December,
2002
SHARED VISION MAGAZINE
For
her sustained commitment to helping raise money for the Vancouver
Friends for Life Society, local Jazz Diva Stevie Vallance was honoured
last month when the Society presented her with their 2002 Friend
In Deed Philanthropy Award at their annual signature event, Art
for Life. Established in 1993, the Vancouver Friends For Life Society
is a privately funded nonprofit society, offering a wide range of
therapeutic programs and services to those facing life-threatening
illnesses. Motivated by the devastating loss of a close personal
friend, Stevie Vallance conceived Divas For Life, a benefit concert,
hosted in Vancouver For the past two years. As part of the 2001
Vancouver International Jazz Festival, she produced a series of
sold-out dinner concerts at Zev's restaurants. Proceeds from all
of these events, grossing close to $75,000 have been generously
donated to Friends For Life.
November
7, 2002
Friend In Deed Awards Dinner / "ART FOR LIFE"
(excerpt from Lifelines Magazine, Autumn 2002)
STEVIE
VALLANCE receives 2002 Friend In Deed Philanthropy Award. Motivated
by the devastating loss of her close personal friend, Jane, to cancer
in 2000, this diva in her own right conceived Divas For Life. In
addition to producing the First Divas For Life concert at The Vogue
on Feb. 3, 2001, she produced and negotiated a national distribution
deal for the CD Divas For Life: Live at The Vogue, as part of the
2001 Vancouver International Jazz Festival. She then produced a
series of sold-out dinner concerts at Zev's Restaurant. Most recently
she produced the DIVAS FOR LOVE, Divas For Life:02 concert held
on February 14, 2002. All proceeds from each of these shows, which
have now grossed close to $75,000 have been generously donated to
Friends For Life.
Slinky,
sultry and really sensational
by
Alexandra Gill, Globe and Mail, February 19, 2002
VANCOUVER
-- Divas for Life Featuring Lee Aaron, Christine Duncan, Kate Hammett-Vaughan,
Angela Kelman, Karin Plato and Stevie Vallance At the Vogue Theatre
in Vancouver on Thursday.
Take
six divas from Vancouver with voluptuous voices, squeezed into sensational
form-fitting gowns. Put them on an intimate flower-strewn stage
with some of the finest jazz musicians in the country. Light the
candles on three spectacular heart-shaped candelabras that bathe
the sold-out theatre in a warm romantic glow. Donate the proceeds
to a non-profit hospice that provides care for people with life-threatening
illnesses. And you've got the makings of a Valentine's night that
by far transcended every cheap materialistic cliche typically reserved
for the occasion. Read
More
The
'Do-Good' DIVAS...
by
Alexandra Gill, GLOBE & MAIL, July 2001
VANCOUVER
-- The quintessential diva is not usually a very happy lady. Once
upon a time, the term was reserved for spectacular vocal gems with
tragic personal flaws. Thanks to VH1, the word has devolved into
a corporate catch phrase applied to any slinky pop princess who
can carry a tune and boast a broken nail.
Divas
for Life is not really about any of that. This is a story about
six talented singers from Vancouver who organized a little jazz
benefit concert last February that grew beyond anyone's wildest
expectations and is now taking on a life of its own with a live-recorded
CD to be released Au. 7 and plans for a national tour. It's a happy
story -- so happy, some might say it's corny. And it's a story that
restores a certain dignity to the word diva. Read
More
STANDING
ROOM ONLY - Divas Dazzle At The Vogue
by Paul Grant
It
all started last summer when half a dozen top female vocalists were
profiled in Vancouver Lifestyles Magazine. During the photo shoot,
talk turned to doing a benefit concert together.
Stevie
Vallance had just returned from New York, where she'd been visiting
her 41-year-old friend Jane, who was dying with cancer (see One
Diva's Story). Stevie suggested a benefit for Friends For Life,
and set about taking a lot of the work on her slender shoulders,
lining up musicians, sponsors, MC's, a venue and even dealing with
lighting and staging.
The
work was worth it. The concert was sold out, with people scrambling
to buy standing room only tickets. And they weren't disappointed.
Read
More
CD
REVIEWS:
John
Beaudin
August 2001, Shared
Visions, Vancouver
Divas
For Life-Live At The Vogue ! / Fusion
3
Before
I heard this album I kind of had it with Divas. With the Pop princess
Is there were rumours of cat fights temper tantrums way too many
crazy crescendos and then there's Celine Dion. Her diatribes on
having a baby alone were enough to turn anyone's stomach how she
figured her ovaries were important to us is beyond me. This album
is about artistic integrity not full-size egos it's about singing
from the right place for the right reason and not competing with
vocal gymnastics though any one of these local Jazz Divas has the
range to threaten your glassware . Read
More
DIVAS
FOR LIFE - Live At The Vogue! ***
by
Marke Andrews, June 2001, The Vancouver Sun
The
successful benefit concert at the Vogue last February is now a CD...
At the concert, six Vancouver based vocalists performed three songs
each, plus two tunes as an ensemble; the disc retains the two ensemble
numbers, a song from each, and an instrumental. Dee Daniels show-stopping
'God Bless the Child' opens the disc, and it's hard not to get a
chill listening to this accomplished vocalist let it fly; Stevie
Vallance does a polished job on 'Over the Rainbow', which has a
strong saxophone solo from Tom Keenlyside. Plato's all-Vancouver
tune 'Beauty in the Rain' gives a lift to the blues structure, with
Michale Creber playing great piano... Kate Hammett-Vaughan brings
power to the words for 'This Is New'. 'Here's to Life' is the better
of the two ensemble tunes. Various members of the Divas perform
individual concerts at the festival.
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