The National Ballet’s Pinocchio, a sketch-comedy Fest and Seven Other Things to do this Week
A trip to the Land of Toys
The National Ballet follows up its previous world premiere—the ethereal Little Prince—with another twist on a classic kids’ tale: Pinocchio.
The choreography is bouncy and romantic, the costumes are dazzling and
the Land of Toys is appropriately terrifying, but the best reason to go
is Skylar Campbell, the irrepressible first soloist who’s dancing the
title character. Campbell, a 25-year-old former skateboarder from Laguna
Beach, is too boyish for the company’s imperious princely roles, but
his springy athleticism is ideal for the mischievous marionette: he’s
impish and compact, with a head of red curls that would make even Archie
Andrews jealous. Saturday, March 11 to Friday, March 24. $65–$265. Four Seasons Centre for the Arts, national.ballet.ca.
An interview with Paul Feig
This Friday, Kid in the Hall Bruce McCulloch will interview
fellow funny man Paul Feig about the juicy stories behind the films and
TV shows he’s directed or written: Bridesmaids, Ghostbusters, The Office, Freaks and Geeks. The
Q&A is on of the highlights of the Toronto Sketch Comedy Festival, a
12-day romp that also includes a short-film fest, a live newscast by The Beaverton team, and plenty of nightly improv. To Sunday, March 12. Prices vary. Various locations, torontosketchfest.com.
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A glimpse of the magic behind Canada’s finest graphic novelist
Seth is one of today’s most recognizable graphic novelists, melding a retro-cool aesthetic (think early New Yorker meets Winsor McCay) with a melancholy sense of humour. This retrospective exhibition centres on the Guelph artist’s seminal Palookaville
series, 22 comics about a fictional Ontario town and the loners and
lost souls who inhabit it. Comprising a quarter century of Seth
sketches, the show documents his artistic process and how his own
experiences have crept into his frames. To Sunday, March 19. Peel Art Gallery, Museum and Archives, pama.peelregion.ca.
A bloody family feud
Modern Times and Aluna Theatre’s take on Blood Weddings was
one of the best plays of 2015, taking home six Dora Awards for its
excellent direction, set and costumes. It taps a diverse cast—12 actors
from 12 different cultural backgrounds—to bring to life Federico GarcÃa
Lorca’s classic Spanish tale about brutal family vendettas and a runaway
bride in a dreamy, mythical world. To Sunday, March 19. $15–$20. Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, buddiesinbadtimes.com.
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A pair of hyper-local photography shows
In their new show, Focus on Gerrard, the six members
of the local photography group 6ix Clicks Collective have assembled a
Humans of New York–style scrapbook of east-end personalities. The show
pairs vibrant portraits with first-person accounts of how the Gerrard
East and Little India community has changed over the years. Next door,
in an adjoining gallery, the collective shows its shots of the larger
city—the waterfront, Yonge-Dundas Square and beyond—in a second show, Focus on Toronto. Opening night is Thursday, March 9, from 6 to 9 p.m. To Friday, March 31. Riverdale Gallery, riverdalegallery.com.
An East Coast whale tale
In 2014, nine endangered blue whales were stranded in the ice
off the shore of Newfoundland and died—a loss for Mother Nature, but a
boon for science. The ROM assembled a team to venture east and recover
the carcasses of two whales that had washed ashore. What they gathered
is one of the largest, most complete skeletons in the world, and it’s
the centrepiece of the museum’s newest exhibition, Out of the Depths: The Blue Whale Story.
Through photography, videos and new research gleaned from the
expedition, the show details the lives—and deaths—of the whales and
what’s being doing to protect their species. Opens March 11. $30. ROM, rom.on.ca.
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A dazzling shadow-puppet play
Feathers of Fire is a family-friendly fantasy that
purports to be the most elaborate shadow-puppet play ever produced: with
160 different puppets (royals, dragons and mythical creatures), more
than 100 backgrounds (castles, oceans and forests), it’s certainly no
amateur flashlight-and-bedsheet affair. Based on the 10th-century
Persian poem Shahnameh (The Book of Kings), the show
combines original music, cinema and theatrical charm to tell the story
of Zaul and Rudabeh, forbidden lovers who triumph over enormous odds.
Friday, March 10 to Sunday, March 12. $45–$85. Toronto Centre for the Arts, tocentre.com.
A fictional artist’s real paintings
Sophie La Rosière, a brilliant but reclusive 19th-century artist,
painted nearly 300 works from her cottage in the Parisian suburb of
Nogent sur Marne. She also never existed. La Rosière is the fictional
alter ego of Canadian-German artist Iris Häussler, who has spent several
years dreaming up an elaborate mythology—last year, she reconstructed
La Rosière’s fictional studio, right down to the tattered Persian rugs,
and hired real conservators from the Louvre to analyze and X-ray her
works: vibrant, electric florals that get their first-ever showcase this
month. Thursday, March 9 to Saturday, April 29. Daniel Faria Gallery, danielfariagallery.com.
A jazzy Japanese rock show
Japanese post-rock trio Mouse on the Keys has an unusual
lineup (two keyboard players and a drummer) and an even more eccentric
sound: peculiar chord progressions, tricky rhythms, hyperactive
percussion worthy of a math-metal band. Onstage, they pair their music
with frenetic projections of Tokyo and abstract animations for an
immersive audio-visual phantasmagoria. Wednesday, March 8.
$29.50–$34.50. Harbourfront Centre Theatre, masseyhall.com.
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