Reviews

  • A washed-up cabaret performer gets ready for his comeback only to find in his dressing room a reporter. The interview ensues and the audience watches as this original tale written and performed by Bremner Duthie takes his has-been character and shows the reporter and viewers what kind of an artist this man had been.

    Whiskey Bars: a Kabarett with Songs of Kurt Weill
  • I did not know what to expect and had no reference from any previous experiences from the RC Weslowski body of work, but after the show and thinking of what I just saw (or did it happen?), such expectations could have ruined this wonderfully tripped out time.

    The Wet Dream Catcher
  • Awkward Stage Productions brings us this musical written by Marvin Hamlisch and Howard Ashman.  It's about a teen Beauty Pageant with a fascinating twist. Rather than have it’s young cast play both the teenagers and the adults in some sort of age makeup, the older set is presented “Avenue Q” style as puppets, with the young performers fully visible in black. While occasionally awkward, in the hands of some of the performers true magic occurs.

    Folks from Awkward Stage Productions
  • There is much to admire in this piece and I fully applaud Sapience Dance Collective for bringing us dance at the Fringe, however I can’t help but wish the piece felt more finished and fully rehearsed.

    Seattle's Sapience Dance Collective
  • It’s ok to love them both!

    Writer/Performers Emmelia Gordon and Pippa Mackie have crafted a winning confection that could have real legs developing and growing into something longer and greater than its already wonderful self.

    Writer/Performers Emmelia Gordon and Pippa Mackie
  • A brilliant idea is ruined by a poorly rehearsed performance – for this show to work it needs to move like clockwork. It doesn’t.

    The floor is covered in a map of the world – Cormack tells us part of her life story as she moves from country to country as a recorded voice lists them alphabetically.  In the middle section of the show, she draws Ireland and Wales in outline and lists statistics that join her two “homes.” Then she tells us where she’d like to visit on earth, taping down a zig-zag line and then there is a...

    Performance Art / All Ages
  • We’ve heard these stories before.

    One about a woman (let's call her A) who creates a fake past and becomes a celebrity for the “pain” she’s been through, the other (let's call her B) dreams inside of a man who will complete her, but she never speaks to him. When A is found out and B has her dream irrevocably crushed, each decides to commit suicide. They connect online – and for a while it’s interesting, even if B's plight seems unbelievable as a reason for suicide - people delude themselves true, but this story is a bad cliché.

    Both...

    Oooh... bright shiny lights!
  • Why would you want to come and see the performance poetry of Jem Rolls IS PISSED OFF?

    Jem Rolls and his awfully big hands
  • The idea behind Brent Hirose's one-man play (he is author and actor) is original and ingenious:  suppose that after a faux pas one could turn time back a few seconds and say the right thing instead.   Most of us, I expect, can identify with this.   Accept this one premise, and you are ready to be drawn into the situations Hirose creates.   He uses four characters to explore this fantasy.

    Brent Hirose
  • Wildwood Park walks us through the painful steps of obsession as experienced by Ms. Haviland, (played by Maryth Gilroy), a realtor who has been both drawn into and repulsed by an incident in her hometown. Like a kind of Stockholm Syndrome, she has a very personal relationship with the home she's trying to sell and yet at the same time has far too much emotional attachment to part with.

    The perspective buyer, Dr. Simian, (played by Jason Broadfoot), seems to wear a mysterious cloak, and waffles from menacing in one moment to almost normal in the next. He both...

    Maryth Gilroy & Jason Broadfoot

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