Category: Theatre in Ottawa and the region

Prismatic Festival : Cliff Cardinal at the GCTC Studio

Prismatic Festival : Cliff Cardinal at the GCTC Studio

Cliff Cardinal
Prismatic festival

PERFORMANCE INFO:

Cliff Cardinal

CBC Special

Type of Performance: Theatre

Dates:

September 15th @ 7pm

         September 16th @ 5:30pm

         September 17th @ 8pm

         September 18th @ 8:30pm

Venue:

GCTC – Studio

Ticket Prices

$23 (Gen Tix) / $19 (Sr./Student)

Use the promo code “prismatic” to waive the $5 online order fee

     Born on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, Cliff Cardinal is a multi-talented writer, performer and musician known for his black humor and compassionate poeticism. His solo plays Stitch and Huff have won numerous awards, he has performed his music on three continents and is developing new work with The Video Cabaret where he is the Artistic Associate. He is also a graduate of the National Theatre School of Canada and the son of iconic Canadian actress Tantoo Cardinal.

     Prismatic is honoured to present Cliff Cardinal, who is performing his newest stage work, Cliff Cardinal’s CBC Special, a combination of stories and songs about his Canadian experience directed and dramaturged by his longtime collaborator Karin Randoja.

Prismatic Festival: Zoey Roy

Prismatic Festival: Zoey Roy

Prismatic Festival
Zoey Roy

PERFORMANCE INFO:

Zoey Roy

Type of Performance: Spoken Word

(double bill with Kaha:wi Dance Theatre – Blood Water Earth)

Dates:

September 15th @ 8pm (Artist Talk Back)

         September 16th@ 7pm

Venue:

GCTC – Mainstage

Ticket Prices

$23 (Gen Tix) / $19 (Sr./Student)

Use the promo code “prismatic” to waive the $5 online order fee

     Zoey Roy is a poet, community-based educator, community engagement consultant, author, filmmaker and social entrepreneur based out of Saskatoon. She holds a Bachelor of Education from the University of Saskatchewan, is currently pursuing a Master’s Degree at Johnson Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy and is set to begin a PhD in Education at York University in September 2019.

     Her Cree-Dene Métis roots and career as an artist give her a unique insight into working with Indigenous and Canadian youth in pursuit of relationship-building and reconciliation. She is passionate about ensuring young people have what they need to ‘find their voice’ and reach their potential. Her passion, experience, and knowledge in storytelling, artistic expression, and community engagement provide children and youth with a platform to heal holistically and communicate authentically in a safe space. She recently completed the preliminary stages for establishing an Indigenous Artist in Residence Program that had a soft launch in 2018 – 2019 and is now fully integrated in the University of Saskatchewan today. She recently released her third book, “The Voyageurs: Forefathers of the Metis Nation” published and available at Gabriel Dumont Press. She is a woman with a great imagination and is always up to something.

Alegria: the Cirque du Soleil ressurects the show that defined its aesthetic

Alegria: the Cirque du Soleil ressurects the show that defined its aesthetic

Aerialists  reunite in a most  sensual and beautiful fluttering of bodies between earth and sky    Photos thanks to Cirque du Soleil

Time has passed and even if Alegria does not capture the in depth  artistry  brought about by memory, desire and all that swirls  in a  mind returning to its past inspired by Fellini’s cinema that made Corteo so special (see below******), Alegría, created in 1994,  did define a brand new circus aesthetic that has grown with the company, especially since its work in Las Vegas.

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The Bonds of Interest: Jacinto Benavente’s renewal of Spanish theatre (1907) ,a significant choice for this new Odyssey beginning.

The Bonds of Interest: Jacinto Benavente’s renewal of Spanish theatre (1907) ,a significant choice for this new Odyssey beginning.

 

Bonds of Interest      Photo Barb Gray
Arlequin (Mitchel Rose), Crispin (Ross Mullan), El Capitan (Bruce Spinney)

The  Bonds of Interest is thought to be Jacinto Benavente’s most important play because it bridged the gap between the 19th Century Spanish melodramas, playful French inspired commercial forms of musical theatre, patriotic nationalism  and uncritical visions of Spanish Society by rejecting the bourgeois  festive theatre that hid Spain’s real problems of that period.  (See the Cambridge companion to Modern Spanish Culture) Towards the end of the Century, the war had drained Spain and left its Spanish American colonies,  Cuba and Puerto Rico in ruins.  Benavente’s play operates against a background of this devastation by transforming Spanish traditions of the stage, especially the Siglo de Oro and the Italian partially inspired by commedia classical theatre,  into a viciously critical form of theatre  that made nasty fun of the rich, that exposed the plight of the poor, that taunted the false values of those with money.

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Odyssey Theatre’s Bonds of interest unmasks flawed humanity with panache

Odyssey Theatre’s Bonds of interest unmasks flawed humanity with panache

Bonds of interest  Photo Barb Gray

Deep into the show, a piece of sweet, wistful recorded music begins, a signal that, even in the world of The Bonds of Interest, tenderness and grace may have a foothold.

That’s reassuring — at least a little bit. Because everywhere else in Jacinto Benavente’s 1907 comic play, here newly translated by Catherine Boyle and Laurie Steven, duplicity, cynicism, greed and violence call the shots. Whether that flicker of musical hope — we learn that it’s a song called The Kingdom of Souls, suggesting a community of like-minded goodness — stands a chance of surviving, let alone triumphing, remains an open question.

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St Lawrence Shakespeare festival: Cyrano de Bergerac: an excellent English language adaptation saved by the strength of the lead performance.

St Lawrence Shakespeare festival: Cyrano de Bergerac: an excellent English language adaptation saved by the strength of the lead performance.

Cyrano at the St Lawrence Shakespeare Festival  Photo Helen Mott

Cyrano de Bergerac, the character who really existed in the 17th century,  and  Edmond Rostand’s comédie dramatique, (written in 1897) based on that individual,   seem to be lighting up stages around the world especially  in a new prize-winning play written and directed by  Alexis Michalik (Edmond – 2016). This romantic adaptation  by Michalik  of Rostand’s writing process  which gives  us an intimate glance into the life of the poet and the way Rostand might have composed his own play,  recently received numerous awards in Paris.  Then the  film version (2019) has become an extraordinary hit playing in French language theatres around the world.

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St Lawrence Shakespeare Festival: “The Winter’s Tale”, a fairy tale for adults with an excellent cast and sure-handed direction!!!

St Lawrence Shakespeare Festival: “The Winter’s Tale”, a fairy tale for adults with an excellent cast and sure-handed direction!!!

The  Winter’s Tale  Photo Helen Mott     with L to R: Catherine Rainville (Hermione), Jesse Nerenberg (Leontes), Richard Sheridan Willis (Antigonus), Zach Council (Lord), Sophia Swettenham (Mamillisu), Liam Lynch (Jailor).

The principle joy of the St. Lawrence Shakespeare Festival’s production of The Winter’s Tale is the uniformly excellent cast. From Jesse Nerenberg’s Leontes, incited into a jealous rage by Catherine Rainville’s elegant Hermione, to Quincy Armorer’s intense and proud Polixenes, to the vibrant through every fiber of her being Tamara Brown’s Paulina, this ensemble, under the sure handed direction of Mikaela Davies, is firmly in command of Shakespeare’s play of love gone awry.

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Company of fools: No foolin’. This Romeo and Juliet is a capering classic.

Company of fools: No foolin’. This Romeo and Juliet is a capering classic.

Romeo and Juliet  Photo JVL Photography

A Company of Fools presents Romeo and Juliet. Photo: JVL Photography

Has A Company of Fools rediscovered its mojo? After a series of hits and misses, including last summer’s unfocused Twelfth Night, and an apparent struggle over just how much of their beloved foolery they want to inject into their shows, the Fools have bounced back to form with a Romeo & Juliet that’s adventurous, carnival-like and ultimately serious.

Exuberance defines the show. That’s in keeping with the storyline about young, upstart love. But it also reflects this production’s timely championing of those who, fed up with oppression, challenge power, tradition and entitlement.

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1000 Islands Playhouse : Made in Italy, a raucous comedy with heart.

1000 Islands Playhouse : Made in Italy, a raucous comedy with heart.

 

The Media Room      Photo Dylan Hewlett

 

Playing in the intimate black box space of the Firehall Theatre at TIP, Farren Timoteo’s one-man show Made in Italy (a production from Western Canada Theatre) is a suitably personal story which draws the audience into the world of the playwright’s characters. Timoteo’s show not only succeeds on the emotional front but also as a duly entertaining performance piece in its own right, as directed by Daryl Cloran, who also happens to be the artistic director of the Citadel Theatre in Edmonton, AB. Telling the story of an Italian-Canadian teenager’s struggle to fit in while growing up in 1970s Alberta, Made in Italy communicates equally the trials and humour of such an experience.

Beginning with the appearance of Salvatore, a first-generation immigrant of the Mantini family, the values which are to become central in Timoteo’s show are presented. He speaks of the dining table as the most important piece of furniture in the home, since all of the family gathers there for meals. The symbolic significance of the table is further underscored by Salvatore’s remark that it is the first item he bought in Canada, thus foreshadowing its central role (both literal and figurative) throughout the play. The focus, however, eventually falls on Salvatore’s Canadian-raised son Francesco, who only feels embarrassment and resentment at his heritage which separates him from other youth. By going through many dramatic and rough experiences, including an inspiring visit to the old country, Francesco eventually comes to embrace both his Italian identity and the importance of family.

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OLT’s Unnecessary Farce: You Don’t Say!!

OLT’s Unnecessary Farce: You Don’t Say!!

 

Unnecessary Farce  Photo, Maria Vartanova

When an on-line  critic mentioned Noises off and Unnecessary Farce in the same sentence I really blew my top !! Especially after seeing this heavy-handed pile of badly acted nonsense at the OLT.  that has nothing to do with Michael Frayn’s wonderful   British farce that pits two performances on two sides of a set  as the actors and characters meet in the most  original rush of stage energy one could ever imagine. I’ve seen  Noises off several times and one extraordinary performance at the Kanata theatre  several years ago  almost made me choke with laughter. Unnecessary Farce was a bit of farce, a bit of vaudeville, a bit of physical comedy, something that suggested a silent film  gone wrong  with a sick Groucho Marx  that gave one the impression they were all trying much too hard.

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