Preview: SheDot Festival

Featuring the best in female comedians, the inaugural SheDot Festival begins on May 1 at The Comedy Bar in Toronto

“What happens over and over,” explains Martha O’Neill from her home in Toronto, a week before the inaugural SheDot Festival of women in comedy, “is that bills tend to feature one woman. There’s the observational guy and the storytelling guy and the guy working blue  – sexually-oriented comedy, you know – and whichever other guys and then: The Woman. Just one.” Because of this, O’Neill says, many comedy fans never get a chance to be exposed to the range and breadth of women in comedy.

From this idea, SheDot was born. Originally a working weekend for women comics to develop new material, discuss work, commiserate and celebrate at O’Neill’s father’s cottage in northern Ontario (“we called it Festivag! But I didn’t tell my father that. He’s 80,”) the experience was mixed for O’Neill. On the one hand, she loved being able to work with so many women and all their styles and humour. On the other, so many of them shared stories of being abruptly dropped from bills or having trouble getting work because many show will only book one, or perhaps two, women in an entire lineup. Eventually, in frustration and hope, O’Neill announced her intention to launch a women’s comedy festival and the somewhat more tamely-named SheDot came to life.

Continue reading Preview: SheDot Festival

Cheap Theatre for the Week of April 29, 2014

Fitting in is never easy. At work, at home, or in society as a whole, sometimes you just don’t feel like you belong. But not to worry! This week’s Cheap Theatre list focuses on characters who also don’t quite fit in, and their struggles to overcome their outsider status. You can see any of them for around $20 or less! So whether you’re interested in the tale of an out-of-the-ordinary Roman slave fighting for his freedom, two lovers trying to navigate the Wikileaks affair, or the story of children begging on the streets of Kolkata, come check out some good, affordable theatre!

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Review: Cold Comfort (Fly On The Wall Productions)

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A man comes to terms with his deceased alcoholic father in Cold Comfort playing at Tarragon Theatre in Toronto

Cold Comfort is a one person show about an Irish man who is drinking alone with his estranged father’s corpse.  He knows it’s impossible, but he wants the dead man to speak and answer some questions, primarily why did his mother leave them when he was a child? But Kevin knows the answer already. His father was an alcoholic, and now Kevin is too. He even has his own ex-wife. He is distraught at following in his father’s footsteps but he doesn’t know any other way to live. Fly On The Wall Theatre presents this portrait of a disturbed man at Near Studio on the second floor of Tarragon Theatre. Continue reading Review: Cold Comfort (Fly On The Wall Productions)

Review: The Last Confession (Mirvish)

The Last Confession

The Last Confession looks at the puzzling events preceding the death of Pope John Paul I, at the Royal Alexandra Theatre in Toronto

Somehow it seemed appropriate that the opening performance of The Last Confession at the Royal Alex was on a Sunday. After all, it is a play about the Catholic Church. Not a religious play though. It’s a political drama set in the Vatican.

It did make me give thanks for theatre. This is theatre at its best. A literate script by Roger Crane, tight direction by Jonathan Church, fabulous performances by a talented international cast, a towering set by William Dudley and perfect lighting by Peter Mumford. Continue reading Review: The Last Confession (Mirvish)