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The Simcoe Mall, vaulting into the future of Downtown Oshawa

Will McGuirk February 11, 2017

I took a wander around downtown this afternoon. It is rather dismal to be honest but hey its February. There are some bright spots however. I dropped into the old stomping ground, used to be The Vault, it is now The Simcoe Mall and I would recommend it for a stop-in. It has to be the best smelling flea-market I've been in ever and its bright, clean and full of enthusiastic entrepreneurs running their own booths.

I spoke with a chap who identified himself as John, he runs G&G Music Memorabilia. He says he is under no illusions about the location and the social issues the downtown faces but he says there has been an uptick in his business. He has a very fine collection of music and movies in all formats as well as the merchandise, Elvis, KISS, Rolling Stones etc.

It was gratifying to see the building still in use, those of us involved in The Vault put a lot of time, thought and effort into keeping the doors open for the year it ran. A crowd of young folk took it over afterwards and did a fine job with it. They built it up to a point where the folks behind the Simcoe Mall could envision it as a place where they could invest for their the future.

So if you happen to wander downtown, take the time to visit the Mall, say hi and maybe even buy something - best collection of music/concert DVDs I've seen thats for sure.

Photo supplied

Photo supplied

Our man for all reasons, Joe reviews OLT's A Man For All Seasons

Will McGuirk February 5, 2017

A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS
OSHAWA LITTLE THEATRE
Producer:  Claire Crossman, Director:  Geoff Coulter

Forty year ago, the Oshawa Little Theatre staged A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS at Eastdale Collegiate, and the company is to be commended for remounting Robert Bolt’s epic drama now in performance at the Russett Avenue building.  Director Geoff Coulter writes what a privilege it is to have faced the challenges in re-staging this multi dimensional period piece of Tudor history while exploring the issues of an informed conscience, supreme authority and silence all rich in text and sub textual meaning.  It might be a good idea for future audiences in the next two weeks to ensure they are aware of the play’s historical context, otherwise it is easy to be completely lost in this sometimes quickly moving plot.

OLT’s production elements, once again, become a feast for the eyes, and I’m sure Stage Manager Ellie Patte and her team had to have tremendous organization backstage to serve up the goods.  Costumes by Alex Amini Costume Design capture magnificently the colours, contours and shapes of the capes, gowns, hats and dresses of the Tudor era.  Geoff Coulter and Steven Fraser’s set design makes use of levels and of entrances and exits within the theatre so our eyes are constantly moving when characters are introduced.  Colin Hughes’s lighting design is effectively taut even when candles and shadows are used to heighten dramatic intensity.  During the first Saturday performance, a few actors did not find their light and were often in shadow when speaking.  I’m sure this will be rectified immediately at the next performance.

With a 15-minute intermission, OLT’s production runs three hours so pacing is of utmost importance to maintain momentum in this heavy dialogue driven play.  Mr. Coulter has clearly been prepared to remain true to the playwright’s words while being faced with the daunting task of engaging a twenty first century audience to care about a loyal subject and learned man, Sir Thomas More (a heart felt performance by OLT president Michael Schneider), principled in beliefs and traditions of the Catholic faith whose church was extremely corrupt.   

Periodically, there were moments at this performance where pacing slowed considerably on account of a number of the actors delivering lines upstage and important plot information was lost.  Many of the audience members around me appeared puzzled as they did not hear what was said.  Again, I’m sure this will be rectified at this week’s performances.   

Chris Furlong is consistently believable and always in the moment as the Common Man.   In knowing the historical context that A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS is a story of kings, cardinals, lords and ladies, it is odd to see a commoner break the fourth wall and speak to us.  But through this Brechtian characterization, we initially trust and like this man until we see that even commoners are also subject to bribery and corruption.

As Cardinal Wolsey, Oshawa city councillor and actor Rick Kerr evokes beautifully the corruption within the Church at this time in the cardinal’s necessary efforts to secure the divorce for King Henry VIII and his first wife, Catherine of Aragon.  Will van der Zyl as Thomas Cromwell emphasizes even further the rampant corruption as the King’s right hand man (read ‘spy’ into this description as well).  Mr. van der Zyl’s black costumes along with his swarthy physical appearance render him one to fear especially at the conclusion of Act One where he assaults the untrustworthy Richard Rich (a focused performance by Anthony Labriola).  Garret Lee as the Duke of Norfolk convinces us of his desperation and heartbreak when More, his friend, will not administer to the oath of the Act of Succession.  Eryk Burns as the Spanish ambassador Signor Chapuys is sly as he slowly tries to get More to open up about his decision in not supporting the divorce.  

In spite of a twenty-year absence of doing theatre, James Grist’s performance as the King is highly persuasive and yet stealthy.  In one moment, we see a royal who wants to remain jovial and on good terms with his friend, More, while in the next minute we see a King who frighteningly threatens his friend when he clearly tells him, “Your conscience is your own affair, but you are my Chancellor”.

The members of More’s immediate family are conflicted on the patriarch’s decision to remain silent on matter of the King’s divorce.  Alison Irons delivers a steely and feisty performance as Lady Alice (Thomas’s second wife) who is fearful of losing her place in society on account of More’s silence.  A tender bond of compassion and filial love exists between More and his daughter, Margaret, played sensitively and humanely by Kathryn Fraser.  More’s initially head strong future son in law William Roper, played with passion by Tyler Cox, turns to respect for the father figure who clearly wants to confront head on this war on the Catholic Church.

There are wonderful moments of true ensemble work in this production, butit is Michael Schneider’s resonating performanceas the martyred saint who propels the action of this story forward.  We witness the creation of a real life human who has faults and weaknesses like any commoner.  At the trial scene in this production, we witness a human who moves the audience with high emotion as More knows he has nowhere to turn.  The very silence that he thought would free him is the silence that sends him to his death.

A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS continues at the Oshawa Little Theatre, 62 Russett Avenue, February 9, 10, 11, 12, 16, 17 and 18. Tickets are available at the door before each performance.  Visit www.oshawalittletheatre.com for further information.

 

DSP presents the Good People of South Boston, Joe takes a look

Will McGuirk January 22, 2017

GOOD PEOPLE by David Lindsay-Abaire

Produced and Directed by Carolyn Wilson
DURHAM SHOESTRING PERFORMERS

I don’t think I’d want to mess with any of these ‘Southies’ in David Lindsay-Abaire’s GOOD PEOPLE.  The title is most certainly an appropriate one for this engaging 2011 script of character development now in performance by The Durham Shoestring Performers at Oshawa’s Arts Resource Centre.  Two music versions of “Good People” by Paul Lamb & Sean McCann with performance by Great Big Sea AND by Jack Johnson weave nicely in between each of the scene changes to keep us aware of ‘where do all the good people go’.

Carolyn Wilson’s set design functions well in this intimate performance space. Hanging boxes, which look as if they are suspended without wires, are turned by the Stage Managers to indicate the various locales.  Rather than having the set pieces dragged out from back stage, most of the furniture is stored neatly and practically at stage left with positioning in place when necessary.  Phil Ireland’s lighting design effectively highlights and delineates the various locales from a back alley behind a dollar store, an apartment kitchen, a church bingo hall, a doctor’s office and an upscale living room.  A nice bit of fun and acknowledgement to the stagehands who help set the various scenes.

In her Director Notes, Ms. Wilson states that Mr. Lindsay-Abaire wanted to write lovingly about his south Boston roots, and he (along with Wilson’s skillful direction) has created memorable ones.  Ms. Wilson has finely molded her solid cast to become very real working class south Bostonians with acid tongues.  All six actors create distinct personalities who are funny, opinionated, fiery and, sometimes, vulgar and who don’t or won’t put up with anyone’s crap to be perfectly honest.

Margie Walsh (a gutsy and courageous performance by Gillian Woodhouse) is fired from her job at the seedy dollar store.  Beneath her tough exterior lies a good yet scared woman who wonders what the future holds for her and her developmentally delayed adult daughter, Joyce, as they live pay cheque to pay cheque.  Ms. Woodhouse convinces us immediately she IS Margie.  We constantly root for her as she stands up for herself, empathize and want to hug her when life throws her a curve, and are horrified especially in the second act when she tries to blame an old boyfriend, doctor Mike Dillon, for something that might have happened years ago.

There are strong performances from the other five cast members of this true ensemble effort.  Newcomers to the DSP stage Gordon Bennett and Laka Ford-Williams play Doctor Mike Dillon and his wife, Kate with credibility.  Mr. Bennett has clearly worked diligently during rehearsals to sustain a continued nervous apprehension in his conversations with Margie since he is trying to blot out this sordid part of his life.  Margie’s unexpected arrival at Mike’s office in the first act and at his home in the second act provides a bona fide power struggle of verbal jousting on many levels for Bennett, Ford-Williams and Woodhouse that becomes highly engaging for the audience to watch.   Our emotions run the gamut for Ms. Ford-Williams as we feel for Kate since she is unaware of the truth of the situation between Mike and Margie.  When the truth is finally revealed to Kate, Ms. Ford-Williams’ performance becomes strong in her silence of how she handles her husband and Margie.    

Rounding out this cast are Margie’s rather obnoxious, catty and profane girlfriends, Jean and Dottie (passionately and gleefully played by Patti Wilson and Laurie Scattergood).   At times, these bitchy women are so mean to Stevie (Kyle Robertson), Margie’s supervisor, who fires her from the dollar store.  Robertson’s performance is genuinely heartfelt that we feel badly why Stevie chooses to endure all of this abuse especially during the Bingo game.  By the end of the play, we learn that Stevie is one of the ‘good people’, and we know where he goes.

Accents of any kind always require work from all professional and non-professional actors.  Kudos to the DSP performers as they have done their homework in trying to sustain the lilt of the New England and Boston area; however, there were moments where it was difficult to hear the projected dialogue while maintaining the cadence and rhythm of the accent.  I’m certain attention will be paid to the New England accent for this week’s performances.

Ben Brantley wrote in his review of the original New York production “the characters [in GOOD PEOPLE] often accuse one another of being too mean or too nice, too hard or too soft. And they’re right on all accounts…as there’s nothing pure about the goodness or badness of the folks who inhabit this play. This makes them among the most fully human residents.”  The DSP cast has created fully human residents of Southie who, by the end of the play, may or may not be good people.  Pay a visit to see them for a most entertaining evening and to chat with them after the performance.

GOOD PEOPLE continues at Oshawa’s Arts Resource Centre, 45 Queen Street (behind Oshawa City Hall) January 25, 26, 27 and 28 at 8:00 pm.  Tickets may be purchased at the door before the curtain.

 

Come From Away well worth a gander; Joe Szek on the Royal Alex production

Will McGuirk December 11, 2016

COME FROM AWAY

ROYAL ALEXANDRA THEATRE
Book, Music and Lyrics by Irene Sankoff and David Hein
Directed by Christopher Ashley with Choreography by Kelly Devine

I’m certain each of us can recall where we were during two pivotal historical events that forever altered North American society from the early 1960s to present day.  I was two years of age when President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, Texas; however, I can recall exactly where I was and what I was doing that warm September 11, 2001 morning when the Manhattan skyline was decimated as the Twin Towers in New York’s financial district came crashing down and over three thousand lives were lost.  

I was teaching a class at my school when a colleague came into the classroom and announced this news to all of us.  My initial reaction was one of annoyance as I wondered why this individual was interrupting the lesson.  That annoyance turned to confusion on all parts as the students and I were looking at this purveyor of information and trying to decipher what was being told to us.  The classroom went silent as the students looked to me, I looked at them and none of us knew what to say.  Then the array of other emotions followed over the next few hours, but one thing was clear- there was this enormous void of fear and emptiness in knowing that our world had changed not necessarily for the better.  Could any hope or goodness spring from this deep chasm?  The answer to this question is a resounding YES.

The newest musical COME FROM AWAY is now in performance at Toronto’s newly restored Royal Alexandra Theatre.  Irene Sankoff and David Hein have written a brilliant, poignant, sad, moving and, at times, amusing account of that time when 38 planes had been diverted to Gander, Newfoundland on September 11, 2001. 

According to 9/11 American Airlines pilot, Beverley Bass, “The people of Gander were just phenomenal to the more than 6,000 passengers who were waylaid for five days.  Gander citizens treated these passengers like family and brought them into their homes.”  Even as I write this, my eyes well up because I am reminded of what Anne Frank had written in her diary, “In spite of everything, I still believe people are good at heart.”  COME FROM AWAY is not about the sadness of 9/11, but about the goodness that came out of it.  This is a musical masterpiece that finds joy, friendship and compassion in the midst of all this sadness. You Tube it to see highlights of this production. 

At this time, tickets are scarce and premium seats are $275 from what I understand.  If you are going to see COME FROM AWAY, you are fortunate and lucky as you will be entertained but most importantly you are going to be moved on many levels.  The audience was on its feet immediately at the curtain call for these very talented and highly professional twelve performers who play a variety of roles throughout the 110-minute piece sans intermission. 

The set is a simple one of barn board wood along with chairs and tables that can be moved easily throughout each scene.  I noticed many moments where back lighting highlighted the action on stage in the creation of spectacular tableaux.  The ten-piece band rocks the stage with moments you would swear Great Big Sea was in the house.  At times, the music overpowers the singers, but the audience didn’t mind, as it is the joy of all on that stage that captivates our hearts. 

These professional actors have created such dazzling moments on stage, and space does not allow me to address each one.  I’ll only mention two:  The Screeching In party at the local pub is riveting for its choreography and the song itself.   Jenn Colella as pilot Beverley Bass brought all of us to tears in her solo of‘Me and The Sky’, especially in knowing that she made aviation history twenty years earlier as the first female captain for American Airlines.

If you don’t have tickets, tell your significant other and/or friend(s) that it will be time for a trip to the Big Apple to see this one.  This production has toured to other major American cities with rave reviews by audiences there.  And yet I have a concern.

 A few years ago, there was a marvellous production of JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR at the Stratford Festival with a phenomenal reception by audiences.  Even Sir Andrew Lloyd Webber saw this production and gave it his blessing in its transfer to New York because he thought it would do well.  The New York critics gave it a tepid to lukewarm to maudlin reviews and the show closed quickly. I certainly hope this will not happen to COME FROM AWAY as this story needs to be told.  If anything, our world needs goodness, joy, compassion and hope right now.

COME FROM AWAY plays at Toronto’s Royal Alexandra Theatre until February 7 when it then transfers to New York City.  Visit www.mirvish.com for information.

Whitby's The Little Details are taking big strides in unique gift market

Will McGuirk November 29, 2016

It began small but it grew, its the Little Details, they make a difference.

Leanne Fahy and Lorraine White

Leanne Fahy and Lorraine White

Leanne Fahy and Lorraine White are the minds behind a new business, The Little Details, one which is grabbing hold of folks and decking them in customized warm wooly socks, scarfs, hoodies and raglan Ts.

For now, as befits a Canadian start-up, the focus is on seasonal wintery items, Xmas gifts and decor. Tree feeling cold? Wrap it in a custom branded message skirt. Santa need a sack or a name plated wooden gift box? Does the wall need an Advent calendar? Meet The Little Details. They even make cozy wraps for tabletop cutlery.

Fahy and White met and became friends about a decade ago, bonding over roots, family, and an interest in the arts, there may have been some wine involved. Fahy has a background in fashion design, White in web design, together they figured out a way to stay home with their respective families, raising children, pets, gardens and raising some extra dollars at the same time. The time is now two years.

The common roots Fahy and White have, have grown into a viable business, one that is branching out. The branches are reaching out from local town of Whitby, Ont., to their global village. The Little Details is as Canadian and Cottage Country rootsy, as late evening blanketed shoulders and hands cupped around warm chocolate, as friends and bonfires, maple marshmallows and the Hip’s “Bobcaygeon”.

The internet makes it easier to find the others, those interested in the same things, those who value the same things, those who are about the same things. The internet allows an idea to find firm footing and the right idea, like a plant in the right environment, will raise itself.

The Little Details is that idea, the idea that details matter, the idea that customized matters, the idea that, like these two creative maker friends, other people want that something special, a something that speaks to them and their values and their family. And the idea that an idea plus friendship can take root and grow, if you take care of the little details.

VISIT THEIR WEBSITE HERE -> 

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