The Ā鶹“«Ć½Ó³»Fringe Festival runs until Sept. 18.
And Bella Sang With Us
Sept. 14, 16 and 17 at the Cultch
Before TVās Cagney and Lacey came real-life L.D. Harris and Minnie Miller, the first two policewomen appointed to the Ā鶹“«Ć½Ó³»Police Department in 1912. They wore the long skirts of the period, no weapons (well, perhaps a hatpin or two) and were hired, more or less, to help wayward women back into the fold. Itās a stellar cast with Sarah Louise Turner and Leanna Brodie as the two lady cops, Simon Webb, Sarah Roa and Sarah May Redmond (as Bella, the big, child-murdering immigrant woman. who, astonishingly, can be soothed into compliance by joining in the singing of the old songs, which in this production are accompanied on the piano by Matt Grinke). Written by Ā鶹“«Ć½Ó³»writer Sally Stubbs, this production is extremely polished and a decided cut above the usual Fringe fare.
The Nether
Sept. 12, 15 and 17 at the Firehall Arts Centre
There are some shows that bend your mind but The Nether turned mine right around. It makes a persuasive case for pedophiles keeping themselves and society safe by choosing to work out their sexual fantasies ā including āThe Actā ā in a cyber world. Escaping into The Nether, āPapaā indulges in his personal fantasy with a nine-year-old Alice-In-Wonderland-ish little girl. The bind, of course, is that fantasies like his must not ācross-overā into the real world and the jury is still out on whether the ārealā and the āvirtualā worlds can remain mutually exclusive. When a do-gooder detective, in hot pursuit of Papa, closes down the operation, we have to ask: what will Papa do now that heās on the real streets of Vancouver? Virtual reality as a safe place is not a new idea but the sympathy for Papa (David Bloom) that The Nether elicits is fascinating and more than a little unsettling.
Dying City
Sept. 12, 15 and 17 at the Cultch
More coffee might have helped draw me into the lives of these three characters: Kelly, a young psychotherapist; Peter, an unwelcome late night guest; and Kellyās recently deceased husband Craig who was also Peterās identical twin brother. Peter (shirt on) and Craig (shirt off) are played by one actor. But with a play that goes back and forth from present to past, and refers to the Vietnam War, Iraq, Abu Ghraib, old relationships, homosexuality, parental abuse and more, I just couldnāt hang in there past about 10:30 p.m. Most significantly, Dying City illustrates the worst case of passive aggression imaginable. You just want to tell Peter to get out and to hope Kelly quits watching TV, biting her nails and gets on with living.
A Dog at a Feast
Sept. 12 and 14 to 17 at Carousel Theatre
Alison Kelly (best known for Momās the Word) was made for the role of Janet, a tough-as-nails-but-up-against-the-ropes theatre director. Kelly is in command from the get-go and never lets go. Written by Michelle Deines, Dog at a Feast is a real meal for anyone associated with the theatre and everyone else, too. Janet, a bitchy critic (Barbara Tomasic) and a ādewyā young ingĆ©nue (Lisa Goebel) mix it up during rehearsals for the bitchy criticās not-very-good-play called Dog at a Feast which, as far as we can figure, has nothing to do with dogs eating. The dialogue is sharp, funny and right on the money. Janet, re: the process of putting up Dianeās play: āItās a f***ing hierarchy and Iām at the top.ā Kellyās at the top of her form in this fast-paced, tell-it-like-it-is gem.
War and Peace
Sept. 13 and 15 to 18 at Carousel Theatre
Not enough time to read the four volumes plus epilogue of Tolstoyās War and Peace? Check out this Ryan Gladstone one-hour, tour-de-force deconstruction. Gladstone plays all the characters ā all of whose names in āov,ā āoff,ā āich,ā āova,ā āskyā or āoy.ā Donāt worry, be happy, youāll get the drift. Gladstone gets bonus point for brilliantly lit āfootnotesā in which he digs some real dirt on Tolstoy whose first name is/wasnāt Leo but Lev and who, at the age of 82, left his wife of 48 years ā she who had transcribed by hand all 1,444 pages seven times because the publisher couldnāt read Leo/Levās handwriting. Gladstone is charmingly, enthusiastically energetic and audience-friendly as he races through decades of the Rostov family and European history.
Love is a Battlefield
Sept. 13, 16 and 17 at Revue Stage
Martin Dockery fans ā and they are legion ā will be surprised at his 2016 Fringe entry. This is sort of a mini two-hander play (with a beginning, middle and end) starring Dockery and Vanessa Quesnelle as a might be/might have been couple. They appear to be in a recording studio but thereās no mic and no recording equipment. And it seems more like the womanās living room. Quesnelle has a lovely voice and the song she sings a cappellaĀ ā āLove Is A Battlefieldā ā is beautifully, if protractedly, performed. Not completely gone is the Dockery we dote on: windmilling arms, spidery hands, shotgun delivery but in this context his tics work against credibility: these two just donāt seem to have a future. And weāre left figuring they donāt.
Great Day For Up
Sept. 12 (last performance) at Waterfront Theatre
A lot of water, blood, sweat and tears have flowed under Jonathan Youngās bridge since he was a Studio 58 student 20 years ago and when he first wrote Great Day For Up as his requisite āsolo show.ā In the black-and-white photo on the Electric Company Theatreās website, Young looks so young, so incredibly sweet and optimistic, but this 30-minute play shows a lot of existential questioning even then. Great Day For Up is so Beckett, so Waiting for Godot. It begins, āAlready? Well?ā And includes lines like, āIām looking for the moral for whatever the ābitā wasā and āHave faith in scraps.ā And yet itās not Beckett because, faint as it might seem, thereās a bit more hope. A consummate performer, Young is spellbinding to watch and with only one show to go, Iād say run donāt walk.
The Old Woman
Sept. 14, 16 and 17 at Waterfront Theatre
The titular Old Woman is writer/performer and former Ballet BC dancer John Gradyās mother. Her decline into dementia is hard for Grady to witness and it brings him face to face with his own mortality. The plot rambles but is always interesting, intelligent and wryly funny. āWelcome to your dirt napā is the way he warns fellow park users against death-by-a-rattlesnake thatās lurking in the park where he walks dogs. With his mother (whom we donāt see) losing her mind, he frets over forgetting a woman he once dated and words, words, words. What Grady has not forgotten is how to dance and the highlight of this show is a dance performance that is a homage to life, aging and death. Itās a stunning piece of choreography and a jaw-dropping ode to dance.
Bella Culpa
Sept. 12, 13, 16 and 17 at Waterfront Theatre
From Portland comes the comedy duo of Arnica Hunter and David Cantor in the sweetest bit of clowning Iāve seen for a very long time. They are servants in a Downton Abbey-type setting. Sheās in a prim, mid-calf uniform, white apron and bonnet; heās in black and white livery. And, oh, how they clean that house and rid it of mice both small and monstrously large. The show is more or less mimed with only the odd, āGet itā or āO-kayā delivered in a French accent and itās scored in the style of the old b/w films. Thereās death by scrub board, death by drowning (an over-watered sponge) and death by broom. Itās all funny, acrobatic and very, very clever. A physical comedy jewel for the whole family. I loved every minute of it.