
Dear Artists and Friends,
The Festival of Ideas and Creation kicks off today! This coming week, we have a number of exciting events that explore aspects of the creative process, with some of Canada’s most incredible, visionary and provocative artists. Plus, on Saturday night, we are thrilled to host an intimate conversation a special party with new Artistic and General Director Matthew Jocelyn. Meet Matthew and join us to celebrate the festival‘s first week!
Here are some of the week’s highlights. To reserve your seat please call the Box Office 416-368-3110 or email festival@canstage.com
Visit www.canstage.com/festival for the full festival lineup.
All events listed are FREE and are at the Berkeley Street Theatre, 26 Berkeley Street, unless otherwise noted.
In Conversation: Daniel MacIvor with designer and collaborator Kimberly Purtell
Wednesday June 10, 7 p.m.
Meet the Governor General’s Award-, Siminovitch Prize- and Obie Award-winning writer, director and performer behind See Bob Run, Wild Abandon, The Soldier Dreams, You Are Here, Marion Bridge, A Beautiful View, How It Works, His Greatness and solo works House, Here Lies Henry, Monster and Cul-de-sac created in collaboration with creative partner Daniel Brooks. MacIvor and Brooks will be presenting their newest collaboration This Is What Happens Next at Canadian Stage in April of 2010. Join Daniel MacIvor, one of Canada‘s most seminal artists, and design collaborator Kimberley Purtell as they discuss projects of the past, present and future.
In Conversation: Electric Company’s Kim Collier, Zuppa Theatre’s Alex McLean and the TD Dream in High Park‘s Sue Miner, with the Cooking Fire Festival’s Kate Cayley on creation in outdoor spaces
In Partnership with The Cooking Fire Festival
Thursday June 11, 7 p.m.
Canada‘s public spaces have long been used as performances venues, offering professional productions in unusual locations to the surprise and delight of audiences. This conversation with directors who work in outdoor spaces across the country examines the relationship between experimental theatre, outdoor venues and public spaces and looks at how the interaction of art and public space challenge both the space and the art. Hosted by Kate Cayley, artistic director of The Cooking Fire Festival of Theatre in Dufferin Grove Park, this conversation features award-winning theatre practitioners from Toronto, Halifax and Vancouver.
In Conversation: Activism and the Arts: Toronto Voices
With Donna-Michelle St. Bernard, Catherine Hernandez, Marilo Nunez and Chy Ryan Spain
Friday, June 12, 7 pm
Join us for an interactive conversation with theatre artists making a difference in their communities. Hosted by Donna-Michelle St. Bernard, General Manager of Native Earth and Playwright-in-Residence at Obsidian Theatre, this roundtable discussion features acclaimed theatre practitioners who consistently push the envelope and ensure their voices and issues are heard on stages across Toronto. The evening also features rhymes and rhetoric by Donna-Michelle’s thinly veiled alter ego, Belladonna the Virtuous, and readings by distinguished artists, including excerpts from Catherine Hernandez’s Coyote and Future Folk, Marilo Nunez’s Three Fingered Jack & the Legend of Joaquin Murieta, and the provocative poetry of Chy Ryan Spain. Stay after the show to mingle and share your voice with the artists!
Reading: Our Lady of Lost and Found by Daniela Vlaskalic
Directed by James MacDonald, featuring Jane Spidell and Gina Wilkinson
Saturday June 13, 4 p.m.
Do miracles still exist? Are we capable of faith? Is there room for it in our lives today? A middle-aged writer goes into her living room to water the plants and finds a woman standing there. She is the Virgin Mary. Invited to stay for lunch, Mary explains that after two thousand years of petition, adoration, and traveling she is tired and needs some R&R. An exploration of what faith means now and what it is that we believe in. A staged reading of a new play by Daniela Vlaskalic (Sister James of Doubt: a parable, and co-creator of the award-winning The Drowning Girls), adapted from the novel by Governor General’s award-winning author Diane Schoemperlen.
Special Event: Matthew Jocelyn, The Canadian Stage Company’s Artistic and General Director Designate
Saturday June 13, 7 p.m., party to follow
Meet the new Artistic and General Director in an open exchange on the state of theatre and the performing arts in Canada and around the world, and share your ideas for the future of The Canadian Stage Company. Following this open forum, we invite you to join Matthew for a celebratory party, where the conversation can continue late into the night! Based in Europe until recently, Matthew is an internationally acclaimed director of theatre and opera, a producer and an arts administrator. He was the Artistic and General Director of the Atelier du Rhin in Alsace, France, for the past 10 years. He was responsible for establishing the organization as a major centre for theatre, opera and contemporary dance – the only multi-disciplinary artistic centre of its kind in France – and for launching the Jeunes Voix du Rhin, an internationally recognized training centre for young singers. He was named Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres (Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters) by the French Ministry of Culture in July 2008, one of the country’s most prestigious arts honours.
Special Event: BASH! at The Power Plant
In partnership with The Power Plant
The Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery, Harbourfront Centre, 231 Queens Quay West, Toronto
Sunday June 14, 2 p.m.
Join members of The Canadian Stage Company’s BASH! Artist Residency Program for a guided tour and talk about the exhibit Universal Code, as part of The Power Plant’s Sunday Scene Series. Every Sunday, speakers from the world of art and beyond offer their responses to the current exhibition. Whether focusing on a single work/artist or on the entire exhibition, guest presenters draw provocative connections between the gallery’s programs and broader cultural and intellectual debates. Timed to coincide with the International Year of Astronomy, Universal Code presents responses from a broad range of contemporary artists to cosmology and ideas of the universal in our current information age, a time of significant scientific and technological development as well as rampant globalization. The Power Plant is Canada‘s leading public gallery devoted exclusively to the art of our time.
Questions? Please contact festival@canstage.com.
Sincerely,
Natasha Mytnowych & Claire Calnan
Festival Director Associate Festival Director
Posted: June 10th, 2009 under June 09 newsletter.
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