Tag Archives: scott peters

An Iliad – the O.G. war epic, at Shadow Theatre

Michael Peng and Erik Mortimer in An Iliad. Set and lighting design Scott Peters, costume design Leona Brausen. Photos Marc J. Chalifoux Photography

A plain wooden table and chair, centre stage, and white dropcloths covering furniture pieces in the background. Lights up on the empty set with a bit of fog. A slow shuffle thump stage right.

A weary man on crutches (Michael Peng) hobbling in, looking at the audience, and commenting that he’s been reciting this poem, telling this story, many times, in different formats and in different places. He has a version that takes a year to tell, and a version that takes three days. Some places people love it, and sometimes the audiences are weary of it. He’s wearing ordinary, 20th- or 21st-century clothing, but the places he names might be in the ancient world. I wasn’t familiar with the details of the source material, so at first I wondered if he might be representing one of the characters – maybe the Greek warrior Achilles if he survived the war, maybe the Trojan non-combatant Paris. The limp, the exhaustion, the wooden crutches and contemporary walking-boot – those all made sense to me evoking a former soldier. But eventually I figured out that as narrator, he’s representing the canonical poet Homer.

After a little while, he stops pacing, sits at the table, and starts to sing or chant in what I’m pretty sure was Ancient Greek, with a poetic metre. I guessed that it was the start of Homer’s original verse,

“Achilles’ baneful wrath resound, O Goddess, that imposed
Infinite sorrows on the Greeks, and many brave souls losed
From breasts heroic, sent them far to that invisible cave
That no light comforts, and their limbs to dogs and vultures gave;”

And then the poet launches into the story, in English and in casual prose, of a few crucial days after ten years of war. He switches viewpoints between the Greeks on the beach, with King Agamemnon, and Greek warrior Achilles and his companion Patroclus, and the Trojan royal family in their walled city, including monarchs Priam and Hecuba, their soldier son Hector, and his brother Paris, the one who started the war by eloping with (kidnapping? seducing?) Helen, who had been married to King Menelaus of Sparta at the time. I recognized all these names, because of various other versions of the source material, but the poet gave enough information to refresh my memory about who was on which side and why.

The characters and events are rich source material, used in Euripides’ The Trojan Women, Shakespeare’s Troilus and Cressida, several of Charles Mee’s plays, Marion Zimmer Bradley’s novel The Firebrand, Madeline Miller’s 2011 novel The Song of Achilles, Jessy Ardern’s plays Prophecy and The Fall of the House of Atreus: A Cowboy Love Song, and many other plays, novels, songs, poems, and movies. In any versions, it’s always struck me as a big messy epic, hard to follow without conventional plot arc and harder to find a satisfying theme.

The version in Lisa Peterson and Denis O’Hare’s solo play that is built on the Varscona stage in this Shadow Theatre production (John Hudson directing) is surprisingly compelling. By giving us viewpoints from both armies, the playwrights don’t give us the option of dehumanizing one side and looking to rejoice with the others as “winners”. There is pride and revenge and anger and stubbornness on both sides. And there are gods and goddesses who take sides and make things worse, for their own motives. And there are horrific losses and betrayals. The script of An Iliad isn’t a selection of the source material that gives much agency or attention to female characters, focusing mainly on Achilles and Hector as well as kings and deities.

Partway through, I began thinking about ways that the back-and-forth, endless combat with no hope for peaceful resolution reminded me of more recent conflicts. Gaza. Ukraine. Minneapolis. And then later on in the play, the poet narrator appears almost overcome with the tragedy of the story he’s telling, and then he gets muddled. Oh wait, was that the Peloponnesian war, he corrects himself. Or the second battle of Sparta? He begins naming a few conflicts I’d never heard of, and then others I had, and he keeps going and going and going, to the eighteenth and nineteenth century and the twentieth, wars I’d heard of and wars I never had. And I found myself holding my breath – would he name the horrific conflicts of the New World, and the ones I’d encountered in LIFE Magazine and on TV news? He did name them, and he kept going, his rage and devastation building, repetition driving home that modern wars aren’t one-and-done either, Sarajevo, Afghanistan, Darfur, Sudan, Afghanistan, Gaza, Sudan, Gaza … It was brilliant and horrible.

Michael Peng and Erik Mortimer in An Iliad. Set and lighting design Scott Peters, costume design Leona Brausen. Photos Marc J. Chalifoux Photography

Despite the fact that the solo narrator spends much of the 105-minute performance sitting down at a table, I found it fascinating to watch and listen to. Musician and sound designer Erik Mortimer accompanies the poem from on stage with a keyboard, a lyre, and various other percussion instruments and looping apparatus. Set and lighting designer Scott Peters enhances the performance with interesting lighting shifts, lights on a backdrop/cyclorama thing evoking sunrise, a shield, and other outlooks with a base set in a sort of timeless pub, with stocked bar, stools, and a pool table. John Hudson, outgoing artistic director of Shadow Theatre, directed the piece, and Leona Brausen provided costuming. Effective use is made of a scarf in the poet embodying different characters. One of my favourite bits of stage business was the part where Achilles and the other Greek leaders are making plans, wielding the sceptre of power – which the poet explains is “like the original talking-stick, in this cradle of democracy” – and Peng naturally hoists a crutch above his head to represent the sceptre.

I learned from members of the production team that Michael Peng’s crutches and walking splint were a recent and necessary addition, due to an ankle injury late in the rehearsal process, and that the original blocking would have had him moving about the stage, standing on the pool table, jumping over the bar, and leaning on the piano. While I would have liked to experience that version, the less mobile narrator contributed to the sense of fatigue and despair and futility.

An Iliad continues at Varscona Theatre until February 8th. Tickets are available here. Matinees offer Pay What You Can pricing at the door.

The 2026 theatre season continues after this with the Citadel’s Death of a Salesman, Walterdale’s production of the Hannah Moskovitch play This is War, Workshop West Playwrights’ Theatre’s My Testimonial (Greg MacArthur), and more.

Deaths and lives, a hundred years ago.

On the Remembrance Day weekend, I saw Raes Calvert and Sean Harris Oliver’s First World War play Redpatch at the Citadel.  And tonight I saw Hannah Moskovitch’s What A Young Wife Ought To Know at Theatre Network.  Both of them showed me the human consequences of historical facts that I’d already known in a more abstract sense, and I left wondering more about the unspoken hardships in my own grandparents’ lives.

Redpatch is the story of a young First Nations man (Calvert) from the west coast who enlists and is sent to fight in France.  The rest of the ensemble (Jennifer Daigle, Taran Kootenhayoo, Joel D Montgrand, Chelsea Rose, Odessa Shuquaya) play his fellow soldiers, but also his grandmother, childhood best friend, a Raven, a killer whale, etc, as the story of their war is interrupted by the older story of two boys sneaking out of school to take a canoe out on the ocean.   One of my favourite bits is where the two boys talk while drifting in a canoe, swaying gently so that I almost felt like the canoe was actually on the water.  The violence of war is presented in a stylized way, with quarterstaves used as Ross rifles and bayonets, very little actual contact, and no blood, but lighting (Brad Trenaman) and sound (James Coomber) to convey the nightmare horror of trench warfare and No-Mans-Land night raids without being so overwhelming that the text was lost.  I found this very effective.

What a Young Wife Ought To Know, directed by Marianne Copithorne, previewed tonight at the Roxy on Gateway, and plays until December 2nd.  It is set in the 1920s, among working-class Irish immigrants of the Ottawa area.  I found it heartbreaking and sweet, embarrassing and upsetting and sexy and laugh-out-loud funny, by turns.  Merran Carr-Wiggin plays the young wife of the title, starting from a teenager with no understanding of sex getting some reluctant explanations from her bolder older sister Alma (Bobbi Goddard).  We see her awkward romance with hotel stablehand Jonny (Cole Humeny), their love and pride as new parents, and then their gradual realization that expressing their love for each other physically can’t be separated from risking her life and health in childbirth, and needing to raise more children in an already-impoverished situation.  There are no easy answers – Carr-Wiggin’s Sophie tells the audience about some of the unsatisfactory options and staged scenes show us some of the others.  The direction and performances felt very compassionate to me.  The young husband weeps with frustration, not just wanting to share intimacy with his wife but wishing for more children to love, not quite grasping how awful more pregnancies would be from her perspective.   I appreciated that the plot was more nuanced than a typical mid-century narrative showing unmarried women suffering deadly consequences for their own desire or being victimized by men – one can see some similar narrative in Alma’s arc, but Sophie’s and Jonny’s story is a more complicated one that I had not really thought about much before.   I was reminded a bit of Moskovitch’s The Kaufman Kabaret, part of the U of A Studio Theatre season in 2016, but this is a much smaller-scale examination of similar issues, and I preferred it.

The set and costume design, by Tessa Stamp, conveyed the modest circumstances of the characters.  The two-story backdrop might have represented both the hotel and the tenement apartment, and a sliding door hinted at stables behind.   I will be thinking about it for a while.