipeg's long-running multicultural festival returns this year, virtually. 

The festival's organizers announced Tuesday that the event will offer three days of online programming, dubbed Folklorama Fusion, this August.

Folklorama's executive director, Teresa Cotroneo, said the COVID-19 pandemic is the reason for the online approach, saying that indicators pointed to another year where producing a full festival is not possible. 

The 2020 festival — the 51st year for Folklorama — was cancelled due to the pandemic. Instead, Folklorama ran a community scavenger hunt and promoted different areas of the city.

This year's Folklorama will run from Aug. 6 to 8. 

Performances will be streamed live on YouTube from Winnipeg's Burton Cumming Theatre. The programming will be free and the schedule is available online

Each night will showcase different cultures and continents. Aug. 6 will feature performances from Asia and Africa, Aug. 7 will showcase the Americas and Aug. 8 will focus on Europe.

The actual show will start at 7:30 p.m. each night but a live stream will start at 7 p.m. and show behind-the-scenes interviews with performers and entertainers for that evening. 

"Instead of it actually just being one traditional pavilion, it would be more like being out at a festival where you are taking a tour of some of the different cultures," said Controneo. Profiles of artists and performers are available online, as is a virtual ethnocultural marketplace

The year will also introduce an ethnocultural food week, which will allow you to order food from partnering local restaurants.

The long-running multicultural festival started in 1970, originally intended as a one-time event to celebrate Manitoba's centennial. It became a yearly event and is now the world's largest and longest-running festival of its kind, organizers say.

Though this year's festival will be online, the traditional pavilions will return eventually, said Stan Hall, the chair of Folklorama's board of directors. 

"While it will look very different this year, we are excited to start planning our traditional 2022 festival," said Hall.

The 2022 festival is scheduled for July 31 to Aug. 13.

Corrections

  • We initially reported that this is the second year Folklorama will be done virtually. In fact, last year there was no virtual festival programming. A community scavenger hunt and promotion of different areas of the city were done instead.
    Jul 07, 2021 8:37 AM CT