Category: Theatre in Ottawa and the region

The Sound of Music: a Dismal Wrong-headed Revival of this Musical

The Sound of Music: a Dismal Wrong-headed Revival of this Musical

The next time the National Arts Centre English Theatre tackles something like The Sound of Music perhaps it should seek guidance from people who know what they’re doing.

Perhaps someone like Ottawa’s distinguished community theatre group, Orpheus, which has been around for more than a century and enjoys a solid reputation for maintaining professional standards in the staging of its musicals.

The NAC’s godawful treatment of a seminal Rodgers and Hammerstein hit will no doubt have its admirers. After all, familiarity breeds contentment, and there’s no surer way to ensure audience approval than to schedule a show so familiar, so popular, so ingrained in our cultural conscience, that we enter the theatre already humming the music we’re going to hear. Furthermore, there’s nothing like audience participation to ensure a further stilling of our discriminatory senses — hence the invitation we received the other night to sing along with the singers. If audience response seemed somewhat tepid on opening night, maybe that’s because some of the on-stage singing was falling lamentably below basic adequacy.

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Ethan Claymore : A heart-warming holiday play despite some uneven casting

Ethan Claymore : A heart-warming holiday play despite some uneven casting

ethan_claymoreNorm Foster’s play, Ethan Claymore, is the heartwarming story of Ethan, a young recluse widower living in a small Canadian farming community who, with the help of a doggedly determined, meddlesome neighbour and the ghost of his recently-deceased brother, finds a meaning to life and love just in time for the holiday season. Foster’s earnestly honest writing crafts a story with depth and feeling and keeps it away from the realm of cheesy or gimmicky. The play, under John P. Kelly’s direction for the Gladstone, is simple, sweet, and without pretense. The director manages to infuse the production with the charm and warmth found in small communities and that is central to the play. The atmosphere is sometimes thrown off by the uneven acting and some of the casting choices didn’t make all that much sense. However, other than that, this is a great, feel-good holiday piece that can be enjoyed by the entire family.

Ethan Claymore (played by Tim Oberholzer), an artist at heart who moved to the community years ago to live “the simple life” has been mourning his dead wife for five years. He secludes himself and buries his head and heart into his failing egg farming business. That is, until determined, curmudgeonly neighbour Douglas (Paul Rainville) takes matters into his own hands by setting Ethan up with the new schoolteacher, Teresa (Sarah Finn). Add to this a surprise visit form his very recently deceased brother, Martin (David Drisch) to resolve deep-seated family resentment, and we see Ethan slowly open himself up to the possibilities of life and love.

John P. Kelly manages to get the pacing of the show just right. It flows along and keeps the audience’s attention throughout. There’s also a sweetness and lack of pretention to it that makes the story and characters all that much more relatedly human. The set is functional and homey and the cast uses the stage well. Particularly good were moments when Martin’s ghost, only seen by Ethan, is in the room with others. The almost a dance-like preciseness of moments mimic the pace of the play.   

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Ethan Claymore : a nuanced and observant production for Same Day Theatre that underlines the play’s strengths.

Ethan Claymore : a nuanced and observant production for Same Day Theatre that underlines the play’s strengths.

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Poster for the production found on http://www.theatreottawa.com/professional-theatre1.html   Norm Foster’s Ethan Claymore is a piece of Yuletide whimsy about a widowed egg farmer and the shade of a recently deceased brother who’s been detained on earth to make peace with the sibling from whom he has been long estranged.

This is the sort of play where you are able to anticipate how things are going to end long before the final curtain. It is, unabashedly and unapologetically, a feel-good script that knows the right buttons to push in winning an audience over. 

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Ethan Claymore : a warm feel-good family show that is just right for the Christmas Season

Ethan Claymore : a warm feel-good family show that is just right for the Christmas Season

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Tim Oberholzer as Ethan Claymore. Photo: Andrew Alexander

A feel good story of complicated family relations, headed by the shy, retiring, slightly recluse Ethan Claymore who has withdrawn from social life for five years because of his wife’s death. Thanks to a well-intentioned interfering neighbour, a caring school teacher and a ghost seeking redemption, he is dragged out of his state of mourning and brought back to life. Paul Rainville plays the volatile, hilarious neighbour Douglas Mclaren, , bristling with energy, excitement and with just as much chili pepper as they put into that hot chocolate that was served after the show. Rainville stole the show hands down. No matter however, because we know that when Paul Rainville makes his moves on stage, he overflows with so much temperament and stage magic that no one can overcome his presence. This time was no exception.

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Goodnight Desdemona, (Good Morning Juliet) at the GCTC: a lively tale of self-discovery that at times seems burdened with trying to live up to the play’s reputation,

Goodnight Desdemona, (Good Morning Juliet) at the GCTC: a lively tale of self-discovery that at times seems burdened with trying to live up to the play’s reputation,

desdemona5GetAttachment.aspx  Photo: Andrew Alexander

Ann-Marie MacDonald’s clever play GOODNIGHT DESDEMONA, (GOOD MORNING JULIET) is a lively comedic tale of self-discovery. Graduate Assistant Constance Leadbelly, who is obsessed with tracing obscure Shakespearian sources, is suddenly catapulted into the worlds of OTHELLO and ROMEO AND JULIET. She inadvertently transforms them into comedies by saving the lives of the two leading ladies. In the world of the plays, the dialogue is in nifty iambic pentameter. There are sword fights, disguises, and seductions. In Act II there’s some entertaining gender bending, prompting Desdemona’s forlorn cry, “Does no one in Verona sail straight?”

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Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliette): Lively, bright and lots of fun.

Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliette): Lively, bright and lots of fun.

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Photo: GCTC Zach Cousil and  Geoff McBride

Thanks to Ann-Marie Macdonald’s witty, and intelligent script, director Ann Hodges and her cast have shown us what a well written   play this really is.  When the Queen of Academe, Assistant professor Constance Ledbelly is projected into the world of her Shakespearean research, she finds herself interfering with the important moments of the plots of Othello and Romeo and Juliet as she searches for a more transgressive i.e. Feminist reading of the plays where the women refuse to be victims. Thus, the true author of these narratives, and even her own identity, must be revealed…and all this on the eve of Ledbelly’s birthday.

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Legally Blond, The Musical:Think pink, but see beyond the fluffy overlay

Legally Blond, The Musical:Think pink, but see beyond the fluffy overlay

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Photo. Valleywind productions

Expecting fluff? Then your first surprise is that the script of Legally Blonde, The Musical is equipped with a few skewers and incisive comments alongside the heroine’s signature colour of pink and her dream of love and marriage to a dream guy/jerk.

Among the sideswipes at stereotypes, projecting the appropriate image, social climbing and social niceties in general are a couple of shots at lawyers and the style of musical theatre. Along the way, Legally Blonde, The Musical, book by Heather Hach, music and lyrics by Laurence O’Keefe and Nell Benjamin, laughs at itself, too. And that is why the show is so much fun.

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You Should Have Stayed Home : political theatre that tells a good story.

You Should Have Stayed Home : political theatre that tells a good story.

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Praxis Theatre, Toronto. Photo of Tommy Taylor. Photograpyher unknown. Found in the Charlebois Post.

 

The 2010 G20 Summit in Toronto resulted in everything from a number of international financial agreements (will they actually be realized?) to astronomical costs for Canadian taxpayers (remember the much-pilloried artificial lake?). It also produced riots and, in the case of Tommy Taylor and many others, a mass arrest and detainment for having done nothing more than being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

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Two plays stand out in The Extremely Short New Play Festival

Two plays stand out in The Extremely Short New Play Festival

Extremely Short New Play Festival
Extremely Short New Play Festival. Photo by Andrew Alexander

The Extremely Short New Play Festival
New Theatre of Ottawa

Two plays stand out in the group presented in this year’s Extremely Short New Play Festival. And one speech in one of the two is particularly moving and alone justifies the need to sit through other less worthwhile pieces.

It is the widower’s words about his dead wife in Jessica Anderson’s Terminal Journey, as delivered by Brian K. Stewart, that create a lasting impression and confirm that Anderson (currently with a play premiering off-Broadway) is destined to make her mark as a playwright.

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Visage de feu au Périscope: flambée onirique

Visage de feu au Périscope: flambée onirique

Réjean Vallée (le père), Joanie Thomas (Olga), André Robillard (Kurt) et Diane Losier (la mère) dans Visage de feu. Photo by Gilles Landry
Réjean Vallée (le père), Joanie Thomas (Olga), André Robillard (Kurt) et Diane Losier (la mère) dans Visage de feu.
Photo by Gilles Landry

Critique par  Joanne Desloges.

(Québec) Montée en 1999 par Thomas Ostermeier, qui signait le mémorable Un ennemi du peuple au plus récent Carrefour international de théâtre de Québec, la pièce Visage de feu a été traduite et modelée par le Théâtre Blanc, qui nous offre une adaptation québécoise qui s’annonce aussi surréelle que percutante.

L’objet théâtral est entre les mains de Joël Beddows depuis quelques années déjà. Le metteur en scène et directeur du Département de théâtre à l’Université d’Ottawa a accroché autant sur la forme que sur le fond du texte de l’Allemand Marius von Mayenburg, auteur, dramaturge et traducteur depuis près de 15 ans pour la Schaubühne, compagnie dirigée par Thomas Ostermeier à Berlin.

Visage de feu relate l’éclatement d’une cellule familiale, mais aussi d’une société post-industrielle où la famille, le temps, l’espace individuel sont en mutation. Deux adolescents, Olga et Kurt, un frère et une soeur, se révoltent contre la cage dorée aux barreaux extensibles où leurs parents, surtout leur père, les maintiennent depuis l’enfance.

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