Fringe day six

Apologies for the late posting of this. When I got home from the fringe last night, I had power. As soon as I booted my computer, the neighbourhood went out until early this morning. So here it is a day late.

O(h)

O(h) is everything that I could ask from a dance piece at the fringe!

To draw a theatre comparison, this could easily be titled this is a dance, in reference to Daniel MacIvor's this is a play.

Through a series of narrated duets and solo numbers, and with a tremendous sense for and of their audience, performers casebolt and smith expose, play with, and sometimes send up the dance world.

If you have any experience with dance, you will laugh at yourselves. If you have no experience with dance, you will be guided with joyous mischief.

This is dance that is totally accessible and enjoyable for theatre people!

Be not afraid, oh fringers, but journey into this hall of dance!

Very highly recommended!

St Francis Talks to Birds.


Tedious brief.

A play there is of some fourty minutes, which is as brief as I have known a play. And yes by fourty minutes, it is too long.

It is perhaps not good of my to be uncharitable to a play about the life, or rather final monomers of st, Francis, and so I shall be brief. The show, a dialog between a dying st, Francis and the vultures that are consuming his remains, starts in the middle of a desert and goes pretty much no where. The jokes are bad, the characters are flat, the performances are as cut out as the cactus on the set.

Recommendation avoid.

It's Always You.


When I figured out the premise of this new musical about fifteen minutes in, I was sure that it would not be able to sustain itself for the full ninety minutes that it was scheduled for. I am so happy to report that I was proven wrong.

In this production we are given a glimpse, between two and five minutes long into the lives of three characters. Then time is reset and we get another glimpse into the same lives, but in a world in which different past decisions have led to different situations. As we see the different outcomes, we discover that these are always the same three characters, but that at some point in the past a single moment was the splitting pot for their disparate lives. One theme, multiple variations, and, as the lyrics of the overture indicate, every one is true.

This show has heart, comedy, top rate performance, and an very interesting premise, well executed.

I understand that advanced tickets have sold out and people were lining up for this one about seventy five minutes before curtain. If you want to get tickets be sure to arrive well in advance as this show will sell out.

A Young Lady's Guide to Vivisection


This docudrama looks at a term of study of the medical class of 1884 at Queen's university, the first year to admit women in the program.

Falling too strongly on the side of factual recreation, the material is interesting, but the script needs more craft to truly engage. There are some excellent moments, and there is great dramatic potential to be mined. Good themes too, as goos questions about the nature and speed of social and scientific progress are raised. these are structural successes more than dramatic. However the show is still very much ore.

One directorial choice that I have to take issue with is the cross casting of some of the roles. One of the women students is played by a man, and one of the male students by a woman. Though I can make academic guesses to justify the choice, in practice it was more consuming than illuminating.

Recommendation, worth seeing if the subject matter interests you. Don't expect greatness.

Stealing Sam

A touching and heartfelt piece.

Steven Gallagher is Jimmy, long time friend, and one time love of the titular Sam. As the show opens, we find Sam preparing to give Sam (who has died three days earlier) a final farewell. The theft of SAMs ashes, mentioned in the show blurb, is ultimately a bit of a red herring as the focus of the show is on Jimmy's life, his paths taken, mistakes made, and his sense of loss and confusion as he looks forward to his fifties.

This is a beautiful piece, and Mr. Gallagher gives an open, honest, and truly moving performance.

Strongly recommended!

Supperfesta.

Earlier I talked of a show that was tedious brief, this show, sadly, is tedious long. The plot is simple. a married newly vegetarian older sister finds out her younger sister is seeing a new guy, and invites them over for a diner party. mildly dysfunctional mayhem ensues.

This show might have looked funny in outline, but in final draft and execution, it falls flat. The initial establishment of characters takes too long, and the main event, the dinner party, lack narrative or emotional shape. A ticking clock sound effect used to signal the passage of time served primarily to remind me to look at my watch and hope that the ninety minute run time would soon be over.

Awkward pauses and slow pick up on line cues serve only to point out that there's nothing particularly super about this supper.

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Fringe Day Five

Only four shows on day five. Here's the run down:

Bremen Rock City

Performing at the Kids' Fringe, perhaps in front of some of the harshest critics of all. Children do not hesitate to tell you when they do not enjoy or are not held by a show. They have no time for pretension, they know when they are being talked down to, and they demand continual engagement.

I'm happy to report that Bremen Rock City, for the most part, passed the child test! The story: small town Donkey wants to make it big, falling in the footsteps of his rock star porcupine idol. On the way to the big city of Bremen, he befriends a rooster, dog, and cat, forms a band, makes it big, lets it go to his head, and makes discoveries about himself and the importance of friendship.

This show has great vocals, excellent physicality and characterizations, catchy music, and a story that, mostly, keeps driving forward for the full hour. The script got a bit awkward towards the end, but, untypically, I mark this up to not having enough time to let the show breathe. In particular, I'd like to see more background story given to the characters of the cat and dog, and a few more songs pushing plot and character development forward. This show could easily be expanded to 90 minutes and toured. I hope it has a life past the Fringe.

Recommended for children of all ages.


Or Be Eaten

A fairy tale for adults. The second show of my day was also a winner!

This three hander presents a standard adventure journey as a "house-less" youth seeks a home by travelling through the secret tunnels of the TTC subway system and encountering fantastic creatures... who all want to eat him for dinner.

The story is simple, and simply told, but narrated and performed with heart and humour. The presents the tale making use of mask, clown, and puppetry.

Recommended!

Almost, Maine

Four vignettes exploring the nature and qualities of love in a world where people carry their broken hearts in paper bags, keep the love they've been given in the trunk of their car, and where shoes drop from heaven. Each piece in this show is a pleasantly crafted diversion, but (as noted in the program) we are only getting about half the the original show. While it holds together well enough, it seem to hint at, but not quite reach, some greater statement. The pieces resonate, but overall the show fails to hit home.

It's a safe bet for an enjoyable hour, and recommended for light fare, but felt too save for me to recommend highly.

Excuse You

The horror stories of customer service provide the fodder for what is generally a loosely connected group of sketches. There are many laughs to be had, though the material sometimes crossed the line from frustration-based humour to the airing of dirty laundry.

The show delivers more smiles than frowns, and will be a cathartic release for anyone who has worked in service, particularly in the arts. It may be less resonant with those who have not had exposure to this world, as it paints a generally damning portrait of patrons.

At 90 minutes, however, this show runs out of steam. Cut it to 55 minutes and tighten up the pacing and it would be brilliant. As it is, it still delivers laughs, just not as consistently or intensely as it could.
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Day Four of Fringe 2013

Ok, I'm going to align my posts with the days of the Fringe festival, so that makes Saturday day four, though it is personally only my third day at the Fringe.

It was a five show day today, so the reviews will be brief, as I have a relatively early morning tomorrow.

This play is like ____.

This was an interesting show, completely performed (and I assume written by) high school students. Combining story-telling and vignettes, it explores the life of a high school girl with a severe peanut allergy.

It was generally good for what it was, and the students, for their part, did a good enough job. However, it seemed out of place at the Fringe, and was more the kind of production that I would expect at the Sears festival.

A good effort by students who obviously have a passion for theatre, but still need to progress in their craft.


Jack Your Body

Described as "exploring the evolution of underground social dances from the 70s-90s" this show does pretty much what is says on the tin. If you can suffer through the first ten minutes of remarkably unengaging, and almost surreal, "walking", "strutting", and "giving face" then the rest of the show is an enjoyable performance.

I felt that the organization of dance styles from present day strictly backward in time did a bit of a disservice to the dancers, who seemed most in their element in the more recent dance styles. I also feel that it would have been a stronger show if they ditched their attempt to "investigate issues of race, gender, and social status" and focused on the energetic and engaging dancing which, at many points, the company showed they were capable off.

The audience is encourage to be raucous and call out in encouragement.

Teaching Hamlet

I will be up front. Alternative author debates around Shakespeare bore me, and such a debate is the central conceit of the show.

An actor with financial issues is hired by a conspiracy theorist to be a spokesperson for a group of proponents of the theory that the Earl of Oxford wrote the plays of Shakespeare. Predictable dialog and humour ensues.

The Hystericon

This show was easily the highlight of my day!

Three actors, Renee Hache, Lesley Robertson, and Nicole Wilson, do a fine job taking on the personas of three women treated for hysteria by J.M. Charcot in 19th century Paris.

Alexander Offord's script is smart, and his direction is engaging. The production as a whole is highly stylized, with white-face makeup, self narration, and a strong meta theatrical sensibility. It has a good balance of humour and horror in the world it creates, keeping a sense of emotion and depth while challenging the audience to question the past, and the present.

The pacing drops slightly about two thirds the way through, but recovers well, and the final image is tense, and provocative.

Highly recommended!

Erotic Tales of the Old Testament

Presented by Ink and Quille Productions, a project of the Dead Birds collective.

Honestly, I am starting to think that I should pick shows based on what food will be provided. Yesterday I was given tea, tonight I am served grapes on a platter.

This site specific performance unfortunately only ran three shows during the Fringe, and I caught the final one. However, if you are a fan of burlesque, this group seems to be one to keep an eye on.

Put simply, this is a burlesque show themed around women of the Bible (and some supplementary mythology, as Lilith makes an appearance and acts as mistress of ceremonies). The show was totally enjoyable, through strictly speaking a mixed bag. The strip-tease performances were, of course, the highlight (and I particularly enjoyed the musical selection. Who would have though you could do a strip tease to Dead Can Dance?)  On the weaker side, the M.C. lacked presence and a vocalist set went on a couple songs too long. The singer was good, though, and I feel the night would have been better served by two shorter sets at different points in the evening. A mentalist/magician act seemed a bit out of place, and, while enjoyable, was the weakest fit to the theme of the night.

What won me over, however, was the setting. Staging the performance outdoors in the courtyard of St. George the Martyr Church, was wonderfully evocative, and the performance space, which included a grass runway through the audience from the doors of the church to a stage in front of the bell tower, was well executed.

If there were future performances at the Fringe, I would recommend them. I hope that this company continues to explore non-traditional venues and interesting themes for its shows.
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