91大黄鸭

Skip to content

Provincial theatre festival plays through Vernon

Theatre BC鈥檚 Mainstage Festival kicks off June 29, ends July 7 with banquet
12458900_web1_180413-VMS-PC-CalendarGirls
Kristine Larsen (Ruth), Barbara Berry (Jessie), Amy Bell (Cora), Liz Saville (Celia), Jennifer Goodsell (Chris) and Bev Steeves (Annie) star in Calendar Girls, Powerhouse Theatre鈥檚 production featured in Theatre BC鈥檚 Mainstage Festival July 1. (Kiss the Monkey Photography)

The cycle rotates daily. A performance is followed by an engaging green room socials, which precedes a coffee critique the following afternoon before workshops and a new performance at night.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just so much going on. It鈥檚 like you鈥檙e bringing the Vancouver theatre forum to Vernon,鈥 said Richard Kerton, Theatre BC Mainstage co-chair. 鈥淓very night is a different show. Every night is a different experience.鈥

Theatre BC鈥檚 Mainstage Festival kicks off at the Vernon and District Performing Arts Centre June 29 with Collected Stories by Donald Margulies presented by E.C.H.O. Players of the North Island Zone. Each night sees a performance from each of the eight theatre companies entered in this year鈥檚 festival, which culminates in an awards banquet July 7 at the Schubert Centre.

鈥淲e鈥檙e getting excited. We鈥檙e feeling the anxiety just crossing the T鈥檚 and dotting the I鈥檚,鈥 Kerton said of the looming festival kickoff.

鈥淢ainstage likes to set a certain quality. Giving them (community theatre companies) the opportunity to perform in a professional theatre is an experience. It鈥檚 giving them a chance to see what it鈥檚 all about.鈥

Prior to the festival, theatre companies joined together with other companies in each of Theatre BC鈥檚 eight competing zones to decide which company proceeded to the provincials. In the Okanagan Zone (Ozone) that honour went to Powerhouse Theatre鈥檚 Calendar Girls directed by Tanya Laing Gahr.

As part of their initial performance, Calendar Girls, in the vein of the true story itself, produced a calendar from which a portion of the proceeds was donated to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society of Canada.

According to Barbara Keith, with Powerhouse Theatre, those donations total $4,650 and will be presented to Anni Rychtera, an LLSC volunteer and a Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma survivor, prior to Calendar Girls鈥 July 1 Mainstage performance.

Other performances include The Best Brothers by Daniel MacIvor presented by Terrace Little Theatre of the Skeena Zone June 30, Halo by Josh MacDonald presented by the Chilliwack School of Performing Arts as a wild card entry from the Fraser Valley Zone July 2, The Gravitational Pull of Bernice Trimble by Beth Graham presented by Between Shifts Theatre of the North Shore Zone July 3, No Exit by Jean-Paul Sartre presented by Theatre In The Country of the Fraser Valley Zone July 4, Hand To God by Roberts Askins presented by Williams Lake Studio Theatre of the Central Interior Zone July 5 and Blackbird by David Harrower presented by Stage North of the Peace River Zone July 6.

鈥淪ome of the companies are used to performing in their own facility and are getting used to (performing on new stages). Some have never performed in a big theatre either. We try to make it as comfortable as possible. Our goal is to welcome them to Vernon and relieve their anxiety,鈥 Kerton said.

鈥淭heatre BC is a non-profit. Our mandate is education. I鈥檓 confident that what we are doing is the right thing.鈥

Kerton said feedback from adjudicator Stephen Drover, artistic director of Rumble Theatre and associate artistic director at Arts Club Theatre Company, is provided not only to actors but to all who work on a production. And, for one Mainstage workshop, the feedback presented to Cathie Young, full-length winner of the Theatre BC 2017 Canadian Playwriting Competition is the highlight.

鈥淪he鈥檚 bringing her play to Vernon. That鈥檚, of course, a brand new play never performed before,鈥 Kerton said of Young who works with Expect Exceptional Theatre Company.

Scenes from Young鈥檚 play Port Moody Confidential 鈥 Glimpses will be workshopped by Kathryn Shaw at Powerhouse Theatre as part of the festival.

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard when you have it on paper to see what it鈥檚 going to look like on stage,鈥 Kerton said.

In addition to the performances and critiques, local theatre star Amelia Sirianni will lead the Theatre Youth Camp Workshop July 5-7. Sirianni led the workshop last year with success.

鈥淭he biggest struggle is getting young people into community theatre, actually getting them on stage,鈥 Kerton said.

At the banquet July 7, awards will be presented to theatre companies, actors, set designers, costume designers and more.

鈥淲e want people to come to the show. You鈥檙e not just buying a ticket to see a show, you鈥檙e supporting the theatre community,鈥 Kerton said.

鈥淭his is a great opportunity for people to see great theatre in a short period of time at an affordable cost.鈥

Tickets to Theatre BC鈥檚 Mainstage Festival are available through the Ticket Seller, 250-549-7469, . Single performances are $30 or $25 Theatre BC member, a three-day pass is $87 or $72 respectively, a five-day pass is $140 or $115 and an eight-day pass is $216 or $176.



parker.crook@vernonmorningstar.com

Like us on and follow us on .





(or

91大黄鸭

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }