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Away for the holidays

Source: National Post
Date: December 4, 2007
Author: Sarah B. Hood
Exhausted parents can keep kids busy during the Christmas season by taking them to shows such as The Nutcracker or a Ross Petty pantomime. But what if you're the one onstage? Here's how some of Toronto's performing families cope.

DEBORAH LUNDMARK & MICHAEL DECONINCK SMITH

This year marks the 20th anniversary of Canadian Children's Dance Theatre's production, Wintersong. When it's over, company founders Deborah Lundmark and Michael deConinck Smith will travel with their children, Britta, 24, and Erik, 22, to the family farm, as they have done for 26 years.

"Every Christmas we travel 2,000 miles to Saskatoon and another 100 miles to our small town, and then we set up for Christmas again," says Lundmark. "It's hard to get Christmas trees in Saskatchewan, and every single year Michael's father, who is 96, goes to the Co-op, where you can get your tree for 10 bucks, and brings it to the farm before we get there."

In two days, the empty farmhouse is made ready for family festivities. "It's crazy, but you know what? We haven't missed a year," says Lundmark. "It's very special because it's -40, and it makes the fireplace and the food much more inviting. It's a time when we all can sit together in the living room without television and computers. We listen to each other, and we talk about our wishes and dreams and hopes for each other, and that's the most important time."

TED DYKSTRA & MELANIE DOANE

Actor and director Ted Dykstra and singer-songwriter Melanie Doane have a son, six-year-old Theo, and a daughter, four-year-old Rosie. "It's a bit of a tag-team effort and we try to arrange it so that we're never both working over Christmas," says Dykstra.

"Last year was really hard; I was in Winnipeg doing The Rocky Horror Show, and I could only come home for three days, so Melanie had all the stress. And this year is almost the exact opposite; I'll be here rehearsing Salt-Water Moon [with Soulpepper Theatre], but Melanie will be performing on the Canadian Pacific Holiday Train."

Beginning today and continuing to Dec. 19, Doane is living and performing on the train, which travels across Canada to raise food and awareness of local food banks. To make her absence easier on the family, Dykstra is driving with their children to meet the train in Smiths Falls; they'll travel together to Toronto, where the train stops for a show in the Distillery District on Dec. 3. Then Doane continues to Vancouver.

"The thing that we've learned is that every year is different," Doane says. "This year, the kids will have special time with Dad."

Surviving, says Dykstra, is "a question of having the ability of -- no matter how in the thick of it you are with your work -- being able to say, 'In these three days, nothing else matters.' "

KAREN KAIN & ROSS PETTY

National Ballet artistic director Karen Kain is married to producer and performer Ross Petty; both have a long history of holiday appearances. Every year, Petty plays the comic villain in his Christmas pantomime (he's Captain Hook in this year's Peter Pan). In some years, Kain has even performed in both The Nutcracker and Petty's show. Nonetheless, the couple usually invites their extensive family for a complete Christmas dinner.

"One always does try to do the turkey, but it's never done in the right amount of time and you have to throw it in for another hour or so; I think we share that with many families. Sometimes we get pre-stuffed Cornish hens to throw in the oven. That's always our fallback position, and I think that may be what we're going to do this year," says Petty.

"I bow out very quickly after dinner; it's our only chance to recoup before we do two shows on Boxing Day," he says. "It's a difficult time as a family; however, a great time for me to be entertaining other people's families. I think that is my tradition."

KURT BROWNING & SONIA RODRIGUEZ

Champion figure skater Kurt Browning and National Ballet ballerina Sonia Rodriguez have a newborn son, Dillon, and four-year-old, Gabriel. Between the demands of the skating world, and the fact that Rodriguez has often been on call for the annual Nutcracker, they've never really had a quiet family holiday. "I've sometimes had a show on the 24th and then had all the relatives come over for dinner," says Rodriguez.

Even when Browning was young, holidays were hard to come by. "As a skater, we always had a big competition coming up in January, so I'd drive back to the farm for Christmas Day, knowing that 5 a.m. on Boxing Day I'd have to leave for three and a half months. That really sucked," says Browning.

Although he's starring as Peter Pan at the Elgin Theatre right through the holiday season, Browning says this may be one of their more relaxing years. "Even though I'm working, I'm coming back to the house every night. And Sonia is not doing The Nutcracker this year, so this could be a really great Christmas."