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Recent Posts
- EYBLER QUARTET’S MASTER TAKE ON HAYDN & JULIA WEDMAN’S MEMORABLY PROBING SONATAS AND PARTITAS OF BACH ….. RECENT PLEASURES IN THE ARTS: NOVEMBER 2024
- AN UNMISSABLE CANDIDA AT THE SHAW FESTIVAL & A PRICELESS JUDI DENCH BOOK, SHAKESPEARE: THE MAN WHO PAYS THE RENT
- RECENT PLEASURES IN THE ARTS—FILMS, BOOKS, CDs
- CROW’S THEATRE DOES AN UNFORGETTABLE UNCLE VANYA AT THEATRE AQUARIUS UNTIL JANUARY 27
- ANNA-JULIA DAVID: SOPRANO HAS “A DREAM COME TRUE” AS SHE DEBUTS WITH OPERA ATELIER AS AMOUR IN GLUCK’S ORPHEUS AND EURIDYCE – OCTOBER 26 TO NOVEMBER 1 AT TORONTO’S ELGIN THEATRE
Recent Comments
- What an Album Release! - Frank Horvat on FRANK HORVAT: “FOR THOSE WHO DIED TRYING” – COMPOSER’S NEW CD ON ATMA, WHICH WAS INSPIRED BY “THE MURDER OR DISAPPEARANCE OF HUMAN RIGHTS ACTIVISTS IN THAILAND,” EXPLAINS, “THE 35-MOVEMENT STRING QUARTET HONOURS EACH VICTIM”…..A REVIEWER’S INTERVIEW WITH PEOPLE IN THE ARTS
- Christos Hatzis on TIM CORLIS: COMPOSER OF SOUNDING THUNDER: THE SONG OF FRANCIS PEGAHMAGABOW, AT TORONTO SUMMER MUSIC FESTIVAL ON JULY 23, REMEMBERS, “THE BIGGEST TURNING POINT IN MY LIFE WAS WHEN I MADE A DECISION TO MEDITATE REGULARLY AND DEVOTE MY ARTISTIC TIME TO WRITING MUSIC THAT SPEAKS FROM THE HEART” … A REVIEWER’S INTERVIEW WITH PEOPLE IN THE ARTS
- catherine thompson: canadian long rider, instrument maker, musician, composer, performer, visual and material artist, now in the mountains of northern thailand, declares “it’s important to not get too too comfortable and, in that, whenever possible, i on CATHERINE THOMPSON: CANADIAN LONG RIDER, INSTRUMENT MAKER, MUSICIAN, COMPOSER, PERFORMER, VISUAL AND MATERIAL ARTIST, NOW IN THE MOUNTAINS OF NORTHERN THAILAND, DECLARES “IT’S IMPORTANT TO NOT GET TOO TOO COMFORTABLE AND, IN THAT, WHENEVER POSSIBLE, IT IS VALUABLE TO REMEMBER WHAT IT FEELS LIKE TO BE DIMINISHED, TO BE UNCOMFORTABLE, TO BE IN DANGER.” … A REVIEWER’S INTERVIEW WITH PEOPLE IN THE ARTS
- Tafel Fan on Contact
- Dudlow on ABIGAIL RICHARDSON-SCHULTE: AWARD-WINNING COMPOSER-IN-RESIDENCE OF THE HAMILTON PHILHARMONIC DECLARES “WHAT CONCERNS ME IS POP CULTURE REPLACING THE ARTS AS CULTURE, THE DECLINE OF MUSIC EDUCATION IN SCHOOLS, AND THE AGING OF CLASSICAL MUSIC AUDIENCES…A REVIEWER’S INTERVIEW WITH PEOPLE IN THE ARTS
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Tag Archives: Shaw Festival
TOP GIRLS, PETER AND THE STARCATCHER, THE BUFFALO PHILHARMONIC AND A VEGAN WEEKEND AT THE SHAW FESTIVAL PART I
Photo by David Cooper Top Girls Not long ago, I met a university student who very confidently declared, “I like Stephen Harper.” “And why is that?” I asked, incredulous. “Because he gets things done,” was his answer. “And at what … Continue reading
Posted in shaw festival, the arts, Uncategorized
Tagged Caryl Churchill, Niagara on the Lake, Shaw Festival, Top Girls, Vegan, Vikki Anderson
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SWEET CHARITY AT THE SHAW FESTIVAL: ENERGY WITH A HUMAN HEART
In the Shaw Festival production of Sweet Charity, director Morris Panych and his impressive cast reach under the stylized and safely distant entities that musical characters can easily become and find there a vibrant and unforced humanity. I took almost … Continue reading
IBSEN’S THE LADY FROM THE SEA AT THE SHAW FESTIVAL: ANOTHER MUST-SEE GEM IN THE COURTHOUSE THEATRE
A naked woman lies atop a solitary, eroded, but commanding rock formation. A duet of female voices is gradually consumed by an electronic soundscape. The woman turns away from the spirit-dominating darkness around her and, looking toward us, seems consumed … Continue reading
LAUGHTER UNCONFINED: SHAW’S YOU NEVER CAN TELL AT THE SHAW FESTIVAL TO OCTOBER 25
A few seconds of animation footage of a boat directed full speed ahead at the audience, a floating inflated fish and bubbles ascending merrily, and one feels present here the spirit, perhaps, of Terry Gilliam of Monty Python days. And … Continue reading
THE PHILADELPHIA STORY: MOYA O’CONNELL CLAIMS TRACY LORD AS HER OWN
On the day of Tracy Lord’s second shot at marriage, we have a diverse bunch of mostly upper crust folks before us. Little sister Dinah is played bubbly with existence and prone to mispronunciation, in her saddle shoes, by Tess … Continue reading
Posted in shaw festival, Uncategorized
Tagged Gray Powell, moya o'connell, Patrick McManus, Shaw Festival, The Philadelphia Story
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A POIGNANT AND FINELY MODULATED JUNO AND THE PAYCOCK AT THE SHAW FESTIVAL
These are poor people in “the Boyle family’s two-roomed flat in a tenement house in Dublin,1922” and at the outset of Sean O’Casey’s Juno and the Paycock, Marla McLean as daughter Mary spiffs up her shoes with her bare hand. … Continue reading
Posted in shaw festival, Uncategorized
Tagged Jackie Maxwell, Jim Mezon, Juno and the Paycock, Mary Haney, Sean O'Casey, Shaw Festival
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A LOVELY SUNDAY FOR CREVE COEUR BY TENNESSEE WILLIAMS
The stage brightens up twice for Tennessee Williams’ A Lovely Sunday for Creve Coeur, first through Louise Guinand’s lighting design and then, again, with the appearance of Deborah Hay as vulnerable Dorothea. Dorothea is wide-eyed and comically light doing her … Continue reading
SMALL TOWN SNOBBERY AND SCANDAL IN SHAW FESTIVAL’S WHEN WE ARE MARRIED
Three decidedly Yorkshire couples, with each celebrating twenty five years of matrimonial union, are informed that, officially, they are not married. Prior to this shattering revelation, pretty devastating stuff for when the play takes place, it has been obvious to … Continue reading
THE CHARITY THAT BEGAN AT HOME: CAST AND DIRECTOR CHRISTOPHER NEWTON IN BRILLIANT FORM AS THE SHAW FESTIVAL RETRIEVES A FORGOTTEN GEM
If The Sea, though first produced in 1973, is set in 1907, the rarely produced The Charity that Began at Home by St John Hankin, another theatrical gem at the 2014 Shaw Festival, was actually mounted on stage a year … Continue reading
THE PHILANDERER BY SHAW AT THE SHAW FESTIVAL: “I LAUGHED WITH DELIGHT FROM BEGINNING TO END”
OR THIS….. For maybe four decades, on every trip to London, I have made it a point to visit the National Portrait Gallery and sink, each time, into the gaze of one or two different female subjects who hang there … Continue reading
Posted in shaw festival, Uncategorized
Tagged Gord Rand, Lisa Peterson, Marla McLean, moya o'connell, Shaw Festival, the philanderer
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