2.24.2010

EXCHANGE: Devon Elke + Karen Bernard

The following is an exchange of emails between Karen Bernard and Devon Elke, both artists are performing in the final week of Rhubarb.

DE: Can you tell me about your encounter or relationship with Swimming Pool / Ozon that made you want to use it as a point of reference in this piece?

KB: I was in a three week residency at Wassard Elea in Ascea, Italy. I had taken movies with me to entertain myself at night. One of them was the Swimming Pool. I related to the main female character, an English mystery writer who goes to France to write—and how an erotic thriller enfolds. I have been creating a parallel abstracted and distilled personal drama. The video images I use come from my travels over the last two years. How about yourself?

DE: I was searching for a source for this project and my partner suggested Gertrude Stein and I uncovered Tender Buttons. As for this particular text, I've spent an over-abundance of time watching, studying, practicing what some might call 'living room drama'. I hoped that Tender Buttons would keep me grounded in a pursuit of something different: a structural or instinctual logic rather than representational.
You mentioned a residency at Wassard Elea and your website categorizes Ouette as 'in progress' ... can you tell me a little bit about the stages of building your work? Has anyone inspired or influenced your process of creation?

KB: My work grows from where I am at in my life—often related to family issues, the negotiation of being an artist, body image, sexuality and mortality. These are recurring themes. The work is always physically driven, but often in conjunction with conversation, visual elements, nostalgia and humor. I decided to play down the fourth wall, not be a funny character -- but retain levity, and explore independence, solitude, sexuality and mortality. In a way I have left my family behind -- as the kids are grown and my husband and I allow a freedom of independence.
The work is built intuitively: there is no game plan. It keeps building upon itself: often music inspires dance, and in this case, I have really enjoyed videoing and editing images and sound. Working with video is satisfying the visual artist side of me, although I have often seen myself as a moving sculpture. I have been inspired by Joseph Beuys, Gilbert and George, and Cindy Sherman. I would like to know more about what you meant by "living room drama" and "structural or instinctual logic rather than representational."

DE: The "living room drama"—for me—is a tradition in Canadian theatre where the goal is verisimilitude; using affective memory to represent "reality". Narrative provides the driving logic. The very essence of the style is to keep the choices (the construction of reality) hidden. And this theatre, therefore, denies its very political role in reinforcing limiting, constrictive ideologies.

And so how to create performance that allows the spectator to assign their own meaning? A theatrical experience that appeals to more than conscious intellect? Inspired by what Stein accomplished in Tender Buttons, I am searching for a process that relies less on the ego and instead utilizes formal experiments with tempo, pattern, level, repetition, etc. as the building blocks of creation.

You've said that you look for natural or clichéd movements that become abstracted by repetition. Did Swimming Pool provide any movement motifs that found way into your piece?

KB: Yes…"Sarah,” the English writer, was shut down physically , prim and proper, but steaming underneath. I have added gestures embodying this feeling—in particular from a dance sequence that happens in the movie.
BG

2.22.2010

ECOUTER: Karen Bernard on Evi-dance


Karen Bernard appeared on CIUT's Evi-dance this weekend and gave an in depth look at her influences and her inspiration for Ouette | o'et.

"I've been doing a lot of travelling in the last couple years, and so the piece is really about independence, being independent; my reflections and the way I'm travelling. The Swimming Pool, which I had seen on one of my residencies, is a about an English woman writer who goes to France, to write, to have some solitude and to create, but she gets involved in a very erotic thriller drama. I've always been connected to travel, and so that's where I started. I parallel my own personal story, very fragmented, but inspired by this movie."

Listen to the full interview HERE. (Interview starts at the 00:03:00 mark.)

Evi-dance radio is live to air Sunday's @ 9am, CIUT 89.5 FM. Ouette | o'et runs Feb 24-28, The Chamber 9:30pm

2.19.2010

CAPTURED: Betty Burke


YZZ Buddies Photographer Kai Yapp captured indie super-band Betty Burke (Maggie MacDonald & Shaun Brodie of the Hidden Cameras, Holly Andruchuk and special guests) at the Week 2 kick off bash.

2.18.2010

BUZZ: A Bailwinian Future


Software designer and hair model Jeremy Bailey had a moment of sheer awkward brilliance last night. During a Q&A following his presentation The Future Of Theatre an audience member asked, "If the future of theatre is through computers, what about the trained theatre actors?" Jeremy swiftly quipped, "What about them? I have no respect for training. I want to be onstage. I have no training."

Bailey's presentation is genius.  He applies a rudimentary understanding of theatre with brilliant software design skills to reinterpret and predict the future of theatre. Think karaoke Shakespeare meets wii controller meets geometric shapes. Hilarious.

Check out this video of Bailey testing the eye motion detectors.



FYI Jeremy syncs his performance to twitter: www.twitter.com/futureoftheatre. For real.

ALERT: TANNAHOTTIE

WHAAT? Holy Hotness. Jordan Tannahill (Jannahot that's right YYZBuddies coined it) talks about his tween insurgency with Chandler Levack in this week's issue of EYE magazine. 

Jannahot dishes about his company Suburban Beast, frat boys, and tween actors. At the end of the article he cracks this wicked blow-line:

“There’s this funny thing about working with underage actors, you have to deal with their parents. The show right after ours at Buddies is Les Petit Mort, based on this short story by George Bataille. There’s live scat onstage, vagina play, lots of boobs. So we have to usher these kids out. It’s like, ‘Okay kids — great job on the show. Now run, run, run! Get out quick!’”

See Jannahot's Insurgency which runs until Feb 21.

Check out Levack's full article here.

2.17.2010

EXCLUSIVE: Benjamin Gillespie + Karen Bernard


Body of Water/Body of Sex

Rhubarb intern Benjamin Gillespie talks to New York City Dancer and New Dance Alliance Artistic Director Karen Bernard about Ouette | o’et.

BG: What was it about the swimming pool that struck you so that you wanted to create a piece about its protagonist?

KB: I was more struck by the protagonist — I related to her. I was on a residency in Italy and had taken some movies with me for evening entertainment. The protagonist is also on her own residency in the French country side to work on a book. I related to her to her up tightness and the unfolding of her sexual desires and finally empowerment. A body of water is also a metaphor for sexuality and possible fear -- The pool is at the heart of the story.

BG: How and where do space and sexual desire converge for you in the piece--do you look for strong contrasts here? Is this related to your long background in space being affiliated with performance, even as a child?
KB: I never thought about it this way — are you sure you aren't a therapist? The spaces were a vehicle to create suspenseful ambiance — having different spaces allows me to create different physical expression. I imagine also that the spaces could have a feeling of claustrophobia — adding to the air of suspense. But you are giving me something to think about because I did not set out know what this was about. I was inspired by the movie and it has been through making the piece that I am finding myself in it.

BG: Technology and performance--do you often search for quotidian gestures in your pieces?

WERK: Round 2!


This week features some of Canada’s most fearless and brilliant artists. Don’t miss it! Here is this week's Rhubarb line-up:

Rae Spoon’s beautiful solo show, Hunting!, a chronicle of growing up trans in Pentecostal Calgary, with songs, stories and animations.

Media artist Jeremy Bailey with his solution to the modern dilemma or theatre, with Shakespeare karaoke, goateed weeping avatars and more with The Future of Theatre.

Lindsey Clark and Aubrey Laufer explore distance, love and longing with catchy electronic pop songs, cats in human form and sequined moustaches in Moustaches &Lipstick.

Jordan Tannahill’s company, Suburban Beast, investigates the question “What would you die for?” in collaboration with five 11-year-old performers in Insurgency.

Jonathan Heppner and Sasha Kovacs bring you a glorious tribute to the bygone era of lace and leather, denim and hairspray with Headbangers.

Out Of Line Theatre puts their sloppy spin on George Battaille’s morbidly erotic short story The Dead Man in Le Petit Mort.

The incomparable d’bi.young with the first play in her new trilogy, She, inspired by celebrity obsession and female pop stars like Rihanna.

iSPY: Erika's Intervention


Dear Hennebury:

We, your co-workers here at Buddies, have come together today to tell you that we are concerned for you. Your self prescribed organic remedies and potions have turned your office into a Shoppers Drug Mart aisle. Yesterday I asked you how you were and you responded, "Have you seen my Optimum card?" An hour ago you spritzed me with an with an organic facial refresher. Yes, it was relaxing and I do feel refreshed, but I believe this is a slippery slope that will only end up with us sharing lemon lozenges and ear candles. You know my extension number if you need to talk.

2.16.2010

TUBE: Love Love Love








This Wednesday d'bi young debuts her new work "she." "she" examines celebrity obsession in biomyth-monodrama, a form that combines dub poetry and theatre, and uses a personal experience broadened through verse.

For those who are not familiar with young's awesome stage presence check out this TEDx video.  

i can love you courageously 
what's next is a courageous love
me loving you relentlessly 
me loving you with integrity 
because this love our love can be a healing love
SH

SKOOL: Out Of Line




Transgressing the Abject in Art: Out of Line Theatre’s Le Petit Mort

Reading Bataille’s erotic short story The Dead Man is a bit like falling into an expressionistic dream of abject passions and excrement. Marie, a woman who has just witnessed the death of her lover, plunges into an orgiastic frenzy where the explicit becomes a response to the experience of death. The French ‘le petit mort’ translates as ‘the little death’ but is also a colloquial pun meaning ‘orgasm.’


Throughout the narrative, death and orgasm—erotic and explicit sex—come to the fore, juxtaposing feelings of loss and remorse with that of physical pleasure. Bataille, known for his borderline pornographic prose, undoes notion of censorship to get down to the strange and unexpected reactions the body has to death. Out of Line Theatre’s response to Bataille will be graphic and confrontational, but should provide some insight into the often-blurred binary of art/porn. Indeed, how do we confront this contradictory binary, taking into the light the history of theatre and art in general? 

Le Petit Mort runs as part of the Rhubarb! Festival from February 17th to 21st at 9pm and features Out of Line’s Mia van Leeuwen working through the filth and eroticism of Marie. Director and co-creator Ian Mozdzen, as well as van Leeuwen, will demonstrate the power of the body in theatre in its most raw, sensual, and abject form.
BG

2.15.2010

LOL: Missed Connections




Another reason to go to Rhubarb... you might pick up one of the participating artists. Buddies has definitely had its share of missed connections but this one takes the cake...

A proposition for a member of CORDELIA - m4m - 35 (Buddies Rhubarb!)


If you are a friend of the performers in Cordelia and reading this - please alert them! I'm presenting a rare Valentine opportunity here.

You: excited about the fleshlight and didn't play the guitar. Wearing a blue long-sleeved shirt and dark denim.

Us: delighted by you and not playing guitars, either. Wearing expressive faces full of marvel, sadness, surprise and glee. 

Likely to my friend's horror, I am sending this messenger pigeon into the thorn-filled cyber universe on his beautiful behalf.

Frankly, we were captivated. Glenn Marla's glitter may still have been hanging in the air, but you were a soft-focus vision and charming!

On the off chance that you're single and got some free time on Family Day, take a risk and respond to this and let me set you up on a blind date. It's going to be a gorgeous day. You can walk around and stuff.

Like you, your potential date has got those Canadian good-looks, a razor sharp wit, and a massive capacity for joy. He'll be mortified when I tell him how and why he has to wear a grey scarf and be in a ____ at _____ for 2 pm, but has the happy energy, good humour and the secret crush to nudge him in the direction of doing it. Do you?

Be in touch, and have a great show tonight. And so there are no hurt feelings, I will confirm that your co-star is also a hearthrob.

Happy Valentine's Day to both of you, and whoever else is reading this.

Love.

TUBE: Rae Spoon vs Beyonce

Rae Spoon traces his journey from growing up in a pentecostal church in Calgary to touring as a transgendered country singer. Here is his version of Beyonce's If I Were A Boy.

Hunting runs 17-21, 8pm The Cabaret. For more information about Rae Spoon visit www.raespoon.com

2.12.2010

DISH: Lindy Zucker + Zack Russell

Lindy Zucker (right) with Mariko Tamaki at the Rhubarb Kick-Off, photo by Kai Yapp.

The brilliance of Lindy Zucker squares off with Rhubarb's Mr. Zigfield, Zack Russell about his show Parole Parole. (The interview was conducted without the use of a translator.) 



LZ: Describe your theatrical career so far in 5 words?

ZR: Too much, too soon....can it be four words?

LZ: What was the inspiration for this Rhubarb piece?

ZR: Growing up, I was obsessed with the Italian TV channel Telalatino. My favorite were the variety shows, because they were impossible to follow (I don't speak any Italian). The visuals are so rich on those shows that you can be entertained without really understanding anything. You'll be watching a segment and think its one thing (for instance, an interview with Julia Roberts, in which she looks utterly confused), and then instantly it will turn into something else (a fan of Julia Roberts, talking about her battle with alcoholism).

LZ: If you were given someone else's credit card with which to purchase one ridiculous set piece what would it be?


ZR: Anything orange and pleather: couches, chairs, toilets, etc.

LZ: If you could create a cocktail to be served during this show what would be in it?

ZR: A ball of lemon gelato floating in a big glass of vodka.

LZ: If you could introduce this piece each night to the audience, what would you say??

ZR: I'd probably quote someone. Whenever I'm asked to give a speech or say something meaningful, my first instinct is to say something someone else has already said. I also have a terrible memory, so the quote never comes out quite right. Something happens between the moment I read the quote and the moment I try to repeat it. Unintentionally, I put my own spin on it. And I guess that's kind of what the show's about.

Parole Parole Runs Feb 10-14, 8pm The Chamber. 

YOOTS: YCU This Weekend @ Rhubarb



YCU Artistic Director Evalyn Parry gives YYZBuddies the rundown on this weekend's performances by Tyson James and Zita Nyarady.

This weekend at Rhubarb the Young Creators Unit presentations begin. I love the YCU. I've been the director of this program for four years, and it's been such an exciting four years, with so many talented young queer artists flexing their muscles, and stepping out. The YCU is where a lot of new voices have got their start at Buddies, and it's been the birthplace of two recent Buddies productions: multiple dora-award-winning Agookwe by Waawaate Fobister began in the YCU, as did Fishbowl, by Mark Shyzer (which is on it's way to NYC next week!); from the 2009 YCU, Obaberima by Tawiah M'Carthy is currently in development, and will have a workshop presentation during Pride 2010.

This weekend come check out the newest creations from this year's hot young queer creator/performers, presented over two weekends at the Rhubarb Festival. Round one features two very unique young artists exploring equally unique perspective:

Tyson James is the creator of Cassandra Moore, a popular and glamourous Toronto drag personality. In speak, Cassandra and Tyson duke it out to see who will come out on top, in an experimental smash-up of fabulous numbers and gritty memories, fantastic drag and personal storytelling. It's been such a pleasure directing this special project, and i think you'll agree that Tyson is a force to be reckoned with: a stunning, truly unique performer.



Zita Nyarady is a young mover and shaker on the contemporary dance scene than as a theatre artist. In A Bee Sees, Zita is speaking as well as stepping out, with some beautiful poetic text written from the perspective of a bee - a queen-bee-in-waiting, to be exact, in an urban roof-top hive. Drected by the ever-fabulous Allyson MacMachan (aritist director of Theatre Rusticle), A Bee Sees has been a exciting collaboration between a very talented young dancer and a brilliant physical theatre director.

Feb 13 and 14: Tyson James (speak, directed by Evalyn Parry, 6 pm) and Zita Nyarady (A Bee Sees, directed by Allyson McMachan, 6:30 pm). YCU shows are free for youth under 25, pwyc for everyone else, or buy a Rhubarb ticket and stay for the whole evening.

2.11.2010

XPOSED: Photos By Kai Yapp

























iSPY: Kick Off Bash

Nothing says quality like the iPhone's 30-fps VGA cam, but it does the trick.

COVERAGE: Xtra's Rhubarb Love In



"The sexy, transgressive, genderbending, daring, messy, gay, gay, gay, Rhubarb Festival." Might be the best description of Rhubarb ever created.  

In this week's issue of Xtra!, Chris Dupuis talks with celebrated performer d'bi young about her upcoming showcase at Rhubarb. Young's piece, she, uses Rihanna as an influence to examine the religion of celebrity.  

“If you look at what’s happening to Rihanna and how the media is treating her, it’s nothing new,” she says. “It happened to Madonna, to Brandy, to Britney. There is a system at work here for artists who are seduced into this idea of what success is. The piece is less about pointing fingers than it is about looking at community expectations.”

For the full article click Xtra!

Also,

Date Bateman catches Rhubarb Festival Director, Erika Hennebury, on bus between cities in Alberta. Read Bateman's outline of the 3-week convergence of contemporary performance Xtra!

2.10.2010

CATCH THE SPIRIT: Rhubarb Starts Tonight!

The much anticipated Rhubarb Festival begins tonight. There isn't an Olympic torch igniting this three week flame, but there is a cake and a fierce and unrelenting line-up of Toronto and New York’s hottest indie artists.

Hot on the heels of a sold-out run of Taylor Mac’s The Lily’s Revenge, New York City’s “hottest fat go-go boy” and “downtown prophet” Glenn Marla brings us his hilarious solo, Tragic Magic.

Zachary Russell’s Parole, Parole invites us behind the scenes of an absurd and obscure ‘80s Italian variety show and into the mad spiralling world of its English translator.

Nicole Brooks’ Obeah Opera takes us back in time to the witch trials with a stunning choral arrangement for five women suspended in the moment before their fates are revealed.

Birdtown and Swanville will rock your world with Dead Wrestlers, 10-woman, full-contact throw-down, set in the glory days of professional wrestling.

Real-life roommates David Tomlinson and Ryan Kelly get all ‘Flight of the Concords’ with their hilarious and tender ‘play-with-music’ Cordelia.

Ulysses Castellanos and Sherri Hay enact a twisted shadow-cast of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre with stuffed animals and loads of fake fabric blood in Teddy Chainsaw Massacre.

2.09.2010

FLY ON WALL: Tech Day, A Perspective

Rhubarb Tech Day is a long haul. Shawn Hitchins, blog master, logs the mayhem from his perspective.


11:00am - Arrive late for work, Starbucks in hand.
11:15am - Briefing with Hennebury: "Marla was stopped at the border yesterday. Customs questioned why he had a pound of glitter in his luggage. His response, 'I just love glitter.'"
11:20am - Office discussion about my new Annie Lennox haircut.
11:30am - Give Healy a quick lesson in French for his interview with Radio Canada on Wednesday.
11:45am - Share a Cliff Bar with Wilcox. 
12:00pm - Sneak into tech rehearsal for Cordelia. Set looks great. Kelly, Tomlinson, and Connor are walking through the set-up.
12:15pm - Catch up with Tistsais, who is performing in Parole Parole. 
1:00pm - Crew Break, a feast of Wendy's and Mr. Sub. Laura Baxter's hair is amazing
1:05pm - Neal Medlyn spotted in the building. Red framed glasses. OMG
1:30pm - On the way to Wendy's to grab lunch, I see half the set of Parole Parole in the hustler park outside the theatre.
1:35pm - Junior Bacon Cheeseburger, Baked Potato with Sour Cream and Chives. Quick and Cheap.

EXCLUSIVE: Jess Dobkin + Erika Hennebury












Dobkin dishes everything she's got in five awesome answers. 

In the mayhem of last minute rehearsals and meetings Rhubarb Festival Director, Erika Hennebury, found a quiet moment to chat with Rhubarb Poster Girl Jess Dobkin.

EH: What was the impetus for Everything I've Got and what does showing 'everything you've got' mean for your future work?

JD: The piece was initially provoked by the loss of a friend, whose untimely death encouraged me to dig deeper into questions about artistic process and mortality. I’ve always felt extreme urgency about my many creative ideas that might not get realized. I never feel trust in a sense of future, so I create each new work with a clear understanding that it could be my last. “Everything I’ve Got” is very much about the present moment of live performance. I love this about live performance – that while it can speak to a past and future time, it is firmly rooted in real time and space.

EH: How do you see the yourself as an artist and as a queer in relationship to the unicorn?

JD: There’s a fable that explains the unicorn’s extinction being due to its failure to board Noah’s ark during the flood. I’m compelled by this story and its unanswered questions – why it did not to follow, why it failed to board. The unicorn can symbolize many things - but certainly as an artist, a queer, an outcast, a singular, sexual beast. And the unicorn relates to questions I have about performance – about the ways that performance might or might not exist in consciousness and in memory.

2.08.2010

TUBE: Cordelia... Are You Gonna Make It Okay?

Dora Winner Ryan Kelly teams up with the comic brilliance of David Tomlinson in Cordelia. Here is a preview of their upcoming performance.



In the recent issue of fab Magazine Kelly quipped:

"What makes Cordelia not as conventional as Kelly fears is that 'it’s rare for gay men to see their lives presented not as a novelty or a joke on Will & Grace. Cordelia is the intimate experiences of two men. It’s a new reflection of gay life,' he laughs. 'For this one I’m not in a dress. Audiences will have to accept me for who I am, not the height of my heels or the size of my hair.'”

Read Drew Rowsome's article here.

Cordelia runs Feb 10-14, 9pm. The Cabaret. For more information about the Rhubarb Festival line-up click here

SH

2.05.2010

WERK: Put A Ring On Medlyn

We are one week away from the one man tour de force known as Neal Medlyn. The Neal Medlyn Experience is a live, faithful re-enactment of Beyonce's 2007 concert DVD The Beyonce Experience Live! featuring backup dancers, birthday cake, and cameos by Destiny's Child. Words can't describe what youtube can. Bring out the industrial fans, let's see some acrylic hair fly.



The Neal Medlyn Experience, One Night Only. Fri Feb, 12 @ 10pm. 12 Alexander St. 

2.04.2010

DON'T OPEN THAT DOOR: Ulysses's Plush Horror













 

Remember the classic and somewhat disturbing song that begins? “If you go down in the woods today, you’ll get a big surprise!”

While Teddy Chainsaw Massacre may not be the blissfully queer image of frolicking bears in the forest, it does promise to be equally as memorable. This collaborative performance piece was created by Ulysses Castellanos and Sherri Hay, both multidisciplinary artists who have presented work in Toronto and internationally. The piece is bound to be a humourous bloodbath, redistributing horrific and gory images onto innocuous, lifeless stuffed animals. With the manipulation of these furry creatures, they have adapted the iconic horror film onto a new medium, juxtaposing both the gruesome images of the film with the kitschy medium of polyester creatures, to create an thrilling narrative which will doubtless undo our perceptions of cute and cuddly, bringing these teddy’s to life—a dark comic world where the teddy bear picnic turns into the teddy bear massacre

BG

2.03.2010

OMFG: Insurgency

Here's a look at Jordan Tannahill's upcoming Rhubarb show Insurgency. Child soldiers and UGG boots: two things that are horribly wrong with the world. By combining these topics Tannahill asks his subjects and his audience, "What would you die for?" Brilliant.



SH

2.02.2010

EXCLUSIVE: Ryan G. Hinds + Glenn Marla


















Downtown Divas dish Makeup, Fatness and Toronto vs. NYC

At a fabulously ungodly hour somewhere between the last subway and morning wake-up calls on CP24, self-professed terrible creature of the night and “Tragic Magic” star chatted with “Stadium” ‘s Ryan G. Hinds

RGH: What make up do you use and why? How should your fans create the “Glenn Marla” look?

GM: I get great discounts at MAC and use whatever I’ve picked up being a queen homo over the years. The Glenn Marla look comes from the gut. In Tragic Magic, “Face Masturbation” is about how the process of putting on makeup feels so good and is a unique way you can learn to love your body. When you let yourself sit down, get in front of the vanity, spread it all out...if it works, it works.

RGH: Several of the out-of-town artists at Rhubarb are New Yorkers. People often complain NYC isn’t fun anymore, but I find the opposite.

GM: I’ve lived in New York since 2001 and am in disagreement with anyone who says “wah, it’s not fun anymore”. New York has been good to me, and I’ve been good to it. Every single night of the week there is a venue where you can see subversive queer performance art. It’s awesome that everyone gets to play. Yes, let’s have the conversation about gentrification of neighborhoods and people being displaced and art venues closing, but at the same let’s look at what’s popping up. If people don’t like that it’s changing, then leave. Change is a constant in New York.

RGH: Usually artists decamp Toronto for NYC, but you’re doing the reverse (albeit temporarily).

GM: I’m so excited for Toronto. I haven’t been there since I was a teenager, but I know so many amazing awesome queers who are from Toronto....people I’ve performed with all over. There’s a whole group of fat activists; Chelsey Lichtman and the whole queer conference circuit

RGH: Why do you think people are surprised when they find out big boys and girls can dance or dress well?

GM: They’re not used to seeing us like that because we live in a world where fat people aren’t often allowed to feel empowered in their body or encouraged to go to a dance class. People just aren’t used to seeing larger bodies with not a lot of clothes on. I’ve gotten big tips go-go dancing on a platform where there was space to shock people, and that shock was always positive.

RGH: In Rhubarb this year, there are a few shows that cast their creators as Icons: Yours, mine, Neal Medlyn’s, Rae Spoon’s, and Jess Dobkin’s. What do you think drives us to bring our own lives and experiences to the stage, instead of hiding behind a character?

GM: I went to acting school; I’ve put on a rehearsal skirt and done Tennessee Williams, and at the end of the day there aren’t parts for fat trannies. We have to create art on our own terms. I look at the media, the theatre, the art all around me and I don’t see the lives of me and my people depicted at all. Queer stories are good stories to be telling, and the way we tell them is really special.

BG