Festival Archive

Aaron Collier’s Frequencies creates a stunning combination of autobiography and techno music
- Festival
- FOLDA
- Review
- Spiderwebshow
Described as a part-techno concert and part autobiographical, the musical innovatively tells the entertaining and captivating story of Collier’s life, starting at the beginning of the universe.

Good Things To Do is technological poetry
- Festival
- FOLDA
- Review
- Spiderwebshow
Good Things To Do is an immersive virtual experience “blending dreamy sonic landscape, solitary physical environment and an unexpected use of technology” in order to explore the softness within ourselves the world demands we abandon. From its initial workshop implementing digital design into the live installation at foldA in 2018 to its adaptation for COVID-19 today, Good Things To Do’s full embrace of a computerized form is the very thing that potentiates the theatricality of dream logic.

Virtual Connectedness and Pandemic Dreaming at Cabin Fever PROTOTYPE
- Festival
- FOLDA
- Review
- Spiderwebshow
In the first few months of the pandemic, virtual activities were beyond popular. From Zoom drinks to Club Quarantine to the rise of TikTok, people around the globe were craving a sense of togetherness that the pandemic was devoid of. Cabin Fever PROTOTYPE seeks to address this phenomenon: can virtual events create a sense of togetherness and unity?

New Canadian Musical LANCASHIRE LASS Explores British History Through A Soaring Score
- Festival
- Queen's University
- Review
- Watershed Festival
like a surprising combination to some. On May 27, the Watershed Festival presented award-winning composer and DAN School of Drama and Music’s artist-in-residence Leslie Arden’s latest commission The Lancashire Lass, a full-length musical that will receive its premiere at next year’s festival.

Watershed’s New Works Showcase dives in head first
- Festival
- Queen's University
- Review
- Watershed Festival
The Watershed Festival continues to explore how and who exactly are the artists examining and developing music theatre as we know it. The New Works Showcase featured a series of upcoming projects at various stages of development from artists across the country, followed by a live Q & A with the creators.

Leading Ladies: Musique 3 Femmes at the Watershed Festival
- Festival
- Queen's University
- Review
- Watershed Festival
In a time of creative and collective upheaval, the inaugural Watershed Festival examines the integration of music, drama, dance, and design as musical theatre or opera, exploring those boundaries in order to revitalize the ways those artforms are practiced and understood.

SLC Digital Debris Fest 2: Digital Creativity in Its Finest Form
- Festival
- Review
- St. Lawrence College
Digital Debris Fest 2, a digital showcase of their year’s work. The digital event featured 15 different artistic iterations that seamlessly incorporated music, digital media, videography, calligraphy, revealing the true interdisciplinary talents of the students.

Expressions of the electric – Digital Debris Festival 2020
- Festival
- Review
- St. Lawrence College
semester showcase illustrating what exactly the students are interested and capable of creating. The works we witness have been made by artists who are unseen outside of their work.

KTA Takes on The Shortwave Theatre Festival
- Festival
- Review
- Shortwave Radio Theatre Festival
rom November 1st to November 7th, I had the privilege of attending the Shortwave Theatre Festival, a festival of radio dramas presented by CFRC. While the festival featured six different radio plays, I had the opportunity to listen to and review three.

Old form, new frontiers – The Soundcastle at the Shortwave Radio Theatre Festival
- Festival
- Review
- Shortwave Radio Theatre Festival
In her new radio play The Soundcastle, Sarah Emtage explores what happens if a tree falls in a forest and somewhere, rather than someone, is around to hear it.

In verse and over the phone – Ned Dickens’ debut at the Kick & Push Festival
- Festival
- Kick & Push Festival
- Kingston Theatre Alliance
- Review
This is how playwright and storyteller Ned Dickens describes why a bunch of strangers are collected together on a conference call. From Kingston’s Breakwater Park to my stepdad’s deck in Toronto to the bedrooms of a youth theatre group in India, Luke and the Big Circles is a cycle of four stories in verse and over the phone.

The Itinerary: Playtest seeks new ways to say good night and good-bye
- Festival
- Kick & Push Festival
- Kingston Theatre Alliance
- Review
immersive and inter-disciplinary theatre company Outside the March returns to the Kick and Push Festival for their fourth year with The Itinerary: Playtest. Broadcasted through Zoom and enacted through your phone, the performance is literally in the hands of the audience. Players select from a series of actions to be carried out by performers Amaka Umeh and Sébastien Heins, taking us through the death, life, then death again of the one and only: Elaine.