Your opera singer just hit a half-century mark
You know, sometimes the news cycle feels like an endless scroll of things breaking apart. Everything is complicated, everyone is yelling, and the rain just keeps coming down. And then, you get a story that reminds you that some things… some people… just endure. Don Wright, a chorus member with the Vancouver Opera, is retiring after 51 years. Think about that for a minute. More than five decades on stage, right here in our city.
This isn't just some trivia tidbit; it's a quiet testament to a life lived in service of art, right here in Vancouver. Don followed his father and brother into the chorus in 1975, which means he's been part of the Vancouver cultural fabric longer than some of our most iconic buildings have stood. He's seen operas performed in venues that no longer exist, watched the city transform from a sleepy port town to this sprawling, expensive metropolis. He’s been a constant, a voice, through all of it.
### What This Means for Vancouver
* **A thread of continuity:** In a city that often feels like it's constantly tearing itself down and rebuilding, someone dedicating 51 years to a single institution is… *rare*. It’s a link to a past that sometimes feels like it's slipping away. * **The unsung heroes:** We often focus on the stars, but a chorus is the backbone. It’s the collective power that makes the magic happen. Don Wright represents the thousands of dedicated people who make our city's cultural life vibrant. * **Art as a life's work:** It reminds us that there are still paths for a long, meaningful career in the arts, even in a city where creative industries often struggle against the tide of rising costs.
It’s easy to get lost in the noise, the development cranes, the endless debates about affordability. But then you hear about someone like Don Wright, who has literally added his voice to the city's symphony for over half a century. It's a grounding force, a reminder of the quiet, beautiful things that truly make Vancouver, Vancouver.
Beautiful out here. Complicated in here. That's the coast.
If you're looking for more stories like this, my friends on the Morning Wire team dig into them every day. You can tune in live at mornings.live.