Cherry Docs: steel-toed and heavy-handed

  Guest review by David Johnston It’s a good production and, when the script occasionally gets out of its own way, it becomes great. In Cave Canem’s latest outing, neo-Nazi skinhead Mike (Kenton Klassen) has stomped a Hindu man to death; liberal...

New Cackle Sisters: Kitchen Chicken—homemade okayness

New Cackle Sisters: Kitchen Chicken is inventive but not dazzling, an intermittently engaging form of theatrical folk art. In the show, a cast of six prepares a meal of chicken and mashed potatoes as well as appetizers—all while performing popular American songs from...

Chimerica: how many hours do you have to spare?

I thought it was never going to end. Then, after two hours, the lights finally came up—but it was only intermission. We had another hour and a half to go. Playwright Lucy Kirkwood’s Chimerica is about the current murky codependence between China and the States. To...

The Orchard (After Chekhov): hobbled by imitation

  There are good bits, but overall it’s a mess. And the primary faults are in the writing and direction. In The Orchard (After Chekhov), Sarena Parmar, who grew up in Kelowna, resets Anton Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard in the Okanagan in 1974. The central...