Vancouver

Shadow Machine, the latest work by Co. Erasga (presented at W2 Storyeum from Oct 21-30), is described in broad strokes in its press materials, as “an exploration of the conflicting relationships humanity has held with machines and the industrial process since the first years of the industrial revolution.” Based on this ambitious description, I expected the performance to examine technological evolution in a large sense, and anticipated an evening of strangely morphed bodies and surreal technological experiments. While Shadow Machine did indeed feature inventive sets and mechanistic choreography, the narrative elements of the work were more idiosyncratic and...

Shadow Machine

Before the show starts, I suddenly realize that this experience is so American.  It just feels hopelessly sincere and awfully over the top.  The warmup guy (otherwise known as Vince Fontaine played by Eddie Mekka of “Laverne and Shirley” fame) tried his best to get this Vancouver crowd going but wow what a cold cold room. Eventually, there was actual singing  and even some minimal hand jiving. It's all a bit crazy for me.  He is certainly a talented guy but I don't know if this is the right town for this kind of schtick.  

At intermission, I start...

Real-life image of the merch booth.

Who knew Hitchcock could be hilarious

OK, The 39 Steps isn’t a straight-up theatrical rendition of the classic thriller film of the same name. And that’s just fine. The play is very funny, with compelling acting and imaginative use of stagecraft to keep the audience engaged.

The play follows the trials and tribulations of Richard Hannay, a man on the run for a crime he didn’t commit. While rambling through the English countryside on the lam from Scotland Yard, he finds himself immersed in a mysterious spy plot with consequences that could affect the future of the nation. Along the...

Diana Coatsworth and Martin Happer in the Arts Club Theatre Company’s production of The 39 Steps. Photo by David Cooper.

Anyone who has had the misfortune of listening to me blabber on about playwrighting will have heard the following: theatre uses simplicity to convey complex ideas. In working through my own scripts I identify what I think of as “literary conceits” versus “theatrical moments”. By literary, I mean those ideas that are best savoured in the mind; ones that make you look up from a page and ponder for a few moments. Because of its relentless, forward movement, theatre doesn’t easily allow for these sorts of mental breaks. Any moment that puts an audience into a reflective state also pulls...

Where am I? Jonathon Young in Tear the Curtain

As a big fan of both Grease movies back in the day, I was thrilled to be able to review Screaming Chicken Theatrical Society’s latest production Greece Does Grease. While I thoroughly enjoyed the performance and the all-too-familiar Grease songs (with slightly reworked lyrics), I have to admit that I felt like a naughty little kid sneaking into see the movie Mum and Dad banned you to watch when you were at school. And I loved it!

Greece Does Grease tells the classical Greek story of Persephone, the daughter of Demeter and Zeus, who falls in love with Hades,...

Miss Fit in Greece Does Grease

American monologist Mike Daisey is a god.  Two and a half hours passed in an instant. I definitely was glad I made an effort to get out to this one night PuSh+ presentation.  Kudos to Norman Armour and the PuSh Festival for bringing it to a sold-out Vancouver audience at the Vancity Theatre.

Mike Daisey with his iPad

Oh my god I have to write a review! It’s 10am, the Sunday after seeing the play What You Want on Friday night at the Havana Theatre, and I still haven’t written the damn review.

Andrew, I sympathize. What to write? How to write it? The never ending torture a writer must go through.

Random notes I took while watching the play:

  • Entertaining, Funny, Quirky  
  • I laughed A LOT (use another word)
  • Learned about a new term – ASV (Anal Sex Virgin) – can people really do that on Craigslist? Could I do that? What am I thinking?!
  • ...
Russell Bennett in What You Want

If you can only go to one show this festival, 52 Pick Up would be a good choice.  Fifty two playing cards are thrown into the air.  Each card dictates a scene that Gemma Wilcox and Sam Elmor perform in the order they are chosen, gradually revealing a romantic relationship that is complex, funny, infuriating, passionate, Mars vs. Venus typical, funny (oh, did I already say funny?, well, it’s very funny), and frighteningly familiar.  

Wilcox and Elmor pull off this amazing feat of acting with extraordinary subtlety. Each scene is compelling and I was moved in every direction.  I...

52 Pick Up

Playwright Andrew Templeton returned to Vancouver after a fifteen-year absence and What You Want is the almost-true story of what he got.  He has written himself into the play, and the cast takes turns playing him, themselves and their characters.  Actors Rachel Aberle, Gillian Bennett, Russell Bennett and Sean Tyson, ramp up the comedy when they bicker about whether they’re actually improvising or if their improvised rebellion is merely scripted dialogue. The pacing is brisk and precise and the delivery naturalistic.

On a bare stage, with just a few boxes to perch on, we’re introduced to Dave and Laura, Starling...

Gillian Bennett in What You Want

First of all, let us get the obvious out of the way: what the hell does "bildungsroman" mean and how do you pronounce it? With the help of Wikipedia, here is what you need to know:

The bildungsroman (German pronunciation: [?b?ld??s.?o?ma?n]; German: "formation novel") is a genre of the novel which focuses on the psychological and moral growth of the protagonist from youth to adulthood. Change is thus extremely important. The genre is further characterized by a number

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Look, you... you... man!

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