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Theatre review: Leiren-Young brings memoir to stage with a little help from his friends

Never Shoot a Stampede Queen full of bright-eyed, bushy-tailed guffaws
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Never Shoot a Stampede Queen

At the Arts Club Granville Island Stage until May 25

Tickets: 604-629-VTIX

stampedequeen.ca

Mark Leiren-Young is ballsy, Ill give him that. Not until opening night of Never Shoot a Stampede Queen did I understand his shameless self-promotion Facebooking for weeks, posting audience and critical response every day from Western Canada Theatre in Kamloops where the show premiered: Standing O and sold out houses. Funnier than the book, he promised.

But on opening night in Vancouver, the penny dropped for me. This is a Canadian Actors Equity Co-op production renting the Arts Club theatre. Oh. No sponsors. No grants. Just TJ Dawe (director/dramaturge) and Leiren-Youngs money on the line. Oh. Now thats either gutsy or crazy. I dont know what kind of houses these two need to break even but theyve got to be good. And that means social media big time and in your face.

It makes sense that this show did well in Kamloops: fresh-out-of-college Â鶹´«Ã½Ó³»­kid takes a job as a reporter in Williams Lake and learns a thing or two about small towns. And a lot about himself. Folks in Kamloops must get that all the time; city folk looking down their noses at country folk not that Kamloops is country anymore, but it used to be and the attitude probably still exists.

And Ill bet Williams Lake would love it. Although Leiren-Young sets his memoir back in 1985 in Williams Lake (population 13,000 back then), that town may still love to tear strips off a cub reporter who falls for every prank in the book including a description of a new and really, really silly bear trap. An arrow shoved up the bears butt? Really? Oh, yeah, Leiren-Youngs degree from the University of Victoria was in Fine Arts not animal behaviour.

Solo performer Zachary Stevenson throws himself into Never Shoot a Stampede Queen with all the guts and gusto of a cowboy breaking a horse. And the analogy is apt. Based on Leiren-Youngs Leacock medal-winning book of the same name, its a pretty rough ride really a series of anecdotes from Leiren-Youngs early years as a wet behind the ears reporter for the Williams Lake Tribune. Stevenson, who was fabulous in Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story last August on the Stanley Stage, is a fresh-faced kid with a huge grin and he can really pull off the wide-eyed naif that was Leiren-Young as a 22-year-old. Stevenson plays all the roles from Kate, the green-eyed pixie who was the newspapers photographer, to the girl in the 24-hour convenience store who chases the thief down the street to give him back his knife. Youd swear Stevenson has a big beer gut (he doesnt) when hes Stan, the publisher, and you can almost see the yellow stripe down the pant leg when hes playing Staff Sergeant Johnson, the nicest guy in town. Theres a lot of bright-eyed-bushy-tailed innocence in this show and Stevenson does it well.

Conflict? Not much. Dramatic tension? Some, when it comes to shall I stay or shall I go time. Its very Stephen Leacock and its no wonder the novel won the award named for the great Canadian humourist.

Ross Nichols set is raked and pretty simple: piles of newspapers bundled up. Lighting was a bit off on opening night: Stevenson found himself searching for his light on occasion. But these are technical things that get worked out.

This Williams Lake experience contributed to making what Leiren-Young is today: a successful novelist, playwright and, recently, theatre critic. Stampede Queen and his soon to be released sequel/prequel Magic Secrets Revealed have been optioned for film and he is currently writing the screenplays for both.

You might want to check the schedule because some of the performances of Stampede Queen will have tweet seats where those with electronic gadgetry will be encouraged to tweet their friends during the show. Good grief.

For more review, go to joledingham.ca.