“It’s basically S&M, right?”: Alberta Theatre Projects Takes the Stage with Venus In Fur

Directed by Tracey Flye, Alberta Theatre Projects’ production of David Ives’ Venus in Fur at the Martha Cohen Theatre is a vulgar, oddly compelling experience.

The play opens with playwright/director Thomas Novachek (Tim Campbell) in a worn-down studio after a round of failed auditions for his latest project, an adaptation of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch’s Venus in Fur. Frustrated at the lack of female talent in the city, Thomas sets out to go home to his fiancee. Abruptly, actress Vanda Jordan (Amanda Lisman) bursts into the room and pleads for an audition. At first, the very crude and immature Vanda turns Thomas off. It is when the actress delivers an impressive cold read for the role of Wanda von Dunayev that the director takes great interest in her. Continue reading

Dancers’ Studio West’s 33rd Annual Alberta Dance Festival Showcases Exciting Talent

Presented at the Pumphouse Theatre, Dancers’ Studio West’s 33rd Annual Alberta Dance Festival is a showcase of both emerging and established Canadian dance talent. This year, the dance festival is titled “Dance & The Image.” Nine choreographers workshopped their respective dance pieces over the course of a seven-day Creative Intensive with direction provided by the company’s artistic director, Davida Monk, and the Dance Action Group.

In this second week of the festival, six choreographers and their dancers take to the stage to present choreography influenced by various works of art.

First in the showcase is Choreographer Serenella Sol’s “Hollyhocks and Cacti,” an abstract piece that plays with the notion of female archetypes. Underscoring Sol’s piece are recited lines of Maya Angelou’s poem “Still I Rise” which play over the speakers. Valentia Dimitriou and Kimberly Powley, Sol’s two dancers in this piece, go on to embody various archetypes, like the Seductress.

Choreographer Serenella Sol's Hollyhocks and Cacti. Dancers: Valentia Dimitriou (front), Kimberly Powley (back). Phototographer: Tim Nguyen

Choreographer Serenella Sol’s Hollyhocks and Cacti. Dancers: Valentia Dimitriou (front), Kimberly Powley (back). Phototographer: Tim Nguyen

As the piece goes on, however, there is a moment of rejection where the two dancers remove their dresses and show disgust towards them. We are left to wonder: what are they rejecting? If we accept dresses to be signifiers of femininity, then perhaps that is what the two dancers are rejecting: socially normalized ways of performing femininity. In only their body suits, the two dancers appear to find freedom and individuality; they no longer belong to any particular archetype.The act of rejection, then, can be taken as an act of defiance. This idea of defiance is supported by these lines of Angelou’s poem “You may write me down in history With your bitter, twisted lies, You may trod me in the very dirt But still, like dust, I’ll rise” which Sol’s piece closes on.

In the following piece, choreographer Oriana Pagnotta continues on the topic of femininity, specifically the everyday experience of women, with her piece “We Aren’t Always in Pieces.”

From the beginning, Pagnotta, performing in her own piece, Eva Biro, and Lindsay Oehlerking generate a strong sense of uneasiness. They move about the stage frantically with exaggerated, physical movements where they sometimes hit themselves with their arms. The dancers repeat phrases like “don’t cry” and “don’t breathe,” which they then answer back with “I won’t.” We gather that there is more to the anxious quality of the piece.

What Pagnotta’s piece culminates to is a commentary on the way society at large frames violence against women. The instructions repeated over and over again speak to negative attitudes toward female victims that hold them exclusively responsible for their own safety, that if only they had done “the right thing” they could have avoided being battered and/or sexually assault. The frantic, uneasy movement of Pagnotta’s dancers, in effect, come to be understood as discomfort of being in one’s own skin, of being forced to believe that they are the problem, and they do not belong to the space which they occupy.

Pagnotta’s piece hits hard as she successfully conveys through movement and a choice selection of words a powerful and relevant message to her audience.

Choreographed by Chelci Blais, Quinn Kliewer, and Sisa Madrid, “Seiten” – the third piece of the showcase – stages a critique of media and consumerism. In this piece, newspapers fill the stage. Dancers Kelsey Clement, Valentia Dimitriou, Emily Henley, Raine Kearns, and Tessa Mark each sit with their fair share of newspapers. However, a frenzied competition and control of the newspapers overtakes the dancers. They fight each other, tearing newspapers in the process, until they achieve satisfaction. But what is enough? At what point does one have enough? The question is lost to the dancers, but brought to our attention by the choreographers.

“Seiten” is a smart, fun piece. The dancers bring plenty of expression and vigor to their movement. Even in the chaos of newspaper being torn and thrown around, the dancers manage to keep the choreography tight. Blais, Kliewer, and Madrid also do well to make clear their narrative and views on the effects of consumerism. The piece ends with a surprise where the dancers reach a resolution – by way of an act of kindness through sharing – only to have a bundle of newspapers drop downstage. (The cycle begins anew).

The showcase’s final piece is Pamela Tzeng’s “to be or not to be: A Very Important Verb (Part 1).” Here, Tzeng struggles to make peace between her Canadian and Chinese identities.

The piece begins playfully with Tzeng listening to a “How to Speak Mandarin (Chinese)” learning tape. Tzeng attempts the various common phrases the instructor guides her through, but fails. Then, moving beyond sound, Tzeng tries to look Chinese. She manipulates her face, sculpting it to read as Chinese. The most striking change Tzeng makes is removing the round appearance of her eyes. But as she goes on, we can see that Tzeng realizes the futility of her efforts.

The futility of Tzeng’s efforts to embody (signifers of) foreigness leads to a heavy frustration. Tzeng’s frustration nears higher levels when she cannot fit her head through a traditional Chinese dress. But then, Tzeng, now undressed, lays the dress over her body and pretends that she, perhaps for once, is finally Chinese. The joy Tzeng expresses is great. Tzeng proceeds to lose herself in a delightful dance with a red umbrella. The act of appearing Chinese suffices for Tzeng. But then the conflict between her two identities resurfaces, leading to a frightening madness where Tzeng’s frustration is finally too much for her.

Choreographer/Dancer Pamela Tzeng, after the show.

Choreographer/Dancer Pamela Tzeng, after the show.

Tzeng does a good job of exploring questions of cultural identity. Is belonging to a culture simply speaking the language and looking the part, or is there more? And for those with two cultures, how does one reconcile the differences between that of their origins and their host? Is it truly a matter of one over the other? As this is only a 10-minute excerpt of the final product, it will be interesting to see what conclusions, if any, Tzeng comes to at the Fluid Movements Arts Festival where the piece is set to premiere.

But the experience of the festival is marred by the noise travelling from the neighboring room into the performance space. Loud conversations and laughter remove us from the intimacy of certain moments throughout the showcase. Hopefully, the company will resolve this issue for future performances.

Ultimately, however, the DSW’s 33rd Annual Alberta Dance Festival succeeds. The talent of the dancers is impressive. But it is the clarity of the choreographers who demand us to listen to what they have to say that truly capture our attention. It will be interesting to see what the choreographers do next in their artistic journeys.


Dancers’ Studio West’s 33rd Annual Alberta Dance Festival – Dance & The Image ran from September 11-13, 18-20, 2014.

For more information about DSW’s upcoming season, visit: http://www.dswlive.ca

All Ears For Ghost River Theatre’s Production of Tomorrow’s Child

The audience has put on their Sensory Deprivation Masks. Blindfolded, they are led one by one to a room booming with the sound of children at play. Overheard above the noise are murmurs of confusion and excitement from the audience.

Ghost River Theatre’s production of Ray Bradbury’s short story Tomorrow’s Child is the first installment in the company’s Six Senses Performance Series. As advertised by the company, the production is an “audio experience created for a blindfolded audience.” Continue reading

Scared Stiff: Bare Bones Production’s Wilma-May and Her Tight White Socks Fails to Impress

Presented at the Alexandra Centre Society as part of Calgary’s Fringe Festival, Bare Bones Production’s Wilma-May and Her Tight White Socks suffers from an uninspired script that lacks direction, resulting in an exhausting, disjointed performance.

Written and performed by Jennifer Roberts, Wilma-May and Her Tight White Socks is a one-woman show that tells the story of Wilma-May, a woman who is afraid of everything. At the request of her therapist, Wilma-May joins an online support group to help overcome her recent emotional trauma which has made her a shut-in. The situation is dire, however, for Wilma-May as her supply of light bulbs has run out (and as you guessed it, she is terrified of the dark). In the next 12 weeks, Wilma-May must either overcome her fears or live the rest of her life in total darkness. Continue reading

Moon Dinosaur Theatre’s Paleoncology Delivers At Calgary Fringe Festival

How do you cope losing what was never really there to begin with? This is one of the questions Kira Hall explores in her poignant one-woman show, Paleoncology. Presented by Moon Dinosaur Theatre at Artpoint Gallery, Paleoncology, directed by Andrew Young, is a play that, at first, draws audiences in with its humour and charismatic lead, but then proves to be something more earnest under the surface.
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All The World’s A Stage: Eavesdropping on Swallow-A-Bicycle Theatre at the Calgary Fringe Festival

Three friends reconnecting over coffee, a struggling writer, and a man searching for himself in an unsuspecting coffee patron: it’s just another day at the coffee shop. Or is it? Performed inside Gravity Espresso & Wine Bar, Swallow-A-Bicycle Theatre’s site-specific Eavesdrop: The Coffee Shop Show invites audiences to listen into the private conversations and innermost thoughts and desires of six characters trying to navigate through life, one sip of coffee at a time.
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The Calgary Fringe Festival!

Today is the first day of the Calgary Fringe Festival (Aug 1-9)! Artists and crews from across Canada are in Calgary to deliver phenomenal theatre, the likes of which the public has never seen before. With over 25+ festival entries that range from musicals to solo acts, there is sure to be something for everyone! Be sure to watch here for my reviews and commentary on what the Calgary Fringe Festival has to offer this year.

For more information about the Calgary Fringe Festival, visit: http://www.calgaryfringe.ca/

Shakespeare by The Bow Gets Silly with The Comedy of Errors

comedyoferrors

Adriana mistakes Antipholus of Syracuse for his twin brother, her husband, Antipholus of Ephesus. Pictured from left to right: Andrea Rankin (Luciana), Joel Taylor (Antipholus of Syracuse), Merran Carr-Wiggin (Adriana), and Jacob Lesiuk (Dromio of Syracuse)

In partnership with Mount Royal University, Theatre Calgary’s Shakespeare by the Bow (formerly known as Shakespeare in the Park) returns this summer with William Shakespeare’s The Comedy of Errors. Calgary’s scenic Prince’s Island Park hosts the production’s comical hijinks which are presented in the play’s original text, with the addition of several contemporary elements. Creativity is abound in Shakespeare by the Bow’s energetic production of The Comedy of Errors. Continue reading

Festival Play Reading of Robert More’s Dads in Bondage Entertains

First produced in 1988, Robert More’s play Dads in Bondage, with music by Thomas Doyle, is currently being developed as an one-act for Lunchbox Theatre’s 2014/2015 season. As part of the Suncor Energy Stage One Festival of New Canadian Work, the public was invited to the Lunchbox Theatre to attend a public reading of More’s hilarious comedy about three career men whose lives are flipped upside down when they become stay-at-home dads.

Unlike typical stage productions, play readings do not (usually) feature the use of props or choreography on stage. The focus of the event, instead, is to allow a playwright to hear their work-in-progress live in front of an audience. (Here, the play reading was four actors with their scripts on music stands and Doyle accompanying them on piano). Additionally, after the reading, the audience is invited to make comments and ask the playwright questions. Based off the audience’s reactions and feedback, the playwright gains a better sense of what needs to be cut or added when they later revisit their script.

Dads in Bondage is about three men – Charles, Joey, and Kirk – who are each comfortable in their respective careers and lifestyles, that it is until the arrival of their newborn children brings more than they bargained for. When they are each let go from work, the excitement of fatherhood becomes short-lived. Once a man of the world and finer tastes, Charles is now trapped at home with his daughter. Joey, a neurotic school teacher, cannot keep up with (or tell a part) twins Virgil and Horace. And, Kirk can never seem to find enough time away from household chores to hit the gym. With their partners away at work, the men struggle not only with their parenting duties, but also their identities as men.

Playwright Robert More, the Lunchbox Theatre.

Robert More, playwright.

At the time of its original production, the play and its themes, More told the audience during the Q & A session, was “revolutionary,” a statement older member of the audiences nodded in agreement with. While the number of stay-at-home dads are double what they in the 1980’s due in part to the 2008 recession*, More’s play does not feel outdated. What makes the script feel contemporary is its self-awareness and, accordingly, ability to parody, with humorous results, the gender stereotypes present in the play.

As a result, Dads in Bondage features very funny dialogue and character moments. The humour of the play is supported well by Doyle’s musical work. Doyle’s compositions not only sound great, but they also suit each man’s respective character. Charles, someone of status, has a distinct musical style compared to Joey whose own style is reflective of his anxious character. This attention to character in the score is impressive. Overall, Doyle’s score is delightful.

With its smart dialogue, animated characters and vibrant musical score, More’s Dads in Bondage is set to be a hit with audiences when it arrives at Lunchbox Theatre as part of the company’s 40th season.


Dads in Bondage will run at Lunchbox Theatre from April 27-May 16, 2015.

For more information about the company’s 2014/2015 season, visit http//lunchboxtheatre.com/

The Suncor Energy Stage One Festival of New Canadian Work ran from June 13-28, 2014 at Lunchbox Theatre. The public reading of Dads in Bondage was held on June 27th, 2014.

Robert More – Playwright
Tom Doyle – Composer
Glenda Stirling – Director/Dramaturg
Vanessa Sabourin – The Woman
Scott Shipley – Kirk
JP Thibodeau – Joey
Kevin Rothery – Charles

*Italie, Leanne. “Study: At-home dads down slightly since recession.” Yahoo! News, 5 June 2014. Web. 27 June 2014.