2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival: Tomasso’s Party

Presented by Rooftop Creations
Written by Jules Lewis
Directed by Nigel Shawn Williams

Tomasso's Party

Jules Lewis’ quirky two-hander Tomasso’s Party takes an intimate look at the sexual and emotional politics between two young lovers. Hugo (Simon Bracken) is hyper-anxious because Madeleine (Leah Doz) wants to go to a birthday party for her boss (the mysterious womanizer Tomasso), and he suspects she may be cheating on him.

Andre Du Toit’s cozy bedroom set becomes increasing stifling as the pair engage in cutting back-and-forth dialogue—full of teasing and torturous remarks—that leave the audience and Hugo unsure of Madeleine’s true intentions.

Bracken brings great comic energy to the neurotic Simon, while Doz gives a remarkably expressive performance as Madeleine (using only her voice and arms) with her back to us the entire time—an interesting approach that succeeds in making us feel Hugo’s distress more intensely.

Tomasso’s Party runs until January 15 at the Factory Studio Theatre. Visit fringetoronto.com for a full performance schedule.

Rating:
Posted by Lauren Gillett in Theatre | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival: Loving The Stranger

Presented by Ecce Homo Theatre
Written and directed by Alistair Newton
Inspired by the life of Peter Flinsch

Loving The Stranger

Ecce Homo Theatre’s Loving The Stranger or How To Recognize An Invert has my vote for best of the 2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival. This show represents everything modern theatre should be: artistically bold, intellectually curious, emotionally compelling and visually striking.

Based on the life story of Montreal’s Peter Flinsch (theatre designer, visual artist, and survivor of the Nazi persecution of homosexuals under Paragraph 175), the cabaret-style production presents a musical collage of queer history facts and figures from the 20th century.

Alistair Newton’s script pulls from multiple sources, including a recorded interview with Flinsch (the last before his death in 2010), personal memoirs, newly translated documents from the history of the gay rights movement in Germany and homophobic Nazi propagana. The play also examines contemporary LGBT rights issues with satirical recreations of anti-gay Proposition 8 ads and a couple of digs at Stephen Harper’s stance on same-sex marriage.

The uber-talented cast of five—Seth Drabinsky, Matt Eger, Kimberly Persona, Geoff Stevens and dancer Laurence Ramsay—play over 30 characters, while Flinsch (played by a deeply committed Hume Baugh) observes from his chair. Featuring wonderful costumes and makeup, silent film projections, and music from the gay cabarets of 1920s Berlin, Loving The Stranger is a unique and touching tribute to a courageous man, in loving memory of the others who didn’t live to tell their story.

Loving The Stranger runs until January 15, 2012 at the Factory Theatre Mainspace. Visit fringetoronto.com for a full performance schedule.

Rating:
Posted by Lauren Gillett in Theatre | Tagged , | Leave a comment

2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival: Uncalled For Presents Hypnogogic Logic

Created and performed by Uncalled For
Written by Matt Goldberg, Mike Hughes, Dan Jeannotte and Anders Yeats
Performed by Matt Goldberg, Dan Jeannotte, Colin Munch and Anders Yeats

Uncalled For. Photo by Jeremy Bobrow.

Montreal sketch troupe Uncalled For explores the depths of the subconscious mind in Hypnogogic Logic, an absurdly funny comedy about the unpredictable and frequently insightful world of dreams.

Dressed in matching khaki shorts and bright red lifejackets, Matt Goldberg, Dan Jeannotte, Colin Munch and Anders Yeats move through a series of strange and hilarious scenarios (post-apocalyptic television shows, dangerous missions, wine tastings) with spastic energy and infectious enthusiasm.

The troupe makes great use of the space, integrating chairs, newspapers and a few well-chosen props along the way. Hold onto your bed posts!

Hypnogogic Logic runs until January 15, 2012 at the Factory Theatre Mainspace. Visit fringetoronto.com for a full performance schedule.

Want to know more about Hypnogogic Logic? Read our 2011 Toronto Fringe Festival Q&A with Uncalled For.


Rating:
Posted by Lauren Gillett in Theatre | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival: Love Is A Poverty You Can Sell

Presented by Soup Can Theatre
Directed and choreographed by Sarah Thorpe
Emcee segments written by Justin Haigh
Musical direction by Pratik Gandhi

Love Is A Poverty You Can Sell

Soup Can Theatre’s Love Is A Poverty You Can Sell is a dark and sultry tribute to the music and influence of legendary composer Kurt Weill. Hosted by German emcees, Hans (Ryan Anning) and Jodel (Scott Dermody), this condensed version of the 2010 Fringe hit transforms the Factory Theatre upstairs bar into a 1920s Berlin cabaret.

The floor show features a four-piece orchestra, including woodwinds (Ruhee Dwji), keyboard (Terence Vince), cello (Cory Latkovich) and percussion (Pratik Gandhi), and performances by Dayna Chernoff, Alex Dault, Christian Jeffries, Natalie Kulesza and Hayley Preziosi. Stand out numbers include: “Class” (Chicago), “Money Money” (Cabaret) and “September Song” (Knickerbocker Holiday). At 30 minutes, this is just a taste of what these talented people have to offer—a delectable musical theatre treat!

Love Is A Poverty You Can Sell runs until January 15, 2012 at the Factory Theatre Ante-Chamber. Visit fringetoronto.com for a full performance schedule.

Rating:
Posted by Lauren Gillett in Theatre | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival: Living With Henry

Presented by Beyond Boundaries
Book, music and lyrics by Christopher Wilson
Directed and choreographed by Donna Marie Baratta

Ryan Kelly in Living With Henry

Ryan Kelly in Living With Henry.

Christopher Wilson’s Living With Henry is a musical drama about the realities of living with HIV/AIDS today. The main character, Michael (played by Ryan Kelly), learns the “price of nice” when he sleeps with pos-boyfriend Matthew (John Edwards) and becomes infected. From then on, Michael is shadowed by HIV, or “Henry” (embodied by the commanding David Silvestri). The virus threatens Michael’s life and affects all of his close relationships—with his mother (Mary Kelly), best friend Jenni (Lizzie Kurtz), and new partner Peter (Jay Davis)—but in the end he learns to accept his condition and take care of himself.

Featuring introspective songs and dedicated performances by talented cast members, Living With Henry creates an instant emotional bond with the audience. The musical deals with heavy subject matter, but Wilson’s sense of humour makes more than a few appearances throughout. His script is bursting with lighthearted moments, including a song and dance performed by HIV medications Sustiva and Truvada in colourful costumes and wigs, and a saucy tango number in the men’s bathroom. In the end, this show is definitely more about the joy of living than the fear of dying.

Want to know more? Read our Q&A with writer and composer Christopher Wilson.

Living With Henry runs until January 15, 2012 at the Factory Theatre Mainspace. Visit fringetoronto.com for a full performance schedule.

Rating:
Posted by Lauren Gillett in Theatre | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival — Morro & Jasp: Go Bake Yourself

Presented by U.N.I.T. Productions
Created and performed by Heather Marie Annis and Amy Lee
Directed and dramaturged by Byron Laviolette

Morro and Jasp in Go Bake Yourself

Heather Marie Annis and Amy Lee.

Eat your hearts out, Gordon Ramsay and Martha Stewart—Toronto’s favourite clown sisters are back with their very own cooking show. Now playing at the 2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival, Morro and Jasp: Go Bake Yourself transforms the Factory Theatre upstairs bar into a comedic test kitchen where anything can happen (and it does).

Morro (Heather Marie Annis) prepares for a Hell’s Kitchen-style battle, while Jasp (Amy Lee) hopes to win a man’s heart with her signature soufflé. As usual, the audience gets involved, and things get messy (watch out for flying food!). At 30 minutes, this quick hit comedy is a guaranteed recipe for fun.

Morro and Jasp: Go Bake Yourself runs until January 15, 2012 in the Factory Theatre Ante-Chamber (if you can still get tickets!). Visit fringetoronto.com for a full performance schedule.

Rating:
Posted by Lauren Gillett in Theatre | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival: The Tiki Bikini Beach Paradise Party A-Go-Go!

Written and directed by Allison Beula
Original songs composed by Jeffery Straker

The Tiki Bikini Paradise Party A-Go-Go!

A playful tribute to the swinging beach party movies of the 1960s, Allison Beula’s The Tiki Bikini Beach Paradise Party A-Go-Go! remembers a time when Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello surfed the silver screen, dance crazes were all the rage, and everything was copasetic.

With hilarious nods to popular shows such as Gidget, Gilligan’s Island and Scooby Doo, the hour long musical—featuring 14 cast members and five musicians—follows a group of bikini-clad girls and surfer boys in the last days of summer vacation. Lead by cutesy couple Freddie (Thomas Duplessie) and Jeannette (Sarah Kuzio), the teens are planning a beach party in an area controlled by tough guy Big Tuna (Evan Dowling) and his sidekick Mini Minnow (Stephan Dickson). They fight to keep their spot—with a surf-off, of course.

Showcasing classic tunes like Guy Hemric and Jerry Styner’s “Bikini Beach,” “How To Stuff A Wild Bikini,” and “Pajama Party,” as well as original songs by Beula and Jeffery Straker, this lively performance—overflowing with colourful Hawaiian-styled costumes and props—is the perfect winter escape.

The Tiki Bikini Beach Paradise Party A-Go-Go! runs until January 15, 2012 at the Factory Theatre Mainspace. Visit fringetoronto.com for a full performance schedule.

Rating:
Posted by Lauren Gillett in Theatre | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival Q&A: Jessica Moss

Jessica Moss in Modern Love

Originally presented at Canadian Stage’s Festival of Ideas and Creation, Theatre Caravel‘s Modern Love takes a look at the ways we connect with and disconnect from each other every day. Here, we talk with writer and solo performer Jessica Moss about the show’s upcoming run at the 2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival (opens January 5, 5:30pm—Factory Studio Theatre).

Theatromania: What inspired you to write Modern Love?

JM: There used to be a loneliness I could only feel in crowded rooms, and now I feel it all the time.

That’s a line in the play. And that’s where it started from.

I’m really tormented by Facebook. Like, really. I found that the more “friends” I had, the
more I questioned who my real friends were, and the more people knew and could find out
about my life without me being aware, the more I had no one to tell anything to. I wanted to talk about the idea of “connection” as something technical, a hook up to an online world, in juxtaposition with the idea of a connection you have with one other person. I wanted to talk about how our world is shrinking but my sense of being alone is getting bigger and bigger.

I love solo shows and I thought that one performer playing all the parts could
simultaneously show a world very crowded with people and connections and interactions,
and a world that was scarily isolated. My favourite work is always very funny and very sad at the same time, or alternating quickly between these two things, and my feelings about how absurd my social interactions were, but also how much they were hurting me felt like they were in some balance between hysterical and heartbreaking.

So I thought all of these things could come together and make a show.

Theatromania: How has the production evolved since it was first developed for Canadian Stage’s Festival of Ideas and Creation?

JM: There are three other people involved in the show: Kyle Purcell, who does all the
mulitimedia work, Eric Double, the director, and Julia Nish-Lapidus, the producer. They’ve
all worked very hard on bringing this to life, both at the festival, and now, as we’re moving
towards Next Stage.

The first production we did was 30 minutes. For Next Stage, we knew there was more to
flesh out and things we wanted to touch on, so we expanded to 60 minutes. In doing that,
we had the opportunity to talk about new things (Twitter and Skype now have little features, among others), but we also had to find a way for all of these additions to help the central relationships and problems of the play get deeper and deeper.

Building the show to what it is now was, I think, about thinking bigger, and pushing the
limits of what was possible for me as a performer and for the technology that we use (which involves a giant screen), while at the same time getting simpler, clearer, and more honest about the heart of the show.

Theatromania: Have you learned anything in the process?

JM: I think I’m learning that no matter how much I learn, I have a lot to learn. It’s a hard lesson. Like, calculus hard. I feel I learn something and then in the next project it doesn’t work. So I learn something opposite, and then in the next one that doesn’t work. The truth is in between all these things, maybe. Thesis, antithesis, synthesis. And then the synthesis
becomes the new thesis and it all starts again.

I’m either learning a lot or slowly going crazy.

Theatromania: Best experience working on the show so far?

JM: The reception at the Festival of Ideas and Creation was really amazing. I was incredibly nervous, and didn’t know what to expect, in terms of who would come, how many of them would come, and what they would think about it. We had to bring in extra seats, there were so many people, and we just had this lovely, generous audience who were so supportive. Even my ability to feel bad about myself was silenced by the kindness of that room.

There was one line that I thought was OK in the script, and when it was performed onstage, it got an enormous laugh. It shocked me. I was worried it wouldn’t resonate with anyone other than me, and their laughter was an acceptance, a “Yes, me too!”

People coming up to me after and saying, “I feel that way too,” is such a wonderful
experience. One of my favorite quotes is from Chuck Klosterman: ‘“Art and love are the
same thing: It’s the process of seeing yourself in things that are not you.” It’s scary to stand on a stage and talk about my fears, insecurities, hopes, and to present them in a way that reflects my pretty weird imagination. When someone sees that and goes, “I get that,” it’s like they see the parts of me that I wish I could hide, and they don’t run away. It’s an antidote to loneliness.

Theatromania: What excites you most about this year’s Next Stage Theatre Festival?

JM: It’s a Fringe in January! All the friends, theatre and beer without the unpleasantness of beautiful weather!

Theatromania: Are you working on any upcoming projects?

JM: I have ideas for seven hundred plays in my head. So, my plan is to train seven hundred monkeys to create them for me. And one monkey to do the bookkeeping. Someone has to keep track of all those bananas.

Modern Love runs from January 5 to 15 at the Factory Studio Theatre. Visit fringetoronto.com for a full performance schedule, and stay tuned for our review!

Posted by Lauren Gillett in Theatre | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival Q&A: Christopher Wilson

Ryan Kelly and David Silvestri in Living With Henry

Kelly Ryan and David Silvestri in Living With Henry.

Featured as part of the Best of Fringe Uptown 2011, Living With Henry is a new musical drama that explores the fear, complications and realities of living with HIV/AIDS today. Here, we talk with writer and composer Christopher Wilson about the show’s upcoming run at the 2012 Next Stage Theatre Festival (opens tomorrow, 8:45pm—Factory Theatre Mainspace).

Theatromania: What inspired Living With Henry?

CW: Living With Henry is in many ways an autobiographical piece, though it has been further developed and has evolved dramatically through its workshop, rehearsal processes and initial Toronto Fringe Festival production. The piece began with my personal HIV diagnosis—and grew as a means to cope with something that was initially very frightening—to shift it into something more humanized and emotionally manageable.

It began with personal dialogues and journal entries. Those further evolved into writing scenes and composing songs. And it landed as an hour and a half musical drama—exploring some very important and hard-hitting issues that continue to confront both our gay community and the community at large. These issues include fear of disclosure, medication
management and interpersonal relationships as affected by the virus.

Theatromania: How would you describe the show’s musical style?

CW: The show’s musical styles are broad in scope. They include a contemporary musical theatre feel, a funk element, classical musical theatre sounds and even a tango.

Theatromania: Has the production changed at all since the 2011 Toronto Fringe Festival?

CW: The goal of this incarnation was to further strengthen and solidify the piece. Some of the language has been cleaned up in terms of dialogue and lyrics. Relationships have ideally been made more clear and have deepened. A few little scenes have been added to the script, as well as three additional songs. We also have three new actors (David Silvestri, John Edwards and Jay Davis) joining the company which has excitedly shifted the energy.

Further, is a shift in interpretation of characters. Henry is much more present in this version and much darker in energy. Our new actor portraying the role, David Silvestri, is bringing some very exciting qualities to the exploration. I would also offer that the “sexy” factor has also been ramped up in this version!

Theatromania: Best experience working on the show so far?

CW: Two things come to mind: 1) the pleasure of working with a incredibly dedicated and talented group of theatre artists that continue to give so openly, positively and generously! 2) the delight and surprise that this piece has and continues to resonate with so many different people on the level of overcoming personal adversity to become a much more self-realized individual.

Theatromania: What excites you most about this year’s Next Stage Theatre Festival?

CW: It is exciting to be given the opportunity to dig deeper and explore the work in a much more detailed manner. I am also very excited to support my colleagues and see the continued development of their work!

Theatromania: Are you working on any upcoming projects?

We are hopeful to be potentially invited to participate in the 2012 New York Musical Theatre Festival this July. We should know the status of things by the end of January—fingers and toes crossed !!!

Living With Henry runs from January 4 to 15 at the Factory Theatre Mainspace. Visit fringetoronto.com for a full performance schedule, and stay tuned for our review!

Posted by Lauren Gillett in Theatre | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

American Idiot

Punked: Green Day’s hit musical rocks Toronto 

Scott J. Campbell (Tunny), Van Hughes (Johnny) and Jake Epstein (Will) in American Idiot. Photo by Doug Hamilton.

Time to get off the couch and into the mosh pit (er, theatre). Green Day’s Tony Award-nominated American Idiot is on stage now at the Toronto Centre for the Arts.

Based on the concept album of the same name, American Idiot tells the story of three disaffected friends growing up in post-911 suburban America. Each dreams of life beyond the suffocating comfort of his parents’ basement: Johnny (Van Hughes), runs off to the big city; Tunny (Scott J. Campbell) joins the army; and Will (Toronto’s own Jake Epstein) stays behind to work things out with his pregnant girlfriend.

Johnny narrates the action diary-style between songs—including “Holiday,” “Boulevard of Broken Dreams,” “21 Guns” and “Wake Me Up When September Ends”—in what turns out to be a surprisingly emotional journey from angry youth to jaded adulthood. In the face of addiction, love, violence and death, the three friends reunite in a touching homecoming.

Steven Hoggett’s choreography is perfectly in sync with each heart-thumping riff as the cast members throw themselves around Christine Jones’ highly functional set. Visually this production is simply remarkable: lights flash; television screens blare politically-charged news reports; there’s even an aerial ballet scene.

The male leads pull off a fast-paced, exciting and painfully honest performance. Joined by an outstanding cast—Jennifer Bowles as Heather, Gabrielle McClinton as Whatsername, Joshua Kobak as St. Jimmy and Nicci Claspell as The Extraordinary Girl—these young actors get to the heart of Green Day’s rebellious music.

We bet you can’t keep your head from banging.

Catch American Idiot at the Toronto Centre for the Arts until January 15, 2012. Visit dancaptickets.com for more information.

 

Rating:
Posted by Lauren Gillett in Theatre | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Best of Toronto Theatre 2011

Theatromania’s top 12 picks

Ed Mirvish Theatre

December 6, 2011: 244 Victoria Street renamed the Ed Mirvish Theatre (formerly the Canon).

Looking back, 2011 has been an outstanding year for theatre in Toronto. Here’s a list of our 12 favourite shows in celebration of the coming year. Happy 2012!

1) Another Africa (Volcano Theatre in association with Canadian Stage): Featuring high-energy music, top-notch choreography, innovative design and powerhouse acting, this groundbreaking double bill showed us a modern Africa—from two very different perspectives.

2) Assassins (Birdland Theatre/Talk Is Free Theatre): Director Adam Brazier’s Dora Award-winning production came back with a bang early this year. Joined by five new cast members, the sinfully solid cast did Sondheim’s macabre musical proud. Talk about hitting the mark.

3) Brothel #9 (Factory Theatre): Anusree Roy’s riveting drama explored the painful truth about Calcutta’s sex trade and took home this year’s Dora Award for Outstanding New Play.

5) Hair (Mirvish Productions): Diane Paulus’s stirring revival of The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical from 1967—with book and lyrics by Gerome Ragni and James Rado and music by Galt MacDermot—awakened audiences to a new Age of Aquarius.

6) His Greatness (Independent Artists Repertory Theatre): Daniel MacIvor’s better-than-great play—starring Richard Donat as the self-destructive Tennessee Williams—painted a touching portrait of the theatre giant at the end of his career.

7) Montparnasse (Groundwater Productions in association with Theatre Passe Muraille): Maev Beaty and Erin Shields bared body and soul in this provocative story of two Canadian women in the hedonistic world of writers, artists and nude models in 1920s Paris.

8) Our Class (Studio 180 in association with Canadian Stage): The North American premiere of Tadeusz Słobodzianek’s astonishing play—about Polish-Jewish relations in the 20th century as seen through the eyes of a group of classmates—gave us a history lesson we won’t soon forget.

9) Ride The Cyclone (Acting Up Stage Company in association with Theatre Passe Muraille): Produced by Victoria-based theatre company Atomic Vaudeville, Jacob Richmond and Brooke Maxwell’s wildly popular musical about six teenage choir members who die in a roller coaster accident is poised to be the next Canadian cult classic.

10) Ruined (Obsidian Theatre in association with Nightwood Theatre): Lynn Nottage’s devastating play opened our eyes to the real-life horrors of war and sexual violence in Congolese society.

11) The Glass Menagerie (Soulpepper): Striking a delicate balance between humour and tragedy, director Ted Dykstra’s production showcased a fine collection of talent.

12) The Test (The Company Theatre in association with Canadian Stage): The English-language premiere of Lukas Bärfuss’ most recent play turned out to be wickedly funny and surprising—another ambitious and rewarding effort from the burgeoning Company.

Posted by Lauren Gillett in Theatre | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Hair

A shining, gleaming musical portrait of those soulful hippies and their hair

By Ava Baccari

Book and lyrics by Gerome Ragni and James Rado
Music by Galt MacDermot
Directed by Diane Paulus

The Hair National Tour

The Hair National Tour © Joan Marcus.

There’s something about tresses that the cast of Hair finds so utterly irresistible: theirs, yours. Like rock stars slamming high fives to fans they rush past along the sidelines, the flower children—“not flower pots! Pot is for smoking!” Crissy points out to one of those misguided adults—fanned through the audience at the Royal Alexandra Theatre on its opening night Wednesday, tousling the locks of anyone they could get their hands on. (Shiny, bald heads not excluded.)

It’s the dawning of the age of Aquarius, as the opening number tells us, and its offspring are a colourful (literally), freewheeling, man-hating (that’s THE Man) bunch. And oh, the hair! The woolly, matted locks of hippie heartthrob Steel Burkhardt, which he can’t stop ruffling his fingers through, are as much a part of his character Berger’s charm as his unsurprising inability to commit—to a home, to school or to his doe-eyed, activist girlfriend, Sheila (Sara King).

Similar to how Twitter and Facebook rallied the fed-up masses in the countless protests this year alone, music both unites and drives the anti-war sentiment of the East Village flower children in 1967 New York. It’s through song that Claude (Paris Remillard) rails against his abhorrent fate of being drafted to fight in the Vietnam War or where the spirited tribe argues that their free-loving, drug-addled ways are an enlightened, non-violent resistance to political, racial and cultural spheres in mainstream America. And of course, the nuclear weapons.

Director Diane Paulus’s stirring powerhouse of a musical—a revival of The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical from 1967—reignited on Broadway back in 2008, winning the 2009 Tony, then blazed in London’s West End in April last year. The lyrics by Gerome Ragni and James Rado harvest the inflammatory sentiment of the us-versus-them politics held by those gentle, highly engaged hippies careening on revolution—or refusing to grow up and “face reality,” if you ask their parents. When they hold up their “lay don’t slay” signs in protest, you really sense the earnest, non-threatening nature of these kids. And want to hug them for it (you may even get the chance to, lucky aisle-seaters).

Major props to Lisa Ann Fraley, hair supervisor on the North American tour, who teases, tosses and tousles the cast’s down-to-there locks into gloriously grungy hippie perfection. With bell bottoms and paisley-patterned everything, the costume design by Michael McDonald completes their 1960s transformation.

The soul of Hair is what stands out in the midst of flashy clothes and vibrant, heartfelt ballads. It’s one that defines every typecast generation of rebellious youth and that timeless, perilous journey of coming of age, provoking change and finding your true voice in the process. Some things never change.

So step back in time and let the music remind you of who you once were and what you unabashedly stood for—or at least make you nostalgic for a time when running barefoot in the fields, free love and protesting Washington were all in a day’s work. It’s OK to let your hair down—in fact, it’s a must.

Hair is on stage now at the Royal Alexandra Theatre until December 31. Visit mirvish.com for more information and to buy tickets.

 

Rating:
Posted by Ava Baccari in Theatre | Tagged , | 1 Comment