Lowest Common Denominator

At the Performing Arts Lodge Theatre (PAL) until March 30
Lowest Common Denominator reminded me that I’m an older, heterosexual female. Nothing wrong with that; it’s just that lust at first sight is hard to wrap my head around.

Dallas Sauer as Trevor in Lowest Common Denominator. Credit: Mark Halliday

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Whose Life Is It Anyway?

At The Cultch until March 22, 2014
Jennifer Lines was still misty-eyed – and with good reason – when the cast of Whose Life Is It Anyway? took its bows. I was choked up, too. And for good reason.

Jennifer Lines, Bob Frazer and Patti Allan in Whose Life Is It Anyway? Credit: Tim Matheson

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The Seafarer

At Pacific Theatre until March 29, 2014
Those who know Ron Reed, artistic director of Pacific Theatre, will be astonished at how he has transformed himself for his role in The Seafarer. In it, his hard drinking Irish character Richard punctuates almost everything he says with the f-word and he’s so filthy, so unwashed, you’d swear you can smell what undoubtedly are Richard’s frequently pissed-in trousers.

Ron Reed as Richard in The Seafarer. Credit: Emily Cooper

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Floyd Collins

At York Theatre until March 30, 2014
This is a glorious production of a very strange musical. It’s certainly not Rodgers and Hammerstein; it’s not even Stephen Sondheim whose Sweeney Todd is comically dark. Floyd Collins is just dark.

Daren Herbert as Floyd Collins. Credit: David Cooper

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Beggar’s Opera

At Jericho Arts Centre until March 14, 2014
Adapted from John Gay’s 1728 ‘ballad opera’ by David Newham, with music composed by Daniel Deorksen, this Seven Tyrants Theatre presentation of Beggar’s Opera is, as the opening number claims, like nothing you’ve ever seen.

Martha Ansfield-Scrase as Jenny Diver in Beggar’s Opera. Credit: David Newham

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Porno Death Cult

No more performances
I love Tara Cheyenne Friedenberg’s mind; it goes into such dark and funny corners. Like her supple dancer’s body, it turns on itself, wickedly undercutting what she has just created.

Tara Cheyenne Friedenberg in Porno Death Cult. Credit: Clancy Dennehy

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Hirsch

At the Firehall Arts Centre. No more performances
Alon Nashman, co-creator (with Paul Thompson) of Hirsch, kicked off his solo performance by coming down the back stairs, through the audience to the stage, announcing, “I am your actor for the evening”.

Alon Nashman as Hirsch. Credit: Cylla von Tiedermann

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Tiny Music

No more performances
There’s nothing tiny about Tiny Music: A Sound Design Musical. There are songs but it’s not really a musical. There are musicians – piano, accordion, clarinet, violin, drums, bass and ‘live electronics’ – but it’s not a concert. There’s a story, a heartbreaking/heartwarming one, but Tiny Music is much more than a play.

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Nothing But Sky

At Scotiabank Dance Centre  (677 Davie Street) until March 2, 2014
Creator/director Kendra Fanconi tells us in her director’s notes, “Nothing But Sky is based on a true story. That is, the life story of Joe Shuster, the artist, Jerry Siegel, the writer, and Joanne Kovacs, the original model for Lois Lane, and their creation: Superman.” And who knew it was a nerdish, Jewish, bespectacled Canadian who first drew Superman?

Amitai Marmorstein and Robert Salvador in Nothing But Sky. Credit: M. Sider

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Driving Miss Daisy

At the Arts Club Granville Island Stage until March 15, 2014
Is it my imagination or has Nicola Lipman been portraying quirky little old ladies since the beginning of time? It’s not a complaint – she’s wonderful at it: shuffling walk, shrunken posture, quavering voice. No one delivers such perfectly timed, snarky lines like Lipman.

John Campbell as Hoke and Nicola Lipman as Miss Daisy in Driving Miss Daisy. Credit: David Cooper

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