The Great Gatsby probes empty American Dream

The Great Gatsby probes empty American Dream

As you enter the Walterdale Theatre these nights, there’s a party going on. There’s music, the clink of glasses and the babble of happy voices. You have stepped into the middle of one of Jay Gatsby’s infamous parties. There’s merriment everywhere – the ladies in their fringed Charleston dresses and the men gussied up in […]

REVIEW: Heavy elephant drama inspired by Lucy

REVIEW: Heavy elephant drama inspired by Lucy

As Romney, the marketing consultant in Workshop West’s production of Conni Massing’s new play Matara observes, “Everyone knows you really can’t call yourself a zoo without an elephant.” By now, everyone in Edmonton should know that this probably sums up much of the attitude that keeps Lucy, our lone elephant, from being trucked to warmer […]

Office comedy sparkles with gung-ho MacEwan cast

Office comedy sparkles with gung-ho MacEwan cast

9 to 5 was not a great movie when it was released in 1980 – but it tapped into slumbering feminist passions that were just stirring at the time. It also featured terrific performances from three powerhouse stars, Jane Fonda, Dolly Parton and Lily Tomlin. It was a big hit. The inevitable Broadway musical followed […]

REVIEW: On the Verge lost in the underbrush

REVIEW: On the Verge lost in the underbrush

In the 1800s, heroic (male) explorers set out from Mother England to tame and colonize the unruly dark lands beyond the British border. What history failed to note was that Mary Baltimore, Fanny Cranberry and Alex Cafuffle decked out in proper Victorian long dresses, pith helmets and brollies, and as intrepid as any male explorers, […]

FALLEN ANGELS: Varscona Farceurs Scandalize Citizenry with Lascivious Hijinks

FALLEN ANGELS: Varscona Farceurs Scandalize Citizenry with Lascivious Hijinks

Back in the Spring of 1925, that young theatrical turk Noel Coward was at it again. He wrote four plays that year – but the one that had the bluestocking brigade most up in arms was Fallen Angels. It featured two young wives, typical Coward creations, pampered, pretty and flighty, admitting to premarital sex – […]

REVIEW: Austen powers heart-warming Christmas romance

REVIEW: Austen powers heart-warming Christmas romance

This is the time of Jane Austen. We are told that the early 19th Century author sells more books now than she ever did. Just look at the number of stage productions and seemingly unending movies based on her slender output that continue to grace stage and screen. They’ve even turned unfinished novels into movies […]

Hannah Moscovitch birth control drama a wrenching reality show

Hannah Moscovitch birth control drama a wrenching reality show

The title of What a Young Wife Ought to Know may read like one of those bogus pseudo-righteous early 20th Century self-help pamphlets given to prospective brides. In the hands of playwright Hannah Moscovitch, the latest Theatre Network play is anything but a tract against “unnatural means” (read: birth control) to prevent having babies. It […]

Take off, eh – to the Mayfield’s best, most Canadian jukebox musical!

Take off, eh – to the Mayfield’s best, most Canadian jukebox musical!

Be prepared for a warm bath in nostalgia – and Canadian nostalgia at that. The Mayfield Dinner Theatre has achieved notable success with its jukebox musicals – at least judging from its unending Niagara of tribute shows. Over the years they have mounted British Invasions, various appreciations of Buddy Holly, Roy Orbison, Patsy Cline, pop […]

Carole King musical a thrilling spectacle of sheer talent

Carole King musical a thrilling spectacle of sheer talent

Beautiful is a jukebox musical unlike any you have ever seen – and from Buddy to Mamma Mia you’ve probably seen a lot of them. The show opened in San Francisco in 2013 and proved to be such an immediate success that it was transferred, almost whole, to Broadway a year later. The much-praised Carole […]

TONIGHT, I HUNT: Myth and reality fuse in powerful Redpatch

TONIGHT, I HUNT: Myth and reality fuse in powerful Redpatch

Early in World War 1, the British High Command had difficulties in distinguishing the Canucks (considered inferior) from the Brits in the ranks. So, at the Battle of The Somme, a single red patch was attached to the Canadians’ uniforms. Some of those soldiers were First Nation and Metis. In fact, some 4,000 volunteered to […]

The Comedy Company balances hilarity with horror

The Comedy Company balances hilarity with horror

Neil Grahn is a very funny fellow. We first realized that when, with three other jovial people calling themselves Three Dead Trolls in a Baggie, Grahn helped solidify the Fringe in its very earliest days. Grahn has been around making us laugh in various ways ever since. (Full disclosure: We worked on a number of […]

Blood: a Scientific Romance marred by gothic melodrama

Blood: a Scientific Romance marred by gothic melodrama

The Maggie Tree is a small feisty local company that dedicates itself to theatrical projects initiated by women. Under that rubric they have given us a series of well-produced plays that have spoken to a wide audience of theatre-goers. Perhaps the best known was Nancy McAlear’s disquieting mounting of Belinda Cornish’s anti-animal testing Category E […]