All posts by Samantha Wu

Samantha is both a writer and a fan of the arts and has been able to find numerous ways to pair the two. Aside from being an editor here at Mooney on Theatre, she's a photojournalist for Been Here Done That, a travel, dining and tourism blog that focuses on Toronto and abroad and previously for  Lithium Magazine, which got her writing and shooting about everything from Dave Matthews Band to Fan Expo. She's passionate about music, theatre, photography, writing, and celebrating sexuality -- not necessarily in that order. She drinks tea more than coffee, prefer ciders over beers, and sings karaoke way too loudly. You can follow her on various social media including Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

And Then it Happened – Toronto Fringe 2017 Press Release

Photo from And then it happened

From Press Release

A 50 minute sketch comedy revue by Fringe debuting duo, A2Z, And Then it Happened…, is a character-heavy showcase of the most fear inducing situations we often find ourselves in.

Directed under the tutelage of multiple Canadian Comedy Award winner, Kris Siddiqi, And Then it Happened… tackles subjects such as race, murder, loneliness and awkward social interactions. It’s all made easily digestible by a light-hearted approach that rejoices in the absurdity and introduces elements of fantasy and pop-culture into everyday life.

And Then It Happened… is written and performed by Toronto-based comedians Zohaib Khan and Anesti Danelis who have over a decade of combined comedy experience and have performed together at Edmonton Fringe (Basic Witch, 4/5 Global TV Edmonton), The Toronto Sketch Comedy Festival, Globehead and Big City Improv Festival. This marks both of their Toronto Fringe performance debut.

You can follow Aspiring Landlords as A2Z on Facebook: www.facebook.com/a2zcomedy  and Twitter: @a2zcomedy

Aspiring Landlords
in association with The Toronto Fringe Festival presents

And Then It Happened…

written by and starring Anesti Danelis and Zohaib Khan
directed by Kris Siddiqi
stage managed by Connor Low

Details

  • And then it happened… plays at The Theatre Centre’s Franco Boni Theatre. (1115 Queen St. W.)
  • Tickets are $12. The festival also offers a range of money-saving passes for serious Fringers.
  • Tickets can be purchased online, by telephone (416-966-1062), from the Fringe Club at Scadding Court, and — if any remain — from the venue’s box office starting one hour before curtain.
  • Be aware that Fringe performances always start exactly on time, and that latecomers are never admitted.
  • Content Warnings: Gunshots, Sexual Content, Fog, Mist or Haze Effects, Audience Participation, Mature Language.
  • This venue is accessible.

Performances

  • Friday July 7th, 04:00 pm
  • Saturday July 8th, 07:30 pm
  • Sunday July 9th, 11:00 pm
  • Tuesday July 11th, 06:45 pm
  • Wednesday July 12th, 09:15 pm
  • Thursday July 13th, 01:45 pm
  • Saturday July 15th, 03:30 pm

Photo of Zohaib Khan and Anesti Danelis by Nicolas Melo

The Miserable Worm – Toronto Fringe 2017 Press Release

Photo from the miserable wormFrom Press Release

“What a miserable, miserable worm I am.”

The “Platonov Estate” opens its doors to old friends and old lovers to celebrate the birthday of Platonov, everyone’s favourite intellectual heart-breaker. This reunion is tense from the start, and only spirals further into disaster once the vodka is passed around. How long can Platonov keep hiding from her husband, her lover, and herself before she succumbs to Chekhovian ennui?

This new adaptation of Chekhov’s “untitled play” is our reaction to the traditionalism we learned in theatre school. We’ve been waiting for years to graduate and start breaking rules and this is our
chance. Galvanized by our exposure to classical training, and emboldened by the Toronto indie theatre scene; we want to ask questions and we want to challenge assumptions. We invite you to
question and challenge with us. We are Let Me In and we want to let you in.

Let Me In makes their Fringe debut this summer with The Miserable Worm, a new adaptation of Anton Chekhov’s “untitled play” directed by Patrick J. Horan. This version, adapted and written by
Justine Christensen, gender-bends eight of the original characters, thrusting them into the present day with debauchery, vitality, and a little melodramatic humour.

You’re invited to Platonov’s birthday bash! Bring your own vodka, but we’ll provide the entertainment – as long as you don’t mind laughing at other’s misfortune.

Let Me In in association with The Toronto Fringe Festival presents:

The Miserable Worm

Adapted by: Justine Christensen
Directed by: Patrick J. Horan
Featuring: Justine Christensen, Geneviève DeGraves, Seamus Easton, Philip J. Geller, Emily Howard, Tymika McKenzie-Clunis, Justin Mullen, Michael Ruderman

Details

  • The Miserable Worm plays at the Annex Theatre. (736 Bathurst St.)
  • Tickets are $12. The festival also offers a range of money-saving passes for serious Fringers.
  • Tickets can be purchased online, by telephone (416-966-1062), from the Fringe Club at Scadding Court, and — if any remain — from the venue’s box office starting one hour before curtain.
  • Be aware that Fringe performances always start exactly on time, and that latecomers are never admitted.
  • Content Warnings: Sexual Content, Mature Language.
  • This venue is wheelchair-accessible through a secondary route which requires a staff escort. Check in at the box office at least 20 minutes prior to showtime.

Performances

  • Friday July 7th, 04:45 pm
  • Sunday July 9th, 06:15 pm
  • Monday July 10th, 08:00 pm
  • Tuesday July 11th, 02:15 pm
  • Thursday July 13th, 09:15 pm
  • Friday July 14th, 12:00 pm
  • Sunday July 16th, 07:30 pm

Photo of Justine Christensen by Rae Ormshaw

About Time – Toronto Fringe 2017 Press Release

Photo from About Time

From Press Release:

Awarding Winning Comedy Duo Debut New Revue About Time at Toronto Fringe

Toronto-based comedy duo The Templeton Philharmonic (voted “Best Duo” at the LA Comedy Festival) are set to launch their new sketch comedy revue at the 2017 Toronto Fringe Festival. The show is entitled About Time and it’s well… about time. The sketch show serves as a loosely chronological journey through the ages and explores the existential nature of time itself. The show will run July 7 – 17, at the Tarragon Theatre’s Mainspace.

All the sketches are written and performed by the duo, which consists of Briana Templeton (The Comedy Network’s The Beaverton, and SyFy’s The Expanse) and Gwynne Phillips (PBS’s Odd Squad, and HBO Canada’s Sensitive Skin). The pair made their debut at the Montreal Fringe in 2011, where their self titled show earned them a nomination for the “Just For Laughs Award for Best English Comedy”. Since then, they have honed their chops at the Chicago Sketch Comedy, the New York Sketch Comedy Festival, the San Francisco Sketch Comedy Festival, and the Toronto Sketch Comedy Festival (where they picked up the award for “Producer’s Pick”). Last year, they performed at Massey Hall at Incubator, hosted by astronaut Colonel Chris Hadfield. The duo are also contributing writers for The Irrelevant Show on CBC Radio-Canada and co-creators of the CBC web series Womanish.

About Time is not The Templeton Philharmonic’s first foray into the Toronto Fringe Festival. In 2014, the pair wrote, produced, and starred in An Evening In July – a site specific piece performed at the cloisters at St. George The Martyr Anglican Church. The play was inspired by the cult documentary Grey Gardens and had many sold out performances, solid reviews and a remount at the 2015 SummerWorks Performance Festival. Soon after, they premiered the sketch revue Unbridled & Unstable at the 2015 Next Stage Theatre Festival – which earned them an award for “Best Sketch Comedy Or Variety Show“ at the My Entertainment Awards.

The comediennes’ work often incorporates a dark sense of humour, stinging social commentary, and a distinct feminist bent. Their new show will be no exception. It will also take full advantage of their love for period pieces and playing a bevy of zany characters, ensuring that it’s not a production to be missed.

Details

  • About Time plays at the Tarragon Mainspace. (30 Bridgman Ave.)
  • Tickets are $12. The festival also offers a range of money-saving passes for serious Fringers.
  • Tickets can be purchased online, by telephone (416-966-1062), from the Fringe Club at Scadding Court, and — if any remain — from the venue’s box office starting one hour before curtain.
  • Be aware that Fringe performances always start exactly on time, and that latecomers are never admitted.
  • Content Warnings: Realistic Violence or Gore, Sexual Content, Fog, Mist or Haze Effects, Mature Language.
  • This venue is barrier-free. The designated accessible seating is in the middle of the auditorium.

Performances

  • Friday July 7th, 10:30 pm
  • Sunday July 9th, 06:30 pm
  • Tuesday July 11th, 03:00 pm
  • Wednesday July 12th, 05:15 pm
  • Thursday July 13th, 08:00 pm
  • Saturday July 15th, 05:45 pm
  • Sunday July 16th, 12:00 pm

Photo of Gwynne Phillips and Briana Templeton by Shannon Laliberte.

Review: Uncle Vanya (Show One Productions/Luminato)

Photo from Uncle VanyaUncle Vanya played to sold out crowds as part of the 2017 Luminato Festival in Toronto

I’ll admit that I approached seeing Uncle Vanya, the classic play about a family caught between between tradition and transformation, with trepidation. The play written by Russian playwright Anton Chekhov was performed during the 2017 Luminato Festival in Russian by Moscow’s Vakhtangov State Academic Theatre. Continue reading Review: Uncle Vanya (Show One Productions/Luminato)

Am I Pretty Now?: A Musical Romp Through Plastic Surgery – Toronto Fringe 2017 Press Release

From Press Release

The first ever musical on plastic surgery and the trials and tribulations of going under the knife! Comedian, Stephanie Herrera, delves into a journey of insecurity and “never quite fitting in”. We get a first hand account, from “Ugly Duckling” to “MILF” and why she pays homage to Colin Mochrie in her song “Thank you Colin Mochrie for my boobs!” Whether you are curious about plastic surgery or you just can’t fathom why anyone would do such a thing, this show will keep you laughing and tapping your feet as Stephanie examines race, gender, motherhood, and Liza Minnelli in 60 min.

Directed by Conrad Coates (Stratford Shakespeare Festival, Tron: Legacy, Star Trek: Discovery, CBC’s Save Me, and Acting Professor at Seneca College and at his own studio: Coates and Company), this unique look at the world’s obsession with youth and beauty will be hilarious and touching. Based on her actual life, Herrera examines race and first generation Canadians living just outside the norm, and recounts her surgeries (in detail) all in the pursuit of trying to feel “pretty”.

Written and starring, Stephanie Herrera, a Toronto native who moved to Durham Region to have a family and ended up also creating the not-for-profit Durham Improv Collective Inc., producing a plethora of plays, and hosting/creating/producing five shows on Rogers TV in Oshawa. Stephanie is a Canadian Comedy Awards and Latin American Achievement Awards nominee and winner of the “Best Entertainment” Art of Transition Award and is a THEA winner for Best Female in a Musical. She is an actor, director, producer, writer, singer, and voice-over artist who has just released her first book: The Ten Commandments…of Improvising!

Herrera’s original musical score will be backed up by local piano man extraordinaire, Donald Guinn, and yes, Colin Mochrie makes an appearance, albeit, in photo form.

Details

  • “Am I Pretty Now?”: A Musical Romp through Plastic Surgery! plays at the Al Green Theatre. (750 Spadina Ave.)
  • Tickets are $12. The festival also offers a range of money-saving passes for serious Fringers.
  • Tickets can be purchased online, by telephone (416-966-1062), from the Fringe Club at Scadding Court, and — if any remain — from the venue’s box office starting one hour before curtain.
  • Be aware that Fringe performances always start exactly on time, and that latecomers are never admitted.
  • Content Warnings: Unsuitable for Minors, Sexual Content, Mature Language.
  • This venue is barrier-free. Note that only certain building entrances are wheelchair-accessible. Accessible seating is in front of the front row, and may have poor sightlines for certain productions.

Performances

  • Friday July 7th, 01:15 pm
  • Saturday July 8th, 08:45 pm
  • Sunday July 9th, 10:15 pm
  • Monday July 10th, 06:45 pm
  • Wednesday July 12th, 07:00 pm
  • Thursday July 13th, 03:30 pm
  • Saturday July 15th, 09:45 pm

Photo of Stephanie Herrera by Giancarlo Osaben