Theatre Reviews

Reviews of theatre, dance, opera, comedy and festivals. Performances can be in-person or streamed remotely on the web for social-distancing.

Review: Season 2013 (ProArteDanza)

Season 2013. ProArteDanza

ProArteDanza’s Season 2013 is filled with stunning and exceptionally performed choreography playing at Toronto’s Fleck Dance Theatre

I think I have seen all of ProArteDanza’s Seasons and every year they deliver the goods. This year sitting once again in the Fleck Dance Theatre watching the spectacular dancers that make up Season 2013, ProArteDanza showed that they followed through with their commitment to excellent dance.

The evening consisted of two 2011 works, Shifting Silence and Fractals: a pattern of chaos; and one world premiere, Beethoven’s 9th – 3rd Movement. Choreographers Robert Glumbek, Roberto Campanella, and Guillaume Côté have a contemporary work that highlights all artists balletic backgrounds in Season 2013. Featured in these three dances were some of Toronto’s strongest dancers including Valerie Calam, Justin de Luna, Tyler Gledhill, Mami Hata, Benjamin Landsberg, Ryan Lee, Delphine Leroux, Erin Poole, Anisa Tejpar, and Katherina Nakui. Continue reading Review: Season 2013 (ProArteDanza)

Review: Crash (Theatre Passe Muraille)

Crash is an emotionally raw and visceral autobiographical story playing at Toronto’s Theatre Passe Muraille

Pamela Mala Sinha’s Crash, currently onstage in the Theatre Passe Muraille Backspace, takes the audience on a harrowing journey where sadistic rape is ever present, grief and loss loom larger and larger, and spectres of murder and suicide lurk around certain corners. And yet there is a through-line of familial love that keeps hope alive. Also, on a more objective note, there is the pleasure of watching a production where sound, lighting, projection and dance are all seamless and integral aspects of the storytelling.

Continue reading Review: Crash (Theatre Passe Muraille)

Review: The Flood Thereafter (Canadian Stage/York U Theatre Department)

floodthereafter

Greek mythology meets a small Quebecois fishing village in The Flood Thereafter playing at Toronto’s Berkeley Theatre

I’d never really thought about Greek mythology in the context of a small Quebecois fishing village, but Sarah Berthiaume’s The Flood Thereafter is an interesting re-imagining of the travels of Odysseus, brought to vivid corporeality at Canadian Stage’s Berkeley Theatre.

The Flood Thereafter hones in on the specific involvement of the sirens in the Odyssey, gorgeous sea creatures who enticed sailors into the depths with their song. The sirens in Berthiaume’s story are Grace and her daughter June, both seemingly tied to the village and its men, unable to move on. Grace owns a diner, and June has taken to stripping to earn her living, her nude form so potently beautiful that it makes the men cry. It’s the arrival of a stranger, a young man named Denis, who starts to shake things up.

Continue reading Review: The Flood Thereafter (Canadian Stage/York U Theatre Department)

Review: Funny Girl In Concert / 2013 – 2014 Season Preview (Harold Green Jewish Theatre Company)

funny_girl_02

Toronto’s Harold Green Jewish Theatre Company’s Funny Girl in Concert launched their current season with musical precision and larger-than-life performances

These are stories that have been millennia in the making – stories that capture the very heart of the Jewish existence. Now entering its seventh season, the Harold Green Jewish Theatre Company , held its 2013 – 2014 season fundraiser last night at the Toronto Centre for the Arts .

The night featured a workshop production of Funny Girl (reviewed below), and was a smash success in its execution – heralding boisterous bouts of applause and multiple standing ovations from its spectators.

Continue reading Review: Funny Girl In Concert / 2013 – 2014 Season Preview (Harold Green Jewish Theatre Company)

Review: Gay Play Day 2013 (Gay Play Day)

GPD2013poster

Gay Play Day showcased thought-provoking and inspiring theatre by local LGBTTQ playwrights at Toronto’s Alumnae Theatre

Having grown up with supportive family, friends and peers, my coming-out process was an enviably easy process.  I have been—and do appreciate this—quite fortunate in that I have not had to dwell on my sexual orientation. It has never been an obstacle for me, nor even particularly interesting subject matter, and so I rarely seek out specifically gay content.  I arrived at the Alumnae Theatre Studio Space to see the second annual Gay Play Day feeling dubious, yet intrigued.

The festival features plays by local LGBTTQ playwrights.  (For those who are not familiar with what all of those letters signify, here is a breakdown:  Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Two-Spirit and Queer.)  Six short plays ran for two evening performances on the Friday and Saturday, with an additional matinee on Saturday that featured four solo shows.  There was considerable talent showcased this year. Continue reading Review: Gay Play Day 2013 (Gay Play Day)