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Posts Tagged ‘Sterling Lynch’

Navigating the Undercurrents: an interview with Pat Gauthier (Part 2)

January 27th, 2011 by Andrew Snowdon

The undercurrents festival is now well underway at the Great Canadian Theatre Company. When I spoke with Pat Gauthier a couple of weeks ago, he shared some insight into the decision process behind the lineup, and the spectrum of artistic creation that is represented across these six shows.


That’s the difference from the Fringe model, and that brings it closer to the existing festival model. Of the three local productions, you’ve got one that’s been around for a couple of years, one that’s fairly recent, and one that’s just now being created. Did you plan it that way?

“Expect the unexpected” at the 2010 Ottawa Fringe Festival

June 3rd, 2010 by Emma Godmere

Drama. Comedy. Shakespeare. Burlesque. Improv. Dance rock-opera retellings of Inuit folk tales. Zombies.  

This’s year’s 2010 Ottawa Fringe Festival — aptly titled “Fringe Feast” – promises to have something for everyone as 60 production companies ascend 16 stages across the city for over 370 performances June 17-27. 

Sounds like a lot, doesn’t it? But it gets even better. 

The festival’s executive director, Natalie Joy Quesnel, filled Ottawa Tonite in on some exciting initiatives the Fringe is launching this month. “Mini-Fringers Make A Scene” gives parents the opportunity to drop their kids off to take part in a mini drama camp hosted by the Orleans Young Players on Saturday afternoon, while parents get the freedom to enjoy several Fringe shows. In recognition of the festival’s first year as a registered charity (just like every year, 100 per cent of the ticket sales go back to the artists), the “Fringe it Forward” campaign will invite theatregoers to donate to the Fringe and its three charitable partners — Jer’s Vision, Big Brothers Big Sisters Ottawa, and Hopewell.

(more information available here: Ottawa Fringe Lunchtime Artists Series)

 

  

Theatregoers will also get the chance to meet and interact with Fringe actors and artists with the festival’s “Artists Series” happening every weekday from June 21-25 at noon in the Fringe courtyard. Heather Marie Scheerschmidt shares the details of each day’s unique events with Ottawa Tonite (more information available here: Ottawa Fringe Lunchtime Artists)

One of the best things about the Ottawa Fringe Festival is its ability to bring local and international theatre communities together — as local actor and playwright Sterling Lynch (who happens to be involved in three Fringe productions this summer) told Ottawa Tonite, “We get to play host to great talent from around the world and show off our own talent.”

Local director Teri Loretto agreed: “It’s a fabulous place for young, upcoming actors or people who have only been involved in community theatre to break into a huge audience that comes from all aspects of life.”

Both Ottawa thespians took the opportunity to share their Fringe experiences with Ottawa Tonite. 

So how are they getting the word out about it all? Pat Gauthier, community manager for this year’s festival, tells Ottawa Tonite about FullyFringed.ca, where you’ll be able to find reviews for every Fringe performance, and more social media initiatives the festival is taking on to reach out to Ottawa audiences. 

The 2010 Ottawa Fringe Festival officially kicks off on Thursday, June 17th. Tickets are available now via ottawafringe.com, along with more information about shows, venues, how to volunteer, and more. 

(Emma Godmere is a local journalist and entertainment fanatic who believes the Ottawa arts scene is very much alive and well. She is the host of Now Playing on CHUO 89.1 FM every Wednesday at 1pm.)

Video Courtesy: Kevin Burton

One Minute to Midnight: Sterling Lynch’s Home In Time at the OLT this weekend

April 20th, 2010 by Andrew Snowdon

Phoenix Coffee shop2

Every time I call playwright Sterling Lynch a genius, I worry that someone out there thinks I’m being hyperbolic—or worse, paid.

I assure you, the inverse is true.

Your chance to verify my claim is on Saturday, April 24, at 8pm, as the Ottawa Little Theatre plays host to a workshop presentation of his award-winning play, Home In Time, directed by Peter Hinton.

Yes, Peter Hinton, Artistic Director of English Theatre at the National Arts Centre. I don’t feel so hyperbolic when a playwright gets an endorsement like that.

We got a taste of what Home In Time will look like at Cube Salon in February, where a small portion of the play was presented as a staged reading. Balancing Sterling’s flair for subtle comedy with his tendency to bring up philosophical subjects in an unconventional manner, Home In Time is as fun to watch as it is intellectually stimulating.

Sterling had asked for feedback when he first made the play available on his website; during our brief correspondence (I read the play in one sitting, and still have my printed-out version peppered with marginal notes) he shed some light on the writing process: “I keep my playwriting brain separate from my directing brain: so I only include as many stage directions as are required to drive the narrative.”

I’m curious to see what a seasoned, world-class director like Peter Hinton is going to do with an already brilliant piece. And for only ten dollars? There’s got to be some kind of catch.

Well, there is: space is limited. Call the Ottawa Little Theatre box office (or order online) and get your ticket now, before your time is up.

 

Andrew Snowdon is a theatregoer, concert attendee, and writer living in Lowertown, Ottawa, sandwiched between a MacBook and a typewriter, with a cup of coffee.

Cube Salon: tempus

March 11th, 2010 by Andrew Snowdon

Tempus fugit. Time is fleeting.

That’s what I was thinking as I looked down at my iPhone, hand freezing to it in the cold wind outside Cube Gallery, waiting for my friend Crystal (recruited as a last-minute photographer) to join me for tempus, the first installment in the current Cube Salon series, and the last performance at Cube’s Hamilton Avenue location.

Once inside, we were greeted by Evan Thornton, whom we’d both met in his role as theatre reviewer for the Wellington Oracle while we were volunteering for the Ottawa Fringe Festival this past summer. He welcomed us to the Salon, showed us where to put our coats, and recommended the Qu&ecaute;bec cider cheese.

As we were deciding where to sit, a very tall man with a sheaf of papers in his hand walked out of the back section of the gallery. It was Sterling Lynch, holding a copy of his play Home in Time; I waved, and he came over to shake our hands. Although I’d read the play (thoroughly, making notes), seen him perform (particularly in Nadine Thornhill’s Oreo this past Fringe season), read his blog Movement, and had numerous interactions with him over Twitter, this was my first time meeting him in person.

We chose seats in the second row, to stage right. Wayne Current dropped by to say hi; we had sat together at the GCTC for the opening night of BASH’d! and had a conversation about social media during the afterparty. Now, in suit and striped tie, he was preparing to read the stage directions for Home in Time. Wayne is producing Sterling’s companion play, The Prisoner’s Dilemma, for next year’s Ottawa Fringe. For once, I detected a touch of nervousness in Wayne’s normally entirely confident demeanour.

Cube Gallery Curator Don Petit relaxes for a moment.

Curator Don Monet welcomed us with a brief explanation of how the salon concept started in 16th-century France, and how the Salon series put on by Cube were an attempt to recapture that sharing and co-operation between the arts. He went over the agenda for the evening, which included music, poetry, and theatre, as we enjoyed our wine and basked in the presence of the art on the gallery walls.

John Carroll, wearing a fedora and wool sportcoat, sat down and picked up his guitar, starting the show with a song by Dan Weisenberger from Vancouver Island, then his own Lost Radio (available on his CD ), before going on to play New Leaf, and finishing with Boldly When I Go.

Next, Jonathan Koensgen took the stage, and performed a reading of Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s Kubla Khan, but with such clear emotion and theatrical cadence that this familiar poem seemed to take on new depth of meaning. The poem, describing as it does a state of immortality and timelessness, was well-chosen, perfectly in keeping with the evening’s theme.

We took a break, and I took the chance to chat with Breanna, about to play her part in Sterling’s Home in Time. She, like everyone else in the Ottawa theatre scene, has some pretty insightful things to say about theatre and the arts, and we ended up talking about the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, of all things.

Don came out to introduce Sterling and the other actors. Before he did that, he asked us to look up at the ceiling. I could see plastic glow-in-the-dark stars stuck to wood planks. Don told us that those planks were the reason that musicians, particularly jazz musicians, loved to play in this room; the ceiling being made entirely of old-growth BC red cedar, there was no echo, and the timbre was perfect.

“You’re some of the last people to enjoy this,” he said.

I was eager to finally see Home in Time, even as only a partial staged reading. The centrepiece of the evening brought the words of the play to life, with a crisp, well-rehearsed reading by Wayne, Breanna, Colleen Sutton (who was also in Oreo), and Sterling himself.

Having read the play (which I highly recommend), I was acutely aware of the audience’s reactions to nuances of the plot and the dialogue for which I was already prepared. I also wondered (since the play in full is supposed to run just short of an hour) at what point they would cut it; the dialogue flows at a pace that makes it difficult to find a lull or natural break in the action. The point they chose was extremely effective, and definitely left the audience wanting more.

Sterling mentioned that, due to the attention the recent award had brought to the play, Peter Hinton of the NAC had arranged a full staged reading of the play for April.

Koensgen came out again holding a thick book, which he explained had been given to him that day by his mother as a gift; it was the Norton Anthology of Poetry. Having been called in at the last minute to fill in for Kel Parsons, due to illness, it turned out to be a well-timed gift indeed. Jonathan performed a stirring, brilliant interpretation of Keats’ Ode to a Nightingale, a poem in stark contrast to Kubla Khan, dealing with the ephemeral, transitive, impermanent nature of experience.

John Carroll pours his heart and soul into a blues lick.

John Carroll set down a glass of red wine beside his chair and took up his guitar to finish off the show with more of his inspiring blues and roots vocals, lap steel, and acoustic guitar. It’s tempting to go catch him some Wednesday evening at the Chateau Lafayette, where he is something of a fixture.

We went over to chat with Sterling, Evan, and Don over at the bar. We talked for a while about arts blogging in Ottawa, particularly the necessity of covering each and every one of the Fringe Festival’s shows this year. I turned the Salon promo piece over in my hands and asked, “Why this?” Banksy’s well-known image of the protester about to overhand a bouquet of flowers in place of a Molotov cocktail was the image they’d chosen to represent the series. The general consensus was that the image was meant to convey the idea of artistic revolution.

I leaned on the bar and asked Don what was going to happen to the Cube Gallery space. “We’ve got it until March 1st,” he said. After that, it would be an antique furniture showroom until the owners had it torn down to make way for a condo development. I hung my head.

As we left, I looked up at the red cedar ceiling, wondering how many fleeting moments like this those beautiful strips of wood had witnessed over the years.
Sterling Lynch, relaxing after his performance.  (Don't worry; not all four empty glasses of wine were his.)
The next installment in the series, memento, will be at Cube Gallery’s new location, 1285 Wellington Street West, on March 13th at 7:30 pm. In the meantime, I recommend listening to pretty much anything by John Carroll, Paranoid Android by Radiohead, and, although it’s tempting, not Iron Maiden’s Two Minutes to Midnight.


Andrew Snowdon is a theatregoer, concert attendee, and writer. He lives in Lowertown, Ottawa, between a typewriter and a MacBook, with a cup of coffee.