This past Saturday, I got into bed with a bunch of strangers.
No, it’s not what you’re thinking. I just happened to be in the audience of draft89 theatre collective’s new work, John/Yoko Bed Piece. The play recreates the 1969 bed-in for peace staged by John Lennon and Yoko Ono, and with the intimate setting and throw pillow seats, the audience really was in on the experience.
Join us June 4th when Toronto’s only ten-minute play festival, InspiraTO, kicks off its 4th season with 10 exciting new plays by a diverse array of playwrights. Playing until June 13th at the Lorraine Kimsa Studio Theatre, InspiraTO gives Torontonians the chance to experience the growing genre of ten-minute plays.
(ed. note: This is a repost of the original article because WordPress apparently ate the original.)
Before I attended the East Side Players’ adaptation of Waiting in the Wings my editor told me that community theatre doesn’t get enough reviews. After ten minutes of watching the play, I could understood why: It’s very hard.
The cast, who were mainly older ladies, looked like they were having fun. There was no pretention, no high-flown stupidity disguised as vile philosophy and no monologues from some rich beatnik in a turtleneck. It just seemed like decent people having a genuinely good time.
This completely dulled my spite. And I need my spite. Without it, I’m simply one of you.
Fear of Flight is the headlining piece in Factory Theatre’s Performance Spring. It’s a collective piece created and conceptualized by Jillian Keiley and Robert Chafe. I won’t lie, I had absolutely no idea what I was in for with this show. Continue reading Fear of Flight – Factory Theatre→