Songs For A New World Order (Third Wheel) 2017 Toronto Fringe Review

Photo of Anesti Danelis

Anesti Danelis is just a boy with a guitar who wants to find the love that’s gone missing in this topsy-turvy world. In his show, “Songs For A New World Order” produced by his own company, Third Wheel; the audience is taken through a series of clever songs about everything from slow walkers on the TTC to accidentally kidnapping babies all tied up in an optimistic bow. Continue reading Songs For A New World Order (Third Wheel) 2017 Toronto Fringe Review

Bad Date: A Cautionary Tale… (Aubrey Productions) 2017 Toronto Fringe Review

Photo of Erin Aubrey (self-portrait)

When I was watching Bad Date: A Cautionary Tale…, produced by Aubrey Productions and playing at the Toronto Fringe Festival, it occurred to me that, since I met my husband at 19, I haven’t had to go on a first date in 13 years. I certainly haven’t experienced dating where actually meeting someone in person is a novelty.

Continue reading Bad Date: A Cautionary Tale… (Aubrey Productions) 2017 Toronto Fringe Review

13 Ways The World Ends (Flash Dazzle Productions) 2017 Fringe Review

Photo of 13 Ways The World Ends cast by Nate Lacroix

This evening I visited the Theatre Passe Muraille Backspace to see 13 Ways The World Ends, a sketch comedy show by Good Morning Apocalypse company currently running in the Toronto Fringe Festival. I was curious about what I would find, since 2017 has been a stressful year for a lot of people, including me, between frightening political trends and reports of war from around the world and the fear of some kind of imminent environmental catastrophe. Could these sorts of fears, these insecurities about the very future of life, really be the raw material for humour? It can: 13 Ways The World Ends demonstrates this quite well.

Continue reading 13 Ways The World Ends (Flash Dazzle Productions) 2017 Fringe Review

Fastcar: Man of Action (blindfool productions) 2017 Toronto Fringe Review

Amo Gulinello in "Fastcar: Man of Action", presented by blindfool productions at the 2017 Toronto Fringe Festival.

Want to catch a show that completely encompasses the spirit of Fringe? Don’t let the prospect of a one-man show with audience participation scare you off;  Fastcar: Man of Action (produced by blind fool productions) is a delightful trip through the absurd, playing now at the Toronto Fringe Festival .

Continue reading Fastcar: Man of Action (blindfool productions) 2017 Toronto Fringe Review