Search: Rant, How our World and our Theatre is going to hell

The following reviews were broadcast on Friday, August 30, 2013, CIUT FRIDAY MORNING 89.5 FM: Blithe Spirit  plays at the Stratford Festival until  October 20 and Faith Healer at the Shaw Festival until October 6.

 The guest host was Phil Taylor.

 (PHIL)

Good Friday Morning, it’s theatre fix time with Lynn Slotkin our theatre critic and passionate playgoer.

Hi Lynn

 (LYNN)

Hi Phil, welcome back.

 (PHIL)

1)   So what treats do you have this week?

 (LYNN)

I’ve got two that deal with the spirit world of sorts.

Blithe Spirit by Noël Coward at the Stratford Festival, is about séances, speaking to the dead, and the dead come back to haunt you.

 And Faith Healer by Brian Friel at the Shaw Festival is about three people’s recollections of one of them who was a faith healer, who sometimes could heal people of their ills, but most times not. And how he affected the other two.

 (PHIL)

2)   Let’s start with the Master, Noël Coward and Blithe Spirit.

(LYNN)

Noël Coward was called “The Master”. I’m not sure if he was the one who gave himself the name but it’s apt. He could write sophisticated comedies that were hilarious and soul-crushing dramas, in the same year. He zipped off some of his plays in mere days. Coward produced Private Lives in three days. And it’s perfect.

But to Blithe Spirit. Produced in the West End in 1941.

Charles Condomine is a successful novelist who lives in a village with his second wife Ruth. His first wife Elvira died years before of illness. Charles is doing research on the paranormal, and invites another couple over for a séance. He invites the local mystic, Madam Arcati, to conduct the séance but not telling her why. In a sense he’s studying her too.

All things go well initially. Madam Arcati has them all sit at a table and in the dim light asks if there is anyone out there in the ether who wants to talk to anyone at the table.  After some mysterious knocking there is some fuss and commotion and the séance ends. Every one thinks it didn’t work. Except it did. The séance conjured Elvira. Charles is stunned to see her and unfortunately he’s the only one.  When he tells Ruth about Elvira’s spirit or ghost being in the room, she doesn’t believe him. Tempers flair. When he shouts to Elvira to shut up and go, Ruth thinks he’s being rude to her. The audience thinks it’s hilarious.

 (PHIL)

3)   Comedy is a serious thing. The more serious the comedy, the funnier it is.

 (LYNN)

Exactly, and certainly here. You have to play it very seriously to sell the humour. Charles is furious and frightened that Elvira has come back because it disrupts his life, and she’s toying with him. He’s furious because Ruth is not giving him any support or sympathy. It’s interesting to see how Elvira, the first wife is so different from Ruth the second. Ruth is very prim, matter of fact, sophisticated but in a coolish sort of way. Elvira is more flighty, flirty, mischievous and funny.

And you certainly get a sense of the depth of the play because of the production.

 (PHIL)

4)   How so?

 (LYNN)

It’s directed by Brian Bedford, a consummate actor who knows his comedy; and he knows his Coward. He has directed his cast to never let up on the seriousness of this hilarious comedy. Sure they can assume that sophisticated aura, as they make their drinks and dress up for dinner  etc. and are catty about people.

 But when Charles sees Elvira it’s shocking to him, and certainly the way Ben Carlson plays Charles. Carlson is furious, biting and desperate for Ruth to see the apparition he’s seeing, and ragingly frustrated when she doesn’t.

 As Ruth, Sarah Topham is straight-backed, stubborn and without a trace of whimsy which is perfect because she’s such a contrast to Elvira.

 Brian Bedford has envisioned a wonderful image of Elvira. She is dressed in a long flowing greyish gown (Katherine Lubienski does the costumes); the skin is pale and as played by the ethereal Michelle Giroux, with her arm bent up and hand drooped down and swaying as she walks, it’s like watching an image move through mist. Fabulous image.

And finally as Madame Arcati, Seana McKenna is eccentric but matter of fact. She never plays up the humour of the woman but makes her real. When she realizes that Charles was observing her for a book she says with terrible hurt in her voice, “you were mocking me?” Devastating…you catch yourself on the lip of the laugh.

 An absolutely funny, sobering, serious comedy done to perfection by this company.

 (PHIL)

5)   And how does Faith Healer deal with the spirit world of sorts.

 (LYNN)

Faith Healer by Brian Friel.  He’s an Irish author who deals in stories of flawed people. The play is four separate monologues delivered by three people.

 They are Frank, the faith healer. Grace either his wife or mistress depending on who you ask. And Teddy their friend and Frank’s manager. They travelled all over the British Isles as Frank casts his spell on unsuspecting folks who came to see if he could heal their ills. Sometimes he got inspired and actually cured someone.

Sometimes he knew nothing was going to happen. One such time involved a group of friends who were staying in the same hotel as Frank and Co. were and dared him to cure their friend who was in a wheel chair. Frank waited while they fetched the man in the chair.

Frank, Grace and Teddy remember details that are slightly askew. Teddy remembers coming up with the phrase that advertised the show and the theme song.

Grace remembers it differently. Grace and Teddy separately remember a tragic event in Grace’s life and Frank suggests that it never happened at all. Grace and Teddy separately say that she was married to Frank and he says she was his mistress.

(PHIL)

6) Where is the truth?

 (LYNN)

In a sense it’s in all of them and they are all haunted by it in their own say.  Frank is bluff.  Grace drinks and smokes to forget. And Teddy drinks beer for the same reason. And each truth is in each of the three characters because of the gifted actors playing them.

 As Frank, Jim Mezon is smooth talking, slowly paced. You are almost mesmerized by his voice and weaving of words. He looks respectable in his three piece brown suit, with shirt and tie. But you notice that his pant cuffs are very frayed. His shoes are unshined.  He’s almost like a hail fellow well met except you soon learn he conveniently doesn’t take any responsibility for any of his actions. It’s a fine performance by Mezon who makes Frank to be a charming loser who always has a quip to get him out of a tough spot.

Corrine Koslo plays Grace and she is heart-squeezing masterful. She has a tight smile that hides a multitude of sorrows. There is a crack in her voice. This is a woman struggling to hold on. She smokes. She drinks more than she smokes and she does both in abundance.

She is trying to forget a terrible point in her life. She is trying to live with her disappointment at Frank. She is trying to live period. Koslo gives a beautiful, nuanced performance.

 And as Teddy, Peter Krantz is all put on buoyancy. But you see the cracks in his veneer too. He loved both Frank and Grace, but perhaps he loved Frank a bit more he says, mournfully. He recalls that low point in Grace’s and his lives because of Frank and tries to hide his frustration. He drinks beer for the whole of his long monologue. He has already drunk three bottles of beer when we meet him. The empty bottles are on the floor by the large paper bag holding both the empties and the other full bottles of beer. Then he goes into the large paper bag for more bottles. As he empties them, he puts them back in the bag and hauls out more.

To get a sense of how much he drank, I think it would have been more effective if Director Craig Hall just had him stand all his empty beer bottles on the floor as he finished each one. I do like Hall’s careful, sensitive direction though.

 (Phil)

7) I take it this is one of those plays that might be heavy going because of the nature of the story, but you are recommending it? Why?

 (LYNN)

I am recommending it. Friel is a beautiful, writer. His plays do look into the wounded heart but he takes that sorrow and illuminates their lives. His writing is richly poetic. And you are held by the simple, gripping storytelling. The production is spare but so rich in detail, emotion, and a beating heart.

 (PHIL)

Thanks Lynn. You can read Lynn’s Blog at www.slotkinletter.com.

 Blithe Spirit plays at the Stratford Festival until October 20.

www.stratfordfestival.ca

Faith Healer plays at the Shaw Festival until October 6.

www.shawfest.com

 

 

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The following two plays were broadcast on Friday, March 15, 2013, CIUT FRIDAY MORNING, 89.5 CIUT FM. AS I LAY DYING at Theatre Passe Muraille, Mainstage until March 31, 2013, and CHING CHONG CHINAMAN at the Aki Studio of the Daniels Spectrum Centre.

Phil Taylor was the guest host.

(PHIL)
1) Good Friday morning. It’s time for our shot of theatre with Lynn Slotkin, our theatre critic. Hi Lynn. What are you going to review today?

(LYNN)
Hi Phil. Two plays produced by companies who have been doing theatre for a long time.

First AS I LAY DYING, based on the William Faulkner novel, is being given the Theatre Smith-Gilmour treatment. The company started as a clown based company, but over its 34 years it’s developed into a company that distils language into the simplest of dialogue accompanied by movement that tells the story.

And then the provocative titled play CHING CHONG CHINAMAN written by Lauren Yee and produced by fu-GEN Asian Canadian Theatre Company, celebrating their 10th anniversary this year.

So two challenging plays.

(PHIL)
2) First give us a brief synopsis of AS I LAY DYING.

(LYNN)
This is based on William Faulkner’s 1930 novella. We are in the lush, quirky world of the Bundren family. Disfunctional is an apt description. Addie is the mother and she’s the one who is dying at the beginning of the story, and dead soon after. Anse is the lazy, cheap, loveless father. The children are sons Jewel, Cash, Darl, Vardaman and daughter Dewey Dell. Misfits all.

According to Anse, Addie wanted to be buried in Jefferson, her home town, 40 miles where she lived. Anse was going to see she got her wish. Cash built the coffin. The trip took 9 days because there were terrible storms that took out bridges they could not cross. They got swept away at one point in a raging river.

They went from town to town trying to get to Jefferson, sometimes run out of towns because the smell of the body rotting in the coffin. Each member of the family had his/her secrets. So the journey was fraught with incident and tensions.

(PHIL)
3) How did they go about dramatising the novel?

(LYNN)
Theatre Smith-Gilmour’s co-artistic directors: Michelle Smith and Dean Gilmour, have been turning the short stories of Chekhov, The Brothers Grimm, Katherine Mansfield and even the Bible, into theatrical story-telling.

AS I LAY DYING is their next step—turning a novel into their spare but vibrant productions. So Smith and Gilmour in collaboration with their company of actors adapted the story.

Seven actors play several parts—there are about 56 characters in the book. They have kept the main format of the book—short chapters, each devoted to a character in the book. And then distilled the language of the book to their essence in dialogue and the rest is conveyed in vivid movement and sound.

The storm for example, is a torrent of body movement, swaying in wind, jerking and flipping in the raging river; even suggesting the coffin wildly tossing in the water. By the end of that scene you could swear that all the characters’ clothes are sopping wet because of the storm and the river.

The physicality of their storytelling is so compelling and gripping that by the end, you get the sense of having exerted all sorts of energy to get to their destination.

I love that about them

(PHIL)
4) With only seven actors playing all those parts, how do they do it?

(LYNN)
They put on a different nose and perhaps a hat. That’s it. The noses are obviously fake, held in place by an elastic band that goes around the head. Simple and brilliant.

The production is co-directed by Michelle Smith, who plays Addie both living and dead; and Dean Gilmour who plays Anse…and the company of course collaborates. They are all terrific.

The company continues to push itself into new territory of telling their stories simply and vividly.

(PHIL)
5) And now for CHING CHONG CHINAMAN. A provocative title if ever there was one.

(LYNN)
It kind of makes you sit up and hold your breath. It’s written by Lauren Yee and is a wild look at stereotypes, racism and family dysfunction, again.

It’s about an Asian-American family, born and raised in the States. The father plays golf and seems disinterested in his wife. The mother (his wife) does nothing all day—she doesn’t work outside the home– and is unhappy and wants to have another child.

The teenaged son Upton plays video games and wants to create them and nothing else. He mysteriously sponsors a man from China name Jing Zhou to come live with him and do his homework so he will pass high-school. The assumption is that all Chinese are good at science. Many of the prejudices are of this Asian-American family. The family mispronounces Jing Zhou’s name hence the offensive CHING CHONG… They are told to just call him J. To add further insult, the father thinks they should order Chinese food since J is Chinese. They do and he finds it inedible of course because it’s nothing like the authentic Chinese food he’s used to back home in China.

J speaks no English but comes to America because he wants dance on an American Idol type show.

The daughter Desdemona is a hyper achiever who is desperate to get into Princeton and goes to great lengths to write her personal essay full of trauma and woe in order to win over the admissions committee. The story-telling is deliberately over the top to really play up the stupidity of racism and stereotypes.

(PHIL)
5) Is the acting over the top to go with the wild writing?

(LYNN)
I’d say that’s what director Nina Lee Aquino is going for. The cast scurry all over Camellia Koo’s efficient set with its sliding doors and moveable set pieces.

It’s just that some of that heightened angst wears thin. However that’s not the case with Richard Lee who plays J. Lee is watchful, quietly reacts to this silly family and is totally believable in this unbelievable situation.

And the same goes for Jane Luk who plays several characters, from the unfortunate young woman Desdemona is counting on to get her a place in Princeton, to J’s phone sex worker mother. Jane Luk is quixotic, funny and believable.

(PHIL)
6) Is the play successful in conveying its point?

(LYNN)
I had a difficult time buying into the farcical aspect of it but that’s not to say others won’t.

I do applaud fu-Gen Asian Canadian Theatre Company for telling the stories of Asian Canadians and Americans; giving voice to them. It’s important. But I had trouble buying into this one.

(PHIL)
Thanks Lynn. That’s Lynn Slotkin our theatre critic and passionate playgoer. You can read Lynn’s blog at www.slotkinletter.com

AS I LAY DYING plays at Theatre Passe Muraille Mainspace until March 31.

CHING CHONG CHINAMAN plays at the AKI Studio of the Daniels Spectrum Centre until March 30.

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l-r: Brendan McMurtry-Howlett, David Patrick Flemming, Miranda Edwards. Photo by Daniel Alexander

The following reviews were broadcast Friday May 11, 2012 on CIUT FRIDAY MORNING, CIUT 89.5 FM. BEYOND THE CUCKOO’S NEST at Young People’s Theatre until May 17. THE AGONY AND THE ECSTASY OF STEVE JOBS (And the Repudiation and Redemption of Mike Daisey) until Sunday May 13 at various locations.

(ROSE)
1) Good Friday Morning. It’s time for a little theatre with Lynn Slotkin, our theatre critic and passionate playgoer.

Hi Lynn.

What’s up for today theatre-wise?

(LYNN)
Hi Rose. I have two really provocative plays. First BEYOND THE CUCKOO’S NEST by Edward Roy, is at Young People’s Theatre and is about mental illness in teens.

And THE AGONY AND THE ECSTACY OF STEVE JOBS (and the repudiation and redemption of Mike Daisey). at various locations until Sunday. It’s the one person show that monologist Mike Daisey created about the dastardly working conditions in China of Foxcon, the company that makes all the Apple electronics and the accusation of the piece is that Steve Jobs the CEO of Apple, knew.

(ROSE)
2) Let’s start with BEYOND THE CUCKOO’S NEST. Mental illness in teens—you’re right, mental illness is a provocative subject.

(LYNN)
And Young People’s Theatre is never shy about producing plays that reflect what’s going on in the lives of young people.

I love this theatre to bits for having the guts to address issues that are affecting young people. This year they did plays about bullying, homophobia, overbearing parents, abandonment, and a musical (Seussical) about a loyal elephant who watched over an egg until the chick hatched.

With BEYOND THE CUCKOO’S NEST they deal with mental illness.

(ROSE)
3) How does the story deal with it?

(LYNN)
Three teens, Patricia, Jude and Trey meet regularly to talk about their problems with a therapist named Cathy. Patricia has issues of self-esteem; Jude is schizophrenic; and Trey suffers from anxiety and panic attacks.

Both Jude and Trey are sweet on Patricia. Jude is loquacious, argumentative, needy and pushes all Patricia’s buttons. She thinks that Jude is just annoying. She doesn’t see that he likes her. Trey has to do an oral presentation and is terrified because he has an anxiety attach before doing such things.

He refuses to tell the teacher of his difficulty and hates the teacher for being tough. Cathy the therapist urges Trey to talk to the teacher for consideration. Then Patricia offers to help Trey with his public speaking.

Over the course of preparing, both Patricia and Trey bond.

(ROSE)
4) Does Cathy treat them with kid gloves because they are mentally fragile?

(LYNN)
No and that’s one of the many beauties of Edward Roy’s play. Cathy doesn’t coddle them. She is considerate but firm. Through it all Cathy keeps the three in check and able to function. She insists they respect each other. She knows their tricks and at one point tells Trey to stop using his illness as an excuse of his not trying or being disappointed.

I love the way Edward Roy deals with the mental illness. Cathy doesn’t let them feel sorry for themselves.

She makes them face their issues and deal with them. Arguments are given and dealt with but not in a facile way. And Roy’s dialogue crackles with the lingo of teens, and since the play is for teens this is crucial. I also appreciated that the story does not end all neatly and with everybody happy.

The title, BEYOND THE CUCKOO’S NEST refers to a group of mentally challenged kids who go into schools to talk to young people about their mental illnesses.

Brave and true.

(ROSE)
5) And the production?

(LYNN)
Edward Roy also directs and it’s with a muscular arm. Rock music throbs in the first few scenes as Jude tries to get Patricia to come with him to see some ‘really sick’ graffiti.

Andy Moro has designed a multi-levelled set onto which the three teens bound, hop, jump and dance. He has also done the projections which are busy and beautifully conjure that world of the teen—bursting with movement, images, and things to distract.

There are terrific performances from Miranda Edwards as Patricia—very confident, hopeful and yet anxious to do well in this new school and not repeat the problems at her other school. As Jude, David Patrick Flemming is a ball of fire and energy, attitude, in your face annoying and perfectly so. As Trey, Brendan McMurtry-Howlett is beautifully awkward, insecure, brow-beaten by his father. And as Cathy the therapist, Soo Garay is firm, thoughtful, considerate and fair.

Beautiful performances and a really compelling production.

(ROSE)
6) And now THE AGONY AND THE ECSTACY OF STEVE JOBS (and the Repudiation and Redemption of Mike Daisey). There’s been a lot of controversy about the show in general. Briefly tell us what the show is about.

(LYNN)
THE AGONY AND THE ECSTACY OF STEVE JOBS is a one man show originally written and performed by a wonderful, prickly monologist named Mike Daisey. In it he tells how he loves any kind of electronic device produced by Apple. He reads about them. He goes to their website to watch demos. Totally devoted.

But then doubt comes in. There are stories about horrible working conditions in China where every one of these devices is made. He decides to go to China to find out the truth.

He has an interpreter. He stands outside the Foxcon Factory in Shenzhen, China—a huge complex that makes these devices. He interviews workers, some as young as 12. He hears about the suicides of the workers because of long hours and grinding repetitive work.

He talks about the workers whose hands are gnarled crippled because of the chemicals used to clean the screens of he iphones etc. He is furious because he says that Steve Jobs knew about these horrible conditions. He had to. He wasn’t a micro-manager. He was a nano-manager.

So from all that comes this show—THE AGONY AND THE ECSTACY OF STEVE JOBS. Daisey is interviewed on NPR….lots of notoriety. But then it was revealed that Daisey lied.

(ROSE)
7) What did he lie about?

(LYNN)
He didn’t actually talk to any workers. He couldn’t confirm that a person he talked to was 12. He didn’t talk to anyone whose hands were crippled because of the work. So then he was vilified in the press and on the NPR program.

Lots of controversy—if he lied then his show is a lie. Daisey issues an apology saying it’s theatre not journalism. He allows other theatre artists to download his script for free.

Enter director/producer Mitchell Cushman and actor David Ferry who take advantage of the offer and produce their own provocative production of it. Only they add a bit that addresses the controversy and they call it …and the Repudiation and Redemption of Mike Daisey.

(ROSE)
8) Why is the production provocative?

(LYNN)
The run is very short—until Sunday—and each show is in a secret location you learn about by getting a message on your iphone on the day. The first show was in a hackers’s work space.

I saw it yesterday in a garage in the Dovercourt/Queen area—brilliant since Apple started in a garage. We were told to keep our cell phones, pump up the volume, tweet, answer calls etc.

Mitchell Cushman directs this and keeps a tally of the calls and texts. Our total was 32.

David Ferry is not Mike Daisey but he is doing his script. Ferry is vivid, vibrant, raging, engaging and sucks us into that compelling story.

The repudiation and redemption part is Ferry reading many quotes from the press etc. vilifying Daisey for what he did and Daisey apologizing and trying to explain.

I love being unsettled by this show and its implication.

When Mitchell Cushman and David Ferry were on our show a few weeks ago Ferry said that all theatre is a lie. And he said that we know that everything Daisey said is true. Because of the show and the bad press on their Foxcon factory, Apple has improved the working conditions.

People now don’t work 16 hours a day any more. The pay is better. Ultimately, the show does what it’s supposed to—it illuminates a reality and leaves it to us to decide if it’s right or not.

I loved the whole theatricality of this production. Beautifully done.

(ROSE)
Thanks Lynn. That’s Lynn Slotkin our theatre critic and passionate playgoer. You can check out Lynn’s blog at www.slotkinletter.com

BEYOND THE CUCKOO’S NEST plays at Young People’s Theatre until June 17.
Tickets: youngpeoplestheatre.ca

THE AGONY AND THE ECSTASY OF STEVE JOBS (and the Repudiation and Redemption of Mike Daisey) at various locations until Sunday May 13.
Tickets: otmtheatre@gmail.com

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The following three plays were reviewed on Friday, November 11, 2011, CIUT 89.5 FM on the as yet no named show: word!sound!powah! at Tarragon Extra Space; LIKE THE FIRST TIME at the Walmer Centre Theatre and LOVE LIES BLEEDING at the Sony Centre. Rose Palmieri was the host sitting in for Damon Scheffer.

ROSE

1) It’s Friday morning and I’m here with Lynn Slotkin, our theatre critic and passionate playgoer.

Hi Lynn

You’re going to talk about three shows this week: word!sound!powah!; LIKE THE FIRST TIME, and LOVE LIES BLEEDING. What caught your fancy about them?

LYNN

It is an eclectic mix.

word!sound!powah! is a one woman play that is written and performed by d’bi.young anitafrika and is the third part in the sankofa trilogy.

LIKE THE FIRST TIME is written and directed by Adam Seelig and is based on a play by Luigi Pirandello.

LOVE LIES BLEEDING is Alberta Ballet’s homage to the music of Elton John and Bernie Taupin.

ROSE

2) An eclectic mix indeed. Let’s go in order as you usually do: word!sound!powah! On the page the title is in all small letters.

Is this deliberate?

LYNN

It is.

The playwright and performer is d’bi.young anitafrika, all in small letters, and she writes about the Jamaican experience.

young anitafrika is a Jamaican Canadian writer/performer now travelling the world and performing her work.

The trilogy was first nurtured at Theatre Passe Muraille and Andy McKim, its Artistic Director.

word!sound!powah! is the third part of the sankofa trilogy— The other two plays, blood.claat and benu will open later in the month.

The trilogy covers almost 40 years in the lives of three generations of women in the sankofa family, namely Benu, her mother and grandmother.

These women are poets and political activists.

The plays are set in Jamaica and in their way look at the politics and corruption of government and the people who want to make a change.

This is certainly true of word!sound!powah!

ROSE

3) If word!sound!powah! is the third part of the trilogy and it’s opening this run at Tarragon, is that confusing?

Will people get a sense of where this play fits in the trilogy?

LYNN
A good question.

I’ve seen the first two plays and was familiar with the characters mentioned in
word!sound!powah! But if I came to it fresh, I would think that it was confusing even though young anitafrika’s performance is compelling. Is that the assumption, that she thinks that people would have seen the other two plays and would automatically know who she was talking about? I don’t think that’s a reasonable assumption.

word!sound!powah! is a mix of dub poetry, story-telling, song, traditional music and sound effects made by three musicians.

Dub poetry is a form of performance poetry that originated in Jamaica or the West Indies at least, involving spoken word said over music.

ROSE

4) Let’s talk about the production. What makes the performance so compelling?

LYNN

d’bi.young anitafrika is just such an engaging performer. She a moving force of expression, flitting seamlessly from scene to scene.

In one scene she is a character brutally interrogated about a recent protest. Then she goes back in time to her grandmother’s day, then back to the present.

young anitafrika gives a powah-house performance that is vibrant, fearless and joyful in a play that is confusing if you don’t know the other two plays.

That said, I think the piece needs trimming. And I think it’s overproduced for a one person show.

d’bi.young anitafrika has said that she envisioned that the trilogy would be huge in production scope.

That’s a mistake, as the production overpowers the piece.

There is a really impressive set by Camellia Koo of a huge tree with branches that spread all through the small Extra Space.

There are three musicians that sing and create the soundscape.

Too much.

And interestingly, there is no mention of a director. It needs one, to help shape the show and young anitafrika’s performance. A performance, no matter how grand, can always use a good director.

So I have issues with word!sound!powah! from its placement in the performance schedule and the piece as a whole.

But I look forward to the other two shows: blood.claatand benu.

ROSE

5) Moving on, what about LIKE THE FIRST TIME?

LYNN

It’s written and directed by Adam Seelig, the Artistic Director of One Little Goat Theatre Company.

It describes itself as a theatre company devoted to modern and contemporary poetic theatre. Theatre that tries to find clarity through ambiguity.

A bit pretentious, that.

I have found their productions in the past hard going in the context of clarity, but I always go.

LIKE THE FIRST TIME is a refreshing change.

It’s based on a play by Luigi Pirandello. An Italian playwright who wrote in the early 20th century and dealt in a metaphysical way with reality, appearance.

His best known play is 6 Characters in Search of An Author. My favourite is Right You Are, (If you think you are).

The premise of LIKE THE FIRST TIME is fascinating and mysterious.

A woman named Fulvia, is involved with two men. She has one child and is pregnant with
another and the father here is a mystery.

At the beginning of the play Fulvia is attempting suicide by hanging herself. Her husband, Marco, has left her for another woman but returns when it doesn’t work out. Fulvia is saved by Marco but leaves for a former lover, a dangerous fellah named Sylvio.

She hasn’t seen him in 13 years because she left him. He raised their three year old daughter.

The two men vie for Fulvia’s affections. She tries to win the love of her now 16 year old
daughter who doesn’t know that she is her mother.

Welcome to Pirandello country.

ROSE

6) You say that Seelig has used Pirandello’s play as a guide, how does he do?

LYNN

Well there is the mystery of who the father of the baby is. There is a lot of games playing with names. Fulvia is sometimes called Flora by Marco. She also refers to him by other names.

In a program note Seeling says the text is written with no punctuation. The actors chose how to emphasize the text.

(A bit dangerous, that)

Seeling also includes a note from Pirandello on the text of a play and the nature of theatre: .. ”The work of art in the theatre is no longer the work of a writer… but an act of life to be created moment by moment on the stage and together with the spectators”

One assumes that that act of life is created by the actor and the director. And here is where this production is a mixed bag.

ROSE

7) How so?

LYNN

As a director Seeling’s productions are beautiful to look at—the scene with Fulvia attempting suicide is beautiful and elegant.

She stands on a table with black gown that billows over the table and a black scarf hanging down from the ceiling that is loosely wrapped around her neck.

But the productions are rather static in the direction.

Seelig belongs to the school of directing that tells actors to move downstage three steps and look out, after they say a certain word.

It gives the productions a stilted feel. Hardly life-like.

The performances here make the difference and are interesting with one glaring exception.

As Marco, Dov Mickelson is dangerous and desperate for Fulvia. He seethes with life.

As Fulvia, Cathy Murphy is almost sphinx-like. I can see why these two men would find her appealing.

Sylvio, the former lover, is supposed to be mysterious and dangerous too, but you would never know it from Andrew Moodie’s wooden, stultifying performance. Comotose, unexpressive and he acts by rote.

The only action of this character is putting his hands in his pockets, walking three steps here or there, and breathing melodramatically.

Awful.

There is much to recommend the production, but this performance really makes it hard to recommend.

ROSE

8) OUCH.

And now for something completely different. A ballet. LOVE LIES BLEEDING.

Last week you said you generally didn’t review opera or ballet. How come you’re doing this one?

LYNN

True.

I don’t generally review these because I don’t have the vocabulary for ballet. So I am looking at this Alberta Ballet production as a theatrical event.

Artistic director/choreographer Jean Grand-Maitre has created ballets using the music of pop/folk composers. He did the popular and award winning FIDDLE and THE DRUM using the music of Joni Mitchell.

He’s created a ballet using the music of Sarah McLaughlin.

LOVE LIES BLEEDING is Alberta Ballet’s homage to the music of Sir Elton John and Bernie Taupin.

In his curtain speech seemed geared towards the person who knew the music but not necessarily the artform.

So he sold it not as a ballet but as a rock concert. There a a lot of lighting effects; bombarding video images and all manner of stuff associated with a rock concert.

Grand-Maitre uses 14 of Elton John and Bernie Taupin’s songs from “Goodby Yellow Brick Road to Rocket Man to, Someone Saved My Life Tonight, to Saturday Night’s Alright for Fighting.

And he encouraged people to tweet and text.

What I was looking at was a muscular, hip-thrusting sexually charged work that is based in sex-drugs-rock and roll and love.

There is not a tutu in sight.

The costumes referenced a lot of the flamboyance of Elton John.

But I also saw a tip of the bowler hat to Broadway director-choreographer Bob Fossie.

His choreography always used lots of hip thrusting. And his dancers wore bowler hats which they always tipped.

LOVE LIES BLEEDING Has lots of that.

And in the middle of this rocking, dazzling work is a number between two men that referenceswar, homophobia and love, that is startling in how moving it is.

ROSE

9) Do you think the non-ballet fans might be converted?

LYNN

I think they might when they see how this music is applied to this athletic choreography.

Is it good ballet?

I don’t know, but the effect on the audience certainly was evident.

ROSE

Thanks Lynn. That’s Lynn Slotkin, our theatre critic and passionate playgoer.

word!sound!powah! is part of the sankofa trilogy which plays at the Tarragon Extra Space until Dec. 4.

LIKE THE FIRST TIME plays at the Walmer Centre Theatre until Nov. 13.

LOVE LIES BLEEDING plays at the Sony Centre until November 12.

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