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Theatre @ 91亚色 presents 'Orlando' and 'The Balcony'

Theatre @ 91亚色 presents two compelling contemporary plays exploring the intersection of identity and shame, Sarah Ruhl鈥檚 Orlando and Jean Genet鈥檚 The Balcony, March 24 to 30. Both shows will be staged in repertory in the Sandra Faire & Ivan Fecan Theatre. Directed by MFA candidates Lindsay Bell and Margaret Legere, this ambitious staging is supported by more than 100 undergraduate designers and crew members, and an acting company drawn from the undergraduate acting and MFA programs.

In recognition of the Department of Theatre鈥檚 ongoing 50th anniversary celebrations, Theatre @ 91亚色鈥檚 2018-19 season is built around the theme of disruptors. Disruptors innovate. Disruptors interrupt. Disruptors infiltrate. To that end, the stories told on the School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design stages this year focus on the impact and influence of people who are agents of change.

Poster image for Theatre @91亚色's production of Orlando

Orlando is a dramatic adaptation of Virginia Woolf鈥檚 feminist classic. It investigates the adventures of a poet who changes sex from man to woman and lives for centuries, meeting the key figures of English literary history. Reflecting on the wide-ranging influence of Woolf鈥檚 original novel on artists and performers, director Bell notes how Orlando 鈥渃ontinues to be an attractive force, continues to inspire, to be a muse, to be mused upon for giving voice to the silenced.鈥 Bell is especially drawn to the play鈥檚 feminist politics, which in Ruhl鈥檚 adaptation becomes a 鈥減layful satire [that] speaks directly to the current cultural watershed of the fluidity of gender identity and the stifling impact of patriarchal systems.鈥

Bell鈥檚 credits for 91亚色 include Middletown (assistant director to Jackie Maxwell), Noise and her upcoming adaptation of Shakespeare鈥檚 Coriolanus (April 2019), among others. In 2018, she directed Duncan Macmillan鈥檚 Lungs for Murmuration Theatre Company. Bell鈥檚 radio adaptations of Virginia Woolf鈥檚 To the Lighthouse and Emily Carr鈥檚 Klee Wyck were commissioned by the Shaw Festival and broadcast by CBC.

Poster graphics for Theatre@91亚色's presentation of The Balcony

The Balcony uses the setting of an unnamed city and a distant background of a revolution and counterrevolution to explore strains of power in a society. The compelling play examines the delicate equilibrium of reality and illusion. 鈥淲hen I first read The Balcony, I was astonished by how horrible and beautiful Genet鈥檚 characters were,鈥 said Legere, the play's director. 鈥淸They were] so close to their own shame and their own glory; naked in it, wrapped in it 鈥 subservient to it and catastrophically desperate for it. It reminded me of myself and of everyone I鈥檝e ever met.鈥 For Legere, The Balcony can be understood as a powerful 鈥渨arning to all who seek to see their image perpetuated throughout time without the burden of responsibility that comes with serving the purpose of their position.鈥

Originally from Halifax, Legere has worked as an actor, director, writer, dramaturge and producer since graduating from Dalhousie University鈥檚 Acting program. She co-founded Loosen the Noose Productions in 2009, where she oversaw the production of three original plays and later served as the co-artistic director of Forerunner Playwrights Theatre, where she wrote, produced and performed in her first play, Leaves of the Virgin Mary. In 2018, she directed Under the Umbrella鈥檚 Thousand Beginnings as part of the Toronto Fringe Festival.

鈥淚f I had to choose a word to describe Department of Theatre heading into Orlando and The Balcony, it would have to be electrified,鈥 said Marlis Schweitzer, department Chair. 鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing to see two shows coming together side by side in our world-class facilities and watching our students rise to the additional learning opportunities that this intense schedule affords. Of course, none of this would be possible without the support of our amazing faculty and staff.鈥

In keeping with the season's focus on disruptors, both productions promise to surprise and engage audiences.

Tickets are available聽聽or by phone at 416-736-5888.

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