Month: June 2016

Ottawa Fringe Festival 2016: Love is a Battlefield gripping production

Ottawa Fringe Festival 2016: Love is a Battlefield gripping production

Concrete Drops (Brooklyn, N.Y.), The Courtroom

Credulity meets manipulation in this gripping, twist-and-turn of a two-hander by fringe favourite Martin Dockery. He plays a lost, naïve soul attempting to record a demo CD by a beautiful, rich songstress played by Vanessa Quesnelle. They squabble, drink, draw closer together, move apart as it slowly becomes clear that there’s more of a back story here than first appeared. To say much more would be to say too much, but the back story soon becomes front and centre as events grow darker and the characters – finely drawn by Dockery and compellingly embodied by both actors – slowly open up before us. That Dockery and Quesnelle are married in real life adds another dimension to the drama and heightens its intimate, almost voyeuristic air. This production marks the Canadian premiere of Love is a Battlefield, which is a welcome addition to Dockery’s canon.

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Ottawa Fringe Festival 2016: Fugee’s excellent script and mostly well-oiled performances speak to the heart

Ottawa Fringe Festival 2016: Fugee’s excellent script and mostly well-oiled performances speak to the heart

TWA (Third Wall Academy, Ottawa), Academic Hall

Kill someone when you’re 14 years old, and your own life – likely now one of crippling self-hatred, anger and isolation — is in many ways over. Back up a bit to see why you committed the act and you’ll probably find it was almost predestined by events over which you had no control. That’s pretty much the case of Ivory Coast-born Kojo (Patrick Bugby), a child soldier and orphan who becomes a refugee among other abandoned child refugees (eight other student actors playing multiple roles) and who sees his own life, once a joyful thing of family and tall trees and potential, shrink to almost nothing. The script by British playwright and screenwriter Abi Morgan is powerful, its execution by this ensemble of under-20 performers mostly well-oiled and passionate. There are problems – characters are not always developed; the high-pitched screams of one actor are painful overkill – but under director James Richardson, Fugee speaks to the heart.

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Ottawa Fringe Festival 2016: Shakespeare Crackpot feels undisciplined

Ottawa Fringe Festival 2016: Shakespeare Crackpot feels undisciplined

Doctor Keir Co (Montreal), Studio Léonard-Beaulne

Just when you thought the question about whether Shakespeare actually wrote Shakespeare was one of those arcane discussions that had finally been consigned to the dumpster of literary history, Keir Cutler raises it again in this lecture-style, partly autobiographical and largely uninspiring comedy. Turns out that the contrarian Cutler’s interest in disputing Shakespeare’s authorship of all those works (he does marshal some enticing arguments for his position) is at heart a rallying cry for independent thinking in the face of smug, conformity-loving academics who simply squelch any discussion of uncomfortable questions like the authorship one. The show has a undisciplined feel, including an extraneous homage to his bright, ambitious parents and an account of how, on the path to a PhD, Cutler discovered that he’d score top marks only by parroting back to professors their own opinions. I don’t know about you, but my own, extended university experience completely contradicts the latter. This show is Cutler’s eighth Ottawa Fringe appearance.

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Ottawa Fringe Festival 2016: Love is a Battlefield – A High class performance by Fringe Royalty

Ottawa Fringe Festival 2016: Love is a Battlefield – A High class performance by Fringe Royalty

Love is a Battlefield written by Martin Dockery, performed by Vanessa Quesnelle and Martin Dockery; Dramaturgy by Vanessa Quesnelle.

The epitome of the best in Fringe performance, actor, director, story teller, mimic, mime, creator of stage events that are completely original,  Martin Dockery is back in Ottawa under the fringe spotlight with his just as brilliant partner Vanessa Quesnelle. The woman with the velvet singing voice that one could listen to all day, as the character says in this show, also proves how she can hold her own in this brief encounter that appears to be improvised but that is tightly scripted I was told.

A singer has hired the character played by Dockery to make a recording of her latest song. It all takes place in her apartment while her husband it out. Simple enough;  however as emotions heat up, unexpected information is discovered, the simple arrangement becomes an accumulation of complex possibilities and relationships that make the dialogue more and more ambiguous as the interlocutors, avoid clear answers, respond to questions with questions, and create an atmosphere of mistrust that persists until the very end, which in itself is purposely unclear.

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Fringe Festival 2016: Fugee a timely play with some excellent performances.

Fringe Festival 2016: Fugee a timely play with some excellent performances.

Fugee : Directed by James Richardson, written by Abi Morgan. A production of the Third Wall Academy

Third Wall Academy has made enormous strides in its theatre training this year, especially related to its actor training, with its production of this moving, and very timely play by Abi Morgan. It brings us into the world of child refugees from around the world, while emphasizing the horrors of Child Soldiers that have been discussed in much African literature recently, including the award winning novel by writer Ahmadou Kourouma (Allah Is Not Obliged 2007) from the Côte D’ivoire, also the country of origin of 14 year-old Kojo, the young French-speaking character at the centre of this performance. Kojo is submerged in the unfathomable noises of an English speaking refugee centre, as a narrative filled with flashbacks, confused memories of his family, gives us the background of this youth who is the focus of this play.

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Ottawa Fringe Festival 2016: Grade 8 Dwayne Morgan captivates the audience

Ottawa Fringe Festival 2016: Grade 8 Dwayne Morgan captivates the audience

It is hard enough to raise a child as a single parent, but try to raise a daughter as a single father, and you face a real challenge. Well-known Canadian poet, spoken word artist and motivational speaker Dwayne Morgan talks about that difficult time when his daughter reaches puberty, and the father takes on the role of the mother. How do you explain the changes her body is going through and how do you deal with other new issues that will come soon? Morgan’s story explores not only a father-daughter relationship, but much more than that. He incorporates in his narrative problems of growing up in today’s wold, such as sexism, racism, and generally cruelty that a sheltered young girl does not know.

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Arthur Miller’s All My Sons Triumphs at Stratford

Arthur Miller’s All My Sons Triumphs at Stratford

 All My Sons – On The Run 2016  Photo: David Hou.Lucy Peacock as Kate Keller and Joseph Ziegler as Joe Keller. 

There was a time when Arthur Miller’s 1947 play, All My Sons, was undervalued, its reputation eclipsed by the
subsequent triumphs of Death Of A Salesman and The Crucible.

Perhaps today’s troubled times have contributed to its renewed stature. Or perhaps its simply benefiting from a more aware perception of what it’s really about. One strength of Martha Henry’s marvellous new production at the Stratford Festival rests in its subtle power in examining the often elusive nature of guilt. This sterling revival provides a textbook example of how to realize the dramatic potential of the familiar theme of the sins of the father being visited on future generations. But Henry and her cast are also going for something particularly unsettling here — the conundrum of the once decent human being who commits a terrible act.

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Stratford’s Self-Indulgent As You Like It is More Newfoundland Hoedown than Shakespeare

Stratford’s Self-Indulgent As You Like It is More Newfoundland Hoedown than Shakespeare

 As You Like It – On The Run 2016Photo  David Hou   
 
  When Rosalind dons a pair of jeans to make like a
man, the Stratford Festival's costume department even ensures that the
legs are fashionably provided with holes.

But that apparently isn't enough, particularly if you want to
emphasize the ludicrousness of Rosalind's bogus masculinity rather
than the fact that she's one of the most divine creations in the
Shakespeare canon.

So in the Stratford Festival's new modernized take on As You Like it,
you also have Rosalind fussing over the rolled-up sock she's stuffed
in the crotch of her jeans. Yes, it's that kind of show.

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God of Carnage: Yasmina Reza returns to the OLT with her award-winning critique of the middle class

God of Carnage: Yasmina Reza returns to the OLT with her award-winning critique of the middle class

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Photo: Maria Vartanova

By Yasmina Reza, translated by Christopher Hampton; Ottawa Little Theatre ; Directed by Chantale Plante

At one point in Yasmina Reza’s incisive, award-winning comedy about social hypocrisy, a father comments that his 11-year-old son is “a savage”.

The savage behaviour in question is a playground fight in which he hit another boy with a stick, breaking two of the other child’s teeth.

Now, the two sets of parents are meeting to discuss the incident. The initial awkwardness, punctuated by long pauses, is soon replaced by increasingly uncivil and uncivilized behaviour revealing the insincerity and ugliness in the married couples’ relationships with each other and with their opposite numbers.

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Shakespeare In Love is Fun — But Should It Be Happening at Stratford?

Shakespeare In Love is Fun — But Should It Be Happening at Stratford?

Shakespeare in Love – On The Run 2016

 Photo: David Hou.  Luke Humphrey (left) as Will Shakespeare and Stephen Ouimette as Henslowe

The first point to be made about the stage version of Shakespeare In Love is that will give a great deal of legitimate satisfaction to a great many theatregoers.

The second point is that any claim to its being a true Stratford Festival “production” seems dubious.

It may be a sound money-making move to include this shamelessly commercial stage adaption of the Oscar-winning movie in a festival season. It also may seem a little crass and opportunistic — especially given that this is a 400th anniversary year that should surely be taken seriously by an organization of Stratford’s international prestige.

At the same time, it would be unfair to dismiss Lee Hall’s stage adaptation of the original screenplay by Tom Stoppard and Marc Norman as some kind of hack job. Hall is a respected British dramatist, a former writer-in-residence for the Royal Shakespeare Company, with a solid output that includes the 2008 stage success, The Pitmen Painters, and the award-winning book for Billy Elliott: The Musical.

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