Thursday, June 18, 2009

Fringe Zoo: Dance Animal - Tribal tribute.

Dance Animal at the JFL Studio is packing them in and is easily the run away hit at this year's Fringe. The buzz is so loud for this piece that even the bees are roaring about Dance Animal.
A Robin Henderson creation and co-directed with Dan Jeanotte it is very entertaining and well worth the time and the buck, Fringe or Loonies. Stand out animals were Jeanotte's 'Dance Wolf', Stephanie McKenna's 'Dance Gecko' and 'Dance Pony' by Joseph Bembridge. The music is a top ten hit parade and the movement is fun to watch with plenty of eye-candy. Also interesting is a bilingual, wel actually multi-lingual script. A blast with a beer in one hand and a friend in the other; except you'll probably want your hands free to clap along to the UP-beats. 4 cents. GO C IT!

Even more FRINGE: BRAZIL NUTS will crack you up!

Brazil Nuts starring Susan Jeremy playing at the JFL Cabaret. Jeremy from NY returns to Montreal with another one women play, her forth. Playing multiple characters in this fast paced no holes barred gem of storytelling is Jeremy's forte. Co-written with Mary Fulham it is stacked full of laughs and physical comedy. From pooches called: Britney, Paris and Madonna to a male stripper, a Brazilian lover and what might be a little of Jeremy herself as the character Jackie, among other supporting voices, she is at the top of her game and scores another hit. Susan Jeremy won multiple awards with her production PS69 (2000), which I saw six (6) times, and Was That My 15 Minutes (1998); Mary Fulham also won awards with Devotion (2003). It would be 'nuts' if this latest piece doesn't get some well deserved recognition also. 5 cents. Go C It!

More FRINGE: AfterLife is full of life.

AfterLife at the Geordie Space; A one women performance by Candy Simmons from NYC. She interprets three women in three separate times and locations, telling their stories: The turn of the century; The 60's; And modern times. It is amazing to see how these characters are so very different in their individual goals, wants and needs and how they go about getting and achieving them. I was more partial to the first two stories and was pulled in by their humor and tragedy.
A not to be missed performance! 4 cents. Go C It!

More FRINGE: The Importance of Being Earnest

The Importance of Being Earnest at the MAI. An adaptation by Nell Corrin of the original version by Oscar Wilde. It's a watered down edited version, cut down to size with one chair as a set piece and a cast of four women playing six of the central characters. I was first under the impression that I was watching it on fast forward; it was so quick paced. A chair and four actors the well known piece of very familiar verse will disappoint purists, who will not enjoy this trick; Wilde would not be pleased this was your first introduction to his work. The most noteworthy interpretations are those of the Lady Bracknell and Miss Prism. Still worth the time if only to be reminded of how delightfull and timeless this piece of absurd theatre remains to this day. 3 cents. Go C It!

Sunday, June 14, 2009

FRINGE #19 June 12 to 21, 2009. My 2 cents...

Well it Is the most wonderful time of the year again, well almost. The weather is unusually nice for the 1st weekend of the Fringe, clear skies and warm to very warm temperatures that are normally reserved for the 2nd weekend of the ten day marathon of 'take your chance theatre'.
The warmer air is in part due to a later than usual start date for the festival, and the warm temperatures are more or less equally balanced by what I've heard and seen on stage so far this weekend, nothing too HOT and nothing too COLD, but with some cooler than others. And there is the definite lack of Grand Prix in the air this season too.

PENUMBRA: Play by Katherine Dempsey; Directed by Paul Van Dyke. With: Catherine Bérubé, Michelle Boback, Howard Rosenstein, and Christopher Moore. Not perfect (yet) but most definitely a must see on your Fringe to do list, -not to be missed. Michelle Bobeck delivers a stellar performance, equaled by that given by Catherine Bérubé. This is not a typical play for a Fringe stage, 'it is a serious piece of theatre' with an equally 'serious ensemble'. It's well placed at the MAI and this helps this 'professional production' with the needed space and necessary lighting required to pull it off on such a scale. It wouldn't have worked as well in one the Fringe found spaces. My biggest complaint would be the smoking, unnecessary these days, really! And some of the lighting was lacking on the faces at times...either actors missing their mark or just a question of too dark a design. It was sold out the 1st night it opened so get your tickets ahead. I predict this production will be on a Montreal stage sooner if not later in case you do miss it in this first run. 4 cents GO C IT!

COBRA III: At the JFL studio. My 3rd experience with this regular Fringe saga. It is a guilty pleasure and impossible not to enjoy the enthousiastic ensemble cast of +/- twenty two talented members. Even the most senior members of the audience were toe tapping and laughing along. It starts with a punch and sags a bit midway, but then picks up just in time to deliver a punchy finalé. Although it doesn't rise to the level of last year's production at the JFL Cabaret, for the camp, the eye candy, choreography, elaborate costumes and set, I have to give it some extra coin. 4 cents. GO SEE IT!

FUCKING STEPHEN HARPER: One man solo performance by Rob Salerno from Toronto. Playing at MainLine, it is worth spending the 50 minutes to learn more about how our current Canadian Government in power thinks and treats the LGBTA minorities in our great land... Although this is more the style of a Queer Current Events seminar at a Junior College than a play, it does have enough of the charm of a stand up piece and is presented in a "FOR ALL", style that is interesting enough for everyone, not only 'our own kind'. 3 cents. GO C IT!

3 WAYS TO HANDLE A TELEMARKETER: Playing at the Portugesse Association. Delightful perfromances are given by most of the cast with a lot of heart. Stand outs were Calli Armstrong Jamie Del Aguila and Chris Nachaj. Although we are not accustomed to a lot of set decoration at a typical Fringe show, this production suffers from way too much; And a poor use of it as well. Less would have been much more here: simply a clip board with chairs on wheels and the hand set of the phones attached would have worked much better. The restaurant counter was way overboard too. With such a large cast it is no surprise that it was sold out the first show, so plan ahead, however once the word gets out about the text, the crowds might stop forming. The play itself, although it has a great premise, misses far too many opportunities and just isn't funny. I counted only one moderate chuckle from a few audience members on one line. Not enough to merit the punch line that we can see coming half way through the text. 2 cents.

My spys tell me that 'Un jour j'ira à Compstelle' is worth seeing, playing in French at the MAI.

Next week I'll be seeing The Importance of Being Earnest and Perverts among others.
See you on the Main... Reminder St-Laurent Blvd closed next weekend: Thursday to Sunday.