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Photo by Julie P Adams Photography

Photo by Julie P Adams Photography

'O Henry Christmas' cheers at Scarborough Theatre Guild

Will McGuirk December 3, 2018

By Joe Szek

“Christmas has arrived early for the Scarborough Theatre Guild and its’ patrons. A bit of research revealed that Howard Burman has adapted the stories and characters that make up an 'O. Henry Christmas'.

It is Christmas Eve, Manhattan, New York City. The year is not specified; however, I am believing it to be near the turn of the twentieth century upon viewing the costumes. Several down on their luck, homeless and broken individuals are gathered around a fire beneath a bridge. On-duty police officer Guido (Baruch Ashoro) appears. He would prefer to be at home with his family but is on the lookout for someone on the lam who likes to use “big words” (Larry Westlake). The others who are warming themselves by the fire agree to hide this man and to share with him what little food and drink they have on one condition – that this man tells the hopeful stories he claims he writes to cheer them all on this Christmas Eve.”

Read more at Inside Looking In here ->

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Port Hope Capital Arts Theatre's 'King Arthur' panto is a knight to remember

Will McGuirk November 26, 2018

By Joe Szek

A bit of background on the British tradition of pantomime, first. Pantos are usually performed in the winter and re-tell children’s much loved and revered stories with a lot of silliness and laughter to help all of us get through these dark days ahead. At times, the performers might break character and start laughing at all the zaniness, but audience members will expect this to occur and it does a few times in the production. That’s the appeal behind the panto as we don’t take anything seriously, not for a second.

Read more at Inside Looking In here ->

Left: Coral Benzie as Gertie, Liam Donovan as Will Parker and Laura Currie as Ado Annie. Photo by Raph Nogal Photography

Left: Coral Benzie as Gertie, Liam Donovan as Will Parker and Laura Currie as Ado Annie. Photo by Raph Nogal Photography

Joe Szek sees modern relevance in 'OKLAHOMA!' presented by Scarborough Music Theatre

Will McGuirk November 12, 2018

By Joe Szek
Theatre Reviewer

It’s a long one, but this 'Oklahoma!" is still entertaining even though ‘times have changed’

Clocking in at nearly three hours with one intermission, I’m still amazed Messrs. Rodgers and Hammerstein’s ‘Oklahoma’ draws in the crowds. It was the first collaborative effort between the two men who would then go on to write and score other audience favourites including ‘The Sound of Music’ and ‘The King and I’. Yes, there are tuneful ditties, corny jokes, and puns to make an audience laugh; nevertheless, there is a darker side to this story given our current world context that I’ll address later.

Read more at Inside Looking In ->

Photo by Raph Nogal Photography

Photo by Raph Nogal Photography

Whitby Courthouse Presents “Next To Normal”

Will McGuirk November 12, 2018

By Paul Love
Guest Reviewer

“Next to Normal” tackles the important — and often misunderstood — topic of mental illness in an unflinching manner. The brainchild of Brian Yorkey (lyrics and original book) and Tom Kitt (music), it found great success in its original run on Broadway, and is now being staged at Whitby Courthouse Theatre.

Diana Goodman (Catherine Marzola) is a caring wife to Dan (Brian Hargan) and mother to Natalie (Sophia Daunt) and Gabe (Devin Dos Santos). We discover that Diana has been battling bipolar disorder for more than 16 years, and this has greatly tested the strength of the Goodman family. The approach of modern Western medicine to treat mental illness —throwing medication at the problem — is clearly on trial here, as the medical treatments Diana receives to make herself more “normal” only seem to make matters worse.

Catherine Marzola portrays Diana as a woman who genuinely cares about her family, but who has moments where they feel like strangers to her. Ms. Marzola makes us feel Diana’s confusion, detachment, and fear very succinctly in a performance that is both powerful and subtle. Her quiet, inwardness contrasts nicely against her bombastic song moments, where her great singing voice lights up the stage.

Brian Hargan presents a Dan who is struggling to hold his family’s world together, particularly when Diana is absent (physically as well as emotionally). He is likeable and funny, adeptly mining laughs from the audience, but then just as quickly tugging at your heartstrings with a moment of deep melancholy. Add a powerhouse singing voice to the solid characterization, and you’ve got one masterful performance.

Photo by Raph Nogal Photography

Photo by Raph Nogal Photography

Taking on the role of Gabe with abandon and a tireless energy — and an excellent singing voice to match it — is Devin Dos Santos, who presents Gabe as a typical teenager — staying up late and ignoring his parents — but also atypical in the way he spends much of his time away from his friends, doting on his mother, almost sensing when she’s struggling, and doing everything he can to pick her up. It is in the moments where he fears losing a connection with his mother that Mr. Dos Santos wonderfully contrasts his gleeful high spirits with a devastating fear and sadness.

As the younger sister living in her brother’s shadow, Sophia Daunt imbues Natalie with a tough, evasive exterior protecting the sad, lonely, young woman inside who just wants to connect and be appreciated. Her struggle to maintain a semblance of a life amid the turmoil of her mother’s illness is such a believable portrayal that it makes Ms. Daunt’s Natalie instantly relatable. Her incredible singing rings with such passion and energy that you are riveted whenever she has the stage. The chemistry she shares with Nathan Simpson, as Natalie’s love interest, Henry, makes for some great moments between these two characters as they desperately try to create a little umbrella of happiness amid Natalie’s stormy family life. Mr. Simpson also displays some great comedic instincts in his brief scenes.

Photo by Raph Nogal Photography

Photo by Raph Nogal Photography

Yorkey and Kitt didn’t give the performer playing the dual roles of Dr. Madden and Dr. Fine a lot to do in this show, but I would be remiss if I didn’t mention Jay Da Costa’s standout “rock ‘n roll moments” as Dr. Fine.

Almost acting as the seventh member of the cast is Erastus Burley’s stunning set. It is not often that you see a set that encapsulates and combines a play’s setting and main thematic elements so perfectly. The majority of the two-level space is representative of the Goodman household, but is presented in an altered fashion: a kitchen framed at one side by a monotonous, greyed-out pyramid of cans that stack off into the distance; a tangled mess of empty picture frames (possibly representing Diana’s lost memories), starting at a small table by the door, climb the wall and grow out of control up to and along the ceiling; more anonymous, greyed out appliances and containers are stacked wall-like along one side of the upper level; and a huge, dishevelled wall of clothing stage centre of the upper level, the centre of which acts as an entrance. It’s as though we’re seeing the clutter and the chaos of everyday life through the lens of Diana’s mind.

I have always thought that a musical theatre production that is performed with a live band instantly places itself in a higher class. Kudos to the talented band that gave so much energy and soul to this production.

Director Shael Risman keeps the action flowing nicely from scene to scene, never allowing any moments to feel bogged down, and using the marvelous set to his full advantage. Mr. Risman makes a beautiful choice with the final number by having a video screen display a montage of people (alive and deceased) who have struggled with mental illness, such as Robin Williams, Jim Carrey, Margot Kidder, and Marilyn Monroe. The most indelible of these images is the final one, of Mr. Risman’s brother, Carey, who lost his own battle with mental illness 22 years ago.

Whitby Courthouse Theatre’s production of “Next to Normal” is not to be missed, and if you want to see it you should act quickly because tickets are selling out very fast. Remaining performances are November 15th, 16th, 17th, 22nd, 23rd, and 24th at 8 pm, with a 2 pm matinee on Saturday, November 17th. Your best bet for getting tickets would be to visit the website.

Photo by Raph Nogal Photography

Photo by Raph Nogal Photography

Photo by Phil Ireland

Photo by Phil Ireland

Durham Shoestring Performers' “The Long Road” ends this weekend

Will McGuirk November 8, 2018

By Paul Love
Guest Reviewer

“The Long Road” is Shelagh Stephenson’s exploration into the realm of grief, loss, and forgiveness, based on prisoner research, and produced for the first time at London’s Soho Theatre a decade ago. The Durham Shoestring Performers are currently presenting this intense drama.

A happy, unassuming family is torn asunder when Danny Pritchard, a mere 18 years old, is killed by a young stranger (Katie Lunman) in a random, senseless attack. Left to pick up the pieces of their broken lives are Danny’s mother, Mary (Raissa Chernushenko), father, John (Kevin Shaver), and his older brother, Joe (Carey Risman). Each member struggles in their own way to come to terms with Danny’s absence from their lives.

I must say that it was a refreshing choice by Director Joe Szekeres to keep the play set in London while dispensing with potentially distracting British accents.

As Danny’s brother, Joe, Carey Risman is locked in and ready to go from the second the lights come up. His opening monologue, wherein he describes the moment where he witnessed Danny’s murder, is a punch to the gut that immediately and succinctly sets the tone for the entire play. The way in which his Joe is giving an account of the events of the murder, while trying to make sense of them at the same time, is remarkable. Mr. Risman creates a character who is very human and real. His struggle to be loved by parents who are emotionally damaged is heartbreaking.

Photo by Phil Ireland

Photo by Phil Ireland

Kevin Shaver presents us a father who is dealing with his grief by finding a means of escape from the pain. At first he takes up running, but eventually that gives way to a deep cycle of drinking. Mr. Shaver portrays John as a proud man who doesn’t want to be treated any differently than he was before Danny was killed. Seeing John struggle to maintain his sense of dignity while the alcohol turns him into a stumbling, disheveled, angry man is tragic. In lesser hands, this character could’ve been easily unlikeable, but Mr. Shaver makes you hurt right along with him and hope he finds his way back.

Katie Lunman plays the young killer, Emma Price, with a put-upon energy that perfectly belies the frightened young woman inside. Much of the time, Ms. Lunman’s Emma grandstands from behind her carefully constructed emotional wall, smirking and ranting about the evils of avocado and which liqueurs are the best. It’s in the moments where Emma struggles to pull down the wall and connect with someone — anyone — that Ms. Lunman is truly riveting to watch. Patti Wilson, as social worker Elizabeth McKellan, gives you the sense of a woman who is adept at keeping her emotions in check even when they’re bursting at the seams, leaving Ms. Wilson to do some wonderful characterization with her eyes. The contrast created by these two performances is powerful to watch.

Mothers are arguably the centre of every good family, and Raissa Chernushenko’s performance as Mary is the beating heart of this production. Not content to accept the notion that she needs to move on with her life, Mary struggles with why it has happened and what must she do to forgive her son’s killer, if anything. Ms. Chernushenko’s journey of emotions from deep sadness to confusion, anger, hope, fear, and frustration while she screams and sobs and struggles to keep her surviving family intact is heart-rending and a wonder to behold.

Mr. Szekeres staged the production well; movement was kept to a minimum, appropriately supplanted by the powerful dialogue of this piece. The transitional music by Elius Caruso struck just the right tone, and the Peter Katz song “Forgiveness” made for a poignant finish.

“The Long Road” has only two remaining performances — November 9th and 10th at the Arts Resource Centre, 45 Queen St, Oshawa. Both shows are at 8 pm. Tickets are available at the door or visit the website for more information.

Photo by Phil Ireland

Photo by Phil Ireland

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