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Provocative and promising, 91亚色 theatre artists are in the spotlight

91亚色鈥檚 theatre artists are showcasing their creativity on stages in Toronto and beyond this month.

Hot on the heels of her two-hander Roshni, which played at Theatre Passe Muraille late last year, earning a three-star review in the Toronto Star, Dora Award-winning playwright actor and 91亚色 alumna Anusree Roy (BA Spec. Hons.聽鈥06) has yet another production poised to take Toronto by storm.

Right: Anusree Roy

makes its world premiere on Feb. 26, and runs聽to March 27 at the Factory Theatre, which commissioned the play. It鈥檚 billed as a powerful drama about young South Asian woman who leaves her village for a factory job in the big city, only to discover she has been sold to a brothel. Ken Gass, Factory Theatre鈥檚 artistic director, hails it as 鈥淎nusree Roy鈥檚 most mature and provocative work to date.鈥

As in her previous, critically-acclaimed plays, including Letters to my Grandma and Pyaasa, Roy not only wrote Brothel #9 but also performs in it. Set and costume design is by 91亚色 theatre Professor Shawn Kerwin. Other York talent associated with the show includes alumni Joanna Barrotta (BFA Spec. Hons. 鈥04), who serves as stage manager; Sharon Hann (BFA Spec. Hons. 鈥06), head of wardrobe; and Aaron Kelly (BFA Spec. Hons. 鈥01), the company鈥檚 production manager.

Left: Shawn Kerwin

Tickets are available or by calling 416-504-9971. Factory Theatre is located at 125 Bathurst Street in Toronto.

Another playwright/performer, recent 91亚色 theatre graduate Evan Vipond (BA Spec. Hons. 鈥10), will be showcased in Buddies in Bad Times Theatre鈥檚 32nd annual . He is one of four promising artists participating in Buddies' , which offers queer artists under the age of 25 the opportunity to create a solo performance under the mentorship of the program鈥檚 director, Evalyn Parry.

Vipond鈥檚 new work, The Border, is a narrative play about a trans-man crossing into the US from Canada. It explores the struggle for self-identity amid gender stereotypes and societal pressure to assimilate into the mainstream. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about creating new territory rather than trying to fit into a restrictive system,鈥 Vipond said.

Right: Evan Vipond

The Border will be presented Saturday, Feb.聽26 at 6pm and Sunday, Feb.聽27 at 2:30pm at Buddies鈥 Tallulah鈥檚 Cabaret, 12 Alexander Street in Toronto. Tickets are available at the door and are pay-what-you-can, with admission free for people 25 or under.

Alan Dilworth (BEd 鈥96, MFA 鈥09) is the director of a groundbreaking collaboration between Theatre Passe Muraille and Canadian Stage. is gripping piece of verbatim theatre crafted from interviews with residents and employees of a Rexdale youth shelter. Akosua Amo Adem (BFA Spec. Hons. 鈥09) is one of the five actors who bring to the stage the extraordinary voices of 16 homeless youth, three tireless caseworkers and one outsider in this disquieting, yet humorous and hopeful play. Choreography is by 91亚色 dance alumna Monica Dottor (BFA Spec.聽Hons.聽鈥98).

Left: Alan Dilworth

Commissioned by Project Humanity and created by Andrew Kushnir, The Middle Place received rave reviews in its previous incarnations at the 2009 Summerworks Theatre Festival and at Theatre Passe Muraille in fall 2010. Canadian Stage now completes this 鈥渞olling opening鈥 with the official premiere production, which opened February 17.

Critical acclaim for this latest iteration of The Middle Place continues unabated. 鈥淭heatre just doesn鈥檛 come more engaging,鈥 said in its four-star review. The Globe and Mail聽theatre critic J. Kelly Nestruck praised Dilworth鈥檚 鈥渟triking staging鈥 and Adem鈥檚 鈥渇antastically natural鈥 performance: 鈥溾he speaks the strangers' words as if they are straight from her heart and consequently sends an arrow right through yours.鈥

The show runs to March 12 at the Berkeley Street Theatre, located at 26 Berkeley Street in Toronto. Tickets are available for purchase or by calling 416-368-3110.

Farther afield, 91亚色 alumna and Siminovitch Prize-winning director Jillian Keiley (BFA 鈥94) is celebrating the success of , the latest creation of her company, Artistic Fraud. The play, written by Robert Chafe, is a theatrical retelling of the true story of Lanier Phillips, the only African American survivor of the shipwreck of the USS Truxton off the coast of Newfoundland in 1942.

Oil and Water was one of four theatre productions on The Globe and Mail鈥檚 national 鈥渕ust see鈥 list for 2011, published five weeks before it opened. Praised as 鈥渟tylish and ingenious鈥 by the St. John鈥檚 Telegram, the sold-out show ran February 9 to 20 at LSPU (Longshoremen鈥檚 Protective Union) Hall in Keiley鈥檚 hometown, St. John鈥檚 Nfld.

Right: Jillian Keiley

91亚色 theatre Professor Shawn Kerwin designed the production and alumnus Andrew Craig (BFA Spec. Hons. 鈥93) was commissioned to compose an a capella score blending traditional Newfoundland folk tunes and African American gospel. Craig, a multi-instrumentalist, vocalist, producer, music director and broadcaster, is equally at home both idioms: his credits include touring internationally as a band member with East Coast alternative rock fiddle sensation Ashley McIsaac and creating, conducting and recording the CBC鈥檚 Gemini-nominated Gospel Christmas concert.

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