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has already shown up online, even though it won't appear in print until tomorrow. This is the first time I've seen something I've written pop up that far ahead of the ink-on-paper version, though maybe I just haven't noticed until now.
The review begins:
I confess that I went into the opening night performance of Marion Bridge at Globe Theatre feeling skeptical.
The premise, after all, sounds like the set-up to a joke: "A nun, an actress and a soap-opera addict walk into a kitchen ..."
Not only that, the fact the three are sisters home together — in Cape Breton, no less — for the first time in years because their mother is dying made me fear I faced a turgid ...
Posted by Edward Willett at 15:26, January 22nd, 2010 under Art Columns, Blog |
...and in particular of Julia Mackey's play Jake's Gift, is
in today's LeaderPost.
An excerpt:
Mackey says one of the main reasons she created the show was to let veterans know that a lot of people really do appreciate the sacrifices they made.
Another was to educate children, and Jake's Gift, Mackey says, elicits the same "amazing" response from 10-year-olds as it does their elders.
"Those young kids really get it, and it makes them interested in history. They come up to me afterwards and want to know more about the war and Remembrance Day. That's such an incredible reward."
Posted by Edward Willett at 10:23, July 2nd, 2009 under Art Columns, Blog |
My preview of New Dance Horizon's presentation of Montreal's Fortier Danse Creation's Cabane is
in today's LeaderPost. It begins:
Cabane, says Paul-Andre Fortier of Montreal's Fortier Danse Creation, is not your typical dance show: instead, it's "somewhere between dance, theatre, performance art, installation and site-specific."
Presented by New Dance Horizons tonight at 8 p.m. in the Jacqui Shumiatcher Room of the Conexus Arts Centre and Friday at 8 p.m. in the Regency Ballroom of the Hotel Saskatchewan, Cabane was created and is performed by Fortier in collaboration with author, musician and visual artist Robert Racine.
"Everybody in his childhood dreamed of a small house you could play in, to create a world for your own self," Fortier says.
With Cabane he hopes ...
Posted by Edward Willett at 22:57, April 23rd, 2009 under Blog |