Virtually every weekend for me is a bit over-stuffed, and I likely have used that exact title before, so now I have to distinguish between them...
But this was one that had me seeing two plays (Mischief at Tarragon and Witch at Soulpepper), going to see the Cowboy Junkies at Koerner Hall, and then going to Warm Company (the successor to Toronto Cold Reads) on Sunday. It would have been tight, but I attempted to go swimming at Regent Park, only to find that the lane swim was cancelled. I was pretty upset, though in truth I mostly wanted to warm up in the spa pool area, and that hasn't even been open the last two times I went. I think it would have been pretty disappointing all the way around had I been able to get in. Nonetheless, I will see if I can get some swimming in on Tues. or Wed. evening this week.
Being blocked in that avenue, I took the Dundas streetcar over to Yonge-Dundas Sqaure and then popped into BMV. I picked up Up and Alien on Blu-ray. I don't think I have Up on DVD, but I might. If so, I can try to sell that off. I still regret not picking up Howl's Moving Castle on Blu-ray at the BMV on Bloor, so I will keep looking for that to turn up again. Then I cut across on Queen, stopping in at City Hall to drop off More and More and More. There was some Olympic Games viewing party at Nathan Philips Square, but it was way too cold and very few people were out. I then continued on and made it up to Tarragon with about 15 minutes to spare.
I loved the set for Mischief (a small reserve store set inside a whale skeleton) and the video projections were first-rate. The interactions between the store clerk and her uncle and aunt(?) were good, and clearly the playwright (who also played the store clerk) is going for something like Kim's Convenience (or even Corner Gas), but I felt that too much was subtext about her trauma of her mother disappearing and not grounded in the actual text that the audience gets to hear. After all, she goes on and on about how she is fine and that she feels paying attention to this statue of Cornwallis just is allowing Cornwallis to live rent-free in the community's head, but then she explodes on her uncle, attacking him for no good reason, as well as, more justifiably though less plausibly, on a racist customer. And she literally explodes the statue with fireworks from the store. Mostly the interactions she has with the white customer and then a "good guy" in the woods aren't satisfying in the sense that she starts screaming at the customer, telling him that he stinks, and he glowers at her and then leaves the store. Exqueeze me? And then the "good guy" turns out, extremely implausibly, to be a cop, who says that she will be charged with criminal mischief, but then she just turns back up at the store, and we never find out if she has actually been charged and just let go to turn up later or if they don't think they can actually make the charges stick or what. Basically, she writes herself into these corners and then doesn't do the hard work to get herself out. I understand the challenges, facing some of these myself, but it doesn't change the fact that there are massive problems with the script. Personally, I didn't like any of the interactions with the 300 year old spirit of her ancestors. This was particularly lazy writing. (Naturally, Joshua Chong over at the Star loved it, telling me once again that I will never enjoy a show that he likes and if he dislikes something, I will probably find a lot of merit in it.)
I spent a bit of time at work, mostly making some improvements to bid we are putting in for a project in Alberta, then I grabbed a sandwich at Subway, and took the train up Koerner Hall. I've seen the Cowboy Junkies three times. Once in their glory days (1990 or so) when they opened for Bruce Hornsby in Detroit, and then in 2023 at Danforth Music Hall and now at Koerner Hall. I'm pretty sure I was supposed to see them at Massey Hall but the band came down with Covid and the concert was scrapped. I enjoyed it quite a bit, though they are far more muted and a bit more depressed than they were back in the 90s. The set list from Danforth is here, and here is the set list from this weekend. They are broadly similar sets, though this time around they played several new songs, not even on an album! In both cases, they played a lot off of Such Ferocious Beauty, and indeed the Danforth set was sort of a CD-release party. In 2023, they played "Murder, Tonight, in the Trailer Park" and "Walkin' After Midnight." This concert they played "Working on a Building," "'Cause Cheap is How I Feel" and "Fuck, I Hate the Cold" (so appropriate). Combining the two concerts into one super live set would be incredible. I have to track down the video I took from Danforth, but I should have it somewhere. In both cases, Margo was drinking tea constantly, but her voice was fine under the circumstances. I probably don't need to see them again, though never say never. I would like to see Bruce Cockburn one more time, particularly if he brings a full band and it isn't just a solo show (as good as that was).
Sunday was generally smoother, though I got a bit of a late start going over to the gym. I also spent a bit too much time looking for hardware over at Home Depot. I didn't get back with the groceries until 1:20 (and somehow I didn't have the hamburger buns, which either got left at the store or perhaps fell out on the trek back). Given that I obviously can't bike, as no bike lanes are truly cleared, and the Distillery is in this weird pocket with terrible transit service from the East End, I had to cab it. I just cannot wait for it to warm up a bit and the roads to clear. There have been a few times I skipped going down to Jimmie Simpson for the same reason, i.e. I can't bear taking 40 minutes to get somewhere on transit that would take 10-15 minutes on a bike.
Witch is a much stronger play than Mischief, though I still had a few issues with it. I think they deliberately blurred the line between Edmonton (as a dukedom of some sort in old England) and the witch being from First Nations rural Edmonton. That's probably mostly my spin, but the set did push me in that direction. I think the script probably needed to give the witch a bit more to do to establish why the community thought she had any powers at all. Did she ever heal anyone? But overall, the conflicting needs of the characters were much stronger (and a bit of a lesson for me). I am not entirely sure why they thought Frank should at least partial reciprocate Cutty's interest. That made no sense to me. Also, the extended (Morris) dance sequence after the explosive confrontation between Cutty and Frank was way too long and self-indulgent. I tuned out of that completely. I kind of thought that Elizabeth's desire to tear it all down and start over was perhaps referring to the horrors of WWI and even moreso WWII, but that seems an extremely long wait, based on when the play was ostensibly set. And I don't think the final, final scene worked (or even made much sense), but otherwise it was a strong piece and certainly worth checking out (whereas Mischief really needed a thorough rewrite). I'm generally able to get through concerts and plays without too much coughing, though the Morris dance scene really tested my powers to stay the cough (and really was so unnecessary...).
I didn't have quite as much time as I had hoped at work, but I did get one thing done, then I went over to the Well. I've been wanting decent Thai food for some time (and Thai Room was closed by the time the Cowboy Junkies set ended). So I picked up something to go, and then suffered through a very slow streetcar trip (particularly on College) until I got to Dovercourt for the Warm Company reading. I think next time I'll try to eat before getting there, as several people commented on how I had the only decent food in the place. Oh well. I hadn't actually eaten lunch and was pretty hungry by that point.
I had a chance to talk a bit more to Jamie, who is planning on directing (if I can improve the script enough), as well as Sam who would like to take the lead role, but isn't entirely sure he is up to it. I liked most of the scripts though the first one was a bit too cliched. My piece got some huge laughs, as the cast really sold the piece. And at the moment the start is by far the strongest part of the script. It's almost a bit of a problem, as it is quite tempting to leave things as they are and not put in the work to hone the script. Nonetheless, it was great getting that positive feedback, and I think it makes it that much more likely they will start taking more of my pieces in the future. I didn't make quite enough connections as I could have (I didn't have my cards with me), but I definitely laid the groundwork for next month. Someone else asked if they could shift the date (as it conflicts with the Oscars), but they said no. A bit unfortunate, as there was another concert I had hoped to go to, but this is more important, so I will be back with them in March. Jane Smythe has agreed to come on board as well, probably as Abby, so I have even more motivation to get this done well.
So on the whole a good, though extremely cold, weekend. Let's see what this week brings...







