A group of Vancouver actors gets together to try and fit the lives of their mothers into 1000 words or less. The project is called My Mother's Story and has become a stage show with the second annual performance on Mother's Day this year. Read the full description.
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Piece Description
Each of us has or has had a mother. As children we often take our mothers for granted, rarely seeing them as the rich and complicated human beings that they were and are. But as adults, some of us can step back and see our mothers differently. In this radio piece, a group of Vancouver actors has done just that. Marilyn Norry, a Vancouver actor, asked the women in her email address book to write their mothers' stories in 1000 words or less. The project is called "My Mother's Story". Here is Marilyn Norry with many mother stories ....
Broadcast History
aired on CBC The Sunday Edition, May 2006





Emon Hassan
Posted on April 21, 2007 at 11:41 AM | Permalink
Review of My Mother's Story
I often tell people that the world's most complex human relationship is between a mother and a daughter. I'm no mother, nor a daughter (see my profile picture). So how is it that I make such a conclusion?
Well, for one, stories women tell about their relationship with their mothers and, two, watching closely the mothers/daughters - who are near and dear to me; Or not but still share their stories - with their daughters/mothers.
The introduction serves a purpose here. 'My Mother's Story' captures a slice of that relationship quite well. I mean the piece did not set out to explore the nature of mother/daughter relationships in general; it simply wanted to accumulate stories about mothers as related by their daughters. In doing so, 'My Mother's Story' became a study in each of the participating women's relationship with her mother. Why did one woman hate her mother only to realize years later that she needed time to understand her better? How do you write about your mother in a thousand words? What do you leave out? These are all part of a discussion you hear women in this piece have. Is it possible that they've learned a lot about themselves during the project by 'living' their mother's lives? Quite possible. When you put pen to paper and reflect, the mirror becomes full-length and the memory streams without filtering itself. Details are crystal clear, only the meaning has changed from when first experienced by a daughter. A mother likely can see herself in her daughter, but a daughter has to wait. You too will likely find yourself in some of these stories in this piece.
A good choice to air for mother's day, but a great piece to listen to any time of the year, or any time in your life.