Behind the Facade
This collection of shorts tells ten stories, each centered around a different BC building - from the starkly simple to the grandiose.
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Episode Title:A Place to Belong
There are over 100 Aboriginal Friendship Centres across Canada. A Place to Belong celebrates Christmas at the very first Friendship Centre in East Vancouver.
Episode Title:Casa Mia - In the Headlines
The sumptuous Casa Mia mansion hides a dirty secret. Newspaper headlines reveal connections between rum running money and some of Vancouver's most iconic landmarks.
Episode Title:A Day at the Races
An impressionistic moment in time at the Hastings Racecourse, Vancouver's oldest sporting facility.
Episode Title:Happytime Social Club
Joseph R. Selsey's belongings were discovered in a shoebox by a dumpster in 2015. The provide us with a rare glimpse into life as a gay man in Vancouver in the 1950s.
Episode Title:Have You Forgotten Me?
In 1930, Indar Singh traveled from India to Abbotsford and was forced to leave his wife behind. During their 22-year separation, Indar wrote letters to his wife, Katar Kaur, and Katar wrote letters to Indar.
Episode Title:Nuxalk Radio
A day in the life of 91.1, Nuxalk Radio is a radio station built to help keep the Nuxalkmc language alive, broadcasting the laws of the lands and waters.
Episode Title:Ode to a Seafaring People
Spoken word artist Sol Diana shares a poem inspired by the origin stories of the Igarot people of northern Luzon, Philippines.
Episode Title:The First Synagogue
Temple Emanu-El is Canada's oldest surviving synagogue building that is still in use as a synagogue.
Episode Title:The Tomahawk
The fine line between kitsch and caricature is examined in this quirky short about the Tomahawk Restaurant - the oldest family run restaurant in BC.
Episode Title:The Train Station
Lyana Patrick (Stellat’en First Nation) shares her story of her family's powerful story of love and survival at Lejac Indian Residential School in northern BC.
Episode Title:Behind the Facade
Stories centred around ten different BC buildings - from the starkly simple to the grandiose - told by acclaimed local directors.