Tag Archives: jayden leung

Quick takes on short runs – Keith Alessi and MacEwan

Keith Alessi, in Tomatoes Tried to Kill Me But Banjos Saved My Life

First, the one that you still have chances to see! Keith Alessi’s solo Tomatoes Tried To Kill Me But Banjos Saved My Life is playing this weekend at Gateway Theatre, as an extra to Workshop West’s subscription season. There are performances tonight (Friday night), Saturday night, and Sunday afternoon at 1:30. It looks like the Saturday show is sold out, so act quickly if you want to grab tickets to one of the others.

I’ve heard lots of solo memoir pieces, and this was one of the best. The performer/creator, Keith Alessi, is humble and authentic, with a ready store of banjo jokes to cover any time he spends re-tuning his instruments. Yes, instruments, plural. There are several on stage at top of show, but more are brought in later. His story and delivery are compelling, with more laughter than tears. Erika Conway is credited as director and producer, and is responsible for the dramaturgy that shaped the story and focused the message. Gateway Theatre, the blackbox venue home to Workshop West, is a great choice for acoustic music and storytelling with an intimate supportive audience.

A shorter version of this show appeared at Edmonton Fringe in 2018 and 2019 – I didn’t see it then so I can’t tell you how it’s been improved. But this version has an intermission, and afterwards Keith is joined on stage by Bruce Ziff (retired U of A law professor and not-retired banjo player), since as Keith explains banjo history, it lends itself to playing in jams and circles, to community and to people playing together, whatever their experience/skill levels. A timely reminder!

Tickets are $25 – and all the proceeds of the tour are divided between arts organizations and cancer charities. At this stop, the beneficiaries are Workshop West Playwrights’ Theatre (with its mandate of nurturing new Canadan plays/playwrights), and Wellspring, the set of supports for patients, survivors, and families affected by cancer. Remaining tickets are here.


Last weekend I caught another short-run show, and ever since I’ve been running into people talking about it. “Did you see Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812 at MacEwan?” “Wasn’t that GOOD?”

This large-scale musical by Dave Molloy hit Broadway in 2016 and won some Tony awards then. It hadn’t been done in western Canada before this production with Jim Guedo directing students in the Musical Theatre program at MacEwan University. The story comes from a segment of the Tolstoy novel War and Peace. I loved how the script acknowledges the challenges of following a large sweeping novel, with the prologue song addressing the audience, telling us to follow in the program and then introducing each character with a repeated catchphrase “Natasha is young, Sonya is good, Andrey isn’t here” and so on. I was reminded of other large-cast novels / operas / musicals where I could have used this kind of acknowledgement and clues – Les Miserables, two versions of Eugene Onegin, a lot of Shakespeare …

Set design (Daniela Masellis) and direction (Guedo) have the audience seated on two sides of a raised alley stage in the Tim Ryan Lab black-box – but the actors are not contained on that stage, or on its extensions to accommodate musicians – they use all the lobby entrances, they swish or strut or slink between cabaret tables and engage with audience members, they carry stools around the audience area and stand on them … I felt immersed in this world of 19th-century Moscow.

Lead roles are played by Lisa Kotelniski (Natasha), Matthew Gregg (Pierre), and Liam Lorrain (Anatole), with Layne Labbé a standout as Hélène in an ensemble of 14 student-performers.

I was particularly impressed by the handling of sound mixing and amplification. With fourteen singers moving around the room, including some playing instruments, and eight additional musicians located at two ends of the stage, I was always able to hear and comprehend the lyrics of the songs. Sound designer Dave Bowden and audio lead / live mix operator Alex Delaney are to be commended.

The last production in MacEwan’s mainstage series is The Prom. It plays the last weekend of March, with tickets available here.

Heathers: high school is more fun to watch than experience

Scene from MacEwan University production of Heathers.
Photo Credit: Brianne Jang of BB Collective
Light Design: Heather Cornick, Set Design: Ross Nichol, Costume Design: Alison Yanota

Continuing on my recent run of seeing new productions of shows I’d seen in the past, tonight I watched opening night of the MacEwan University Musical Theatre program’s production of Heathers, by Laurence O’Keefe and Kevin Murphy, directed by Leigh Rivenbark. I saw the 1988 movie a long time ago, and the Citadel Young Musical Company production in 2016 (also directed by Leigh Rivenbark) but I didn’t remember them very well.

So I had the fun of encountering the musical almost fresh. Layne Labbe as Veronica and Jayden Leung as JD both had strong voices and compelling stage presence. Marina Mikhaylichenko was a disturbingly-mean Heather Chandler. Ashlin Turcotte (Martha, Veronica’s original best friend before her strategic social climbing) and Kara Adams (Ms. Fleming the hippie teacher) both had vocal solos that developed their characters and also demonstrated some impressive talents. It was also fascinating to watch the other ensemble members as high school students who all seemed to have distinctive characters, backstory, and connections with the others. Choreography (Courtney Arsenault) was well executed, and silhouette work behind windows was delightful.

I had forgotten how sharply satirical it was, skewering suicide-awareness campaigns, internalized homophobia, performative allyship, signing petitions without reading them, playing to the media, the misunderstood-loner-in-a-trenchcoat trope, bullying, bulimia, frenemies, and all the teenage stereotypes.

Heathers is playing at MacEwan’s Triffo Theatre all weekend. But if you don’t already have tickets, you’re probably out of luck. You might want to plan ahead to get tickets to the MacEwan production of The Prom, next March.

Back to Avenue Q

Erin Harvey as Mrs. Thistletwat in Avenue Q. Photo Nanc Price.

I’ve now seen three productions of the Robert Lopez / Jeff Marx / Jeff Whitty musical Avenue Q. I saw the Off-Broadway transfer in New York in 2014, and the Citadel Theatre production in 2015. And when I first saw the announcement that Foote in the Door would be doing it in 2024, I had no trouble remembering various catchy tunes from the show, and more trouble getting the earworms out of my head afterwards.

As I wrote after seeing it Off-Broadway, it’s like Rent crossed with St. Elmo’s Fire for audiences who grew up with Sesame Street puppetry, a combination that’s hard to picture until you’ve seen it or are familiar with the cultural phenomenon.

Ten years later, many audience members already know what to expect. The Foote in the Door production, directed by Trish Van Doornum, opened last night at Théâtre Servus Credit Union, to a full and enthusiastic house. I had wondered if some of the elements would require shock-value to be appreciated – “The Internet is for Porn”, Christmas Eve and “Everyone’s a Little Bit Racist”, and the puppet sex scene, in particular – but I thought the opening-night crowd was delighted whether or not they were caught by surprise. Christmas Eve, in the original production, sings “I coming to this country for opportunities, Tried to work in Korean deli, but I am Japanese!” and her speeches are full of comedic L-R switching and English-language-learner patterns. Those tropes are getting old – but in the Foote in the Door show, Christmas Eve is performed by Sunshine Bautista Mauricio, whose overall sass, determination, and compassion were more significant than the stereotypey trope. That early line is changed to “Tried to work in Korean deli, but I am Filipino!” (maybe she said Filipina, but I couldn’t hear clearly since the crowd was laughing and cheering). A couple of places later in the show, she says rude things to her husband in a language I don’t understand (Tagalog?) but some audience members definitely did. Those changes improved the show for me, demonstrated that it wasn’t just about entertaining white people.

Sunshine Bautista Mauricio as Christmas Eve. Photo by Nanc Price.

The current production uses a cast of nine performers, and I was especially impressed by the work of some of the ensemble members I was less familiar with. Erin Harvey (last seen in Walterdale’s Austentatious) was a puppeteer playing Mrs. Lavinia Thistletwat, occasionally covering Kate Monster, Lucy, and a Bad Idea Bear, with a hand in Russ Farmer’s embodiment of Nicky. The scenes where Kate and Lucy interact, with Ruth Wong-Miller doing both voices, fascinated me because my eyes kept fooling me about who was talking for which puppet character. Jay Duiker, whom I remembered as the Baker in FITD’s early-2022 Into the Woods, had a strong voice and good comic timing for wannabe-standup-comic Brian. Renell Doneza (with previous credits ranging from Walterdale’s Altar Boyz to the Citadel’s Prison Dancer) embodied various ensemble characters, and watching his own physicality as a contrast to the puppet Rod’s repressed rigidity was very clever. Jayden Leung, also credited with the video montages used in the show, was the remaining ensemble puppeteer, playing various characters including part of Trekkie Monster. Lead-puppet Princeton was performed by Stephen Allred, whose FITD resume started with an insightful interpretation of Laurie in the 2017 Little Women. And the building super Gary Coleman, often played by a woman, was Malachi Short, whom you may recall from Elope’s production of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat last year. Short, Harvey, and Leung are all current students in MacEwan University’s BFA in Musical Theatre Performance, and ones to watch in future years.

Ruth Wong-Miller as Kate Monster. Photo by Nanc Price.

There’s one bit in the show where Princeton decides to collect donations to fund another character’s dream, and he motivates other characters to pass the hat running up and down the theatre aisles. When I saw it in New York, the meagre takings that they counted afterwards included a Metro card (subway pass) – I wasn’t sure if that was scripted or not. Well, last night they pulled an ARC Card (local transit pass) out of the hat, so I guess I have my answer. And then after the curtain call, company co-founder Ruth Wong-Miller told the audience that the takings from the hat-passing, plus anything else we wanted to add to the ASMs’ hats in the lobby, would be donated to the Youth Empowerment & Support Services, who operate the Youth Emergency Shelter and other programs in the neighbourhood. This struck me as a great choice, not just for being hyperlocal but for building on the sympathies for the characters in the story, who are mostly a step or two away from the outcomes of the characters in Rent but who are still young and with limited resources. (So take some money, and not just for the concession!)

Avenue Q is full of short songs with lyrics that you might not want to sing at your recital, and musical-theatre melodies and harmonies that are hard to get out of your head. All the voices were strong, and the sound-mixing was well done (which I can’t always say on opening nights). Almost all the audience members near me managed to resist checking Oiler-score updates during the show – giving us a satisfying end to the evening in more ways than just a fun performance with happy and credible futures for the various characters.

Leland Stelck has designed a functional and interesting streetscape set, in the style of Sesame Street or In the Heights, and the musical ensemble directed by Grace Huang are visible downstage and occasional participants.

Avenue Q runs until June 8th, but several performances are already sold out. Remaining tickets are available here.