Lois Backstage: A Look at Life Behind the Scenes Rotating Header Image

Skydive

2009 In Review: Top Ten Theatre Experiences

Tuesday The Globe & Mail published their Top 10 Productions of 2009. Wednesday The Vancouver Courier followed suite with their Top 14.  Today it’s my turn.

2009 was a big theatre year for me.   I saw 68 shows. I worked on 12 shows. Picking a top ten was hard, but I love that it is a huge range.  It includes an opera, a musical, some shakespeare, but mostly it includes shows by small, local companies who are doing fantastic work.

I did find that I couldn’t rank them from one to 10, so I’ve listed them in chronological order.

1. 20 minute musicals (Rumble/ Push)
* Distant Second: The Steve Fonyo Story
* Do You Want What I Have Got? A Craigslist Cantata

When I first saw these shows at Club PuSh back in January I rushed home to gush about them here on the blog. I called it “one of the funnest nights of theatre” & told everyone to go see them.  11 months later I still remember that evening’s entertainment & the amount of laughter that accompanied it.


2.Rigoletto (Vancouver Opera)

Rigoletto was a show I wasn’t sure I would see. It was on a “hopefully” list, but money was tight and when I called they were out of their cheap tickets.  Then my friend Craig called.  He’d bought two tickets and didn’t have someone to go with and he knew I liked theatre and would I like to go to the Opera with him.  For me it was a no-brainer.  I was first exposed to opera as a genre at 14 and fell in love with the grandiose nature of it all. Rigoletto was no exception.

Lissa Neptuno in Tempus Theatre's 36 Views.

3. 36 Views (Tempus Theatre)

36 Views was one of the most visually stunning plays I saw this year.  When I originally gushed about it, I said, “Michael Kopsa is pitch perfect as Darius Wheeler, the somewhat shady art dealer and the use of projection with the design is beautiful.” The script was intriguing and had myself & friends talking about it for weeks following its viewing.

4.Fat Pig (Mitch & Murray Equity Co-op)

I had read Fat Pig about a year before it’s Vancouver premiere this past spring.  I read the play and thought “Wow. Tom is an asshole. Other than that this play has potential.”  I went into the local production with low expectations based on that and they were blown out of the water.  In this production Tom was not just an asshole – he had depth & his struggle was real.  And Kathryn Kirkpatric as Helen was wonderful: endearing, hilarious, & heartbreaking.

5.Palace of the End (Felix Culpa, Touchstone Theatre, & Horseshoes & Hand Grenades)

Three theatre companies. Three Directors. Three incredible performances. Three different looks at the war in Iraq.  One show I’m glad I saw because I will never look at the war in the same way.

6.Alls Well That Ends Well (Bard on the Beach)

Prior to this Bard production, I had never seen a production of Alls Well that worked – the offstage bedroom scene always felt wrong. Even in reading the play it was like this enormous plot point was missing from the story (of course, that can be said for a lot of Shakespeare’s plays where major plot points happen offstage and are only ever discusses), however under Rachel Ditor’s direction, it works. And it worked. Well.
7.Midsummer (The Cultch & Traverse Theatre Company)

A quirky little play about Bob & Helena.  He’s a used-car salesman. She’s a high powered divorce lawyer. With original songs & a set that transformed into everything from a bar to a bondage club to the church steps for a wedding, it was both hilarious & made me wish there were more designs that transformed as well as this one did.

Bob Fraser as Judas & Michael Kopsa as Satan in The Last Days of Judas Iscariot at Pacific Theatre. Photo by Tim Matheson.

8.The Last Days of Judas Iscariot (Pacific Theatre)

What can I say about Judas? The script is so rich that even now that I’ve read it multiple times I am still finding new depth.  Add to that the remarkable performances given by the entire cast & the beautiful simplicity of the final moments and I still find myself moved by it.
9.The Project (Solo Collective)

The Project had everything going for it – Aaron Bushkowsky’s new script is a witty look at starvation in Africa through a new lens - a camera lens.  Christian fundamentalism. Militarism. Hollywood.  And strong performances by the cast, especially Lindsey Angell & Andrew McNee.

Alessandro Juliani as SuperFrog in PiTheatre/Rumble Production's After The Quake.

10.After The Quake (Pi Theatre/Rumble Productions)

I didn’t have to come home and gush about this show because Simon beat me to it.  This show was a perfect balance – no one element outshone the others, but rather all the elements (design, direction, acting, script) worked together to make the story ever more engaging.  This show certainly earned its place on this year’s top 10 list.

Honorable Mentions:

Anne (Chemainus Theatre Festival) – My first trip to Chemainus was just a week ago to see  Anne.  It didn’t break the top ten, but this girl whose middle name is Anne with-an-E, was delighted by this stage production of a story that shaped my childhood.

Antigone Undone (Leaky Heaven Circus) – One of the more bizarre plays I saw this year, it was all choreographed to 67 minutes of music & projections and sure, it didn’t stick directly to the traditional story of Antigone, but you would expect nothing less from Leaky Heaven.

Skydive (Artsclub/Reelwheels) – Skydive doesn’t really qualify for the top 10 since it premiered in 2007, but the innovation of the ES Dance Instruments & it’s ability to let anyone fly makes it worth another mention.  Besides, who doesn’t love a Madonna dance party mid show?

Previously: 2009 in Review: Top 10 Tweets

2009 In Review: Shows I Saw

Fringe!One of my New Year’s resolutions last year was to start seeing more theatre.  I had decided that if I was really passionate about this, I probably needed to see more than 2 shows a month.  I settled on 3 per month, figuring that to be a fairly easy place to start.  I did, of course, surpass those numbers, seeing 76 plays in 2009.  That averages out to just over 6 shows per month.  Double my original goal.  Below you will see my list of shows, in nearly chronological order (some are out by a little bit, but its very close).

The shows I have seen vary. I saw plays in Canada & the USA. I saw plays at the largest local theatres (Playhouse, Arts Club, Bard),  at the smallest (Little Mountain Studios) and everything in between.  I saw kids doing Shakespeare in the park in Kamloops, I saw my first show at Vancouver Opera, I saw my first ballet in years.  I saw musicals, comedies, dramas, & horrors.  I saw mask pieces, movement pieces, character pieces, plays that were all about the set, or costumes, or script, or directing.   I saw almost everything I wanted to see (there were a few shows I missed, which I think is inevitable when one works in theatre and only has maybe 2 days a week in which to attempt to see plays).

You may wonder, how do I afford to see 6 plays a month on a stage manager’s income? I volunteer. A lot. Probably two-thirds of the shows on this list I have been able to see for free because I volunteer as an usher, bartender, a poster-puter-uper, a money counter, or whatever else the company needed.  I also have a lot of friends in theatre, so sometimes I can get free tickets for opening nights or days that they are running slow.  Probably only 20% of the shows were paid for, and half of those were at a reduced rate as an “artist” or “friend of cast” or “2-for1″ or “rush ticket” promotion.

Seeing theatre doesn’t have to be expensive.  It can be a very affordable way to spend a night out.  And, for those within the theatre community, what better way to open your next cover letter than with genuine praise for the work of the company you are applying to.

As I look forward to next year, I will probably scale back a bit.  I will probably aim for four shows per month (in the middle between 2008′s two and 2009′s six).  I saw a lot of theatre this year, but I did it at the exclusion of other things & now it is time to be pickier about my theatre and make time again for the other things I love to do.

Here is the official list of plays I saw in 2009:

1.Miss Julie: Freedom Summer (Vancouver Playhouse)
2.Skydive (Arts Club /Reelwheels/ Push)
3.5 Days in March (PuSh/Cheltfish)
4.There Came A Gypsy Riding (United Players)
5.Whale Riding Weather (Zee Zee Productions)
6.20 minute musicals (Rumble/ Push)
1. Distant Second: The Steve Fonyo Story
2. Do You Want What I Have Got? A Craigslist Cantata
7.Bye Bye Birdie (Studio 58)
8.Medea (UBC)
9.The Be(A)st of Taylor Mac (Club Push)
10.Coriolanus (Coriolanus Equity Co-op {Mad Duck Collective})
11.Shocker’s Delight (Squidamisu)
12.Beggars at the House of Plenty (Evolving Arts Collective)
13.East of Berlin (Tarragon/Touchstone/Firehall)
14.Rigoletto (Vancouver Opera)
15.Under The Hawthorne Tree (The Two Marys)
16.Munsch Alley (Carousel theatre)
17.The Idiots Karamazov (UBC)
18.Death of a Clown (ITSAZOO)
19.The Real Thing (Arts Club)
20.Where The River Meets The Sea (Presentation House)
21.LifeSavers (Ruby Slippers)
22.Earnestine Shushwap Gets Her trout (Firehall Arts Centre)
23.John & Beatrice (Pi Theatre)
24.Secret World of Og (Carousel Theatre)
25.36 Views (Tempus Theatre)
26.Antigone Undone (Leaky Heaven Circus)
27.Fat Pig (Mitch & Murray Equity Co-op)
28.Les Miserables (Arts Club)
29.Top Girls (Vancouver Playhouse)
30.Palace of the End (Felix Culpa, Touchstone Theatre, & Horseshoes & Hand Grenades)
31.Othello (Bard on the Beach)
32.The Tempest (2-bite Bard)
33.SchoolHouseRock Live (Small Nest Productions @ Edmonton Fringe)
34.Rent (Fighting Chance Productions)
35.Macbeth (Limbo Circus Theatre)
36.Orestes (Cambiare Productions)
37.Unidentified Human Remains; or, the True Nature of Love (20 Something Theatre)
38.Alls Well That Ends Well (Bard on the Beach)
39.Dog Sees God (Fighting Chance Productions)
40.Kicked (Project X)
41.The Saddest Girl in the World
42.Circus x2 (Cabbage Under Heavy Fire)
43.Nggrfg (Small Brown Package)
44.Drinks with Friends (Whirlwind Productions)
45.Lavignia: A Modern Fairy Tale of Gigantic Proportions (Sticky Fingers Production)
46.Some Reckless Abandon (Over the Moon Productions)
47.Cabaret of Bullshit (Vancouver Fringe)
48.Caberlesque! (BSide Productions)
49.AfterLife (Sunset Gun Productions)
50.murder, hope (Infinity Live Productions)
51.The Veil (Presentation House & OneLight Theatre)
52.Midsummer (The Cultch & Traverse Theatre Company)
53.The House of Kosa (TigerMilk Collective)
54.Gift of Screws
55.The Last Days of Judas Iscariot (Pacific Theatre)
56.Any Night (Touchstone, DualMinds & The Cultch)
57.Lot’s Wife (Studio 58)
58.Love You Forever & More Munch (Carousel Theatre)
59.Becky’s New Car (Artists Repertory Theatre – Portland)
60.Evil Dead: The Musical (Downstage Right Productions)
61.Anatomy of Gray (TWU Theatre)
62.Master Builder (UBC)
63.Joseph & The Amazing Technicolour DreamCoat (Footlights Theatre Company)
64.The Big League (Carousel Theatre)
65.The Project (Solo Collective)
66.Moulin Rouge: the Ballet (Royal Canadian Ballet)
67.These Walls Are Paper Thin (Critical Mask & Mind of a Snail)
68.The Vertical Hour (United Players)
69.King Arthurs Kitchen (Axis Theatre)
70.Demon Voice (Touchstone Theatre)
71.After The Quake (Pi Theatre/Rumble Productions)
72.Wired (Green Thumb Theatre)
73.A Winter’s Tale (Studio 58)
74.Robin Hood (Carousel Theatre)
75.A Beautiful View (Ruby Slippers Theatre)
76.Anne (Chemainus Theatre Festival)

Previously: 2009 in Review: Work

PuSh Festival: Week 1 in ReView

The PuSh International Performing Arts Festival got off to a great start last week. I kicked it off by seeing Skydive at the Art’s Club’s Granville Island Stage as my first show of the 2009 PuSh International Performing Arts Festival. The show premiered as a part of PuSh in 2007 & I really enjoyed the show then and was looking forward to seeing it again. And it didn’t disappoint.

The theatre was only about two-thirds full, mostly with patrons who had no idea what they were about to see. I overheard many husbands asking their wives just what this play was about. The lights went to black at the top of the show and the muttering continued until the lights came up & the curtains were falling down, actors were flying through the air. It is a visually stunning opening scene & from that moment on the show had the audience in the palm of its hand.

There have been a few re-writes in the past two years, but most of them make the dialogue smoother – only one or two places feel a bit clunky – like there were some references that they really wanted to include. But overall the script is strong – a story that evokes a lot of nostalgia in people who are old enough to remember the 80′s – and makes people laugh.

But the strongest thing about Skydive are the ES Dance Instruments – the technology that allows the actors to fly above the stage & audience. And at this point I feel the need to give a shout out to the operators of the ESDIs – despite being completely hidden for the majority of the show, they are integral to making the show happen – and get a few moments of guaranteed audience love.

The second show that I saw this week was not nearly as good. 5 Days in March is advertised with the following sentence:

In March 2003, in the days before the US war against Iraq, two Japanese urban hipsters meet at a post-rock show and are swept into a one-night stand that turns into five days’ continuous sex.

And with a premise like that, it shouldn’t be nearly as boring as it is. Written entirely in Japanese and performed with English surtitles, it reads like an interesting short story, but doesn’t work as a play. The language is colloquial – it sounds like a group of friends sitting around at a party telling a story to a friend who wasn’t there – complete with different people telling their versions of what happened, going back over the same part multiple times, and sharing little details that are entirely irrelevant to an audience that doesn’t know the specific neighbourhoods mentioned.

As they tell these stories about passionate subjects (sex, war, etc), there is no passion and there is little action: just small fidgety movements on a bare stage. One rocks back and forth, one grabs his crotch, one balances on the side of her foot and so on with the little twitches.

I’ll admit it: I fell asleep three times in the first act.

I’m looking forward to Week two which is now up and going & tomorrow night Club PuSh opens at Performance Works where I’ll be volunteering Tuesday, Thursday, Friday & Saturday night. I look forward to seeing some of you there.

PuShing in Busy Season

Theatre seems to have its slow times (read: the past 3 weeks) and its busy times (read: the next 3 weeks).

Starting Monday, the PuSh festival rolls into town with its diverse, international offerings. This is my third year as a volunteer for the festival and I always look forward to seeing a number of shows. On my calendar for this year:

1. Siren (UK) – A music/performance piece that looks at the relationship betwen light & sound.
2. Skydive (Vancouver) – My second time seeing this award-winning play that makes a quadriplegic man fly.
3. Nanay: A testimonial play (Vancouver) – Exploring live-in care-giving, this local play was written in collaboration with the Phillipine Women Center.
4. Five Days in March (Tokyo) – In Japanese with English surtitles, I think this play will either fly or flop – not sure which, but I’m curious to find out.
5. Assembly (Vancouver) – Won critics choice, but more importantly a mentor said that it was worth seeing. Reason enough to see it, yes?

Also, for my volunteer postition I’ll be working at Club PuSh January 27, 29, 30 & 31 as an usher/ticket taker, so if you pop in, come and say “hi!” I’ll be the one with the name tag that says “Lois” on it.

As well as the PuSh Festival, the Vancouver Playhouse just opened Miss Julie: Freedom Summer. I saw a preview earlier this week and after a year or two away from the Playhouse I was pleasantly surprised. Often I am enthralled by their production elements, but walk away feeling like the show has missed the mark in a lot of other ways, but this time (despite a few minor things) the production felt very coherent, and all of the elements – acting, directing, design – felt like they were at the same, high level. It’s certainly worth checking out.

On smaller stages there is Squidamisu’s production of Shocker’s Delight! at the Beaumont Studios. I worked on a production of this a few years ago and had forgotten just how sharp & funny the script was.

Sidebar: I had never been inside the Beaumont Studios before tonight, but their 65-seat theatre is a treat. For a city that is really struggling to find performance space, this is a GREAT option for companies that are just getting established and would like a little more flexibility than the Havana. Though I’m told by the actors that the only way to get from stage left to stage right without crossing the stage is to run around the building!

Also, the school’s are opening their first spring term shows in the next couple of weeks. I have tickets to see Bye Bye Birdie at Studio 58 & Medea at UBC. I am looking forward to both of them. I think Cap University is opening 1949 as well, but I rarely make it out to where they are. At some point I’ll do something about that.

On the community theatre front, There Came a Gypsy Riding opens at the Jericho Arts center next week.

I go back into rehearsals on Monday, so it’s a busy time, but getting out there and supporting the rest of the artistic community is important. If I can’t make time to go and see someone else’s show, how can I expect them to have the time to come and see mine?