
Fringe reviews #9: You tread on the boards. If you strut, go to Act IV
Work Hard Play Bard Theatre
Gas Station Arts Centre (Venue 18), to Saturday
⭐⭐⭐
This new 75-minute show follows the adventures of young Boblin, who is questioning purpose, belonging and destiny to parents whose sincerity might be part of our hero's biggest challenge.
Co-written by Scott Thompson and Leif Ingebrigtsen, this animated odyssey is vigorously and often humorously propelled by strong voices and performances. It starts in a dungeon and sings and dances its way through a bar, campsites, caves and a couple of bloody crime scenes. Full props for the costumes — especially the truly terrifying, glancingly lit, killing beast — and to the red fabric scraps that viscerally illustrate disembowellings.
However, a few of the lines, both spoken and sung, feel rushed, and the shifts from humour to Boblin's life lessons to horrific murder sometimes feel jagged — not least, perhaps, to one dad in the audience, putting his arm around his eight-ish-year-old seatmate (though in fairness, the show does include parental guidance about violence).
— Denise Duguay
BRAIN MACHINE
Andrew Bailey
The Rachel Browne Theatre (Venue 8), to Saturday
⭐⭐⭐⭐ ½
'Rape is hilarious — when it happens to dudes.' So begins Andrew Bailey's 2013 satirical and viral monologue about society's double standards when it comes to sexual assault against men.
Andrew Bailey in The Brain Machine (Natalie Watson photo)
While this monologue — or rather its background and fallout — figures into the one-hour Brain Machine, the show is much more than a review of the B.C.-based Bailey's greatest Internet hits.
Vannevar Bush's utopian ideas about non-linear branching networks or 'associative trails'; Douglas Engelbart's pioneering work in applying these ideas to developing the early Internet; the more dystopian realities of how social media networks and online dialogue actually work — all of these are run together through Bailey's own creative associations, which are often hilarious.
Bailey has something of David Foster Wallace's taste for blending technical and pop culture references and for non sequiturs that eventually reveal a bigger whole — only he's warmer, more audience-friendly and just a little more glib.
Most importantly, he's a natural storyteller. Some strangers can talk and talk — and miraculously we want to listen. The nerdy, unassuming Bailey is one of those rare types.
— Conrad Sweatman
DEBBIE LOVES BUMBLEBEE
Sour Candy Comedy
RRC Polytech (Venue 11), to Sunday
⭐⭐⭐ ½
Local performer Bob Banks' one-man show is one of the most singular Winnipeg fringe experiences this reviewer has ever had. It's uncomfortable, voyeuristic, captivating.
Banks' narrative has something to do with memories of his despised, neglectful father, who used drug money to put him through private school. It has more to do with his mother, dying of cancer, whom Banks loves intensely despite her abusive streak.
As capital-T theatre, Debbie's frankly a bit of a mess. A 30-minute show (not 60) that starts with five minutes of caveats, is interrupted consistently by digressions and tears, and whose ending is so unclear that the performer had to awkwardly clap to instruct us it was over — this won't be for everyone.
It can seem as if the emotions Banks is tapping into are still so raw he hasn't figured out how to churn out a polished work of theatre. But the experience is oddly thrilling, not despite, but because of this, bringing to mind the disordered, entrancing verité of Harmony Korine's early films.
— Conrad Sweatman
THE DND IMPROV SHOW XVI: THE CHOSEN ONE
The DND Improv Show
Gas Station Arts Centre (Venue 18), to Saturday
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
The long-running implication of XVI in the title looked daunting to a one-time Dungeons & Dragons player (long ago, warlock, quickly dead). But fear not. While the majority of the audience are clearly well acquainted with all things D&D unfolding onstage, there is not one moment of confusion or exclusion. That even as the third night's hour-long show started where the second had ended, as per the progressive structure employed by this fast-thinking and ferociously talented local troupe.
The basics: there's a chosen one, potential best friends Corn Chip and Onion, a princess, a hapless protector, a horned demon, a witch, somebody named Bean Dip and fan favourite Menno-Knight.
Credit especially to dungeon-master Jesse Miki (co-writer with Sam McLean) for calling the action and rolling the giant dice from one battle challenge to the next.
The only criticism? As vocal as they are, the audience could be even more involved in challenging the performers, who appear to thrive on it, spinning even brief stumbles into shinier gold.
— Denise Duguay
HEART RIPPED OUT TWICE AND SO CAN YOU
Linnea Bond
MTC Up the Alley (Venue 2), to Saturday
⭐⭐⭐⭐
You're the mark in a sketchy sales pitch.
You can't trust a salesman with a plastic smile like Linnea Bond's persona, whom she plays with the officious zeal of Laura Linney in shows like The Truman Show or Ozark.
And the product is dubious: existence itself. Or rather, existence as a theatre performer facing a malignant sort of triple threat: cancer, heart surgery and a lover who might not stick by your side through it all. We quickly tune into the fact that the life on sale is some version of Bond's.
Her maniacal sales persona — trotting out vagina and tumour costumes and drenching almost every line in caustic satire — offers the consolation of gallows humour. The Philadelphia-based performer is clearly a pro, but after nearly an hour this controlled, sarcastic act can feel expressively limited, a little one-note even.
But Bond ultimately creates moments of sincere vulnerability, convincing herself that this dubious product, life, is worth it after all.
— Conrad Sweatman
HOCKEY NIGHT AT THE PUCK & PICKLE PUB
RibbitRePublic Theatre 2
King's Head Pub (Venue 14), to Sunday
⭐⭐⭐⭐
A pair of men who could never forget Al Iafrate's skullet, a couple of retired hockey moms united by synchronized cigarette exhales, and a duet of battle-tested nonagenarians who remember when the red line was what came dripping from a broken nose.
Ryan Gladstone and Jon Paterson (Supplied)
These are just six of the characters joining Canadian fringe vets Jon Paterson and Ryan Gladstone in the Puck and Pickle Pub to watch the gold medal game between Canada and the United States.
Remounted roughly every four years as a topical reflection of us and them, Hockey Night is a regulation-length comedic vision of imagined countries with shared goals in mind. The laughs come faster than Dit Clapper's slapper, often inside the actors' broadcast booth, where Chris Cuthbert (Paterson) repeatedly puts Kelly Hrudy (Gladstone) in his place.
As much about the game as the people we watch it with, Hockey Night is enriched by its barroom setting, where one is inspired to look around and consider which of the barstool commentators are Claudes, Matthews, Colleens or Lindas.
— Ben Waldman
WIT AND WRATH: THE LIFE & TIMES OF DOROTHY PARKER
MissClaudiaPresents
Planetarium Auditorium (Venue 9), to Sunday
⭐⭐⭐⭐ ½
New Orleans's Claudia Baumgarten doesn't just play the singular American poet, writer and critic in this 75-minute biographical dramedy. She positively channels her.
Martini in hand, Baumgarten, who also wrote this show, takes us through Parker's dazzling biography, often in her subject's own wry, witty and oh-so-quotable wisecracks. Baumgarten's so dry and droll that sometimes one forgets she's not actually Mrs. Parker. She even bears a slight resemblance to the woman who once owned a poodle named Cliché.
But it's not all laughs, of course. Baumgarten explores the shades of grey in Parker's colourful life — the multiple marriages, the boozing, the suicide attempts, the self doubt — to create a layered portrait of a complicated woman.
As a performer, Baumgarten is understated; she's sometimes overwhelmed by too-loud music cues that go on too long. But it's also her subtlety that makes her performance so compelling. Time has made Parker a larger-than-life literary figure. Baumgarten reminds us she was real.
— Jen Zoratti
THE LIST: A TRAUMADY ABOUT PROBIOTIC MASCULINITY
Conseil Keith Serry
Son of Warehouse (Venue 5), to Saturday
⭐⭐⭐⭐
It starts as a tale about a young man hitchhiking in Quebec with a sexist 'f—k boi.'
But things soon double back as its narrator, Montreal-based Keith Serry, recounts his checkered childhood and tribulations in choosing between being a 'good man' and 'the man.'
Serry, who's appeared on PBS Stories From the Stage, is a strong storyteller.
Nevertheless, halfway through the hour-long show, one might start wondering where Serry's exercise in tortured masculinity is going. He despises his working-class Scottish father, recalls with embarrassment being impressed by chauvinist creeps as a young man and talks about panic attacks after sex.
Then a revelation comes like a gut-punch and ups the stakes. A catharsis that reminds us of how potent theatre-as-therapy can be. HHHH
— Conrad Sweatman
YOU'RE GOOD FOR NOTHING… I'LL MILK THE COW MYSELF
Natacha Ruck
Théâtre Cercle Molière (Venue 3), to Friday
⭐⭐ ½
French-born Natacha Ruck's 60-minute one-woman storytelling show is billed as 'hilarious, shocking and zany.' It's actually a mildly amusing series of anecdotes, mostly about the women in her family, strung together without sufficient throughline or high enough stakes to be dramatically satisfying. (The 'shocking' likely refers to her mother's propensity for violence, which Ruck doesn't quite succeed in making quirky/lovable.)
Ruck effectively adjusts her mannerisms and voice to portray multiple characters — chic, chain-smoking Maman, wise-cracking father, imperious Belgian Mamie — but the occasions when she flips rapidly between them in conversation are jarring.
Her accent is an imperative part of the performance, but occasionally it leads to mispronunciations that ruin a punchline, and her delivery is halting, with awkward pauses that makes it seem as if she isn't fully au fait with her material. However, the conclusion is filled with grace; one wishes for more of these moments.
— Jill Wilson
YOU'VE BEEN SERVED
Pushy Productions
Planetarium Auditorium (Venue 9), to Saturday
⭐⭐⭐ ½
Noemi is served divorce papers on top of a garbage bin while she's taking out the trash — and that's just the first post-split indignity she suffers.
Noemi and Martini (Liz Payne photo)
Written and performed by San Francisco's Noemi Zeigler, this slapstick dramedy follows our delightfully delusional gal's unhinged journey back to herself after a lifetime of pinning her entire self esteem on the validation of others.
It's a well-written show, full of perceptive, funny and sometimes heartbreaking details about suddenly finding yourself alone at midlife, such as Noemi's admission that she thinks she has to entertain and joke to 'trick' people into loving her. But while the comedy here is tight, the more serious moments are almost played too big; more contrast might help them pack a more emotional punch.
Still, Ziegler is a charming stage presence — and she can sing, too.
— Jen Zoratti
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Winnipeg Free Press
20-07-2025
- Winnipeg Free Press
Fringe reviews #10: A street performer convinces you to join the circus
100% WIZARD Picaro Enterprises The Rachel Browne Theatre (Venue 8), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐ ½ With an abundance of fringe magic shows pushing supernatural hokum to sell their acts, London, Ont.'s Keith Brown is a breath of fresh air amid the smoky hoo-hah. Brown is an affable beardo with an understated mastery of card tricks incorporating impressive memory work. In a display of versatility, the hour-long show even features a mini-monologue about the history of playing cards and their relationship to measurements of time (52 cards represent 52 weeks and four suits correspond to four seasons, etc.), sure to be a surprise for many. The tricks are nothing fancy, but Brown's enthusiasm is disarming to the extent volunteers look pretty pleased to be sharing his stage. You can't ask more than that. — Randall King ALRIGHT: SOLVING THE PROBLEM OF LIVING Four Face Productions Planetarium Auditorium (Venue 9), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐ ½ Clocking in at just under an hour, this show focuses on storyteller Nisha Coleman encountering friends or family members dealing with mental illness and suicidal ideation. These encounters also include her own bouts of despair, including a sudden run-in with police during a wellness check. Though beautiful, there is a feeling of being rushed through each story, giving us no time to sit with the feelings we've just been given. The direction and lighting design are wonderful, but there are times Coleman would have benefited from a microphone to amplify her voice, as the sound cues sometimes drown her out. Coleman's story about not reconnecting with a friend right before that friend died by suicide was the true beating heart of the show, as Coleman deals with the 'what-ifs' of the days before that ultimately lead to no answers. — Sonya Ballantyne CROAKINOLE & CROAKETTE! Croakinole & Croakette Kids Venue MTYP — Mainstage, to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Kermit will be shivering in his boots; he's met his match in Croakinole and Croakette. It's no mean feat keeping a crowd of young 'uns entertained for 45 minutes straight, especially if you're of the amphibian persuasion, but that's exactly what these two frogs manage to do during their high-energy set. Packing in 10 songs across various genres, from pop and punk to dance, hip-hop, rock 'n' roll and even a perfectly executed jazz number, the non-stop fun, action-packed show will have even the grumpiest of grown-ups smiling in minutes. Embark on a musical journey that'll have you on your feet dancing in the aisles with your kids as you twist, turn, twirl and hop along to the block-rocking beats. Real-life partners Mario and Brittany Lagassé make a lovely duo, successfully infecting the audience with their joie de vivre. A must-see. — AV Kitching IF DAY MaxQ Productions Tom Hendry Warehouse (Venue 6), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐ ½ One of Winnipeg's most fascinating and troubling wartime fables goosesteps to the Warehouse in If Day, MaxQ Productions' followup to last year's Nuclear Family. Wartime anxieties are again on the drawing table for writers Gilles Messier and Jess Morgan, who pick their fictionalized story up in the winter of 1942, when J.D. Perrin (Khald Nuristani), the chairman of the Greater Winnipeg Victory Loan, devises a plot that could make Max Bialystock blush: to raise funds for the war effort, Perrin hires an exiled film director (Élie Tardiff-Breen) to stage a faux Nazi invasion. Meanwhile, a John Loewen (Andreas Detillieux) and an Essie Schwartz (Krista Austin) are thrust into the pages of a dime-store pulp comic to ward off the enemies, including a country-club elitist (Stephen Gatphoh) eager to don a brownshirt. If Day is well-executed and ambitious, and should give local history buffs a minor thrill, but the script's twists and turns are far too aggressively telegraphed for too many surprising footprints on a battlefield that's feeling all too familiar lately. — Ben Waldman ITALIAN MONDAY IMPROV WITH KEVIN ALEXANDER Stealth Check Productions Tom Hendry Theatre (Venue 6), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Kevin Alexander and his crew are phenomenal at their craft. This tight-knit local ensemble of four is engaging from the first moment and didn't miss a beat as they weave audience suggestions —names, objects, and ideas — into the story with creativity and precision. These seeds, planted early on, bloom into moments that are both hilarious and unexpectedly emotional. If you're coming to this show expecting rapid-fire, game-show-style improv skits, you won't find that here. Instead, this is a thoughtful, character-driven piece that follows Kevin, a struggling improv actor sacrificing almost everything in pursuit of his dream. What sets this show apart is the cast's ability to shift between the emotional weight of the story and laugh-out-loud moments. The transitions feel seamless, the acting is heartfelt, and the result is a layered performance that showcases the depth improv theatre can offer when done well. It's not just a comedy show, it's a story with soul, heart and a lot of laughs. — Shelley Cook LATE-IN-LIFE LESBIAN Kind Crow Productions Planetarium Auditorium (Venue 9), to Saturday ⭐⭐⭐ ½ Comedian Shane Thevenot, hailing from the backwoods of Portage la Prairie, delivers an autobiographical 70-minute standup routine about coming out as a non-binary lesbian at the tender age of 32. Thevenot is a natural-born raconteur who regales us with tales about growing up as a 'good Christian girl' (who ironically wound up a sex ed teacher at high school), enduring a year of bad dates after moving to Montreal during the global pandemic and ultimately accepting their true identity after moving back to Winnipeg. Yep, there are plenty of F-bombs and a content warning. Thevenot's monologue meanders at times (Plato overstayed his welcome, as did the toilet brush story) and the narrative could easily be whittled by at least 15 minutes. The show is at its best during its more animated moments, and stronger direction by Lucy Gervais would ideally have had Thevenot use the stage more fully. Still, you can't diss someone for speaking their rainbow-coloured truths in a predominantly blue-vs.-pink world, and root for any true seeker on a late-blooming journey of self-discovery and empowerment. — Holly Harris MONEY FISH: BALLS, BALLS, BALLS Hercinia Arts Collective Kids Venue MTYP — Mainstage, to Saturday ⭐⭐⭐ ½ This terrific trio of talented acrobatic fish channel the physical comedy stylings of the Marx Brothers blended with the slapstick genius of Charlie Chaplin in this absurd and fun parody that features juggling, acrobatics and dance. Money Fish (Supplied) Successfully dancing ballet in flipper-clad feet is a remarkable feat and the three ladies of Toronto-based non-profit Hercinia Arts Collective — Kirsten Edwards, Emily Hughes and Natalie Parkinson Dupley — do it with aplomb, generating oohs, aaahs and wows from the appreciative audience. Balls of all sizes abound, rolling around the stage and sometimes off it (sit right in the front row if you've got kids who like to get involved). The front seats are also the best spots to get the full effect of the myriad facial expressions as the troop tumble, contort, sway, flip and balance their way through an array of recognizable tunes over 45 minutes. It's a hoot of a show that knows not to take itself too seriously. — AV Kitching SARAH TEAKLE'S CIRCUS SHOW! Sarah Teakle Kids Venue MTYP — Mainstage, to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ This 45-minute circus showcase starts as you enter the venue, with Sarah Teakle herself mingling amongst the crowd. The Winnipegger's accessibility is one of the most endearing aspects of her performance, especially when she speaks about how long she has been working at learning her circus tricks (12 years!). Teakle is not afraid of making mistakes and this humility draws you in. In an era where some kids are terrified of being 'cringe,' talking about how important it is to keep trying even after you fail is a message many need to hear. Teakle's hula hooping is the standout of her show, but a too-long gag and sound problems mean some young minds will start to wander. On the whole, this is a fun, enjoyable outing; many of the kids on their way out were gushing, 'Best show ever!' It would not be surprising if hula hoop purchases were in some of their futures. — Sonya Ballantyne SEASONS OF LOVE Enigma Performance Company John Hirsch Mainstage (Venue 1), to Saturday ⭐⭐⭐ ½ This gentle contemporary dance show about that which makes the world go 'round offers an antidote to the sea of F-bombs regularly found at fringe. Seasons of Love (Supplied) Inspired by Max Richter's Recomposed, a creative mash-up of Vivaldi's The Four Seasons, 10 (mostly) local dancers (including youngest member Violet Connery-Dwyer, 11, highlighted during the piece's earliest minutes), perform a series of unabashedly lyrical duets, trios, quartets and full ensemble sections choreographed by Brandon-born Willow Harvey as her first full-length work. Despite its premise tipping towards cliché, there's a lot of promise here. Harvey's collaborative vision with director Anthony Ferens creates arresting, often sculptural images that surprise, including one poetic section where dancers sweep across the stage holding billowing white silk sheets. Others feel underdeveloped, such as when several pull their sheets over their heads to become mysterious silky ghosts that became a missed opportunity. Still, there's an ocean of heart in this show about love, and its 35 minutes (billed as 60) fly by faster than the timeless seasons themselves. — Holly Harris STORY WIZARDS Piti Theatre Company Kids Venue MTYP — Mainstage, to Thursday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ ½ This improv show unfolds when the Story Wizard seeks the help of the audience to help him write new tales after his stories are lost. Chaos ensues as the father-and-son duo behind Massachussets-based Piti Theatre Company go on a rollicking 45-minute ride, helmed by the imaginations of a gaggle of elementary school-aged children who take over the stage. Immediate audience participation sees the unfolding of the most outlandish of plots, featuring a 75-year-old grumpy rainforest-dwelling leopard who yearns to be a chicken. Prompts by children are then woven into a tale that also features a frog, chicken nuggets and a black hole — disparate elements cleverly pulled together to make one fantastical, ludicrous, laugh-out loud whole. An excellent exercise in storytelling, underpinned by the off-the-cuff musical compositions of the wizard's real-life keyboard-playing son, it will likely inspire younger members of the audience to create even more magical adventures when they get home. — AV Kitching


Winnipeg Free Press
20-07-2025
- Winnipeg Free Press
Fringe reviews #9: You tread on the boards. If you strut, go to Act IV
THE BALLAD OF BOBLIN THE GOBLIN (A DND MUSICAL) Work Hard Play Bard Theatre Gas Station Arts Centre (Venue 18), to Saturday ⭐⭐⭐ This new 75-minute show follows the adventures of young Boblin, who is questioning purpose, belonging and destiny to parents whose sincerity might be part of our hero's biggest challenge. Co-written by Scott Thompson and Leif Ingebrigtsen, this animated odyssey is vigorously and often humorously propelled by strong voices and performances. It starts in a dungeon and sings and dances its way through a bar, campsites, caves and a couple of bloody crime scenes. Full props for the costumes — especially the truly terrifying, glancingly lit, killing beast — and to the red fabric scraps that viscerally illustrate disembowellings. However, a few of the lines, both spoken and sung, feel rushed, and the shifts from humour to Boblin's life lessons to horrific murder sometimes feel jagged — not least, perhaps, to one dad in the audience, putting his arm around his eight-ish-year-old seatmate (though in fairness, the show does include parental guidance about violence). — Denise Duguay BRAIN MACHINE Andrew Bailey The Rachel Browne Theatre (Venue 8), to Saturday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ ½ 'Rape is hilarious — when it happens to dudes.' So begins Andrew Bailey's 2013 satirical and viral monologue about society's double standards when it comes to sexual assault against men. Andrew Bailey in The Brain Machine (Natalie Watson photo) While this monologue — or rather its background and fallout — figures into the one-hour Brain Machine, the show is much more than a review of the B.C.-based Bailey's greatest Internet hits. Vannevar Bush's utopian ideas about non-linear branching networks or 'associative trails'; Douglas Engelbart's pioneering work in applying these ideas to developing the early Internet; the more dystopian realities of how social media networks and online dialogue actually work — all of these are run together through Bailey's own creative associations, which are often hilarious. Bailey has something of David Foster Wallace's taste for blending technical and pop culture references and for non sequiturs that eventually reveal a bigger whole — only he's warmer, more audience-friendly and just a little more glib. Most importantly, he's a natural storyteller. Some strangers can talk and talk — and miraculously we want to listen. The nerdy, unassuming Bailey is one of those rare types. — Conrad Sweatman DEBBIE LOVES BUMBLEBEE Sour Candy Comedy RRC Polytech (Venue 11), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐ ½ Local performer Bob Banks' one-man show is one of the most singular Winnipeg fringe experiences this reviewer has ever had. It's uncomfortable, voyeuristic, captivating. Banks' narrative has something to do with memories of his despised, neglectful father, who used drug money to put him through private school. It has more to do with his mother, dying of cancer, whom Banks loves intensely despite her abusive streak. As capital-T theatre, Debbie's frankly a bit of a mess. A 30-minute show (not 60) that starts with five minutes of caveats, is interrupted consistently by digressions and tears, and whose ending is so unclear that the performer had to awkwardly clap to instruct us it was over — this won't be for everyone. It can seem as if the emotions Banks is tapping into are still so raw he hasn't figured out how to churn out a polished work of theatre. But the experience is oddly thrilling, not despite, but because of this, bringing to mind the disordered, entrancing verité of Harmony Korine's early films. — Conrad Sweatman THE DND IMPROV SHOW XVI: THE CHOSEN ONE The DND Improv Show Gas Station Arts Centre (Venue 18), to Saturday ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ The long-running implication of XVI in the title looked daunting to a one-time Dungeons & Dragons player (long ago, warlock, quickly dead). But fear not. While the majority of the audience are clearly well acquainted with all things D&D unfolding onstage, there is not one moment of confusion or exclusion. That even as the third night's hour-long show started where the second had ended, as per the progressive structure employed by this fast-thinking and ferociously talented local troupe. The basics: there's a chosen one, potential best friends Corn Chip and Onion, a princess, a hapless protector, a horned demon, a witch, somebody named Bean Dip and fan favourite Menno-Knight. Credit especially to dungeon-master Jesse Miki (co-writer with Sam McLean) for calling the action and rolling the giant dice from one battle challenge to the next. The only criticism? As vocal as they are, the audience could be even more involved in challenging the performers, who appear to thrive on it, spinning even brief stumbles into shinier gold. — Denise Duguay HEART RIPPED OUT TWICE AND SO CAN YOU Linnea Bond MTC Up the Alley (Venue 2), to Saturday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ You're the mark in a sketchy sales pitch. You can't trust a salesman with a plastic smile like Linnea Bond's persona, whom she plays with the officious zeal of Laura Linney in shows like The Truman Show or Ozark. And the product is dubious: existence itself. Or rather, existence as a theatre performer facing a malignant sort of triple threat: cancer, heart surgery and a lover who might not stick by your side through it all. We quickly tune into the fact that the life on sale is some version of Bond's. Her maniacal sales persona — trotting out vagina and tumour costumes and drenching almost every line in caustic satire — offers the consolation of gallows humour. The Philadelphia-based performer is clearly a pro, but after nearly an hour this controlled, sarcastic act can feel expressively limited, a little one-note even. But Bond ultimately creates moments of sincere vulnerability, convincing herself that this dubious product, life, is worth it after all. — Conrad Sweatman HOCKEY NIGHT AT THE PUCK & PICKLE PUB RibbitRePublic Theatre 2 King's Head Pub (Venue 14), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ A pair of men who could never forget Al Iafrate's skullet, a couple of retired hockey moms united by synchronized cigarette exhales, and a duet of battle-tested nonagenarians who remember when the red line was what came dripping from a broken nose. Ryan Gladstone and Jon Paterson (Supplied) These are just six of the characters joining Canadian fringe vets Jon Paterson and Ryan Gladstone in the Puck and Pickle Pub to watch the gold medal game between Canada and the United States. Remounted roughly every four years as a topical reflection of us and them, Hockey Night is a regulation-length comedic vision of imagined countries with shared goals in mind. The laughs come faster than Dit Clapper's slapper, often inside the actors' broadcast booth, where Chris Cuthbert (Paterson) repeatedly puts Kelly Hrudy (Gladstone) in his place. As much about the game as the people we watch it with, Hockey Night is enriched by its barroom setting, where one is inspired to look around and consider which of the barstool commentators are Claudes, Matthews, Colleens or Lindas. — Ben Waldman WIT AND WRATH: THE LIFE & TIMES OF DOROTHY PARKER MissClaudiaPresents Planetarium Auditorium (Venue 9), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ ½ New Orleans's Claudia Baumgarten doesn't just play the singular American poet, writer and critic in this 75-minute biographical dramedy. She positively channels her. Martini in hand, Baumgarten, who also wrote this show, takes us through Parker's dazzling biography, often in her subject's own wry, witty and oh-so-quotable wisecracks. Baumgarten's so dry and droll that sometimes one forgets she's not actually Mrs. Parker. She even bears a slight resemblance to the woman who once owned a poodle named Cliché. But it's not all laughs, of course. Baumgarten explores the shades of grey in Parker's colourful life — the multiple marriages, the boozing, the suicide attempts, the self doubt — to create a layered portrait of a complicated woman. As a performer, Baumgarten is understated; she's sometimes overwhelmed by too-loud music cues that go on too long. But it's also her subtlety that makes her performance so compelling. Time has made Parker a larger-than-life literary figure. Baumgarten reminds us she was real. — Jen Zoratti THE LIST: A TRAUMADY ABOUT PROBIOTIC MASCULINITY Conseil Keith Serry Son of Warehouse (Venue 5), to Saturday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ It starts as a tale about a young man hitchhiking in Quebec with a sexist 'f—k boi.' But things soon double back as its narrator, Montreal-based Keith Serry, recounts his checkered childhood and tribulations in choosing between being a 'good man' and 'the man.' Serry, who's appeared on PBS Stories From the Stage, is a strong storyteller. Nevertheless, halfway through the hour-long show, one might start wondering where Serry's exercise in tortured masculinity is going. He despises his working-class Scottish father, recalls with embarrassment being impressed by chauvinist creeps as a young man and talks about panic attacks after sex. Then a revelation comes like a gut-punch and ups the stakes. A catharsis that reminds us of how potent theatre-as-therapy can be. HHHH — Conrad Sweatman YOU'RE GOOD FOR NOTHING… I'LL MILK THE COW MYSELF Natacha Ruck Théâtre Cercle Molière (Venue 3), to Friday ⭐⭐ ½ French-born Natacha Ruck's 60-minute one-woman storytelling show is billed as 'hilarious, shocking and zany.' It's actually a mildly amusing series of anecdotes, mostly about the women in her family, strung together without sufficient throughline or high enough stakes to be dramatically satisfying. (The 'shocking' likely refers to her mother's propensity for violence, which Ruck doesn't quite succeed in making quirky/lovable.) Ruck effectively adjusts her mannerisms and voice to portray multiple characters — chic, chain-smoking Maman, wise-cracking father, imperious Belgian Mamie — but the occasions when she flips rapidly between them in conversation are jarring. Her accent is an imperative part of the performance, but occasionally it leads to mispronunciations that ruin a punchline, and her delivery is halting, with awkward pauses that makes it seem as if she isn't fully au fait with her material. However, the conclusion is filled with grace; one wishes for more of these moments. — Jill Wilson YOU'VE BEEN SERVED Pushy Productions Planetarium Auditorium (Venue 9), to Saturday ⭐⭐⭐ ½ Noemi is served divorce papers on top of a garbage bin while she's taking out the trash — and that's just the first post-split indignity she suffers. Noemi and Martini (Liz Payne photo) Written and performed by San Francisco's Noemi Zeigler, this slapstick dramedy follows our delightfully delusional gal's unhinged journey back to herself after a lifetime of pinning her entire self esteem on the validation of others. It's a well-written show, full of perceptive, funny and sometimes heartbreaking details about suddenly finding yourself alone at midlife, such as Noemi's admission that she thinks she has to entertain and joke to 'trick' people into loving her. But while the comedy here is tight, the more serious moments are almost played too big; more contrast might help them pack a more emotional punch. Still, Ziegler is a charming stage presence — and she can sing, too. — Jen Zoratti


Winnipeg Free Press
20-07-2025
- Winnipeg Free Press
Fringe reviews 8: You decide to exit, pursued by a bear
BODICE RIPPER: A LOVE STORY Holly M. Brinkman MTC Up the Alley (Venue 2), to Saturday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Part improv and part sultry set piece, Holly Brinkman's spicy, mostly one-woman show digs into her love of romance novels. Each show features a different guest performer from the fringe, who offers their own brief, steamy monologue before Brinkman steps back on stage. She breaks down romance novels into their component parts — 'meet cute,' 'sexy middle,' 'crisis' and 'happily against all odds,' although not delivered in that order in the show — taking suggestions from the crowd on character names, scenarios, genres, etc. An interactive slide show lets audience offer suggestions through their phones — an interesting albeit slightly distracting way to help shape the story. The Victoria, B.C., performer is a very good storyteller, who never falters while cooking up sensual stories on the fly from audience cues and fleshing out compelling plotlines. The steamy 50-minute show will vary slightly based on the guest performer, who returns to act out a 'meet cute' and play a saucy game of truth or dare with Brinkman to close the show. — Ben Sigurdson CHUCKLE HUNTERS LIVE Chuckle Hunters Improv The Rachel Browne Theatre (Venue 8), to Sunday ⭐⭐ In this episode of Chuckle Hunters Live, one improviser chooses the costumes, sets the scene and predicts how the performance will end. It's a good concept in theory, but one that flounders in practice. There's talent and fun chemistry among the Chuckle Hunters — a Winnipeg improv troupe of Brody Sjodin, Charles Hunter, Kathryn Derksen and Quinton Vander Aa — but the dynamic is thrown off by the format, which creates a vested interest in things progressing a certain way. The result is too much 'well, actually' and not enough 'yes, and.' The 60-minute improv show was also bogged down by character details neither the audience nor the performers could remember. The wittiest improvisations and funniest lines came when the cast was able to stretch out and explore a scene without interruption. — Eva Wasney INESCAPABLE Concrete Drops Theater PTE — Colin Jackson Studio (Venue 17), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Fringe vets Martin Dockery and Jon Paterson team up again for this hilarious, anxiety-riddled and brain-bending cyclical show that takes the audience to the brink of madness and back. Jon Paterson and Martin Dockery in Inescapable (Vanessa Quesnelle photo) Before things even kick off, Let it Snow plays on a loop over the PA, setting the tone for the lunacy to come. Taking a break from a holiday party, Dockery and Paterson are examining a mysterious small box the latter dug out of the former's closet. Seemingly stuck in some sort of time loop, every few minutes Dockery's character frantically asks versions of the same questions about the box. As Paterson's answers evolve slightly each time, clues about the duo's backstory of fraught friendships, infidelity, unhappiness and more are gradually revealed. In anyone else's hands this show might not work, and if Inescapable were any more than 45-ish minutes long, the play might live up to its name. But the writing and frantic pace here are pitch-perfect, and Dockery and Paterson's performances prove mesmerizing. — Ben Sigurdson HMONG CLASS 101 Jasmine Yang The Rachel Browne Theatre (Venue 8), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Learning how to 'smile until your cheeks hurt' as a trained Hmong dancer has served Jasmine Yang well. She puts that skill to use in this 45-minute comedy, lighting up the stage with her megawatt smile and natural charisma. The Detroit-based theatre grad also shows off her acting chops, embodying a variety of characters to explore both the history of the Hmong (the 'h' is silent) people and her own identity. You won't find anything about this stateless ethnic group at Folklorama next month, so take this opportunity to learn more about the Hmong's rich culture and nearly lost language in a thoroughly enjoyable show that honours their perseverance. Yang beautifully examines how to navigate identity in a world obsessed with labels. If you've ever felt like too much — or not enough — this show is for you. And in a story about belonging, it's clear Yang belongs on the fringe stage. — Jeffrey Vallis HOCKEY STICKS AND BEAVER PIE Melanie Gall Presents Théâtre Cercle Molière (Venue 3), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐ Vocalist Melanie Gall returns to the stage for her 13th year at fringe, delivering a performance filled with a history lesson for — and love letter to— Manitoba. Kicking off the 60-minute musical with a sing-along, the Alberta-born songbird breezed through and belted out Manitoba's most memorable moments, local landmarks and iconic figures, while inserting stories about growing up in oil country and living in Brooklyn, N.Y. Endearing and witty, Gall embraces the monumental moments that put this province on the map (If Day, Gimli Glider), while acknowledging the complex legacy of others (Hudson's Bay Company). Although Gall's vocal range is wider than the history she covers, her performance does feature a surprise — her banjo. This feel-good, family friendly show will keep your toes tapping, and heart warm for this beautiful province. — Nadya Pankiw A LESBIAN IN THE KITCHEN Willow Roots Productions The Output (Venue 12), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐ In Willow Rosenberg's kitchen, there's no obligation to follow the recipe. In fact, doing so is actively discouraged. This hour-long cooking show is about adapting, bucking tradition and finding your own flavour. And like any good cooking show, there's personal storytelling and live demonstrations. Sporting a Julia Child-esque frock, Winnipeg's Rosenberg shares her late mother's recipes for challah and hamantaschen, while discussing Jewish culinary traditions and her trans lesbian identity. There's a lot on the table, including obvious nerves, but the concept is sweet and fans of food memoirs will likely enjoy a live take on the genre. The set is also well-conceived and made to look like a TV cooking studio with a top-down camera and a real (Easy-Bake) oven that infuses the room with the aroma of freshly baked cookies. — Eva Wasney A MYSTERY AT MURDER MANOR Chris Gibbs Planetarium Auditorium (Venue 9), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Barnaby Gibbs, the bumbling Dr. Watson-like right-hand man of Sherlock Holmes-ish sleuth Antoine Feval, is back to narrate a brand new, hilarious investigation. The large, enthusiastic crowd out for opening night of the one-man show speaks to the success of British-born Torontonian Chris Gibbs' 2024 shows (Not Quite Sherlock: The Tunnel of Terror and The Gaslight Detective). In Murder Manor, Barnaby recounts how he and Feval dealt with the appearance of a mysterious ghost in the sprawling manor of the uncle of one of Barnaby's former classmates, which is rivetingly unpacked in due course. This new show saw a couple of lines slightly flubbed, but Gibbs was quick to poke fun at himself, garnering big laughs. And despite a mic issue, he easily projects his voice across the packed house as he jumps between characters (including a fight scene between a half-dozen characters where he showed off his impressive physical-comedy chops.) At 60 minutes, the show's tighter than last year, and Gibbs' nimble, charismatic delivery and ability to connect with the crowd (often via asides) leave folks in stitches. — Ben Sigurdson ODDS ARE Good Grief Asper Centre for Theatre & Film (Venue 10), to Saturday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ 'Never tell me the odds.' — Han Solo Let's just say New York artist-storyteller Smita Russell is very un-Han-like in her 60-minute solo show (not counting a cellist accompanist). She is fascinated by odds, and at first, the predilection is benign, beginning with coincidental Anne Hathaway sightings in New York immediately after she has watched Anne Hathaway movies. The wife of a scientist, Russell has a number of scientist friends whom she can consult on the odds. But the stakes are raised when applied to her own tragic history of losing late-term pregnancies. Her actuarial obsession is mixed with an earlier love of Greek mythology — as a child, she designed a Halloween costume depicting fertility goddess Demeter — and Russell feels obliged to come through the crisis for the sake of her successfully birthed son. The writing here is very elegant, but not so cerebral that it doesn't give play to an unfathomably difficult emotional journey. (At the beginning of the monologue, she is sitting demurely at a desk. By the end, she's standing on it.) Russell is a New Yorker, but the show has a local element: she was brought to Winnipeg by producer Jacquie Loewen, who directed an earlier iteration of the show. — Randall King SHIT: THE MUSICAL Misty Mountain Music Théâtre Cercle Molière (Venue 3), to Saturday ⭐ Winnipeg performer Donnie Baxter's one-man musical feels like a '90s after-school show gone horribly wrong — like if Barney sang about bowel movements instead of friendship. Set in a university lecture hall, Dr. Eaton Fartmore teaches a class on the semantics of poop through stories and off-key songs that drag on like a bad bout of constipation. As the title suggests, the show is packed with relentless bathroom jokes that are about as funny as they are original. The music — available on SoundCloud via a QR code in the fringe program — has to be heard to be believed, though you probably won't want to hear it twice. The 45-minute runtime was a slog, proving too much for three audience members who walked out before the end. When Baxter sheepishly waved and backed offstage without taking a bow, it felt like even he knew: this shit was a real stinker. — Jeffrey Vallis THE TEMPESTUOUS: A SHREW'D NEW COMEDY Penash Productions John Hirsch Mainstage (Venue 1), to Sunday ⭐⭐⭐⭐ ½ But soft, what blazing ball of energy and brilliant stagecraft descended upon the John Hirsch Mainstage stage? Why, it's award-wining triple-threat Penny Ashton, who returns to the fringe after an eight-year hiatus. Tempestuous: A Shrew'd New Comedy (Supplied) The Auckland, New Zealand-based performer, who last appeared here in Promise and Promiscuity, unleashes her latest torrent, er, one-woman musical, co-written with the Bard, about 'stroppy spinster' Princess Rosa, who rails against belching stepfathers and cocksure suitors to realize her destiny as a newly empowered, validated queen. Ashton scarcely misses a beat as she morphs among a dizzying array of Shakespearean-styled characters during the 90-minute comedy, crafting each one with distinct vocal inflection and physical mannerisms. Not only can she belt out numbers and dance like no one's watching, she's also a crackerjack improviser, with her audience participation sections adding even more mirth to this roiling cauldron of feminist fun — including one particularly pointed political barb. While it's admittedly tricky at times just to keep up, this force of nature is back with an Elizabethan bang. — Holly Harris