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Archive for October, 2010

Franco’s Blog: How did ‘the most multicultural city’ in Canada end up here?

Like it or not, Rob Ford has emerged as the new leader for Toronto.
I was born and raised in Toronto and to be honest, it’s unrecognizable to me this morning. How did ‘the most multicultural city’ in Canada end up here? There’s a lot of speculation, and with good reason, that the arts will be cut. When political leaders say that the arts are not a priority and should be cut, what I hear is, ‘I’m not interested in anyone’s point of view but my own and perhaps those few close friends who are part of my inner circle’.

The role of the artist is to help others understand the world from a different perspective. To be closed to hearing a different viewpoint is a huge worry for me. It’s especially concerning if you are a leader.

This quote is from a lecture that Christopher Hitchens gave at UofT a number of years ago that I believe is apt for today, ‘the morning after’.

It is not just the right of the person who speaks to be heard it is the right of everyone in the audience to listen and to hear. Every time you silence somebody you make yourself a prisoner of your action because you deny yourself the right to hear something.” Christopher Hitchens

Later next month, I’m going to hear Christopher Hitchens and Tony Blair debate at Roy Thompson Hall: “Be it resolved religion is a force for good inthe world”. (THANK YOU RAVI). http://munkdebates.com/home.aspx

300 TAPES: School Matinee Thursday December 9, 11am

Introduce your students to an original piece of Canadian theatre with experimental storytelling, groundbreaking sound design and innovative choreography.

300 TAPES by Public Recordings

Student matinée: Thursday December 9, 11a.m.
Free post-show chat + study guide (click here to download pdf)
Student Groups 10+: $12.
The Theatre Centre, 1087 Queen Street West. (google map).

Imagine recording your life on 100 tapes. Record. Rewind. Play. Listen. Stop.

The three performers – Joe Cobden , Frank Cox-O’Connell and Brendan Gall (East of Berlin – Sterling Award nomination) – recorded their lives onto 100 tapes each. These tapes form the source material for an intimate theatre piece of fact and fiction that explores how memories are shaped (and warped) by time, our own ideas of ourselves and the eyes (and ears) of others.

Merging theatre, sound art, choreography, text and light, 300 TAPES transforms the theatre space into a giant conceptual tape recorder in which the audience and performers are immersed.

300 TAPES will

  • introduce students to an original piece of Canadian theatre with experimental storytelling, groundbreaking sound design and innovative choreography.
  • showcase new techniques, technologies and staging which communicate and enhance specific aspects of the performance and audience engagement.
  • stimulate discussion and thoughts about authenticity, truth and memory. Why do we seek authenticity or truth? How is our identity created by the stories we tell?
  • demonstrate to students how to use their own memories/life experiences as the source for role play/performance.

Recommended for Grades 10+.

DATES: December 1-12, 2010. Tuesday – Saturday 8pm, Sunday 2pm.
STUDENT MATINEE THURSDAY DECEMBER 9, 11AM, PLUS A POST-SHOW CONVERSATION WITH COMPANY.
(post-show chat also available on other dates. Please enquire when booking.)
PRICE: STUDENT GROUPS of 10+: TICKETS $12 EACH. For every 12 seats purchased, receive one FREE chaperone ticket. (A $1 credit card transaction fee applies.)
BOOKING: contact Ruth Waters at 416-538-0988 or ruth@theatrecentre.org
LOCATION: The Theatre Centre, 1087 Queen St. West, downtown Toronto. M6J 1H3 (google map)

Press Release: 300 TAPES by Public Recordings

Download 300 TAPES Media Kit (pdf) – click here.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PLEASE ADD TO LISTINGS THROUGH TO DECEMBER 12, 2010
Media Contact: Ruth Waters, The Theatre Centre, 416-534-9261 ruth@theatrecentre.org

300 TAPES by Public Recordings

Co-produced by Public Recordings with Alberta Theatre Projects and The Theatre Centre
Developed as part of The Theatre Centre’s Residency Program

Opens Wednesday December 1- Sunday 12 December, 2010 at The Theatre Centre

Co-created by Ame Henderson and Bobby Theodore with
Performers Joe Cobden, Frank Cox-O’Connell and Brendan Gall
Sound artist Anna Friz
Scenographer Trevor Schwellnus
Dramaturg Vicki Stroich
Stage manager and archivist Gillian Lewis

Imagine recording your life on 100 tapes. Record. Rewind. Play. Listen. Stop.

Three men recorded their lives onto 100 tapes each for this intimate archive of fact and fiction that explores how our memories and identity are shaped (and warped) by time, our own ideas of ourselves and the eyes (and ears) of others.

With a groundbreaking sound design, a choreography of our everyday twitches and three performers revealing everything, this bold experiment in storytelling thoughtfully and playfully provokes questions about authenticity.

300 TAPES was developed collaboratively over 2 years as part of The Theatre Centre’s Residency Program. The three performers’ recordings of their own personal memories are used as the source material for 300 TAPES.

It is thrilling to present Public Recordings’ 300 TAPES at The Theatre Centre, in the very space the piece was developed as part of our Residency Program. We’re also delighted to join forces with Alberta Theatre Projects in introducing this groundbreaking new work to audiences in Calgary.” Franco Boni, Artistic Director, The Theatre Centre

The Theatre Centre’s 2-year Residency Program supports independent artists to create new work. Artists are provided with space, funding and mentorship to explore and develop an idea and create new work that is both provocative and innovative.

Public Recordings supports and promotes the works of dancemaker Ame Henderson and her collaborators. It is recognized for its distinctive style that incorporates ideas and aesthetics from other disciplines and questions recognized performance models.

Following the premiere of 300 TAPES at The Theatre Centre, it will premiere at the 25th Annual Enbridge playRites Festival of new Canadian Plays, Alberta Theatre Projects, Calgary, in February 2011. www.ATPlive.com.

LISTING INFORMATION: 300 TAPES by Public Recordings at The Theatre Centre
Co-produced by Public Recordings with Alberta Theatre Projects and The Theatre Centre
DATES: 1-12 December, 2010. Tuesday – Saturday, 8pm. Sunday 2pm.
LOCATION: The Theatre Centre, 1087 Queen Street West, Toronto ON M6J 1H3
TICKETS: $22. Student/Senior/Artworker discounts $15. Groups 10+ $12
BOX OFFICE: 416-538-0988
MORE INFO: www.theatrecentre.org
Supported by The Canada Council for the Arts, Canadian Heritage, The Ontario Arts Council. The Toronto Arts Council, George C Metcalf Foundation, The Ontario Trillium Foundation.

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Community Message Board: Discover Queen Street West

The Theatre Centre has teamed up with Betty Ann Jordan to offer you a special discount for a tour in and around Queen Street West on Saturday October 23, 2010 – just $5/person or $10/two (normally $15/person, $25/two)
Art + Design + Culture Walking Tours With Betty Ann Jordan, Art InSite

Rain or shine, on Saturday October 23, Theatre Centre patrons are invited to take advantage of a special deeply discounted insider’s tour of West Queen West with Betty Ann Jordan of Art InSite tours. The group meets in the Gladstone Hotel lobby and tours behind-the-scenes there and at the Drake Hotel, then heads out on walk that includes art, design, urbanism and local history. The walk is larded with anecdotes about and encounters with creative people in the area (Queen West between Gladstone and Shaw primarily, plus Ossington between Queen and Dundas West.)

CLICK HERE for more info.

OFFER
Valid on Saturday October 23, 2010: $5/person or $10/two (normally $15/person, $25/two)
RSVP by October 20, 2010 to Betty Ann Jordan, 416 979 5704; 416 453-3120 (cell); bajordan@sympatico.ca. Quote ‘Theatre Centre Offer‘ when booking. First-come, first-served basis. 15 persons maximum/outing.

Community Message Board: The Music Gallery’s AVANT NEW MUSIC FESTIVAL V

The Music Gallery presents AVANT New Music Festival V:“What Is Real?
October 16-24 • Toronto, Canada

JEFF MILLS/ JOHN OSWALD/ MISSION OF BURMA/ THESE ARE POWERS
MISSY MAZZOLI’S VICTOIRE/ DONATIENNE MICHEL-DANSAC
MYRA DAVIES’ 50 MINUTE RING/ A RECONSTRUCTION OF PIERROT LUNAIRE
THE WORLD PREMIERE OF THE HALO™ BALLET and more!

2010 marks the fifth edition of the Music Gallery’s X AVANT New Music Festival running from October 16 to 24 in Toronto, Canada.

Guest Curator Gregory Oh explores the theme of “What Is Real?” through his programming — looking at notions of authenticity in music. Can objectivity and art co-exist? How do our preconceptions influence what we hear? Through nine days of dynamic programming, X AVANT V runs the gamut from Detroit techno to modern dance and video game mash-ups, from creative re-workings of Wagner and Schoenberg to roof-raising rave-ups by post-punk pioneers.

Learn more and see full festival listings at www.musicgallery.org.

All access festival passes are available now for $75 via www.ticketweb.ca. Festival concerts take place at The Music Gallery, SPK (Polish Combatants Hall) and The Garrison.

Program highlights include:
• World Premiere of Halo™ Ballet, an original Toronto production featuring modern dance in the “Halo” video game environment, choreographed by Julia Aplin to new music by Aaron Gervais
• Canadian exclusive club show by American post-punk pioneers Mission of Burma, featured in Michael Azerrad’s book, Our Band Could Be Your Life
• The 50 Minute Ring — Wagner’s 15 hour Ring Cycle performed in 50 minutes, by Vancouver multi-media artist Myra Davies
• Festival opening night party featuring a live A/V performance by Jeff Mills, one of the legends of Detroit techno
• French vocalist Donatienne Michel-Dansac performs the Complete Récitations by Georges Aperghis, one of the most epic feats of contemporary vocal music — only the second time this has ever been performed in history!

A Man Stands Naked on the Stage….

Co-curator and Director Sarah Garton Stanley tells us about the latest incarnation of THE BOOK OF JUDITH; preparing for the workshop that took place on Sunday October 3 2010 in St Catherines, and prior to its tour in Ontario and dates in the UK later in the year.

“Judith Snow says that transformation is action. There is no arrival. It is all about arriving. Coming back to this project is many things, but one thing remains true: There is no arrival…

Our first night. We have rented an accessible space. And while it is a very friendly space, accessible it isn’t. Had Judith not arrived with her handy piece of bevelled 2 x 4 (a piece that obviously came into being as a result of misnamed accessible space) then the rehearsal would not have been able to happen. Thanks to her experience and foresight we were able to continue. Thanks Judith.

The first quote of Judith’s in the show is “this is not the world I would have designed”.

The plan was that we would work together for 3 nights with the choir and then take an 8-day break. The following week we would meet again, but this time in St. Catharines. Our hours would be longer and there would be travel.

The plan was not a good one. The hours were too long. We missed all kinds of things. And so by the time we actually arrived in St. Catharines, we had reduced it to 2 trips and much shorter hours there. Better, but still hard.

During this 2-week period we went through 4 drafts and learned a bunch of new songs. We cut songs. We added songs and then we cut songs that we added. We took the fun out of things and then – thankfully – let the fun back in.

All the while we remained in conversation with Alex Bulmer (our original choir leader) and Judith Snow – our ongoing inspiration for the piece, the choir and all the various collaborators we are lucky enough to have in our midst. Creating on a clock is hard. We all know this. Creating on a budget is too. But creating without being creative about how we create is just plain bad. And I think part of this process lacked the necessary creative thinking required to make things light. I – personally – hope that I have learned from this. I am excited to think that I may have.

We are in preparation for taking this show to the UK. A great challenge for us! We are also planning a tour of Ontario! There is SO VERY MUCH to learn.

Like that people get sick. Like that travel is not possible for everyone. Like that an hour for one is never going to be an hour for another. Like that it is easy to lose the thread if you don’t have the spinners there to reel you back in. Thankfully we are awash in spinners.

We have new names. All of us. Matthew Goldberg (Michael) Shauna Coupland (Sarah), Pippa Mclaren (Wanda Fitzgerald) and the choir too! All new names. Except Judith Snow. It is – after all – The Book of Judith and we felt it important that Judith’s name and her art remained real and rooted in all the fictionalizing that goes on in her play. Judith remains of two minds about this.

So here is the wonder, the irony and the madness of it all. On Friday night of our second week, we lost a choir member to fatigue and other commitments. This was very sad. And after rehearsal on Saturday night Judith came down with a fever. Come Sunday morning the writing was on the wall – she would not be able to come and do the show.

So here is what Sunday looked like. A brand new draft, some new music, Judith arranging for her van to still help with transport of some of our company members, some of our members arriving an hour late, and a complete re-staging of the piece and new approach as well. In 2.5 hours before the dinner break.

At 5PM the pizzas were laid out, and the beginnings of an alternate ending was beginning to take shape. This was the ending that Judith wished for us to try and so we did. In our new draft, the character of Jason Ailey (Frank G. Hull) leaves the proceedings in protest over the unfolding of events. So we thought that at play’s end it might work for him to return and dress Matthew. A scene of a brittle but meaningful conciliation. The presentation would begin at 6PM

But instead

Matthew stands naked on the stage. He holds his arms open and bellows into the massiveness of the market square in St. Catharines, he screams into the sonic blanket of a beautiful new song by Andrew Penner and says:

“Who will dress me?” and he repeats this until he realizes that not only is he naked, but he is also the only one on the stage. The rest of us leave him as the reality of his delusion starts to fully grab hold.

Moments later… all of us stare on shock as audience members tell us how to end our play (apparently the deets are not to be repeated in print… but if you ask me I will tell you – for sure)

This is the play. (That is our closing song and it has never felt more appropriate)

Judith was not there, she was ill at home. But it felt as though she were with us. And that the gifts that occurred that night were gifts that came to all of us because transformation is about arriving. There is to be no arrival with The Book of Judith, just a healing crusade… Or something else …because we are just going to try and hold onto the threads that the spinners spin.

Glasgow and Liverpool in November and back to Ontario next spring. You can follow us on our blog at http://bookofjudithplay.blogspot.com Thanks for following us on our journey and come out and see where to next bit of thread leads…!”

Sarah Garton Stanley

Community Message Board: Toronto Youth Theatre, fall audition notice.

Toronto Youth Theatre is offering opportunities for students to extend their current skills and training.
Below are details of forthcoming auditions/shows.

TYT Senior: ages 14-20
Show: Chorus Line
Auditions: Saturday October 30 and Sunday October 31, 2010
Performances: February 3-20, 2011

TYT Junior: ages 7-13
Show: Charlotte’s Web
Auditions: Saturday January 8 and Sunday January 9, 2011
Performances: March 10-27, 2011

TYT Senior: ages 14-20
Show: Hairspray
Auditions: Saturday February 26-Sunday February 27, 2011
Performances: May 12-29, 2011

Get involved behind the scenes: Technical Apprentice Program also available. Visit www.torontoyouththeatre.org for full information.

The TYT is a charity dedicated to giving young people the opportunity to work and grow in a professional theatre environment.

For more information www.torontoyouththeatre.org
info@torontoyouththeatre.org 416-915-6747 x 221
Lower Ossington Avenue
100A Ossington Avenue, 2 Blocks North of Queen Street.

Community Message Board: Soundstreams 10/11 Concert Series

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To Book TICKETS to Soundstreams’ Concert Series Click Here

The Horrible, Blood Drenched History Of Eldritch Theatre

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Eric Woolfe discusses his new horror puppet play, MADHOUSE VARIATIONS.

“Beware!

What I am about to tell you is absolutely true, but the knowledge is arcane and dangerous and many lives will be grimly lost in the telling of it…

Eldritch Theatre was formed in 1898 after an impertinent Ouija board informed Randolph Pomeranski that his soul would be devoured by the Great Old Ones That Were And Shall Be Again unless he produced a series of puppets plays exploring the dark and foreboding mysteries of the Dread Necronomicon of Abdul-Alhazred. Unfortunately, none of these plays were ever performed, because when it came time to write grant applications, the Ouija Board would only spell gibberish.

One hundred years after Pomeranski’s blood-sopped demise in the knotting room of an unlicensed wig factory, Eldritch Theatre reformed under the artistic directorship of Eric Woolfe. Driven by madness, and inspired by frequent night terrors, Eldritch Theatre’s creative team began producing such uncanny works of ghoulish terror as…

The Strange & Eerie Memoirs of Billy Wuthergloom, a suburban-gothic musical horror about puberty and the supernatural.

Sideshow of the Damned, a viscera-soaked phantasmagoria of giddy putridity.

Grendelmaus, which concerned the chilling tale of a doomed love, and the ancient, malevolent rodent that destroyed it.

Dear Boss, a historical accurate by entirely implausible exploration of the Jack the Ripper mystery, complete with raining fish.

And The Babysitter, a slasher-puppet play about the eternal, archetypal struggle between the Final Girl and Knife Wielding Maniac.

The plays received numerous DORA nominations, and a handful of wins, but a secret cabal of mysterious occults, bent on the destruction of the Universe has kept the existence of Eldritch Theatre, and it’s puppet-based works of horror, secret from all but a select, and vaguely cursed few.

MADHOUSE VARIATIONS is poised to change all that…

But be warned!

To view it is to expose yourself to a dangerous, supernatural contagion. Some of you will leave the theatre, infused with a nearly miraculous powers – the power to view the Universe in all its unshrouded chaos. Others will be destroyed by what they witness, their brains torn asunder by madness and despair. For, as the Mad Arab Abdul Alhazred wrote in his dread Necronomicon, “The most merciful thing in the world is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents… Some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and safety of a new Dark Age.”

In order to appease the Vile Creatures that lurk in the shadows- not the spaces we know, but between them- Eldritch Theatre has planned a special late night show on October 30th- the Eve of All Hallows Eve. Old Folk tales tell us that on this night, Hungry Ghosts may break through crevices into our world, seeking to take root in puppets and other simulacra. At this performance especially, audiences are warned to be wary… And may wish to come in costume to confuse the Evil Spirits. The tickets for this show are only $13.13, to reflect the fact that most patrons will not go home with their sanity intact.

Other, slightly safer shows, will be sold at the regular price.

Click here for more info about MADHOUSE VARIATIONS.

Please visit www.eldritchtheatre.ca if you wish to survive the horror to come…”

Community Message Board: 7a*11d International Festival of Performance Art

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7a*11d International Festival of Performance Art
Contemporary live art from across the globe
October 21 – 31, 2010
www.7a-11.ca

The Eighth 7a*11d International Festival is the culmination of 14 years of our experiences as a collective, and two years of planning for the over 30 artists that will descend on Toronto this year. We are excited to present a larger festival than ever before ¬ with daily and evening performance art events presented in association with our gallery partners ¬ Mercer Union, XPACE Cultural Centre, and Toronto Free Gallery; and with adjunct events at Tranzac Club, The Gladstone Hotel and various outdoor public sites around the city.

For the 2010 festival, we have assembled a stunning variety of emerging and established artists from Alberta, Belgium, China, Colombia, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Japan, Mexico, Norway, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Québec, Saskatchewan, Singapore, Sweden, UK, USA and Venezuela.

In collaboration with Toronto Free Gallery, we offer Performance Art Daily, a symposium and series in which invited artists talk about their work as well as the performance practices in their own cities and countries, with guest lectures and panel discussions dissecting the compelling issues of global performance.

Bookmark www.7a-11d.ca and check back often for updates, programming changes and the locations of our various off-site artists. Read up on the sights and insights of the festival at 7a11d.blogspot.com where we have commissioned two outstanding writers, Daniel Baird and Natalie Loveless, to chronicle each event.

For the past several festivals we have highlighted the work of iconic Canadian artists, designated as Éminences Grises, ³one who exercises great power or influence secretly or unofficially.² Not so secretly, this year we are pleased to honour Michael Fernandes and Sylvie Tourangeau. We invite you to pay special attention to their presentations.

ARTISTS
Anne Bérubé (Canada)
Jeffery Byrd (USA)
Maurice Blok (Finland)
Étienne Boulanger (Canada)
Robin Brass (Canada)
Chuyia Chia (Singapore)
Brian Connolly (N.Ireland)
Teresa Dillon (UK)
Michael Fernandez (Canada)
Jürgen Fritz (Germany)
Kaori Haba (Japan)
Stein Henningsen (Norway)
Berenicci Hershorn (Canada)
Julián Higuerey Núñez (Venezuela)
Roddy Hunter (UK)
Chen Jin (China)
Jolanta Lapiak (Canada)
Sara Létourneau (Canada)
Pancho López (Mexico)
Jamie McMurry (USA)
Helge Meyer (Germany)
Carlos Monroy (Columbia)
Agnes Nedregard (Norway)
Irma Optimist (Finland)
Francis O¹Shaughnessy (Canada)
Gwendoline Robin (Belgium)
Karen Spencer (Canada)
Joakim Stampe (Sweden)
Victoria Stanton (Canada)
Henry Adam Svec (Canada)
Sylvie Tourangeau (Canada)
Jocelyn Tremblay (Canada)
Natalyn Tremblay (Canada)
Martine Viale (Canada)
Bojana Videkanic (Canada)

Full schedule available on-line on October 1
Festival catalogue available October 4
Festival Hotline: 416-822-3219
Mailing list: info@performanceart.ca

7a*11d would like to acknowledge the support of our funders and the generosity of our partners: Canada Council for the Arts, Ontario Arts Council, Toronto Arts Council, FRAME (Finnish Fund for Art Exchange), Singapore International Foundation, University of Ulster, P3rforman4c3,
Wallonie-Bruxelles International, Konstnärsnämnden (Sweden), FADO Performance Art Centre, Toronto Free Gallery, Mercer Union, XPACE Cultural Centre, Images Festival, Gladstone Hotel, imagineNATIVE Film + Media Art Festival, Red Sky Performance, Vtape, Fuse Magazine and Beehive Magazine.

The 7a*11d collective is: Gale Allen, Annie Onyi Cheung, Shannon Cochrane (founder), Paul Couillard (founder), Jess Dobkin, Adam Herst, Johanna Householder (founder) and Tanya Mars. 2010 Festival Intern: Amy Jenine Wong.