To a tea

Carole Vivier’s personal, professional experience makes her the perfect person to host CancerCare fundraiser

Advertisement

Advertise with us

Two years ago, Carole Vivier was settling into a new chapter in her life, having just retired from a nearly 30-year career as the CEO of Manitoba Film and Music in 2019, when her life abruptly changed again.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $1.44 a week*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*Billed as $5.77 plus GST every four weeks. After 52 weeks, price increases to the regular rate of $19.95 plus GST every four weeks. Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 27/10/2022 (1345 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Two years ago, Carole Vivier was settling into a new chapter in her life, having just retired from a nearly 30-year career as the CEO of Manitoba Film and Music in 2019, when her life abruptly changed again.

Vivier was told she had lung cancer.

“I feel like the cliché, you know, the person that worked for a million years, retires, and within that year gets The Diagnosis,” she says. “It was a shock.”

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
                                Volunteers Karen Bryk (left) and Carole Vivier have collected donated tea cups from women all over the province for the Guardian Angel Benefit for Women’s Cancer, billed as Manitoba’s largest tea party.

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

Volunteers Karen Bryk (left) and Carole Vivier have collected donated tea cups from women all over the province for the Guardian Angel Benefit for Women’s Cancer, billed as Manitoba’s largest tea party.

The last time this writer interviewed Vivier, we were in the boardroom at MFM, talking about the highlights of her legacy-leaving career. Today, we’re in a boardroom at CancerCare Manitoba, where Vivier is currently serving as a volunteer.

She’s harnessing all the tenacity, passion and commitment — as well as a keen eye toward community building — that defined her career and bringing it to her role as co-chairperson of this year’s Guardian Angel Benefit for Women’s Cancer, a marquee annual fundraising event for CancerCare Manitoba and the first one to take place in person since the pandemic.

As a patient, Vivier, 71, had interacted a lot with the CancerCare Manitoba Foundation, who asked her if she had suggestions of names for the benefit organizing committee, including chair.

“I was giving names of suggestions — but I never put my own,” Vivier says. She was daunted by the idea of being in charge of such a large fundraiser and was also concerned about her own health status. But when co-chairing was floated as a possibility, Vivier was in, as was her co-chair, Karen Bryk. The pair had crossed paths professionally before, and Bryk says she has always been a huge Carole Vivier fan.

“When Carole calls you and asks for your help, you never say no to Carole,” Bryk says.


Before she was planning “Manitoba’s largest tea party,” as Sunday’s event is billed, for CancerCare Manitoba, Vivier was a patient.

A round of chemo and immunotherapy followed her diagnosis in October 2020, as Vivier grappled with a life-altering diagnosis during a life-altering pandemic.

“It was a challenging time, made all the easier by the incredible care and support and treatments here at CancerCare Manitoba,” she says. “I mean, they really do take care of you.”

After 12 weeks, a CT scan showed the lung tumour had shrunk, but the tumour in the lymph node had grown significantly. “I was like, ‘OK, that’s not good,’” Vivier says.

At that time, Vivier’s oncologist was in the process of setting up a new clinical trial in Manitoba that, as it happens, targeted Vivier’s specific biomarker mutation, the MET exon 14 skipping mutation. After a battery of tests, Vivier became the first Manitoban patient for the clinical trial.

After six or seven weeks of treatment, the news from the CT scan was good: everything had shrunk down by about 70 per cent, including the lymph node. “The clinical trial is working,” Vivier says. She’s been on medication since March 2021 and is doing well.

To have this specific trial for her specific mutation is extraordinary, Vivier says.

“I really feel like I have guardian angels around me, so this,” she says, referring to the Guardian Angel Benefit, “feels kind of apropos for me.”


You need a lot of teacups to host Manitoba’s largest tea party.

The planning committee asked the public to donate their cups, with a goal of 1,500. The response, Vivier says, was overwhelming.

“A lot of people put notes in their teacups,” Vivier says. “And reading those stories was really heartwarming. So again, it’s that sense of community. I wasn’t quite prepared for it, you know, reading about, ‘these are my grandparents’; they were given these when they got married.’ Or, ‘this was my mum’s and my mum died of cancer,’ or this was my aunt’s or my sister’s.”

Bryk’s 84-year-old mother volunteers twice a week at Mennonite Central Committee, and she immediately took on the teacup-collecting challenge, asking the CEO if they could collect and donate them as well, and then calling her daughter with weekly teacup-tally updates. Bryk’s parents were both longtime volunteers with MCC.

“My father passed away, so I think it was a little bit of my mother’s healing journey to be able to help to do this,” Bryk says. “For her to be present at this event and see all these teacups she helped collect adds another story.”

Hosting an afternoon tea party as opposed to an evening gala was an intentional choice, meant to evoke gatherings in halls and church basements and people’s living rooms. Tea is embedded in many cultures, which is why the event will feature teas from around the world. Tea is ceremonial. It’s ritual. It’s comfort.

“I think a tea party in itself says community,” Vivier says. (Guests are encouraged to take home their teacup as a souvenir.)

Having that community connection point is important since, as Bryk points out, just about everyone is touched by cancer in some way. Getting involved in this event was easy, she says. “Nobody goes to the Olympics without a coach,” she says, “and nobody gets through this without CancerCare.”

Vivier, for her part, wants others to have the same life-saving care she did. “The money they raise contributes to the cost of the research, and the research leads to clinical trials, and that saves many lives, extends many lives,” she says. “You know, as they like to say, it gives us all more tomorrows.”

Vivier has already made good use of her tomorrows. This summer, she took her youngest granddaughter to New York City. It’s been a tradition for Vivier to take each of her granddaughters on a one-on-one trip to the Big Apple.

“I have to say, one of the first things that crossed my mind was, ‘I may not be able to take Ella to New York,’ and it made me kind of cry,” Vivier said. “It was a big deal for me. Thanks to this clinical trial, I was able to take her. We went to New York and had a blast. I have all the pictures with her like I did with the other three. That was very special.

“They’re important moments. So, to get those moments when sometimes at first you think you might not have them? Yeah, it’s a big deal.”

Tickets for the Guardian Angel Benefit are available at support.cancercarefdn.mb.ca, as is access to the online auction, which is live now. Note: you do not need to attend the event to bid in the auction.

jen.zoratti@winnipegfreepress.com

Twitter: @JenZoratti

Jen Zoratti

Jen Zoratti
Columnist

Jen Zoratti is a Winnipeg Free Press columnist and author of the newsletter, NEXT, a weekly look towards a post-pandemic future.

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

History

Updated on Thursday, October 27, 2022 9:36 AM CDT: Corrects year of cancer diagnosis

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Canadian athletes start planning for 2021

Donna Spencer and Lori Ewing, The Canadian Press 1 minute read Preview

Canadian athletes start planning for 2021

Donna Spencer and Lori Ewing, The Canadian Press 1 minute read Tuesday, Mar. 24, 2020

Canadian athletes are recalibrating their lives now that the Tokyo Games are postponed until 2021.

Tuesday's announcement by the International Olympic Committee and Japan's organizers came less than 48 hours after Canada's Olympic and Paralympic committees declared they would not send teams to Tokyo this summer.

Canadian sprint star Andre De Grasse is relieved the emotional roller-coaster he's been riding has levelled out somewhat.

"I'm at peace with the Olympics being postponed until 2021," he told The Canadian Press on Tuesday. "The last few weeks have been difficult.

Read
Tuesday, Mar. 24, 2020

‘The water can’t get away’

Gabrielle Piché 6 minute read Preview

‘The water can’t get away’

Gabrielle Piché 6 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

Manitoba crop insurance payouts will likely exceed $15 million this year — before factoring in recent flooding in the Interlake and Parkland regions. Total costs won’t be fully known until year end.

Meantime, as dozens of local communities declare states of emergency, some farmers are calling for greater infrastructure investment, saying damage could’ve been avoided with better drainage maintenance.

“You can do as much ditching as you want in a field, but if it gets to municipality ditches or the provincial ditches and it can’t flow away, it just doesn’t help anything,” said Ryan Elliot.

He farms roughly 6,000 acres with his father near Stonewall. About one-third of their crop — wheat, canola — has been completely destroyed by rain, Elliot said. He estimates another third is “heavily damaged.”

Read
2:01 AM CDT

Carole Vivier’s experience makes her the perfect person to host CancerCare fundraiser

Jen Zoratti 6 minute read Preview

Carole Vivier’s experience makes her the perfect person to host CancerCare fundraiser

Jen Zoratti 6 minute read Thursday, Oct. 27, 2022

Two years ago, Carole Vivier was settling into a new chapter in her life, having just retired from a nearly 30-year career as the CEO of Manitoba Film and Music in 2019, when her life abruptly changed again.

Read
Thursday, Oct. 27, 2022

We know who is at risk, but we wait anyway

Sherry Gott 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Children with disabilities are experiencing a mental health crisis and Manitoba’s systems are waiting for them to really struggle before they respond.

Across Canada, children with disabilities experience far higher rates of mental health challenges than their peers. Nearly three-quarters of children and youth with disabilities experience elevated mental health challenges. More than one-third score in the “very high” mental health difficulty category, a rate nearly 10 times higher than among children without disabilities.

Between 30 to 50 per cent of children with neurodevelopmental disabilities are diagnosed with mental health conditions, compared to eight to 18 per cent among typically developing children. This includes children with autism, ADHD, FASD, intellectual disabilities, learning disabilities and communication disorders.

Children who struggle with communication, sensory regulation, mobility, executive functioning, or social interaction are often excluded long before systems recognize the emotional consequences of that exclusion. Loneliness and exclusion are not side issues — they are public health issues for children with disabilities.

New plaza graced by art with heart

Tiago Resko 4 minute read Preview

New plaza graced by art with heart

Tiago Resko 4 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Tears fill the eyes of an Ojibwa sculptor from Peguis First Nation as he talks about the spiritual journey and deep friendships that came out of creating his first public art piece.

Maamaawi Naanaagadawendamowin, which means Gather Your Heart, was created for the new Kevin Walters Plaza that opened June 26 outside the Burton Cummings Theatre. The piece was commissoned by the Winnipeg Arts Council for the City of Winnipeg Public Art Collection.

Artist Fredrick Spence, along with partners Darren Sakwi and Rob Peristy, who fabricated the metal sculpture, were celebrated for their work Tuesday at the plaza.

“Me, Rob and Darren, we cried together many times during the process of making this. It really took the time, it took all our hearts,” Spence says.

Read
2:00 AM CDT

Governing by gimmick

Erna Buffie 5 minute read Preview

Governing by gimmick

Erna Buffie 5 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

We all know that politicians can be opportunists sometimes, not necessarily for venal reasons like personal financial gain, but to win the hearts and minds of voters.

So, for example, if the current zeitgeist is all about the escalating cost of living, the opportunist politico will miraculously find ways to look as if they’re doing something to address the problem, when what they’re really offering is a flashy gimmick.

I am referring, of course, to our very own provincial government which seems to have become very skilled in the art of governing by gimmick.

It all began with the gas tax holiday — an action touted as relief for a general public facing ever rising prices at the gas pump. In the end that “solution” cost the government more than $340 million in revenue, and for those of us without combustible engines, provided exactly zero in savings.

Read
2:00 AM CDT