Review Archive
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.
Single Thread’s Collider: Immersive VR Suggests the Possibilities of Theatre
- Review
- Single Thread Theatre Co
In a moment where Zoom meetings, doom-scrolling, and our digital worlds seem repetitive as ever, Single Thread Theatre Company’s production of Collider presents a profoundly innovative way to bring digital theatre to Canadian audiences.
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.
Queen’s Players makes Cultural Studies scholars S[CREAM]!
- Queen's Players
- Queen's University
- Review
Turn on any device, log onto any platform, and you will immediately feel how saturated digital content has become. It’s near impossible to escape the overwhelming monotony of endless scrolling, nostalgia culture, and algorithms predicting your tastes before you even develop them.
DSS: Jigsaw; Hilarity, Sombreness and Curiosity Unfolds Virtually
- DAN Studio Series
- Queen's University
- Review
On March 3rd, the Dan Studio Series produced its winter installment, DSS: Jigsaw. There were clear aspects that DSS was able to innovate and progress upon based on the ubiquitous learning curve that creatives faced while adapting to a virtual environment last semester.
John & Waleed Delightfully Break Down Cultural Barriers Through Music
- Grand ONStage
- Review
towards cultures outside our own. Live-streamed from Toronto’s Theatre Passe Muraille, the production was digitally co-presented by the Grand Onstage. Resembling more of a cabaret than a theatrical play, the performance shifts between musical numbers and anecdotes from the two performers.
Queen’s Players Goes Virtual!
- Queen's Players
- Queen's University
- Review
What do famed Canadian comedians Lorne Greene, Robertson Davies and eleven current Queen’s students all have in common? Queen’s Players! The oldest club at Queen’s University, dating back to 1900, Players describe themselves as “a cross between Saturday Night Live, a rock concert, and a kegger.” In a non-COVID world, Players would consist of crowded performances at The Mansion full of flowing pitchers and Players singing along to pop hits […]
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.
Voulez-Zoom brings the Dance Party of Mamma Mia to Zoom
- Blue Canoe Productions
- Queen's Musical Theatre
- Review
r escapism, which frankly, seems like a necessity in 2020. However, I have yet to experience a production that feels as escapist as Blue Canoe’s Voulez-Zoom. Running just over an hour, this feel-good, dance party-esque show lured me into the fun and joy that is Mamma Mia.
Audience Plays Role of Detective in 6AM’s A Very Merry Mystery
- Review
of A Very Merry Mystery, audiences are given the unique opportunity to play the role of detective in this part-theatre, part-whodunit performance.