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Posts tagged ‘Bailey Green’

In Conversation with Deanne Kearney – Creator of Urban Myth at the Next Stage Theatre Festival

By Bailey Green

Deanne “Dee” Kearney studied ballet and contemporary for years but had never felt completely at home. When she discovered hip hop everything changed. “Hip hop very quickly became my whole life, and identity, as soon as I found it,” Kearney remembers. “It changed everything, even the way I look at things. I write on urban dance and I produce. Hip hop is such a lifestyle, and it’s an amazing, supportive culture.” Kearney teaches dance and is part of the Toronto B-Girl Movement, dedicated to bringing more women to the forefront of a largely male-dominated style.

Kearney set out to create Urban Myth with the goal of bringing popular styles to new audiences, “I completely fell in love [with hip hop], I wanted to show the world how amazing it is.” She chose the styles featured in the show (breaking, krump, house, waacking, to name a few) based on the current, standout styles in Toronto.

Urban Myth is a show geared towards an audience who may not be familiar with this genre. Each style is announced before the dance. When asked about the biggest difference between a theatre show as opposed to a battle, Kearney says, “The audiences are much quieter! You can take pictures and tweet. The performers love to hear the audience yell and respond so it can be odd for them to adjust to the different setting.”

Photo Credit: E.S.Cheah Photography

Photo Credit: E.S.Cheah Photography

Kearney brought in choreographers “at the top of their game” in each style and gave them free rein to create. All she asked was that they each find ways to challenge themselves to choreograph pieces with a story. No themes were given, but as the pieces took shape a variety of stories emerged. One piece, performed by Raoul “Jin” Wilke and The Moon Runners crew, is an apocalyptic future based on the film “I am Legend.” Another dance is 12 minute long krump piece, choreographed by Amadeus “Primal” Marquez, about domestic abuse choreographed. The choreographers worked with their own dancers from their crews and came together to create the opening number of the show.

The challenges of this show came from the volume of people on stage. With about 30 people involved plus Kearney’s own people, it was no small feat to organize everyone involved. “The most rewarding is just seeing the pieces, the whole cast was watching the show just entirely in awe of each other,” Kearney says. “Many of these dancers don’t do theatre shows. They just battle.”

Photo Credit: E.S.Cheah Photography

Photo Credit: E.S.Cheah Photography

When asked about her inspirations, Kearney shouts out her friend and collaborator Anthony “Illz” Put. Illz is a b-boy who travels the world to battle. “He has amazing movement qualities and is so easy to work with,” Kearney says. “He just doesn’t know how good he is yet.”

Urban Myth is a hard-hitting, intricate and visceral show. If you catch it this weekend, be sure to make some noise.

Urban Myth

Presented by BreakinGround as part of the Next Stage Theatre Festival

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Who:
Creator: Deanne Kearney
Choreographers: Amadeus “Primal” Marquez, Anthony “Illz” Put, Mariano “Glizzi” Abarca, Caroline “Lady C” Fraser, Caitlin “Caddy” Superville, Deanne “Dee” Kearney
Featuring: Dancers from Northbuck, Lions of Zion, Footnotes Dance, Ground Illusions, Twisted Ankles and The WaaquettesPresented by: BreakinGround

What:

Krump. Breaking. Popping. Locking. House. Waacking. Bringing raw urban dance from the street to the stage, created by Canada’s top urban dancers and choreographers.

Where: Factory Theatre Mainspace (125 Bathurst St)

When:
January 17 09:00 PM  buy tickets

Tickets: $15.00

Connect:

@breakingroundto
www.breakinground.ca

 

In Conversation with Chloé Hung, from All Our Yesterdays at the Next Stage Theatre Festival

by Bailey Green

In the spring of 2014, Boko Haram kidnapped 276 female students from their school in Chibok, Nigeria. The abduction caught the attention of the world media, celebrities, first lady Michelle Obama and playwright Chloé Hung. The popular hashtag #BringBackOurGirls swept across social media. In October 2014, Hung came across an article marking six months since the kidnapping. To her chagrin, she realized that she had forgotten about the girls whose story had outraged her in April. She wrote an idea on a Post-It, “two sisters kidnapped by Boko Haram” and promised herself she would not let their memory slip away again.

All Our Yesterdays grew out of a two scene assignment that Hung wrote for a class at NYU where she is currently completing her MFA in dramatic writing. In the spring of 2015 she began writing the play in earnest—the story of fictional sisters Ladi and Hasana who have been kidnapped by Boko Haram. Their parents cannot afford for both daughters to attend school, and so the older sister Ladi is sent to school while the younger, Hasana, is kept home. “There was never a draft where Hasana wasn’t on the autism spectrum,” Hung remembers. “In Hasana we see how much she does need school, and how that would give her an amazing opportunity for a life she would never be able to have without education. Hasana has also allowed me to talk candidly about some of the issues in this story.” As part of her research, Hung discovered the lack of support for autistic children outside of urban centres in Nigeria.

AllOurYesterdays

Photo Credit: Rick Bartram

When asked about the challenges of this piece, Hung describes the extensive research involved in the writing process. She credits York University professor Pablo Idahosa with providing her with a thorough crash course in Nigerian history and politics. Another key moment was when her step father, Michael Kaufman, who co-founded the White Ribbon Campaign, helped put Hung in contact with Hadiza Aminu in Nigeria. Hadiza Aminu were part of the creators of #BringBackOurGirls and spoke with Hung extensively about the situation in Nigeria, how the parents were coping and how the people in the community rallied and protested. “So it was challenging to distill all of that information into a story that felt relatable,” Hung says, “and the way I wanted to approach that was using a story of two sisters and the injuries that siblings can do to each other.”

In the transition from playwright to director, Hung adapted and learned to adjust pauses or movements that no longer served their purpose. “There were chances to do re-writing on our feet, and I have two amazing actors, Chiamaka Umeh and Amanda Weise, who brought it all to life,” Hung says.

AllOurYesterdays2

Photo Credit: Rick Bartram

All Our Yesterdays is partnering with Save the Children Canada for this run at Next Stage (during Fringe 2015 they partnered with Because I am a Girl). “It was really important to me that there was an outreach aspect to this show,” Hung emphasizes. “It’s all well and good for me to sit at home with my computer ranting and raving about the world, but what am I actually doing? What can I do from here?”

Short Answers:

Currently Reading: Room, by Emma Donoghue. It’s terrifying, but so good.

Favourite City: Toronto! Bloor/Ossington wasn’t so cool back when I was growing up, but now it’s pretty awesome.

Next Stage Show You Can’t Wait to See: All of them! But I didn’t get to see Rebecca Perry and Rachel Blair’s shows at Fringe this past July so I’m really looking forward to those.

All Our Yesterdays

All-Our-Yesterdays-650x843

Photo of Chloé Hung by Tanja Tiziana

Presented by AnOther Theatre as part of the Next Stage Theatre Festival

Who:
Playwright/Director: Chloe Hung
Featuring: Chiamaka Umeh, Amanda Weise
Stage Manager/Producer: Elizabeth Wilson

What: Sisters Ladi and Hasana have been kidnapped by Boko Haram. Through memory we journey through their captivity as they wrestle with autism, the need to escape and their past. When one makes a selfish decision, the effects reverberate to their present.
2015 Toronto Fringe Patron’s Pick

Where: Factory Theatre Studio (125 Bathurst St)

When:
January 14 09:15 PM  buy tickets
January 15 08:45 PM  buy tickets
January 16 05:45 PM  buy tickets
January 17 08:00 PM  buy tickets

* Talk Back after the show

Tickets: $15.00

www.anothertheatrecompany.com

Truth, Lies, Shadows, and Ducks – Exploring The Wild Duck Project with Re:Current Theatre

by Bailey Green

Is it possible to live your life without telling a single lie? This question is at the heart of Re:Current Theatre’s The Wild Duck Project. The piece is an exploration of Ibsen’s The Wild Duck and marries personal testimony, adaptation, shadow puppetry and movement to explore this complex play.

Artistic Director and co-founder of Re:Current Theatre Brian Postalian has led his cast of four actors—co-founders Victor Pokinko and Eliza Martin, and contributing artists Alex Spyropoulos and Zachary Murphy—through a rigorous rehearsal process. Postalian (along with Martin, Pokinko and Spyropoulos) are graduates of the University of Toronto and Sheridan College joint actor training program – Theatre and Drama Studies.

Wild Duck Project (2 of 211)

Postalian’s approach to The Wild Duck uses a combination of academic questioning and organic exploration. He chose to focus on the thematic elements of flawed ideals and obscured truths that pervade the familial relationships at the centre of the play. Postalian notes how in many of Ibsen’s plays, such as An Enemy of the People, the playwright focuses on the effects of revealing the truth:

“At the top of the play, the poorer family lives with all these concealments. Nothing is obviously wrong but there are a lot of secrets. So the son [Gregers] from the rich family comes home and decides to reveal all of this information. I really believe he is Ibsen’s mouthpiece, though in the play he can sound like quite the villain, because he [like Ibsen] believes living in absolute truth is where we need to be. But Ibsen complicates this further because society won’t let us do that, because society is built on lies. So what ends up happening is the daughter [Hedvig] of the poor family kills herself as sort of the ultimate choice. […] In The Wild Duck, in particular, we see how in knowing the truth, things fall apart.”

The Wild Duck Project has had several incarnations since 2014 when Re:Current Theatre first took shape. While studying in theatre school together, Martin, Pokinko and Postalian decided that they wanted to form a company to explore the re-interpretation of classical texts. The Wild Duck had its first workshop performance in the MIST theatre in Mississauga. It was there that a key element of its design emerged: lamps, held by the actors, are used to light the majority of the production. “The actors have agency and control, which has been exciting and challenging to explore,” says Postalian.

Wild Duck Project (164 of 211)

When asked about how the project stands today at its current stage, Postalian responds, “There’s a lot of problems in the play itself that we’re still trying to navigate. And even sequences that we have in the play that may be problematic. We’re taking a risk by trying it, but I know that there’s a kernel burning in each scene.” He mentions as well that many persistent problems have lead to new discoveries that drive the piece forward.

When asked about the challenges of directing this piece, Postalian says that finding clarity has been essential. Ensuring that the audience can grab on to the story has been very important to the creators as this play may not be well known to potential audience members. Finding clarity for the actors, who are also co-creators, has also been a challenge. The greatest joy for Postalian has come from watching his cast play with free abandon. “It’s so invigorating to see them go off and find something I could never have found,” Postalian says.

When asked to describe The Wild Duck Project in 5 words, Postalian responds, “Lamps, shadow puppets, Fleetwood Mac, whimsy, ducks.”

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The Wild Duck Project plays at Hub14 until December 13th, Wed-Sun at 8pm.

Reality, Idealism, Fantasy. 
Can we live our lives without telling a single lie?

Wild Duck Project is a new contemporary adaptation, reimagining, and deconstruction from Henrik Ibsen’s cynical play ‘The Wild Duck’.

In the Wild Duck Project, four actors have gathered to tell the story of The Wild Duck. In the process, they take apart the play and find an uneasy resemblance with their own lives. Through their reimagining of the play, they discover that truth is dead and lies are our sustenance. If they choose to follow the ideals of truth over a life of lies, are they noble or foolish? Each night, they invite an audience to answer this with them and discover why lies are not only useful but necessary to life. 

Lit entirely by the actors using four lamps and a set of flashlights, the performance is a mash-up of text from the play, personal testimonials from the performers, remixed classic pop and folks songs, and shadow puppetry. The project asks whether or not human beings can live their lives without telling a single lie.

Wild Duck Project asks if it is truly possible to live free and truthful, and if not, is it so bad to be false?

Director: Brian Postalian
​Cast: Eliza Martin, Zachary Murphy, Victor Pokinko, and Alex Spyropoulos
Production Designer:  Joe Pagnan
Associate Designer: Holly Meyer-Dymny
Costume Designer: Laura Delchiaro
Producer: Michelle Yagi
Stage Management: Heather Bellingham
Dramaturgy: Adrian Beattie
Artistic Outreach Coordinator: Cornelia Audrey
Poster Design: Jacek Kociolek

Tickets: wildduckproject.bpt.me

Connect:

Re:Current Theatre: @ReCurrTheatre
www.recurrenttheatre.com

Bailey Green: @_BaileyGreen

In the Greenroom: @intheGreenRoom_

Nirbhaya and Nightwood – Part Two: In Conversation with Kelly Thorton, Artistic Director of Nightwood Theatre

Interview by Bailey Green 

On a rainy morning in the Distillery District, I sat with down with Nightwood Theatres Artistic Director Kelly Thornton to discuss women in theatre, Nightwoods current season and Nirbhaya. 

In 2014, writer/director Yaël Farber and producer Margaret Moll reached out to Kelly Thornton with the intent of bringing Nirbhaya on a Canadian tour. “I’d known Yaël was working on a piece in India,” remembers Thornton. “And when we looked at the materials and subject matter [of Nirbhaya], for Nightwood, it’s a no brainer. This show had to come to Toronto and Nightwood is the perfect company to bring it here. We’re a politically-based company, that believes in changing the world through art and tackling the urgent issues around people’s lives.” 

Kelly Thornton met Yaël Farber in 2009 when Thornton was running the Four by Four Festival, a festival that focused on female directors, in Montreal. At the recommendation of South African director Lara Foot Newton, Thornton brought Yaël Farber in to teach a master class. They ended up running the directing program at The National Theatre School together. Thornton and Farber’s paths diverged as they went on to work on many different projects, but they remained on each other’s radar.

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Nirbhaya – The Company. Photo by Sinbad Phgura.

Thornton describes Farber’s theatre as “sacred and ritualistic”. She describes that when Farber directed Miller’s The Crucible at the Old Vic in London, she asked her cast to consider giving something up and to explore the repression of their desires like the Puritans they were portraying.

Farber’s theatre seeks to ground itself in the immediate world we live in. Nirbhaya could not be a more poignant reflection of that principle. When asked about the subject matter of the show, Thornton replies:

“Violence against women has been an issue… well, basically since the beginning of time. It’s tough subject matter but we need to have this conversation. Theatre can give us catharsis and a call to move forward. And with Kathleen Wynne’s action plan to end violence coming into effect and the UN’s International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women on November 25th, Nirbhaya is a cultural centre piece on this subject matter. Its impact as it travels around the world is amazing. It’s truly a transformational piece.”

nightwood

(L to R) Poorna Jagannathan and Priyanka Bose in a scene from Nirbhaya.

When Thornton was asked about her focus in programming the current Nightwood season, and whether she found that any common elements appeared, she said “this season feels, for me, as if it is tackling the urgent issues of our time. It’s a highly political season.” Obeah Opera spoke about the Salem witch trials, but from the perspective of the African/Caribbean slave, and gave voice to those whose history had been silenced. Unholy tackled misogyny in religion in the form of a public debate about whether or not women should abandon religion altogether. Nirbhaya seeks to dismantle the oppressive silence surrounding the victims and survivors of sexual assault. The Public Servant deals with how public service was gutted under our former government, and how red tape can stifle the best of intentions. Refuge, written by one of Nightwood’s founders Mary Vingoe, is particularly relevant with the global refugee crisis.

When asked about what action theatre companies should take to be more inclusive of female and female-identified creators, Thornton discusses her extensive history of working with female practitioners, academics, as well as PACT, Playwrights Guild of Canada and more recently, Equity in Theatre. Thornton credits their hard work but acknowledges that we still have a long way to go:

“If you have a predominant Canadian theatre of male artistic directors, unconsciously their programming choices are affected by their gender; so I think two things have to happen. I think male AD’s have to understand that they have a responsibility—as Justin Trudeau just pointed out to the world—to stay awake to the other half of the population.               But also to get more female artistic directors into Canadian theatre. And that’s what the Canadian Women’s Directors Catalogue is about. The least women are in the regional houses, the most are in the independent scene, and so getting them in as directors in the regional houses is very important. Otherwise when the time comes to replace that regional AD, as a woman, if you’ve never directed on a regional stage you will never be consider eligible to be artistic director of that company.”

When asked what advice Thornton would give to young women beginning their careers in theatre, and she replied, “Be bold and unapologetic with your own power. Stand up and have your voice heard. Risk. Ask for what you want.”

Rapid Fire Questions with Kelly Thorton:

Currently Reading: The Element by Ken Robinson

Last Play You Saw: Unholy

TV Show You’re Addicted To: I don’t watch much TV anymore, but I guess the last show would have been Breaking Bad.

Favourite Coffee Shop: Furbo

Song Stuck in Your Head: “Sit Down You’re Rockin’ the Boat” from Guys and Dolls (we were auditioning for the Lawyer Show this week.)

nirbhaya-BIG-header

Written and directed by Yael Farber,
Presented by Nightwood Theatre in association with Amnesty International present an Assembly, Riverside Studios and Poorna Jagannathan Production.

Nirbhaya was inspired by true events that occurred in December of 2012 in India, when a woman boarded a bus heading homeThe piece is a tapestry of personal testimonies, which tears away the shame that silences survivors of sexual violence.

When: November 18-29

Where: Harbourfront Centre Theatre

Tickets: $20-45. Purchase here.

For more info, visit Nightwood Theatre’s website.

 

 

Nirbhaya and Nightwood – Part One: In Conversation with Beth Brown, Managing Director of Nightwood

Interview by Bailey Green 

It was a joy to sit down with Beth Brown, Managing Director of Nightwood Theatre. She has a kind and welcoming spirit that I noticed from the moment I met her. After discussing a shared love of animals (with the exception of mice) and a connection to the city of Montreal, over steaming mugs of tea, we spoke about Nightwood Theatres upcoming production, Nirbhaya, running November 18-29 at the Harbourfront Centre Theatre. The transcript of our conversation has been edited for length and clarity:

BG: How did you come in contact with Nirbhaya?

BB: We were made aware of the project through the producer Margaret Moll. She’s aware of Nightwood Theatre and our mandate and she felt it would be a perfect fit for this show. We were very inspired by the story and how it came to be. So we watched the video, reviewed the materials, and then began thinking about the logistics of bringing it to Toronto.

BG: And how did you bring it to Nightwood and Toronto?

BB: Since the production had toured before, that was very helpful to us. But one of our biggest challenges was finding a venue to put it in. Since we don’t have our own venue, we’re at the mercy of the availability of other theatres. [Nirbhaya] requires a specific stage size and we wanted a specific capacity for the audience of this show. And it was at the last minute when we found Harbourfront. Margaret wanted to get a Canadian tour for the show, so we ended up forming a strong relationship with the Cultch in Vancouver, where the show is, currently, and together we applied for funding from the Canada Council of the Arts.

BG: What common themes or elements do you see in the current Nightwood season?

BB: I love this season because of its diversity of story. There’s a lot of different stories being told. I think they’re all extremely impactful and relevant to now… to this time period. I think that they are entertaining as well as thought provoking. They grapple with issues that hit home for everyone. They are interesting and compelling.

BG: Can you tell me a bit more about your role, and what the most challenging and most rewarding aspects are?

BB: Well, I’m the managing director. Rewarding, for me, is definitely seeing the productions on stage and talking to people about them after. Whether they like them or not, I always find it to be really interesting conversation pieces about how the art affects people… what they take away from it. By and large, I have never had a conversation with someone who has disliked the work we put on stage, so that’s really rewarding to get that positive feedback and the detailed feedback as well. It’s not just ‘oh that was a great show,’ there’s always something specific that hit them or that resonated with them. Challenging is always financing, looking after the various budget lines, the nail biting as you’re watching the box office and hoping that you hit your targets and that people are going to come out and see the shows. That is always challenging. In regards to rewards, I always enjoy working with our staff and our community, the theatre community. The networking is great – so supportive and helpful.

Stay tuned for parts two and three where I speak with Artistic Director of Nightwood – Kelly Thornton, and the Writer/Director of Nirbhaya – Yael Farber!

 nirbhaya-BIG-header

Written and directed by Yael Farber,
Presented by Nightwood Theatre in association with Amnesty International present an Assembly, Riverside Studios and Poorna Jagannathan Production.

Nirbhaya was inspired by true events that occurred in December of 2012 in India, when a woman boarded a bus heading homeThe piece is a tapestry of personal testimonies, which tears away the shame that silences survivors of sexual violence.

When: November 18-29

Where: Harbourfront Centre Theatre

Tickets: $20-45. Purchase here.

For more info, visit Nightwood Theatre’s website.