Getting the Ball Rolling…

My bogging has been a little blogged down of late, but my excuse is a good one: I'm back in the director's chair workin' on a new piece that I wrote for the company as my contribution to this summer's Write Club. The work my lovely cohorts turned up with was breathtaking (it turns out… Continue reading Getting the Ball Rolling…

This One Goes to Eleven: Torrance Coombs

I first caught Torrance onstage last year in Bard on the Beach's production of Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead which, being one of my all-time favourite plays, I was nervously hoping they weren't going to screw up. They didn't, not by a long shot. They took a difficult play and made it look easy, top… Continue reading This One Goes to Eleven: Torrance Coombs

Must-Read Theatre Blogging…

This is great, great, great...Ian at Theatre is Territory has published a simply wonderful interview with University of Minnesota theatre prof and Broadway alum Charles Nolte, who grandly holds court on the state of theatre, reminisces about the heyday of Broadway, and dishes hilariously on working with the likes of Henry Fonda, Jack Palance, and… Continue reading Must-Read Theatre Blogging…

This One Goes to Eleven: Brad Lepp

"My dear Minerva, It was not the best of times, it was not the worst of times, it was Ottawa." On June 9th of this year, at 7:45 pm, Kristian Bruun as Frank Dickens (son of Charles), launched the first of forty cross-country performances of his play Dickens of the Mounted with this line. Beginning… Continue reading This One Goes to Eleven: Brad Lepp

Sarah Kane is my Kurt Cobain

Up until last week I hated Sarah Kane. Thought she was anathema to the theatre and pretty much civilization in general. Well, as it turns out, I'm an idiot. An idiot who just learned a great big lesson in judging a book by a single chapter, and had his already firm belief in the power… Continue reading Sarah Kane is my Kurt Cobain

Windy City Wisdom

"Art is not a victim. An eighteen month old diagnosed with a rare form of leukemia is a victim. A family losing their homes because of war are victims. Artists are not victims. Non-profit organizations are not victims; though, if you read many fundraising letters, you'd think they were. Many believe the arts are dying,… Continue reading Windy City Wisdom

Theatre is Dead, Long Live Theatre

Right, summer blogger break is officially over, as indicated by the pissy weather out of the dining room window, so it's time to resume my diligent blogging duties, instead of hanging this site on the interview series alone. Thank you to everyone who checked in during the summer, which has been one of many revelations,… Continue reading Theatre is Dead, Long Live Theatre

This One Goes to Eleven: David Jordan

In taking on the unenviable position of Vancouver Fringe Executive Director, David not only managed to put together an outstanding festival in the face of a venue-disrupting civic strike, but he also weathered a shit-storm of controversy about the Fringe's decision to try out a new idea to raise awareness and pay down its debt.… Continue reading This One Goes to Eleven: David Jordan

This One Goes to Eleven: Medina Hahn

Sherman, set the WABAC machine for the University of Alberta in the year 2000. Here we find one Medina Hahn, young, ambitious, and industrious. Looking for a way to showcase her studied talents post-ed, she and fellow student/pal Daniel Arnold figure hey, maybe we should sit down and write something for ourselves. Novel idea, that.… Continue reading This One Goes to Eleven: Medina Hahn

This One Goes to Eleven: Rhonda Dent

Rhonda has been a TV/film actor here for over a decade and decided 3 years ago to roll up her sleeves and start producing independent theatre with a vengeance. Most recently she produced and performed in Spanish Girl at the Havana. Somewhere in her busy schedule she finds time to be a freelance photographer. 1.)… Continue reading This One Goes to Eleven: Rhonda Dent

This One Goes to Eleven: Ellie O’Day

Vancouver indie theatre, allow me to introduce you to Ellie O'Day, super-publicist. The reason you want to keep making money is so that you can one day hire her so you can work less and make lots 'n lots more money. She began her career here in the '70s as Western Canada's first female rock… Continue reading This One Goes to Eleven: Ellie O’Day

This One Only Goes to Ten

If this were the Buffyverse and not the blogosphere, then the Vampire that sired my This One Goes to Eleven interview series would be Ian Mackenzie and his Ten Questions. Ian has asked me to put my money where my fangs are and submit to a little blood-letting myself. Click here to read the gory… Continue reading This One Only Goes to Ten

This One Goes to Eleven: David Benedict Brown

David finished theatre studies at Douglas College and kept his education rolling by forming Enlightenment Theatre, which launched with Collage: Homage to Kurt Schwitters at Studio 16 in December 2006. Their second effort, Zastrozzi, The Master of Discipline, just wrapped at the waterfront theatre, which David produced, acted in, and provided lighting design. He was… Continue reading This One Goes to Eleven: David Benedict Brown