Before he started racking up film and television credits, Canadian actor Victor Garber famously portrayed Jesus Christ as a puffy-haired hippie in clown makeup and a Superman shirt in the 1972 Toronto stage production of Godspell and the movie adaptation that followed a year later.聽
Subsequent versions of Stephen Schwartz鈥檚 pop musical about Jesus and the apostles have often represented Christ similarly, as a colourful harlequin-like figure. But Sara-Jeanne Hosie knew she wanted to take a different, more modern approach when she signed on to direct the forthcoming Arts Club Theatre Company production of Godspell.
鈥淚 love the original Godspell. I love the hippie, tickle trunk version of it because at the time it was written, that was present,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think bringing it forward is a good thing so other people can relate.鈥
The show is comprised of a series of musical parables, based mainly on the Gospel of Matthew. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think you need to have any knowledge of the Bible to see this,鈥 Hosie ensures. 鈥淔or any belief system, I think this show works.鈥
As director, her challenge was to make the teachings and Biblical characters relevant to modern-day audiences.
鈥淲hat I realized was that Jesus didn鈥檛 need to be a man, Jesus didn鈥檛 need to be a woman, Jesus didn鈥檛 need to be a child. It just needed to be a person that we would follow,鈥 she says.
She and her crew auditioned actors of all ages, races and genders for the lead role. In the end, it was Jennifer Copping who emerged as the obvious Messiah.
鈥淛en walked in the room and she spoke the words and she made the text so contemporary and we just knew we would follow her,鈥 Hosie says.
Meanwhile, Judas will be played by Andrew Cohen and John the Baptist will be played by youth performer Aubrey Joy Maddock, costumed in overalls emblazoned with a heart inside the familiar Superman shield 鈥 a nod to 鈥70s era productions. 聽聽
鈥淭here鈥檚 just certain things that you can鈥檛 escape with Godspell and you don鈥檛 want to escape,鈥 Hosie says.聽
The Arts Club revival takes place in a train station, a bustling hub for people from a diversity of backgrounds. Enter Jesus, who recruits a group of followers and teaches them life lessons through lively song and dance numbers. A large projection screen behind the performance area will help to bring these parables to life.
鈥淭he projection element allows us to escape the train station and go to other places,鈥 Hosie explains. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very modern approach.鈥
All of the 12 multi-talented cast members play instruments on stage, and music director Danny Balkwill (also in the cast) has freshened up the Tony Award-nominated score, which still features fan-favourite hits such as 鈥淒ay by Day,鈥 鈥淟earn Your Lessons Well鈥 and 鈥淭urn Back, O Man.鈥
鈥淧eople who have heard Godspell in the past and love it, I think, will love it tenfold after hearing the dynamic that [Balkwill] has created from the music.鈥
Though based on Biblical source material and featuring re-settings of traditional hymns, Hosie says Godspell was never meant to be about religion.
鈥淭he show is about a community where people have lost their way, they鈥檝e stopped listening to one another,鈥 she explains.
Those themes are more than relevant today in an age when technology has resulted in people being simultaneously connected and anti-social.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a solitude in that,鈥 Hosie says, 鈥渁nd this [musical] is about people coming together, all walks of life coming together, seeing each other, accepting each other and then celebrating what life can be. It really is a celebration of love and community.鈥
Godspell runs June 18 to Aug. 1 at the Granville Island Stage. For tickets and details go to or call 604-687-1644.