Right
of Passage
Written by Ann Barber and Kathleen McDonnell,
Right of
Passage was a critically-acclaimed outdoor show on Toronto Island
in which the audience is led in parade from scene to scene. It is about
the initiation of youth into adulthood and combines the creative skills
of 17 professional artists and 90 community members.
Excerpts from Richard
Ouzounian's review of Right of Passage in the Toronto Star:
"Pure
Magic" full review here
"If you're looking
for a totally different theatrical experience, then I suggest you take
the ferry to Ward's Island one evening between now and Sunday to catch
Right of Passage.
It's part play, part
pageant, and part performance art: a look at three kids from the instant
of birth to that scary moment when they endure the "passage"
into adulthood. And it's your passage as well, because this is the kind
of show where you change locations with each scene...
You pass through
'The Avenue of the Seven Deadly Teens,' a long stretch of boardwalk where
luridly lit figures in huge papier mache heads illustrate the adolescent
ways of sinning. (Yes, Doritos stand for Gluttony.)
Then we arrive at
the Rave, which manages to be every kid's dream and every parent's nightmare
simultaneously.
Grotesque figures
on stilts move in and out of the shadows as the rave master (a terrifying
job from Christopher Pinheiro) chants his insidious message: 'How you
gonna know? Gotta take a risk. Say yes to the road of excess.'
... if you're willing
to surrender yourself to the glories of colour, light, music and movement,
you will be astonished, delighted, and even moved.
And at the end of
the evening as the 10:15 ferry takes you home, the lights of downtown
will look different, I promise you."
For Richard Ouzounian's
full review of Right of Passage in the Toronto Star: - here
Visit Kathleen McDonnell's website here. |