Category: Theatre in Ottawa and the region

The Pirates of Penzance: A campy musical comedy performance at the Springer Theatre that has its fun moments!

The Pirates of Penzance: A campy musical comedy performance at the Springer Theatre that has its fun moments!

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Photo: Jay Kopinski.  Mabel (Alison MacDonald) and Frederic (Adam Charles).

Whatever one does to a Gilbert and Sullivan production, the original witty book and lyrics, the music, the operatic influences, the satire and the perfectly delightful characters /caricatures, all come through in the end. The works of Gilbert and Sullivan are indestructible and that is exactly what I kept thinking through this recent matinee performance in Gananoque as the pirates and the Major General’s daughters lapsed into a wild Charleston to celebrate their collective marriage . This new contemporary version, the first really campy production of G and S I have ever seen, was apparently done to show the Americans, those “Yankee Boozers” on the other side of the river who visit the Playhouse, that we too can do the kind of musical comedy they know best. We too have our own G and S or Gin and Soda style of stage fun.That was what we learned during the prologue to the show which preceded the overture. .

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The Elephant Girls….Critics’ pick for the Ottawa Fringe Festival 2015

The Elephant Girls….Critics’ pick for the Ottawa Fringe Festival 2015

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Best show:      The Elephant Girls: this original show was the result of  historical research which could possibly become an important text in the Canadian repertoire. Margo Macdonald’s excellent interpretation took the actor into an area of solo performance that was uncharted  for her and could be the beginning of a new orientation of her own stage work.

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“Three Men in a Boat”: A delightful and thoroughly professional show that carries the audience away on a hillarious theatrical adventure!

“Three Men in a Boat”: A delightful and thoroughly professional show that carries the audience away on a hillarious theatrical adventure!

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Photo. Courtesy Ottawa Fringe.

Such a delightful , refreshing, witty, beautifully performed, impeccably choreographed show was truly an astonishing discovery at this Fringe. Scott Garland, Matt Pilipiak, and Victor Pokinko   breezed through this Jerome K Jerome adaptation as  though they really belonged in that world of middle class English snobbery (with accents and all) seeking a rousing experience in contact with true, unadulterated nature. Mark Borwnell’s adaptation respects the spirit of the story to the letter but it’s these three young men, deftly directed by Sue Miner, who  create magic in the Leonard Beaulne Studio.

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The Elephant Girls

The Elephant Girls

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Gritty, powerful and excellently crafted, The Elephant Girls is an astounding story that transports its audience to a bar in historic, inter-war London, England. Here at the Ottawa Fringe, we are fortunate to have seen the world premiere of a show that will undoubtedly become a great success.

We meet Maggie Hale (Margo MacDonald), a member of the infamous girl-gang, the Elephant Girls, in a bar where she spins a tale about her years at the right-hand of ruthless gang leader Alice Diamonds. Pint after pint, Hale’s dark humour starts to reveal the truth beyond the stories we might think we know….

This is an excellent example of historic playwriting – one that is not only well-researched and dramaturgically sound, but one that feels intentional. The story is framed such that the audience is treated as if we’ve stumbled into a bar, and into the arms of the notorious Hale who is half in the bag and ready to talk. This endows the story with a sense of realism, which is further actualized through Mary Ellis’ clever direction.

But the story is also purposed. MacDonald weaves Hale’s sexuality into the plot—a lesbian in London in the early 1900s would be quite subversive —and what begins as a bit of an elbow-nudge slowly morphs into something much more meaningful. A repressed shame surfaces throughout Hale’s story, and the audience learns that she is an outcast who has found shelter in the arms of the Elephant Girls.

The story is one that will slowly draw you in as fiction gives way to fact. Though she has a gritty exterior, Hale’s sense of humour masks violence, sadness, and periods of deep isolation. MacDonald is a powerful actor, and now, it seems, a powerful writer as well.

THE ELEPHANT GIRLS

by Margo MacDonald / Parry Riposte Productions

Venue Léonard Beaulne studio.

Critics’ Short List for Critics’ Picks award for the Ottawa Fringe, 2015.

Critics’ Short List for Critics’ Picks award for the Ottawa Fringe, 2015.

Best  show                                                  Bursting  into Flames  
                                                                      Inescapable
                                                                      The Elephant Girls
                                                                      Three Men in a Boat
                                                                     Weird: Witches of Macbeth

Best performers in  Fringe                     Martin Dockery (Inescapable/Bursting into  Flames                                
                                                                John D. Huston  (Screwtape)
                                                              Margo Macdonald  (The Elephant Girls)
                                                             Daniel Tobias (The Orchid and the Crow)
                                                           Gemma Wilcox (Magical Mystery Detour)

 

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Celebrity Exception

Celebrity Exception

A Black Sheep Theatre Production, written by Katherine Glover who won the critic’s award for her monologue Dead Wrong in 2012. It is directed by Dave Dawson whose work in Community theatre in Ottawa has also been recognized.

The story unfolds quickly as a  young couple, the  fellow’s sister and  a movie star  launch the  dynamic of the “celebrity exception. Everyone has the right to a single exception in their lives where they can transgress the pact made with the partner and try some exciting new adventure. Mark is horrified by the idea but  Kayley is excited and confesses she dreams of spending the night with a famous actor known for his vampire and cheap movie hero roles. There is a twist of fate, the actor mysteriously appears and things work out in a most unexpected way and the actors pull it off most convincingly.

The story is a bit silly, it smacks of childish games, although the young people do seem to be comfortable in these roles, and the audience follows it all along. At one point  near the end, the movie star is on the phone but  we are not sure to whom he is talking, that is a hole that needs some clarification. . Nevetheless, this nonsense  allowed the  young performers to get on stage but  the play was not nearly the level of writing that Glover gave us with her monologue Dead Wrong, in 2012,   which was a  winner from the very first moment. Lets hope she goes back to that kind of writing which was  exceptional. At least the names of the actors were mentioned which is a good thing since they do deserve recognition:  Mike Kosowan, Robin Hodge, Jonah Lerner and Alexis Scott.

Celebrity Exception em> in the Court room of Arts Court.

The Elephant Girls.

The Elephant Girls.

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Maggie Hale, alone on stage, drinking beer and smoking, stares us straight in the eye(s) and tells us,  her invisible interlocutor, about her involvement with that gang of 40 women, who terrorized London in the early 2 0th century. Lead by the magnificently powerful  Diamond Annie, they pulled off the most daring robberies of the biggest department stores in the city, selling their goods, acquiring lots of cash and forming a little community of highly successful women who rose above all the stereotypes of their kind at that period.

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Debris.

Debris.

Debris: Daniel Wishes & Seri Yanai / Wishes Mystical Puppet Company

A show that blends shadow-puppetry, object puppetry and classic storytelling, Debris by Wishes Mystical Puppet Company imagines a story wherein the 2011 tsunami that devastated Japan begins a ripple reaches across the sea to touch Canadian soil. Three objects surfaced on three Canadian shores years after the tsunami: A fish in a boat, a basketball, and a motorbike. Daniel Wishes and Seri Yanai’s play takes that as a point of departure, and ruminates on potential meanings behind this debris that washed up on shore. Are they simply three pieces of garbage, or is this the work of an intelligent universe trying to convey a message?

The fish, basketball and motorcycle are given stories that are told from a first-person perspective, and the audience is pulled into the fictional legacy that may precede their arrival to Canada. The show is presented primarily through shadow projections of cut-out drawings which are manipulated to add a visual component to Wishes’ storytelling. Though the mechanics of the puppetry are relatively smooth, the slow pace and lack-lustre stories imagined for these objects come across as innocuous and mundane.

While the performance successfully lures the audience with a quiet beauty, the script needs an edit to avoid storylines that draw the audience away from the core meaning of the play. Certain scenes seem to fit badly into the overall narrative, and leave us grasping for the meaning behind Debris.

    Whose Aemilia

    Whose Aemilia

    Whose Aemilia, directed by Diana Fajrajsl, written and interpreted by Rachel Eugster with Tim Oberholzer and Naomi Tessler.

    Aemilia, the Dark Lady of Shakespeare’s sonnets, has been judged by the historians for almost half a millennium after her death. As Ms. History tells her, she is mainly remembered for her looks, love life and bad reputation. Aemilia is outraged. She was a poet, and a good one! Interestingly enough, only female historians pay attention to her writings, while, for their male colleagues, she is just a pretty woman with questionable behavior. 

    Although an interesting concept, the play still leaves a few elements missing. The topic  which imposes a feminist approach is intriguing, but it  lacks depth and passion of any real conflict with the bard (arguably the greatest writer  in history, and, as a male, recognized as such). Thus  his appearance  (interpreted by Tim Oberholzer) seems out of place and unclear. The whole show has a  scholarly character and feels more like a recital than a theatre performance.

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    The GRANDFATHERS.

    The GRANDFATHERS.

    THE GRANDFATHERS : A play written for young actors by British writer Rory Mullarkey. Directed by James Richardson. A production by the Third Wall Academy, a training programme for young actors affiliated with the Third Wall Theatre

    Reviews are brief so I will get to the point. The production shows serious weaknesses in directing. It is essentially an ensemble piece that gives momentary voice to several individuals respresenting individual problems. We see a group of young recruits being whipped into shape by a Sargent. They go through all the tough rituals that young soldiers are subjected to. We see them exercising on a simulated (or possibly real?) battlefield followed by the training programme which is gruelling. However, none of this is believable and they have chosen a partially grungy realistic performance style  which makes it even more difficult because we sense that they are dealing with  a situation which they have never experienced.  First scene, the group is under fire. The actors are not terrified, not panic stricken not horrified, not fearful, its all external acting in spite of this gut wrenching situation. The direction of actors is terribly weak. The mime is sloppy, the emotions are phony, the sargent should be a sadistic and aggressive terror but the actor does not seem to be involved in the play and she slips over her words. The only authentic realism is the puffing and sweating we see after a lot of physical activity but none of it is internalized….The only exception is a talented young woman named Helen Thai. She is “Val”, going through a bayonet thrusting ritual  to learn  how to become a killer and it disturbs her to such an extent she cannot stick her weapon into the fleshy target.

    Perhaps a work in progress but not ready for the public at the moment. 

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