Author: Patrick Langston

Patrick Langston is the theatre critic for the Ottawa Citizen. In addition to reviews of professional and the occasional community theatre production, he writes a monthly theatre column and previews of major shows for the Citizen. Patrick also writes for Ottawa Magazine, Carleton University Magazine, and Penguin Eggs -Canada's folk, roots and world music magazine. Patrick lives in Navan.
The Glastone Celebrates a Decade of Drama

The Glastone Celebrates a Decade of Drama

The Gladstone Theatre turns 10 years old this fall. That may make it a mere stripling in the arts world, but in the past decade it’s taken on a very adult role in Ottawa’s theatre scene.

And if its upcoming, jam-packed season – 24 shows by more than two dozen different companies – is any indication, the Gladstone will be operating into ripe old age.

The building at 910 Gladstone Ave. in Little Italy is an unusually busy spot, agrees theatre manager AL Connors.

“Any night of the week, there’s something going on. That’s not what you’ll find at most theatres.”

One reason for its bustle is its business model. Basically a rental house, it hosts shows running  anywhere from four nights to two weeks. That means there’s always something fresh on stage and the stage is almost never empty.

It also offers a fascinating mix of productions, most of them professional but with some community theatre in the mix.

The upcoming season, for example, includes Shakespeare’s King Lear, starring long-time Ottawa actor John Koensgen; the family musical Cinderella and the Ice Slipper over the holiday season; Fierce by ever-fierce Canadian playwright George F. Walker; Sophocles’s classical Greek comedy Lysistrata and two shows by Ottawa’s Pierre Brault including Dief the Chief, Brault’s riveting study of Prime Minister John Diefenbaker during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.

That open-minded approach to programming makes The Gladstone a magnet for companies seeking a venue. Local director and producer John P. Kelly has directed some two dozen shows at the theatre, including Alan Ayckbourn’s farce How the Other Half Loves, which opened The Gladstone’s inaugural season in 2008.  Kelly is back as a director in January when his SevenThirty Productions presents David Greig and Gordon McIntyre’s Midsummer, a play with songs.

“What makes The Gladstone good for a producer is that it’s available to independent artists, and not many (venues) with 230 seats are,” says Kelly. “That makes it a very good venue commercially.”

The building itself had a storied history as a performance space long before Kelly mounted The Gladstone’s inaugural show back in 2008.

Built as a truck garage, the building was home to the Great Canadian Theatre Company from 1982 until GCTC moved to Wellington Street West in 2007. Local businesspeople Marilisa Granzotto and Steve Martin bought the building that same year, poured more than $1 million into renovations that transformed the tired space into a glamorous, Art Deco-style house, and launched an ambitious, 11-show season of professional theatre in their first year.

However, debt and lower revenues than anticipated meant The Gladstone was soon scrambling to keep up financially. Martin put the building up for sale in 2010 for $1.5 million, but couldn’t sell it.

The building finally sold in 2015, after being listed for $995,000 on various sites including Kijiji, and the new owner agreed to continue leasing the site as a performance space.

In the meantime, Ottawa-based Plosive Productions and SevenThirty Productions had taken over programming and were soon joined by other companies.

Operations changed again when The Gladstone was incorporated as a non-profit in 2016, and Connors was subsequently taken on as full-time theatre manager.

This summer, Connors and company negotiated a new lease that extends to 2025.

“It allows us to do long-range planning,” says Connors, who lists a series of improvements to the facility including LED lights and handrails for the steeply raked aisles.

Those raked aisles and seats and their close proximity to the stage are part of what makes The Gladstone a great place to act, says Robin Guy. She’s performed in a dozen shows there and is also artistic director of Three Sisters Theatre Company, which is back at The Gladstone this season.

Being so close to the audience – in fact, being able to see the first three or four rows – “creates intimacy, a really interesting energy between the performer and the audience,” she says. “The energy feeds you, gives you a boost.”

Guy, who’s performing in Bear & Co.’s This Flight Tonight: Songs of Joni Mitchell at The Gladstone in mid-October, adds that without the space, there would be no real venue for independent theatre in Ottawa.

That home of independent theatre gets serious support from the Preston Street Business Improvement Association, which represents nearby restaurants and other businesses. Aware that a theatre draws people to an area, the BIA has donated $10,000 a year to The Gladstone for the past decade, says Connors. A number of local restaurants also offer discounts to Gladstone patrons.

With its local support, operational funding from the City of Ottawa and more than 25,000 patrons annually, The Gladstone is financially stable, according to Connors. And that’s good for performers and others: for example, The Gladstone paid out $635,000 to local artists in the 2017-18 season.

None of which would happen without audiences.

“What’s special about The Gladstone compared to other rental facilities is there’s an audience that comes here regardless of what’s going on,” says Connors. “Even though there’s been lots of turnover – the management has changed, the building was sold – what’s remarkable is the audience keeps coming back … The Gladstone definitely has a fan base.”

The Gladstone’s 10th anniversary season begins Sept. 5 with Toto Too Theatre performing Thom Fitzgerald’s Cloudburst. Information on the full season: thegladstone.ca

 

 

 

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New artistic director shakes up the St.Lawerence Shakespeare fest with a season of love

New artistic director shakes up the St.Lawerence Shakespeare fest with a season of love

Actors Rose Napoli (Celia) and Katherine Gauthier (Rosalind) in a scene from As You Like It on now at St. Lawrence Shakespeare Festival.

It’s a safe bet you’ve never realized the universality of A Lover and His Lass, that sweet and buoyant song from Shakespeare’s As You Like It, until you’ve heard it dressed up, via Appalachia, as a bluegrass tune. Unlikely as it sounds, it works splendidly, at least in the production of As You Like It at the St. Lawrence Shakespeare Festival in Prescott, south of Ottawa.

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The Company of Fools takes a tepid turn…..

The Company of Fools takes a tepid turn…..

photo Andrew Alexandre
Twelfth Night.

Small wonder Twelfth Night is considered one of Shakespeare’s best comedies.

Its plot-line of love, gender confusion and general chaos, which is kicked off when Viola, shipwrecked, washes up on the shores of Illyria and disguises herself as a man named Cesario, is superbly comic and deliciously self-aware.

The play’s depiction of love – its uncontrollable nature, its inevitable complications, and its power to enrich whoever it touches – is timeless and true as Shakespeare pulls Viola, Illyria’s Countess Olivia and Duke Orsino, and others into the mix of romance and passion.

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Drawn That Way: Petulant Guppy Theatre at the Fringe

Drawn That Way: Petulant Guppy Theatre at the Fringe

Photo Ottawa Fringe Theatre 2018  Bebe Queen.

Bebe Queen’s drag-queen show starts promisingly. Bebe Queen (Bebe Brunjes), all heels and sparkly eyeliner, cavorts between the cabaret tables at Live on Elgin as Kesha’s Boogie Feet thunders through the small venue and the crowd eggs on Bebe’s enthusiastic, leggy performance.

Alas, the rest of the show doesn’t measure up to its first few minutes.

A mix of weak comedy bits (at one point, Bebe jokes about “forefathers, forebrothers and … foreskins”) and music (Jumpin’ Joel Flash was among Bebe’s guest performers on opening night, although guest artists change every time), the show is stitched together by Bebe’s own story of coming out, including the first time he fell in love.

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Langston reviews God of Carnage, …Like Nobody’s Watching, The Last Spartan.

Langston reviews God of Carnage, …Like Nobody’s Watching, The Last Spartan.

God of Carnage
Stendhal X, Montreal

“We’re always on our own everywhere,” says one of the characters toward the end of God of Carnage, Yasmina Reza’s acute 2006 play about the fragility of our civilized veneer. That aloneness is precisely what Stendhal X’s adaptation spotlights as we witness two couples meet for the first time in an attempt to resolve the bloody outcome of a fight between their young, respective sons.

The attempt, of course, is fruitless. As alliances between the four rapidly shift and long-buried resentments claw their way to the surface, homophobia, race and general human ugliness consume the meeting, leaving the attempt at resolution in tatters. It’s a little like what you imagine the end of civilization to look like, with everyone isolated because they’ve abandoned their common humanity.

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Gracie a compelling, chilling coming of age story

Gracie a compelling, chilling coming of age story

 

At one point in Gracie, Joan MacLeod’s compelling play about a girl’s coming of age in an isolated polygamous community, the titular character stands on a road at the border of where she lives. The road is blocked by a chain, and there’s a No Trespassing sign. “I know I’m home when I see that sign,” says Gracie in the safe, contented tone another child might use when sighting a favourite corner store or a friendly neighbour.

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How Black Mother’s Say I Love You: A script that is not scintillating.

How Black Mother’s Say I Love You: A script that is not scintillating.

How Back Mothers Say I love you. Photo Andrew Alexander

First published on artsfile.ca  March 9 2018

I love you” doesn’t slip easily from Daphne’s tongue. But they are words that her grown daughter Claudette hungers to hear from her mother.

That disconnect — which spirals outward to include Claudette’s sister Valerie, their dead sibling Cloe and multiple generations of black women with roots in Jamaica — is at the heart of Trey Anthony’s How Black Mothers Say I Love You at the Great Canadian Theatre Company.  Opening on International Women’s Day at GCTC, Anthony’s play is about many things: mothers and daughters, walled-off emotions, self-sacrifice, how we compromise to survive, the resilience of hope and love and family.

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Undercurrents: “The Pipeline Project” , Forstner & Fillister present: Forstner & Fillister in: “Forstner & Fillister” and” Little Boxes”

Undercurrents: “The Pipeline Project” , Forstner & Fillister present: Forstner & Fillister in: “Forstner & Fillister” and” Little Boxes”

The Pipeline Project.

White, urban eco-warrior or First Nations rez dweller with a hankering for the good life, you don’t get off easy in The Pipeline Project.

The show, performed as a series of vignettes, centres on the political and cultural battles over pipelines in B.C.

That could make for a dry 75 minutes. But writers/performers Sebastien Archibald, Quelemia Sparrow and Kevin Loring (artistic director of the new Indigenous Theatre at the National Arts Centre) make the matter intensely personal, and in doing so, render it both universal and absorbing.

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What a Young Wife Ought to Know is a lesson in clear-eyed compassion

What a Young Wife Ought to Know is a lesson in clear-eyed compassion

What a young Wife ought to Know. Photo Timothy Patrick

At first sight, the two knitting needles stuck into an inconspicuous basket of wool seem a simple touch of domesticity. They are implements you’d expect any working class mother in the 1920s to wield with some skill and love if she wanted to keep her family decently clothed.

But as Hannah Moscovitch’s trenchant What a Young Wife Ought to Know (at the Great Canadian Theatre Company) proceeds, those needles, part of the set and never removed from the wool, take on a terrible potentiality. For this is a play concerned with women’s reproductive rights – or, more precisely, the absence of them — and we all know the horrifying use to which knitting needles have sometimes been put in the service of birth control.

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Mr. Shi and His Lover: a tautly executed superlative piece of musical theatre

Mr. Shi and His Lover: a tautly executed superlative piece of musical theatre

Mr Shi and His Lover: Jordan Cheng and Derek Kwan, Photo Erik Kuong

A word of advice: If you’re going to see this superlative chamber musical, take the time to read the introductory notes from Macau Experimental Theatre that accompany the National Arts Centre’s program as well as the program itself.

That material will give you not just the show’s background – for instance, it’s based on a two-decades long, real-life love affair between two men: a French diplomat and a Peking opera singer who presented himself as a woman – but also provide invaluable explanatory musical and storyline anchors for a show that, like its concerns with love, deceit, identity and the nature of performance, eludes easy categorization and slyly resists our natural hunger for definitive answers in the face of ambiguity.

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