British Columbia

Audiences invited to feast on Indigenous culture in Métis cabaret show

An acoustic band will join Vancouver-based Métis artist Andrea Menard to perform Rubaboo, a Métis cabaret performance featuring songs that explore themes of unity, love and truth and reconciliation. 

Artist Andrea Menard aims to boost reconciliation, education and hope with show Rubaboo, which means 'soup'

A woman in a white shirt and long blue skirt, stands in the middle of a stage with her arms stretched wide while singing into a microphone. Behind her, the stage is decorated in an intricate pattern of circles and swirls.
Andrea Menard and three other musicians perform in Rubaboo, a Métis cabaret show. (Dahlia Katz)

A new type of performance is taking the stage in Vancouver to showcase Métis songs and stories. 

An acoustic band will join Vancouver-based Métis artist Andrea Menard to perform Rubaboo, a Métis cabaret performance featuring songs that explore themes of unity, love and truth and reconciliation. 

"'Rubaboo' is a Michif word that means 'soup' … rubaboo is me and it's the Métis culture because we're also a mix of different languages, different locations, different peoples," said Menard.

"I wanted that word, that flavour and that spirit of the Michif meal, feast to come together into a show."

Menard says the show is her way of guiding people to "walk toward reconciliation" through music and singing.

She says she hopes the production will make audiences fall in love with Indigenous culture and art, and "with the idea of there being hope, of there being a chance for us to do this together."

Four performers stand on a stage hold hand drums and singing into a microphone. Behind them, the stage is decorated in an intricate design of swirls and circles.
Andrea Menard (centre left) says Rubaboo is a Michif word that means soup, explaining that the show is a soup of stories and songs that reflect the unique mix of Métis culture. (Dahlia Katz )

Healing and hope 

Menard describes Rubaboo as a mélange of artistic elements that form her version of a cabaret performance, which traditionally comprises music, song, dance or drama and is held in a dining room or pub. 

"I'm calling it a cabaret because it's storytelling, it's singing, it's sacred," she said.

She said the 90-minute performance came about when Dennis Garnhum, artistic director of the Grand Theatre in London, Ont., offered her an opening for a new show. 

Menard adds she wasn't interested in creating a show for the sake of it, but decided to use the opportunity to further reconciliation and educate people about Métis history. 

"There's still so many people who don't know anything about the residential school system… of why the Métis people resisted in 1885," she said, referring to the Northwest Rebellion against the Canadian government. 

"I wanted to be somebody who was furthering education and expanding compassion."

A woman in a white shirt and long blue skirt stands on a stage singing into a microphone. Her hands are stretched out in front of her with a red scarf wrapped over her shoulders.
Menard says she is using her platform with Rubaboo to educate people on Métis history and give them space to learn to love Indigenous culture and art. (Dahlia Katz)

Menard adds much of the show's production took place during the pandemic, which inspired her to put together a show to inspire and spread feelings of joy. 

"It's about healing our collective wounds… I want people to walk away with hope," she said. 

"I want to leave this world a better place than when I came into it, and the best way I know how is through telling songs and stories," she added. 

WATCH | Andrea Menard shares the inspiration behind Rubaboo:

B.C. performer shares inspiration behind creation of Métis cabaret

2 years ago
Duration 2:54
Métis performer Andrea Menard created Rubaboo, a Métis cabaret performance, to help people heal and learn more about Indigenous history in a time of Truth and Reconciliation.

Room to share

Garnhum says Rubaboo tells a variety of stories using the natural elements of earth, wind, fire and water. 

But the heart of the show really comes from Menard's own lived experience, he says. 

"It's very clear to me that Andrea wants to be a bridge… She wants people to come gather around and hear her story. It's her turn," Garnhum said. 

"You get to listen to someone's personal experience of living on this planet and you get to connect with Andrea. Not an idea, but a person."

He adds it's important to give Indigenous artists room to share their art and stories with a variety of audiences. 

The show, which opened in London, Ont., earlier this year, is currently playing at Vancouver's Granville Island Stage until April 30. Garnhum says the show will be in Edmonton next year with plans to expand further in the future. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Arrthy Thayaparan is an associate producer at CBC Vancouver. She's interested in health, environment, and community stories. You can contact her at arrthy.thayaparan@cbc.ca.

With files from The Early Edition