The second part of The Room’s experiment on the brain premieres at SummerWorks in Toronto. Check it out.
Posts Tagged ‘SummerWorks’
Red Machine: Part Two
Tuesday, August 4th, 2009The passion of the blogs
Wednesday, January 14th, 2009A look back on a good year in the theatrosphere
By Simon Ogden and Ian Mackenzie
Time to put 2008 to bed? Good idea. But not before we take one last look at the year that was in theatre blogging. And what a year it was! From epic online dust-ups to Internet-wide collaborations, here’s our list of last year’s greatest moments in theatre blogging:
“The Empty Spaces – Or, How Theatre Failed America.”
The American monologuist Mike Daisey’s scathing editorial for the Seattle-based The Stranger newspaper argues that American theatre has been irreversibly damaged at the hands of corporate commodification. It quickly becomes the most widely discussed theatre essay of February.
The Great “Value of theatre” Debate.
For one day in March, the Ohio-based blogger Matt Slaybaugh of TheatreForté organized a theatrosphere-wide discussion to answer one simple question: “What is the value of theatre?” More than 32 different blogs from around the world weighed in on the topic that day – and yet surprisingly few common themes emerged. That theatre’s online diarists could not reduce the craft to tidy soundbites is welcome evidence of the art form’s complexity.
The SummerWorks “Expression” video controversy.
The Toronto-based SummerWorks Theatre Festival promo video depicts some of the city’s most highly regarded women playwrights acting like bimbo valley girls – up-talking and saying “like” a lot. “Expression” sparked an all-out brawl among Toronto’s theatrical intelligentsia. Some called it demeaning, some called it transgressive, others called it smart marketing. But no one called it late for dinner.
Professor Scott Walters “retires” from theatre blogging.
After a lengthy monologue explaining his Tribes model of running a theatre company, and some highly personal bare-knuckle scrapping in his comments section, the resident professor of the theatrosphere calls it quits again in May. He’s back posting within a couple of days; posts sporadically for a few months; and then officially reboots his blog again earlier this week.
The proliferation of the Canadian theatre blogs.
Although theatre blogging exploded in the U.S. a couple of years earlier, 2008 was the year theatre blogging officially took flight in Canada. Here’s a quick, incomplete survey of the current landscape:
- Daniel MacIvor’s notebook – Halifax
- Compass Points – Ottawa
- Struts and Frets – Ottawa
- Third Wall Blog – Ottawa
- Canadian Theatre Festivals – Ontario
- Time and space – Toronto
- Mooney on theatre – Toronto
- Notes from the three Cs – Toronto
- NSAA – Toronto
- Off the Fence – Toronto
- One big umbrella – Toronto
- Play Anon – Toronto
- Spinning/and/spinning – Toronto
- SummerWorks Blog – Toronto
- The TAPA blog – Toronto
- Theatre is territory – Toronto
- The Starving Artist – Toronto
- The Wrecking Ball – Toronto
- Tracking Righteousness – Toronto
- Gypsy Roar – Hamilton
- Mooseguts Live – Winnipeg
- Green Thumb Theatre – Vancouver
- Lois in La La Land – Vancouver
- Otherwise – Vancouver
- Pi Theatre – Vancouver
- PuShing It – Vancouver
- Theatre for People Who Hate Theatre – Victoria
- The Next Stage – Vancouver
- Vancouver on stage – Vancouver
- Grinder’s Grumblings – Wellington
- Nestruck on theatre – National
And the list keeps growing. Thankfully.
Canadian artists rally online over $45 million goverments arts cuts.
The Canadian arts community unites against Stephen Harper’s Conservative government following its controversial $45 million cuts to Canadian arts programs; sets the national theatrosphere ablaze – including dozens of reprints of playwright Wadji Mouawad’s scathing response to Harper and the birth of the arts advocacy group Department of Culture.
Content is king for a day.
Well, several days actually – after Tony Adams drops a post called “Content” in which he wonders aloud why no one on the Internet ever discusses the content of their shows. The topic has legs.
The age of the guest post.
Theatre is territory and its west coast sister blog The Next Stage host a series of guest posts that help inspire their writers to think outside the blog:
- Mackintosh, MacIvor, Murphy – Alison Broverman
- Lumi-not-go – Michael Wheeler
- Selling at the Fringes – Ian Mackenzie
- Everything I know about theatre today I learned from blogging – Simon Ogden
- The Art of Business (series) – by Rebecca Coleman
- What’s the deal with being an actor in Tokyo? (series) – Benjamin Johnson
- Toronto theatre – Defining the landscape – M.K. Piatkowski
- The importance of being burnished – Scott Walters
Don Hall gets divorced.
The usually irascible Don Hall blogs about the dissolution of his marriage, morphing the normally incendiary Angry White Guy in Chicago blog into a tender and affecting piece of Internet theatre.
The Globe and Mail gets its theatre blog on.
After showing all of England how to theatre blog (by founding the Guardian UK’s theatre blog roundup Noises off), J. Kelly Nestruck returns home to Canada to fill the prestigious national theatre critic slot at the Globe and Mail. He promptly starts a Globe theatre blog – Nestruck on theatre – and seals the deal on theatre blogging’s legitimacy in Canada.
Canadian theatre critics invite unprecedented dialogue with artists.
Notorious Vancouver theatre critic Colin Thomas challenges theatre artists to change their status quo and engage him directly about his opinions online – none do (yet). J. Kelly Nestruck does likewise.
How Mike Daisey failed American Theatre.
“The Daisey” goes head-to-head with American Theatre Magazine.
The theatrosphere unites to say goodbye to Harold Pinter.
Legendary American playwright shuffles off his mortal coil and goes on to join the choir invisible; the chorus of the theatrosphere sings his praises down here.
Well, it’s clear that our list could be twice as long and still wildly incomplete. Lest we forget Isaac Butler’s oddball Hair Blogging, George Hunka’s syllable-heavy Organum series, Matt Freeman’s awesome Star Wars fixation, Nick Keenan’s constant innovations, James Comtois’ horror film posts, Leonard Jacob’s prolific flamboyance, Paul Rekk’s island of insight, Adam Thurman’s paradoxical mission, those anonymous ponderings at 99Seats, Travis Bedard’s extreme connectedness, Alison Broverman’s fashionesta quipping, or Chris Wilkinson’s succinct reporting of this whole fine mess . . . oh theatrosphere, we hardly know you and yet we bleed for your love.
Suffice to say, 2008 was the year that many will remember as the year theatre finally made a successful transition to digital.
You can also find this here.
SummerWorks picks
Wednesday, August 13th, 2008Today’s the last day to catch some SummerWorks action. Does anyone have any recommendations? Funny SummerWorks stories? Top picks?
Sex and the Saudi
Wednesday, July 30th, 2008
Publicity shot from the upcoming SummerWorks show, Sex and the Saudi.
How is this show not going to be awesome?
Miss Marker at SummerWorks
Thursday, August 9th, 2007
For more info on this SummerWorks show, click here. And if you get a moment, check out this production’s awesome press stills gallery. Wow! It’s great to see so much care taken with the media materials – and is it just us, or are these images so clearly not digital?
Here’s the company’s mandate statement:
“Making Face Theatre is a new Toronto-based company dedicated to producing high-calibre and thought-provoking theatre through a process of creative collaboration and critical investigation.”
Lift up your shirt!
Tuesday, August 7th, 2007
Essential Collective Theatre Co.’s Hard Ways at SummerWorks.
Click here for more info.
SummerWorks in Toronto
Sunday, August 5th, 2007 Here’s the festival’s Artistic Vision statement:
“SummerWorks supports work that has a clear artistic vision and explores a specific theatrical aesthetic. It encourages risk, questions, and creative exploration while insisting on accessibility, integrity and professionalism. SummerWorks is the place where dedicated, professional artists are free to explore new territory and take artistic risks. Rather than getting larger, we strive to get better. We look to introduce professional artists from diverse communities to each other and be inspired by our similarities and differences.”
Here’s the link to the festival’s website.
And a press still from one of the productions in the festival, In Full Light:
New political theatre
Thursday, August 2nd, 2007
Ok. We already know that the good people at The Wrecking Ball are wicked smart. (Click here for ample evidence.) The even better news is that they’ve put together a special SummerWorks show for this Saturday night. (Click here for more info.)





