Category: Theatre in Ottawa and the region

Un-countried: when the regime crumbles and the human mindset changes!!

Un-countried: when the regime crumbles and the human mindset changes!!

photo Un-Countried : Jon Dickey and Michael Hanrehan
Under Development Industry Showcase, Ottawa

Written by Stéphanie Turple, directed by Kevin Orr.  The new lab O  space in the Ottawa ARt Gallery is proving to be a  perfect source of  stage creativity thanks to the transformative possibilities of the area. It is also an excellent site for students and writers in local experimental shows as well as classes for theatre practice at the U of Ottawa. We should see theatre blooming in this city because of these new possibilities..

Kevin Orr is back  with a performance he created  earlier and is now bringing to the Industry Showcase in the Lab O site where video projections, delicate sound possibilities and a highly raked audience space creates small but perfect viewing area for his  two-hander, that holds us spellbound.

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The Revolutionists strikes a blow for Liberté, égalité and sororité

The Revolutionists strikes a blow for Liberté, égalité and sororité

Victoria Luloff, Robin Guy, Cassandre Mentor and Rebecca Benson star in The Revolutionists. Photo: Andrew Alexander

Marie Antoinette’s wig could be a play unto itself. An eye-grabber in the Three Sisters Theatre Company’s smart production of Lauren Gunderson’s The Revolutionists at The Gladstone, the wig is a beehive of crumpled, handwritten pages emblazoned with a couple of books which, in turn, are topped with an ink well and quill pen.

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Three Plays at Undercurrents provide some bark and a lot of bite.

Three Plays at Undercurrents provide some bark and a lot of bite.

Raising Stanley/Life with Tulia

Hard to fathom, but there are actually people who aren’t mad about dogs — their intelligence, their steadfastness, their boundless optimism. Kim Kilpatrick is not one of those people.

Her storytelling show, Raising Stanley/Life with Tulia, is a smartly paced exploration of the mutually rewarding and complex relationship between human and canine based on her own experience, as a blind person, with a series of guide dogs.

Under director Bronwyn Steinberg, Kilpatrick keeps the narrative and delivery simple: an A-Z of life with four guide dogs. Each is as individual as any human. For example, her current dog — Tulia, a black Lab who lay quietly in her basket through the show — is “like one of those kids who always sits in the front of the class and puts up her hand to show what she knows.”

Tulia, the Labrador retriever. Photo: Juston Van Leeuwen

At the heart of Kilpatrick’s story is her ongoing discovery of each dog’s world as well as her own and the way in which the two worlds evolve, sometimes in synch and sometimes not. Her dogs work hard for her and she works just as hard for them – a nourishing reciprocity to which Kilpatrick gives eloquent voice.

Karen Bailey’s paintings of dogs, including Stanley, a guide dog in training, accompany the storytelling on a screen. Like Kilpatrick’s story, some of the paintings are full of forward motion and some are more a quiet meditation. Kilpatrick can’t see, but there’s no question that she’s as attuned as Bailey and her paintings to the subtle, powerful body language of a dog – how a glance or a twitch of muscle can say so much.

“It’s too quiet a house without a dog,” says Kilpatrick at one point. She’s right: it’s like a life without stories.

The Feb. 16 performance features ASL interpretation.

The Archivist

It’s tough to say exactly what Toronto performer Shaista Latif hoped we’d take away from her meandering one-woman show, The Archivist.

A confusing and self-conscious mix of commentary, dance, videos that run far too long, one loud scream and largely unsuccessful attempts at audience participation, the 60-minute piece ricochets from memories of growing up as an isolated Afghan-Canadian in Scarborough to the inexplicable pronouncement that, when it comes to the material objects in our lives, “everything we have comes from war.”

Otherness – being a woman of colour and queer, for instance – occupies much of the show. There are insights into her mother and father’s activism, their parenting styles and how her little brother, because he was a boy, was the favoured child. At one point, an audience member joins her to sing a song from Disney’s 1992 animated film Aladdin.

The problem is that Latif hasn’t transformed her very personal stories and viewpoints into a consistent vision, let alone anything universal.

At times on Thursday, she also seemed ill-prepared for the show, delivering her lines in unpolished fashion. Maybe that delivery was meant to sound spontaneous and therefore engage us in the moment. Instead, it was scattershot and uninviting.

Latif has some important things she wants to explore, including the outsiderness in Canada of whole swaths of people and concomitant white privilege. Her show, so far, doesn’t do her desires justice.

Coach of the Year

Stories of the sexual abuse of younger, vulnerable people by older men in positions of power have become so common that we sometimes hardly notice them.

Pierre Brault’s Coach of the Year strips away the routine, news-report nature of the distressingly familiar narrative. Brault does that by taking us inside the life of Glen, now in his 30s and forever damaged by what was done to him, and by giving us a chilling view of Daryl Conners, the Junior A hockey coach who did the damage and moved on.

Introduced in nascent form at Ottawa’s 2013 Extremely Short New Play Festival, Brault’s play has evolved into a textured, character-driven piece that still has at its heart the original crux: what happens when, years later, victim and abuser meet?

Brad Long is excellent as Glen, a guy with a mile-thick wall between him and the world. Twice unsuccessfully married, he shields himself with the solitary life of a long-distance trucker reliant on uppers and downers and, when he’s not on the road, alcohol.

What was done to him as a teenager has rippled out, engulfing even his relationship with his single mother Marina (Mary Ellis, in fine form), a diner waitress who has erected her own protective wall around her injured heart.

Brian K. Stewart is the Shakespeare-spouting, award-winning coach, a man as coldly manipulative as Iago – a character he and the young, starry-eyed Glen discuss at one point – but with none of that man’s almost-majestic dark mystery. Stewart’s coiled-snake-within-a-caring-exterior depiction of the coach is economical and insidious.

In expanding his original two-hander into a full story, Brault – who has directed this incarnation – has let some scenes run too long and written some dialogue, especially the coach’s, that’s unnaturally stiff. He’s also briefly and unnecessarily introduced a fourth character.

The play is almost where Brault wants it to be. Glen, unfortunately, will never be where he wants to be.

Raising Stanley/Life with Tulia (Ottawa) and The Archivist (Toronto) were reviewed Thursday; Coach of the Year (Ottawa) was reviewed Friday. The undercurrents festival continues until Feb. 16., mostly at Arts Court. Tickets & information: undercurrentsfestival.ca, 613-232-6162     

What a Young Wife Ought to Know: Affecting period piece which gets to the heart of the matter

What a Young Wife Ought to Know: Affecting period piece which gets to the heart of the matter

Photo: Tim Fort

Reviewed at the Grand Theatre in Kingston, ON

Though an exploration of women’s lives in 1920s Ottawa, Hannah Moscovitch’s What a Young Wife Ought to Know is not a play for the idle history buff. Rather this exploration is a visceral and sometimes discomforting one, as Moscovitch exposes the struggles many working-class women faced without control of their reproduction. The production of the play by Theatre Kingston, directed by the company’s own artistic director Rosemary Doyle, to its credit does not shy away from depicting this reality, hard as some moments may be to watch. The power of this production not only comes from its honest portrayal of the events in the script, but also the fully-realized character portrayals by the actors which make the struggles of the play’s protagonist, Sophie, and her conflicts with her husband and deceased sister thoroughly compelling.

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At the Mountaintop there is doubt, uncertainty and humanity

At the Mountaintop there is doubt, uncertainty and humanity

First published on Artsfile, January 29  2019

One of the first things we learn about Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in The Mountaintop, Katori Hall’s play about King’s final night before his assassination on April 4, 1968, is that he has a hole in one of his socks. He’s just entered his no-frills room at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tenn., the motel where he’ll be shot the next day. Tired, frustrated but still seized by his endless battle for social justice, King shucks his shoes, and his left big toe pokes out of his sock for all the world to see.

It’s a moment of vulnerability, of imperfection in a man who – in Hall’s take on him – knew he was imperfect but whose great challenge is to accept that fact.

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The Mountaintop offers a loving and sometimes critical vie of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on the last night of his life

The Mountaintop offers a loving and sometimes critical vie of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on the last night of his life

Photo Andrée Lanthier

Conversing with an angel in his Lorraine Motel room, Katori Hall’s The Mountaintop, a Black Theatre Workshop and Neptune Theatre Production, attempts to explore what might have been going through Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s head during his last on Earth.

The production, directed by Toronto-based ahdri zhina mandiela, stars Letitia Brookes as motel maid-turned-angel Camae, and Tristan D. Lalla as Dr. King. Set in a realistically designed motel room created by set designer Eo Sharp, the play’s small cast and unobtrusive design help to highlight King and Camae as the sole focus of the show.

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Minding Frankie : a Canadian premiere of an Irish adaptation goes straight to the heart!

Minding Frankie : a Canadian premiere of an Irish adaptation goes straight to the heart!

 

Photo by Lois Siegal. Vivian Burns and Lawrence Evenchick

The narrative voices of Irish novelist and playwright Maeve Binchy that emerge in  Minding Frankie come through with great intensity and enormous emotion in this stage version of a Canadian premier directed by John P Kelly, now on at the Gladstone theater. I attended a preview which was not yet the official opening of the show but because this was the only possible moment  to see the play and as I have always admired Kelly’s work I was not going to miss it.

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Lungs a piece of stripped-down theatre with a fully packed message

Lungs a piece of stripped-down theatre with a fully packed message

Megan Carty and Matt Hertendy star in Lungs at Arts Court.

What do you do when you’re rehearsing a show that has no set, no props, no costume changes and no miming but does have a storyline that unfolds in multiple locales at different times?

Clearly, you head to IKEA.

At least that’s what Megan Carty and Matt Hertendy did to rehearse one of the scenes in Lungs, Duncan Macmillan’s two-hander about a young couple struggling with whether to have a child in a consumer-driven world dogged by climate change. The show, a remount of Carty and Hertendy’s award-winning 2018 Ottawa Fringe Festival production, is at Arts Court starting Jan. 10.

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Ripcord : disturbingly outrageous popular theatre where comedy and tragedy intersect.

Ripcord : disturbingly outrageous popular theatre where comedy and tragedy intersect.

Photo Maria Vartanova
Ripcord with Sharron McGuirl and Jane Morris

 

 

David Lindsay-Abaire in his earlier works, was a  master of television style sit-coms  and Ripcord immediately sets us on this track.    A clear-cut situation with  types who obey the personality  clues that the author sends our way right from the  beginning when  director Riley Stewart’s  lively  music captures our imagination as we picture two women of a certain age dancing gayly to a sprightly Latin American rhythm.   Needless to say,  the music immediately creates an uneasy opposition between   Andréa Vecsei’s beautiful pastel coloured warm looking room in  a seniors’ home where all seems to be snugly comfortable and loveable, and the viscious  tension burning   between the two principles of the show.

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Cinderella and the Ice Slipper: The fun-filled family Panto lives up to expectations!

Cinderella and the Ice Slipper: The fun-filled family Panto lives up to expectations!

What a moment!  Glossy Steppe (alias Réjean Dinelle-Mayer as the “Dame”) in her huge curly  purple wig,  one of the two ‘step-sisters’ tormenting Cinderella,  belted out his/her  own ferocious version of We Will Survive’ from Priscilla Queen of the Desert, just as the step -sisters  battle for the favours of the new  Prince  ‘charms’ .   Prince is  seeking  the mysterious owner of that glass slipper while  both ugly sisters choke in their drool of desperation.  Emotions run very high  because they  both want to get their hands on the handsome  business man  played by the very charming Panto newcomer  Andy Allen- McCarthy (who insists he is not a prince)  whereas the sweet and talented little Cinderella (Emilie O’Brien)  is already tucked away in the kitchen  cleaning  pots and washing the floors of the family restaurant, warbling about her  dreams with  her buddy Buttons (Brady Van Vaerenbergh).  It’s at that moment that Dinelle-Mayer reveals his true nature as a great voice of Orpheus musical theatre and for a few minutes steals the show.!!!! And such a show it was!!!

Emilie O’Brien as Cinderella.  Photo  Dominique Gibbons

 

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