Category: Theatre in Ottawa and the region

A Walk with Mr. McGee: the prequel to Blood on the Moon at the Bytown Museum

A Walk with Mr. McGee: the prequel to Blood on the Moon at the Bytown Museum

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Jean-Nicolas Masson as Thomas D’Arcy McGee, cuts a fine figure as he  finishes the evening with a most uplifting and impassioned plea for what it is to  feel Canadian in this new nation of Canada. All this happens just before he is assassinated and that is where the play ends.  One could say that Talish Zafar has written a  prequel to Pierre Brault’s  award winning monodrama  Blood on the Moon. Speaking before the Canadian parliament in this final moment, McGee  seems to epitomize the spirit of what Canada has  become and it makes us realize that the death of this man in 1868 was a great loss to the country.  The speech, made up of  authentic  excerpts from earlier published speeches by McGee, embellished by playwright  Zafar , was flowing, patriotic prose, which gives one the sense of this  interesting and certainly timely script  staged by director Dillon Orr and performed in the tiny ground floor space of the Bytown Museum. Certainly not the best place for a play,  with bad acoustics, no lighting facilities and almost no room to manoeuvre for this four person cast, the space proved to be the most difficult obstacle to overcome.

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Amelia, The Girl Who Wants to Fly: A perfect fit for the 1000 Islands playhouse summer theatre.

Amelia, The Girl Who Wants to Fly: A perfect fit for the 1000 Islands playhouse summer theatre.

AmeliaGetAttachment.aspx Eliza-Jane Scott as Amelia. Photo: Michael Grills Photography. Having seen and enjoyed this production of Amelia, The Girl Who Wants to fly at the GCTC  last  fall, I was looking forward to a second viewing.  Written by John Gray, who also wrote Billy Bishop Goes to War and Rock and Roll, it’s a perfect fit for the 1000 Islands Playhouse’s Firehall.  If anything, it seems to have gotten even stronger.A co-production with the Festival Players of Prince Edward County, this fascinating fact-based three-character musical explores the life and times of Amelia Earhart during the 1930s, the Golden Age of Flight.  As the playwright has said, “It seems to me like a musical with competing narrators, all of them unreliable.”

There are three of them, (narrators that is), all strong actors and singers.  Midge, Amelia’s sister, is played by Karin Randoja in a subtly layered performance, who settles for what she considers a “safe” life.  Her Act II solo, “The Man Who Is Not There,” is very powerful.

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Ottawa Fringe 2012. Sandrine Lafond emerges as a little blinking bug from a knarled body and blossoms into a human butterfly. Little Lady is an amazing corporeal performance

Ottawa Fringe 2012. Sandrine Lafond emerges as a little blinking bug from a knarled body and blossoms into a human butterfly. Little Lady is an amazing corporeal performance

 Rajka Stefanovska   A former Cirque Du Soleil performer and Celine Dion backup dancer, Sandrine Lafond takes a step towards unique theatre artistry with her show, Little Lady. This artist, gifted with a remarkable talent and daring nature puts together a show to be remembered. Combining the power of imagination, dance, and acting, she created an inventive and challenging performance which clearly belongs to experimental theatre.

Her vision of a little lady is that of a woman who is vain, curious about her image, and inquisitive about her immediate surroundings. As a character, she gradually grows with every new movement on stage. The play revolves around a daily routine of a bug-resembling human creature, which consists of simple things such as listening to the radio or knitting, but also exploring the world around her. In the style of popular fairy tales, there is a daily task for her: to choose from three stainless steel serving dishes, each larger than the next. If she makes a mistake by choosing the largest one, she is punished by an electrical shock. By the end of the third day she grows from a creature that can hardly walk to a person who can stand on her own.

Every movement in Lafond’s performance is there for a reason. Wide open eyes, wobbly legs, wagging tongue – each little move tells part of the story. She paces it beautifully, giving the audience just enough time to take in the segments. The story she presents is vibrant, funny, artistic, and unique – definitely one that should not be missed!  

 Alvina  Ruprecht . Little Lady,  is an amazing corporeal transformation by Sandrine Lafond who is a clown, an acrobat, a contortionist, an actor and a consummate performer. She takes us through a series of daily rituals which show how her body, little by little becomes erect, self-sustaining, and independent as it fills out and begins flowing in a most graceful way.  We feel we are watching the evolution of the human species: from part human part undefinable creature, her body turns into a beautiful human butterfly.

Unfortunately it was in the Arts Court Library where one cannot see the show beyond the third row. Consequently there was no one sitting beyond the fourth row which was too bad for the artist.
I think that if the Ottawa Fringe still wants to use the space they have to rearrange it to make it more “friendly” to the artists and to the public.

For example,   raise the acting space  about two  or three feet,  or else rearrange the seating in that long room. Have the performance on a long platform  located UNDER the windows  (all along that side wall) and have the seats placed in 2 or 3 rows moving from the top to the bottom  in front of the wall.  That would improve the site lines immensely. .

Little Lady Plays in the Arts Court Library.

The Ottawa Fringe 2012. The Open Couple. Dario Fo meets Pirandello

The Ottawa Fringe 2012. The Open Couple. Dario Fo meets Pirandello

Couples go into battle on the stage in some of the most unforgettable plays. Who’se Afraid of Virginia Wolf haunted us for months. The Open Couple is another viciously angry event  that disguises itself as a comedy but whose humour is meant to inflict pain and suffering.

Antonia hates the “Open Couple “ scenario that her husband has imposed on her and the result is a game of  attack and defense- like a classical sword fight, as they both try to get the upper hand in this situation that Antonia finds unbearable but that the husband rather enjoys. After all, he gets the young chicks and she is having a nervous breakdown.

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Ottawa Fringe 2012, Kafka’s nod to Darwin: A fascinating show

Ottawa Fringe 2012, Kafka’s nod to Darwin: A fascinating show

Kafka’s work is all about fears, obsessions, and nightmarish images of a man trying to navigate and understand a world that overpowers him, a world he cannot explain.  If his hero (anti-hero?)  of The Metamorphosis awakes one morning transformed into a giant bug, the “hero” of A Report to an Academy begins as an Ape and is slowly transformed into a semblance of a human being. A reversal of the first text?  Possibly but the man reporting to the Academy has not made a completely successful transformation, and therein lies the rub. What interests Kafka here, is also the process of change. How does it take place and what does it show?

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Fringe 2011: The Interview

Fringe 2011: The Interview

Reviewed by Rajka Stefanovska, Ottawa, June 23, 2011

Ken Wilson’s play “The Interview” is a witty, funny, entertaining comedy that also explores the complete alienation and lack of real communication in the modern world. The actors, well suited to their roles, take us successfully on a journey through the mind’s maze, showing how it functions, person-to-person, moment-to-moment. This is a very well executed comedy. The simple set underlines the excellent acting by the three protagonists, especially that of Dan Baran in the very demanding role of Mr. Anderson.

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Mabel’s Last Performance : Beautiful Study of a Mind Losing Its Bearings.

Mabel’s Last Performance : Beautiful Study of a Mind Losing Its Bearings.

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A most beautifully written monologue by a surprisingly young and obviously talented Megan Piercey-Monafu.  Mabel, a “young sixty” and  former actress whom we meet in a nursing home,   is preparing to don a beautiful costume, walk past the nurses and disappear into the night!  Her final performance! “Heroes” comes to mind but it evolves in a different way.

Mabel, slowly floating away into Alzheimer’s, is caught in her own mind   where  beautiful memories, confused dreams,  theatrical characters and a shifting present  show us  that she is  drifting  somewhere in a complex in-between reality that recreates its own special links with the world.  She dialogues with her former lover, as easily as she does with Nina (the Seagull), Cleopatra (Shakespeare) Joan of Arc (Shaw) and Hedda Gabler (Ibsen) and with Susan in the Nursing home, who comes and goes but who’s “reality” is not any more obvious than that of the theatrical characters who have lived with Mabel her whole life.

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Dead Wrong is dead right.

Dead Wrong is dead right.

 

Dead Wrong is dead right in every aspect. The simplicity and clarity of both writing and presentation enhance the complexity of the issues under discussion. The straightforward, high quality performance by writer/performer Katherine Glover is simply riveting. The compelling storyline is a young woman’s recounting of a horrific rape and its aftermath. As she says, henceforth, her life is sharply divided—life before and after the assault. Then, some years later, she discovers that she may have misidentified her attacker and may, therefore, have ruined an innocent life and that of his family.

Just how can she ever put matters right, if she was, indeed, dead wrong?

Go — run, don’t walk — to this show to find out.

Dangerous Liaisons: joyous audience reaction from this spicy period piece.

Dangerous Liaisons: joyous audience reaction from this spicy period piece.

Les Liaisons dangereuses is the first epistolary novel ever written in France. It dates from the end of the 18th Century, several years before the taking of the Bastille in 1789 which marked the beginning of the French Revolution. Apart from announcing the moral disintegration of a society soon to be  physically removed  by the classes that suffered under the aristocracy, which is the milieu the author shows us.  Choderlos de Laclos’ work also illustrates, in a certain way, a critique of the theories of Jean Jacques Rousseau, the 18th century philosopher who prefigured the French romantic movement by teaching that one should follow one’s own nature.

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International Children’s Festival:The Man who Planted Trees.

International Children’s Festival:The Man who Planted Trees.

by the Puppet State Theatre from Scotland

A work of the same name,  by  the  award winning creator of animated films  Frédéric BACK is at the origin of this performance that was based on the life of Elzéard Bouffier, a shepherd from the south of  France, as told    by French novellist Jean Giono. Giono is known for his novels dealing with the agricultural world of the south of France where poor  farmers are often in disputes with neighbours, fighting over  land but mostly over  water because certain  areas of the south are  so arid.  The  lack of water brings many individuals to despair. (You might have seen Manon des Sources for example or the whole series of Giono’s films that were very good indeed).  Here the performance  from the Puppet State Theatre from Scotland,  brings  together among other things a slick puppet performance involving some good ventriloquist techniques by the manipulator of   the puppet who is called “DOG”. He is a would be  actor and self conscious performer who has to get his nose into everything.  A regular little  smart aleck of the kind we used to see on the Ed Sullivan show, or the Casino circuit, who delighted the adults with racy jokes, Here his vocabularly has calmed down and it is very suitable for children.  I’m sorry they never told us the name of the actor who spoke for him because his repartees and quick answers brought gales of laughter from the whole house.

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