British playwright Bryony Lavery's 2007 play Stockholm has only a few more performances at the Tarragon Extra Space. The piece comes from Nightwood Theatre and is directed by Kelly Straughan and stars Melissa-Jane Shaw and Ryan Hollyman. The show, which has been garnering stellar reviews, tells the story of Todd and Kali, a couple who seem perfect on the surface but have a powerful distrust and desire underneath. Author of more than twenty plays in the past thirty-five years, Lavery is known for her work's underlying feminist themes and heafty women's roles. Her 1998 hit Frozen was nominated for the Tony for Best Play, and 1992's Her Aching Heart was acclaimed by the queer community. For more info or to purchase tickets please click here!! And an FYI - this Saturday matinees is Pay What You Can!!!
Wednesday, May 30, 2012
Final chance to see STOCKHOLM
British playwright Bryony Lavery's 2007 play Stockholm has only a few more performances at the Tarragon Extra Space. The piece comes from Nightwood Theatre and is directed by Kelly Straughan and stars Melissa-Jane Shaw and Ryan Hollyman. The show, which has been garnering stellar reviews, tells the story of Todd and Kali, a couple who seem perfect on the surface but have a powerful distrust and desire underneath. Author of more than twenty plays in the past thirty-five years, Lavery is known for her work's underlying feminist themes and heafty women's roles. Her 1998 hit Frozen was nominated for the Tony for Best Play, and 1992's Her Aching Heart was acclaimed by the queer community. For more info or to purchase tickets please click here!! And an FYI - this Saturday matinees is Pay What You Can!!!
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Preview: Toronto Festival of Clowns
Toronto, ON (March 07, 2012) – The freaks are back to take over Toronto and
this time it’s an international invasion. For four days only, some of the world’s
top clowns, bouffons and physical theatre performers will be unleashed in
Toronto for the seventh annual Toronto
Festival of Clowns.
The
festival, running from May 31 to June 3rd, 2012 is filled with imaginative,
outlandish, peculiar and hilarious shows.
All performances will take place in Toronto’s Pia Bouman Studio Theatre
in the heart of Queen West’s Arts District.
This year,
the Toronto Festival of Clowns goes international, with the premiere of a
bouffon play by Master Clown Teacher Philippe Gaulier, directed by his son
Balthazar.
Over 100
performers will shock and delight audiences in both full length productions and
cabaret performances, including:
La
Gnole de Tante Christine est Imbuvable (Aunt Aggie’s Gut Rot is Undrinkable) –
Paris
Jayne Walling and Julie Maingonnat star in the modern bouffon play by world-renowned artist, Philippe Gaulier. This is the story of two women trying to have a baby, despite one being infertile and the other a virgin. Directed by Balthazar Gaulier, this work is performed in French with English surtitles.
Jayne Walling and Julie Maingonnat star in the modern bouffon play by world-renowned artist, Philippe Gaulier. This is the story of two women trying to have a baby, despite one being infertile and the other a virgin. Directed by Balthazar Gaulier, this work is performed in French with English surtitles.
Fools
For Love - Edmonton
A romantic comedy in red-nose starring Edmonton-based performers Christine Lesiak and Adam Keefe and directed by Jan Henderson. Rocket and Sheshells are best friends on a hilarious roller-coaster ride that will plummet straight into your heart.
A romantic comedy in red-nose starring Edmonton-based performers Christine Lesiak and Adam Keefe and directed by Jan Henderson. Rocket and Sheshells are best friends on a hilarious roller-coaster ride that will plummet straight into your heart.
Bleed
- Toronto
Today, something about Norman is off. Today, he didn’t go to work. Today, he stayed home. Now he is beginning to bleed. A hit at this year’s Rhubarb Festival and starring Phil Luzi, Bleed is directed by the festival’s Artistic Director Adam Lazarus.
Today, something about Norman is off. Today, he didn’t go to work. Today, he stayed home. Now he is beginning to bleed. A hit at this year’s Rhubarb Festival and starring Phil Luzi, Bleed is directed by the festival’s Artistic Director Adam Lazarus.
Yorkville
Bitches take on afFORDability - Toronto
Rob Ford is dead and the Yorkville Bitches (Suzanne Roberts Smith, Jamie Ebbs and Jesse Stanley) welcome you to his celebration of Life. This socialite trio intends to festoon the funeral proceedings with their own personal flavour and turn the memoriam into the see and be “scene” event of 2012!
Rob Ford is dead and the Yorkville Bitches (Suzanne Roberts Smith, Jamie Ebbs and Jesse Stanley) welcome you to his celebration of Life. This socialite trio intends to festoon the funeral proceedings with their own personal flavour and turn the memoriam into the see and be “scene” event of 2012!
Saucisse:
A Foo Musical - Toronto
Foo, one of Toronto’s most beloved clowns, returns to this year’s festival in her own full-length show. Foo, a skeptical, nomadic peddler strikes an unlikely friendship with Saucisse, a new-age vegetarian pig. Directed by Susanna Hamnett and starring Helen Donnelly.
Foo, one of Toronto’s most beloved clowns, returns to this year’s festival in her own full-length show. Foo, a skeptical, nomadic peddler strikes an unlikely friendship with Saucisse, a new-age vegetarian pig. Directed by Susanna Hamnett and starring Helen Donnelly.
Each night
of the festival features a hugely popular cabaret that brings together some of
the most exciting performers in the clowning world. In true festival tradition,
the Red Nose District will kick off
the weekend with the beloved clown duo Morro
and Jasp. Friday night, the freaks and outcasts take the stage for a
satirical Night of Bouffon and Saturday
night features the only west end performance of the exceptionally popular, one-of-a-kind
Lunacy Cabaret – where anything and
everything can and does happen.
The
Festival closes with a Student Soiree that
will feature the best work to come out of recent physical theatre workshops
across the country and the presentation of the third annual Mark Purvis Bursary that funds a
student’s future study in physical performance.
Founded in
2006, the Toronto Festival of Clowns
provides new and established clowns and physical performers the opportunity to
create and showcase their work. Producers Adam Lazarus and Dave McKay aim to
create awareness of the various forms of physical theatre under the umbrella of
“clown”, such as red-nose, mime, bouffon, busking, movement, slapstick,
commedia del arte, vaudeville, mask and character work.
Past participants of
this powerhouse festival of physical theatre include John Turner of Mump and
Smoot, David S. Craig, Christel Bartelse, Rachelle Elie, Leah Cherniak, Rick
Roberts, The Red Bastard, Fiona Griffiths, Michelle Smith and Dean Gilmour, Ginette
Mohr,
Anand Rajaram, Edwige Jean-Pierre, Keystone Theatre, Ravi Jain,
Adam Paolozza, Sue Morrison and Melissa D’Agostino.
Toronto Festival of Clowns
Scotiabank Studio Theatre at Pia Bouman School
6 Noble Street
Scotiabank Studio Theatre at Pia Bouman School
6 Noble Street
May 31st – June 3rd, 2012
Tickets: All full-length shows and cabarets are $10 each
Tickets
are available at the door
For more
information please visit www.torontofestivalofclowns.com
Thursday, May 24, 2012
Next Stage Deadline Extended to Friday
Hello All Theatre Lovers & Makers
We have some exciting news…The 6th annual Next Stage Theatre Festival (NSTF) has extended its application date to Friday, May 25th at 5:00pm!!!
The Next Stage Theatre Festival is now in its 6th year and was created to encourage artists who have participated in Canadian Association of Fringe Festival (CAFF) member festivals to move beyond the summer production model and showcase their work to a wider audience, including discerning artistic decision makers who could be interested in programming their shows on main stages across the country. In five years, we have seen incredible success – audiences have grown by more than 130% and more than a third of our productions have gone on to other stages.
NSTF is interested in projects from emerging and established artists from any genre and style who are developing new work and exploring new artistic avenues, and who are challenging traditional definitions of theatre. Please note we are accepting applications this year for our Ante-Chamber series, performed in the Factory Theatre bar space – these shows should be low-tech and appropriate for a bar venue.
If you are interested in applying please click here for rules, regulations and application.
HATCH 2013 Applications Available Now
Harbourfront Centre Invitation for Artist Proposals
HATCH 2013 - Where New Performance Begins
Deadline for Proposals: June 20, 2012 @ 6:00 pm
TORONTO, ON (May 23, 2012) – Harbourfront Centre is pleased to announce an open call for proposals from Toronto-area artists and companies working in the field of performance for the HATCH 2013 season, guest curated by Trevor Schwellnus.
HATCH is designed to incubate and foster invention and innovation in the local performance community. Entering its ninth year, this programme has become an important element in the milieu of local performance development. Past HATCH projects include Hannah Moscovitch’s The Russian Play, Jess Dobkin’s Everything I’ve Got and Maggie MacDonald and Stephanie Markowitz’s Paper Laced With Gold.
HATCH is a key initiative in Harbourfront Centre’s mission to develop local artists and their unique practices. The HATCH residency and mentorship programme provides resources and professional assistance to a new generation of engaging and innovative contemporary artists to reach the next stage in the development in their work and careers.
Harbourfront Centre invites projects from emerging creators as well as established artists engaging in new collaborations or entering into new artistic territory. We encourage performance proposals from artists working across all disciplines, including, but not limited to, dance, theatre, performance art, music, etc.
Companies and artists selected to participate in HATCH will receive a one-week residency in Harbourfront Centre’s Studio Theatre. HATCH is not about an opportunity for staging a fully finished piece but about using the week to develop a new or existing piece of work.
Use of the residency period is at the discretion of the artist and needs of the project (i.e.
workshop, rehearsals, performance, etc.) at least one presentation of the work for the public and/or invited audience.
HATCH is seeking proposals from professional performance creators from across the GTA at any stage in their career. Proposals should demonstrate a clear artistic mandate, for either a new project or entering the next phase of an ongoing project. HATCH is interested in artists/companies whose work is contemporary in nature and committed to the development of inventive and creative performance based art.
This year’s guest curator, Trevor Schwellness is a Toronto-based Stenographer, designing sets, lighting and video for performance with independent artists. He is Artistic Producer of Aluna Theatre and was Designer-in-Residence at the Theatre Centre. Schwellness has collaborated in theatre and dance and has been nominated for 11 Dora Mavor Awards, winning three of them, a Harold and a Children’s Choice Award. His most recent work was Ajax & Little Iliad by Frank Cox-O’Connell and Evan Webber at Harbourfront Centre’s World Stage.
Full criteria, qualification information and instructions for applicants can be found here. Or by calling 416.973.4237.
Completed applications should be delivered in person, by mail or courier to:
HATCH Proposals
Tanya Carinci
Performing Arts, Harbourfront Centre
235 Queens Quay West
Toronto, ON M5J 2G8
Deadline: June 20, 2012 @ 6 pm
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
It's Tonight Opera Fans.
The young artists of the Canadian Opera Company’s Ensemble Studio take on the lead roles in
their own performance of George Frideric Handel’s Semele tonight, May 23, 2012 at 7:30 p.m. at the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts. This special performance is a valuable and exciting step in developing the next generation of Canadian opera stars as they take to the main-stage in this “scenically
stunning” (New York Times) production by famed Chinese visual and performance artist Zhang Huan. All tickets are accessibly priced at only $22 or $55.
Under the direction of the same artistic team as the main stage cast, including conductor Rinaldo Alessandrini, director and set designer Zhang Huan and costume designer Han Feng, the artists of the
Ensemble Studio perform Semele with the full COC Orchestra and Chorus. Zhang’s Semele draws on parallels between Greco-Roman mythology and Chinese legends, as well as Buddhist concepts of karma and reincarnation, to create a true interaction of Eastern and Western cultures. The production’s centerpiece is a 450-year-old Ming Dynasty ancestral temple salvaged by Zhang from a small town in China, and used to tell this operatic tale of a love affair between the god Jupiter and the mortal princess Semele.
The title role of the flighty, narcissistic and naïve Semele is shared by two rising young sopranos: Mireille Asselin and Ambur Braid. (We've had the pleasure of seeing Ms. Braid at OperaNation, and can say firsthand that she is fantastic.) Commanding the stage as Jupiter is tenor Christopher Enns, and mezzo-soprano Rihab Chaieb brings her vivacity and passion to the roles of Jupiter’s jealous wife, Juno, and Semele’s sister, Ino. Cast as Juno’s messenger, Iris, is soprano Jacqueline Woodley. Bass-baritone Philippe Slydemonstrates his dramatic and musical versatility in the roles of Cadmus, Semele’s father, and Somnus, the god of sleep. Rounding out the cast is guest artist Ryan Belongie, who sings Semele’s jilted suitor, Athamas.
Friday, May 18, 2012
The Real World?
It has been playing for a few weeks now and not only did it open to strong reviews, it also has the the incredible Meg Tilly as a starring cast member. Something to maybe check out over the long weekend? For tickets please click here.
Show Description:
Should or can playwrights truly "write what they know"? If they use their family members as characters in a play, whose play is it? Whose truth is it? And what happens when those family members stand up to their artist son and object to their theatrical selves? The Real World? remains a groundbreaking play about art, autobiography and authority.
Michel Tremblay has been a dominant figure in Québec theatre since the late 1960s; his plays have been performed around the world. Tarragon was the home for many of his English-language premieres, including Hosanna, Les Belles-Soeurs and Albertine in Five Times, and has produced 13 of his plays. Tarragon is reviving this Canadian classic nearly 25 years after it premiered in English on our stage. A PLAY IN ONE ACT. THERE WILL BE NO INTERMISSION.
The Real World?
By Michel Tremblay
Translated by John Van Burek and Bill Glassco
Directed by Richard Rose
REVIVAL
Starring: Matthew Edison, Cara Gee, Sophie Goulet, Tony Nappo, Cliff Saunders, Jane Spidell and Meg Tilly
Show Description:
Should or can playwrights truly "write what they know"? If they use their family members as characters in a play, whose play is it? Whose truth is it? And what happens when those family members stand up to their artist son and object to their theatrical selves? The Real World? remains a groundbreaking play about art, autobiography and authority.
Michel Tremblay has been a dominant figure in Québec theatre since the late 1960s; his plays have been performed around the world. Tarragon was the home for many of his English-language premieres, including Hosanna, Les Belles-Soeurs and Albertine in Five Times, and has produced 13 of his plays. Tarragon is reviving this Canadian classic nearly 25 years after it premiered in English on our stage. A PLAY IN ONE ACT. THERE WILL BE NO INTERMISSION.
The Real World?
By Michel Tremblay
Translated by John Van Burek and Bill Glassco
Directed by Richard Rose
REVIVAL
Starring: Matthew Edison, Cara Gee, Sophie Goulet, Tony Nappo, Cliff Saunders, Jane Spidell and Meg Tilly
Labels:
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Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Preview: You Can't Take It With You
Playing until the very end of June is You Can't Take It With You from the Soulpepper family. There are still a few pre-performance and post Q & A chats to check out over the next few months, and with a cast and director You Can't is boasting it kind of sounds like a dream, especially for all you theatre lovers.
Show Description:
The chaotic, eccentric lives of the Sycamore family are thrown into unaccustomed order when their sensible daughter Alice brings a prospective beau and his conservative parents home for dinner. Kaufman and Hart are at their frenetic best with this Pulitzer Prize-winning romp.
YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU
Written by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart
Playing at Soulpepper (Young Centre) in the Distillery District
Directed by Joseph Ziegler
Featuring Brian Bisson, Derek Boyes, Raquel Duffy, Patricia Fagan, John Jarvis, Diego Matamoros, Nancy Palk, Krystin Pellerin, Eric Peterson, Gregory Prest, Brenda Robins, Sabryn Rock, Mike Ross, Andre Sills, Michael Simpson, Maria Vacratsis and Tim Ziegler.
Friday, May 11, 2012
What's on This Weekend. (That we'd recommend that is.)
Brought up from Broadway, this remount of West Side will impress all audiences, whether you've seen the show and film a hundred times or you've never even heard "I Feel Pretty." Unlike the original production, the Broadway remount, on now at the Toronto Centre for the Arts, features a delicate re-working of the famous dialogue and music to include a lot more Spanish. And considering that half the cast is supposed to be Puerto Rican, it's a great development from the original script. Kudos to director David Saint, who uses Tony Award®-winning librettist Arthur Laurents’ Broadway direction for the tour. West Side Story purists my not appreciate hearing some of their favourite songs in Spanish, but it is well worth seeing. If nothing else you'll spend your evening marvelling at the choreography of Jerome Robbins'.
If three hours of love, gangs and ballet aren't your thing, then head on down to the Harbourfront Centre for the final show in their 2012 World Stage series. The Shipment, which we saw last night, is superb. Truly. I was skeptical that a Korean-American could really capture what it means to be black in America, (who knows how I'd know,) but wow was I wrong. Young Jean Lee may not be black but boy can she write a riveting show.
This is experimental theatre at its absolute best. The Shipment challenges the audience, makes them laugh and delights in a gripping ninety minutes of theatre. With a hugely talented triple threat cast The Shipment may be the best show we have seen all spring! You never know what is coming next. Some of the show's scenes are truly soul touching and haunting. Be advised The Shipment is not your grandma's show*. It is vulgar, confrontational and at times uncomfortable, but what else would you expect from a show about race. This is definitely one to see. Don't miss it during it's limited run at the Enwave Theatre. Click here for more info. The Shipment runs until May 12th.
For all you opera lovers out there, tonight is only the second night for the COC's final opera of the 2011/12 season. And we are hoping they have saved the best for last. Semele, the sensuous Handel opera is re-imagined in Zhang Huan's astonishing and provocatively playful stage direction. We have been looking forward to this for weeks. Semele runs until the 26th of May, and their is a special Ensemble Studio presentation of the opera on May 23rd. (More on that later.) We can't wait. Click here for tickets, and don't forget the COC has some of the best rush and young people discounts going, so don't miss it!
So get out there and see some shows already!
*Unless your grandmother is like mine or Justin's. They'd have loved it!
*Unless your grandmother is like mine or Justin's. They'd have loved it!
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Preview: Dance Marathon
The 2012 World Stage season comes to a close with the return of the internationally-acclaimed immersive theatre show Dance Marathon. This exclusive engagement takes place at Harbourfront Centre’s Enwave Theatre on Friday May 18 and Saturday May 19, 2012. Described as part theatre, part contest and part social experiment, Dance Marathon is an interactive performance piece by Toronto’s award-winning interdisciplinary theatre collective, bluemouth inc.
“Beg, borrow or steal a ticket for this life affirming show.” – London Telegraph
“Part Cabaret, part dance class, part gladiatorial death-match...irresistibly good fun.”
- The Observer
“An intriguing immersive performance piece...bluemouth inc. are challenging and boundary pushing, they create intense, multi-layered experiences that at once question and bring people together.” – Metro (Scotland)
A massive hit at the 2011 Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Dance Marathon is an interactive, duration-based performance event. Inspired by the desperately competitive and physically grueling spectator sports of Depression-Era North America, the show is also a nod to today's cult of celebrity and reality TV.
In the show, audience members of all levels of dance-floor comfort participate, learn and are judged in a series of challenges inspired by the endurance contests of 1920s and ‘30s America while a live band provides the soundtrack. Audience members participate and dance-off with bluemouth inc. members under the direction of floor judges and the merciless movement of the clock to help shape the theatrical experience, or they can sit back and enjoy the fancy footwork.
bluemouth inc. is five artists trained in various disciplines, brought together by a common vision of sharing their training and forging a new language. Their goal is to reach beyond the boundaries of conventional performance practice to create site-specific interdisciplinary art that leads audiences and artists alike into new forms of play.
As a not-for-profit performance collective, bluemouth inc. continues to explore formal issues related to site-specific work: compositional counterpoint between the properties of film, movement, sound design and spoken word; a temporal installation integrated within a challenging setting; and an ongoing adjustment of the relationship of the performance to the spectator.
Toronto’s Dora award-winning theatre collective bluemouth inc. is dedicated to reaching beyond the boundaries of conventional performance practice, and with the support of Harbourfront Centre’s Fresh Ground new works commissioning program, debuted Dance Marathon in the World Stage 08/09 season. From there, the production’s playful integration of movement, text, music, video and audience interaction captivated viewers and critics around the globe, touring to Vancouver, New York City, Melbourne, Tasmania, Cork, Edinburgh and London.
Performance details:
Friday, May 18: 7pm
Saturday, May 19, 2012: 7pm
Enwave Theatre, 231 Queens Quay West
Running time: 240 min. with breaks
Tickets: $35, $28 (seniors and artsworkers), $15 (CultureBreak – 18 to 25 years-old and full-time students of all ages) available at Harbourfront Centre’s Box Office. Call 416-973-4000, email tickets@harbourfrontcentre.com or visit here.
Labels:
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dance,
Dance News,
Harbourfront Centre,
preview,
toronto dance
Monday, May 7, 2012
Preview: West Side Story
As a contrast to the unsettling news from Dancap last week we are excited to announce some good news as Liza and I will be joining Dancap on Wednesday evening for the opening of West Side Story which is premiering uptown at the Toronto Centre for the Arts.
Show Description:
More than fifty years ago one musical changed theatre forever. Now it's back, and mesmerizing audiences once again. From the first note to the final breath, WEST SIDE STORY soars as the greatest love story of all time.
Directed by David Saint, using Tony Award-winning librettist Arthur Laurents’ Broadway direction, West Side Story remains as powerful, poignant and timely as ever. The new Broadway cast album of West Side Story recently won the 2010 Grammy Award for Best Musical Show Album. The Bernstein and Sondheim score is considered to be one of Broadway's finest and features such classics of the American musical theatre as "Something's Coming," "Tonight," "America," "I Feel Pretty" and "Somewhere."
The piece runs for 4 weeks so lots of opportunity to see it!
For more info or to purchase tickets please click here!
Labels:
Dancap,
preview,
Theatre - West Side Story,
Toronto Theatre
Thursday, May 3, 2012
Review: Agwa/Correria
Compagnie Kafig made its triumphant return to the Harbourfront Centre last night, at the opening of Agwa/Correria. The high energy show featured two pieces by acclaimed hip hop choreographer and creative visionary Mourad Merzouki. It was a brilliant melding of Brazilian and French with street styles of dance. Correria, presented in the first act, means raid or foray in Portuguese and featured high energy and agressive battles and electrifying group choreography. While the second act's Agwa, meaning water was decidedly more graceful and elegant. Both pieces played to the dancers' strengths. Strong, athletic, men with washboard abs and cheeky grins, seamlessly moved from hilarity to intensity.
Although Agwa/Correria might not be the most sophisticated and cohesive dance, or even hip hop show, ever, it is certainly entertaining. With creative choreography, athleticism and high energy these guys will engage and impress even the less interested audience member. You can't help but watch engrossed by the sheer physicality and grace of movement.
The second act's Agwa was decidedly more thematic, but perhaps a bit overstated. Either way, who knew that plastic cups could be so beautiful? Overall the staging, by Mr. Merzouki and Benjamin Lebreton and lighting design by Yoann Tivoli perfectly accentuated the talents of the performers and the creativity of the choreography.
This is a great show, and at just 75 minutes makes a perfect introductory or family dance affair. Agwa/Correria runs at the Fleck Dance Theatre until May 5th. Check out the trailer below. And click here for tickets.
Labels:
Compangie Kafig,
dance,
Harbourfront Centre,
review,
toronto dance
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Preview: The Shipment
Award-winning Young Jean Lee’s Theatre Company (U.S.) comes to Harbourfront Centre with THE SHIPMENT, as part of World Stage from May 9-12, 2012 at the Enwave Theatre. Young Jean Lee, a rising star of American theatre, dissects what it means to be black in America in this hilarious and shocking play.
“Ingenious . . . radical.” - New Yorker
“A fiendishly funny piece of neominstrelsy.” – Time Out New York
Brazenly theatrical and transcendentally lyrical, THE SHIPMENT starts with a stand up comedy act and moves from the urban dreams of would-be rappers to the sitcom realism of yuppie domesticity, proving that nothing is ever as it seems. With an ending guaranteed to leave jaws hanging, this is contemporary theatre at its biggest, boldest and most daring.
Young Jean Lee, a Korean-American playwright raises questions about race in an entertaining and unique way. Referred to as “the most adventurous downtown playwright of her generation” by New York Times, Lee has a unique approach to playwriting: she starts a play by asking herself, “What’s the last play in the world I would ever want to write?” THE SHIPMENT stars a cast of five black actors, who developed this provocative play in collaboration with Lee.
The playwright was also a finalist for the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize for THE SHIPMENT in 2010 and recently named as one of the inaugural Doris Duke Artists. Young Jean Lee is a 2011 Guggenheim Fellow, and was named by American Theatre magazine as one of the 25 artists who will shape the American theatre over the next 25 years.
Young Jean Lee’s Theater Company is an Obie Award-winning New York-based company that has creates and produces performances written and directed by Lee in collaboration with company members from diverse backgrounds, since 2003. Their work challenges audiences to think, rather than reaffirm their pre-existing beliefs. Lee has written and directed nine shows in New York with Young Jean Lee's Theater Company and toured her work to over twenty cities around the world. The company’s most recent work is the hugely successful THE UNTITLED FEMINIST SHOW, which The New Yorker described as, “one of the more moving and imaginative works I have ever seen on the American stage.”
Performance details:
Wednesday, May 9, 2012: 8pm
Thursday, May 10, 2012: 8pm
Friday, May 11, 2012: 8pm
Saturday, May 12, 2012: 8pm
Enwave Theatre, 231 Queens Quay West, Toronto
Performance is 90 minutes with no intermission.
THE SHIPMENT contains strong language and content some may find offensive.
Click here for ticket info or call 416.973.4000.
A Word on Dancap's Demise
Sunday morning as I read Richard's Toronto Star article I could not help but feel truly sad that Toronto is lossing Dancap Productions. The company, which began bringing shows to Toronto audiences five years ago, will wind down its operations after the summer season, and their wildly successful tour of Jersey Boys ends in the fall.
By all accounts Dancap, and its novice founder Aubrey Dan were just too ambitious. His efforts to establish a second big brand musical theatre entity in Toronto simply failed to turn a profit. Dan himself said in an exclusive interview with The Star that, "[Dancap] will be stepping back and re-evaluating our involvement in the theatre business." It is a big loss, but boy was it fun.
Over the years Dancap has had a few notable successes. No success was a big, perhaps, as Jersey Boys, which ran uptown at the Yonge Centre for two years. The show launched a Canadian cast, made a few stars, and went on to tour the country. In fact, the tour of Jersey Boys doesn't wrap until October. A fitting end for the company.
But their were other memorable moments as well. Seeing Next to Normal at the Four Season's with Broadway legend Alice Ripley, stands out. As does the company's original tour of South Pacific. But what sticks out most to me, was the excitement I felt five years ago when Dancap burst onto the scene and promised to bring more shows and more variety to Toronto audiences.
Now don't get me wrong Mirvish Productions IS Toronto theatre, and we couldn't be happier that they represent Toronto to the international theatre community, and bring amazing work to audiences here. But I couldn't help feeling proud of my adopted city when Aubrey decided that Toronto was ready for more big budget theatre. And I thought Toronto was too.
Unfortunately, Dancap could not make it work. Who knows where the blame should lie for Dancap's failure, maybe there is no blame to be had. But it is a sad day in a city that was once considered tops behind London and New York in international theatre rankings. At this point it might be hard to place Toronto in even the top five theatre cities in North America. Certainly there have not been many out-of-town previews or development of new work with an international audience in the past several seasons. Those are markers of a thriving theatre industry. Of course there have been other successes recently. Theatre 20, with its star power and unique mandate might prove lasting, and Angelwalk and Studio 180 spring to mind as torch bearers, but they are both decidedly more low key than Dancap.
These are only my opinions, but not many would argue that it was nice to see a bit more variety in the stuff coming in from out of town. I don't think Mirvish would have brought Next to Normal or American Idiot as Aubrey did. They certainly seemed to pass on Tony winner In the Heights which Dancap produced this season. Additionally having Dancap around made Mirvish better. Would Mirvish have gambled on Spring Awakening if Dancap wasn't nipping at their heals? Who knows? Memories of their great shows and enthusiasm will have to sustain us until someone else brave enough comes along to challenge and diversify theatre in Toronto again.
Thanks for the memories Aubrey.
By all accounts Dancap, and its novice founder Aubrey Dan were just too ambitious. His efforts to establish a second big brand musical theatre entity in Toronto simply failed to turn a profit. Dan himself said in an exclusive interview with The Star that, "[Dancap] will be stepping back and re-evaluating our involvement in the theatre business." It is a big loss, but boy was it fun.
Over the years Dancap has had a few notable successes. No success was a big, perhaps, as Jersey Boys, which ran uptown at the Yonge Centre for two years. The show launched a Canadian cast, made a few stars, and went on to tour the country. In fact, the tour of Jersey Boys doesn't wrap until October. A fitting end for the company.
But their were other memorable moments as well. Seeing Next to Normal at the Four Season's with Broadway legend Alice Ripley, stands out. As does the company's original tour of South Pacific. But what sticks out most to me, was the excitement I felt five years ago when Dancap burst onto the scene and promised to bring more shows and more variety to Toronto audiences.
Now don't get me wrong Mirvish Productions IS Toronto theatre, and we couldn't be happier that they represent Toronto to the international theatre community, and bring amazing work to audiences here. But I couldn't help feeling proud of my adopted city when Aubrey decided that Toronto was ready for more big budget theatre. And I thought Toronto was too.
Unfortunately, Dancap could not make it work. Who knows where the blame should lie for Dancap's failure, maybe there is no blame to be had. But it is a sad day in a city that was once considered tops behind London and New York in international theatre rankings. At this point it might be hard to place Toronto in even the top five theatre cities in North America. Certainly there have not been many out-of-town previews or development of new work with an international audience in the past several seasons. Those are markers of a thriving theatre industry. Of course there have been other successes recently. Theatre 20, with its star power and unique mandate might prove lasting, and Angelwalk and Studio 180 spring to mind as torch bearers, but they are both decidedly more low key than Dancap.
These are only my opinions, but not many would argue that it was nice to see a bit more variety in the stuff coming in from out of town. I don't think Mirvish would have brought Next to Normal or American Idiot as Aubrey did. They certainly seemed to pass on Tony winner In the Heights which Dancap produced this season. Additionally having Dancap around made Mirvish better. Would Mirvish have gambled on Spring Awakening if Dancap wasn't nipping at their heals? Who knows? Memories of their great shows and enthusiasm will have to sustain us until someone else brave enough comes along to challenge and diversify theatre in Toronto again.
Thanks for the memories Aubrey.
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