Monthly Archive for March, 2009

Episode 19 » March 11, 2009

This is a bit late getting to the blog, but it’s finally up. Episode 19 took Katherine and I to the Bloor Cinema to see a documentary called Guest of Cindy Sherman, part of the Doc Soup series of documentaries (a program run by Hot Docs). To give you an idea about the film, we found this trailer for it:

You will see what we thought of the film at the end…  It sure was provocative!  It got Katherine quite ticked off, that’s for sure.  At its core, it is really two stories rolled into one.  One being the New York art gallery scene from the 80’s until now, and the other being the story of a man who is with a woman who is much more successful and talented than him.  It sure is a lot of things, but definitely worth a look, especially if you want to know a bit more about Cindy Sherman and her amazing work as an artist.

We got a chance to talk to Sean Farnel, Director of Programming at Hot Docs to talk about the upcoming festival and what Doc Soup is. If you love documentary films, and you haven’t been to Doc Soup or Hot Docs, you’re missing out on one of the best film festivals in Toronto. And it’s pretty darn cheap to see some fantastic stories from around the world.

The second part of our evening took us down to Bread & Circus in Kensington Market to see The Carnegie Hall Show:

… an Improvised meta-variety show that satirizes the gala retrospective not unlike The Lincoln or Kennedy Centre Honours.  After getting a suggestion from the audience of “an event to celebrate” the tuxedo and boa-clad cast (Matt Baram, Chris Gibbs, Ron Pederson and Naomi Snieckus) take the audience on a timeline retrospective of the greatest improvised scenes based on that event as they make them up from scratch before their very eyes. That’s why we can say we offer the greatest Improvised scenes of all time!

For a night of “Pay-What-You-Think-It’s-Worth” comedy, this was a great evening of improv. We got a chance to sit down (or stand) with Chris Gibbs, one of the stars of the show, to talk to us about the beginnings of The Carnegie Hall Show. If you’re ever in the area on a Wednesday night and looking for something off the beaten path to check out, may we highly suggest having a drink and a laugh with some of Toronto’s finest improvisers (for a quick clip, click here).

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Episode 18 » March 4, 2009

Is there anything better than sitting down to a delicious meal with friends or family and enjoying the amazing flavours of the food sitting infront of you? We don’t think so. On Wednesday, Katherine and I sat down with Chef Jamie Kennedy at the Gilead Café to talk about the Slow Food Movement, why buying locally produced food is important to the economy and the environment and the new Thursday night Local Food Movement Dinner Series at the Gilead Cafe. It was an inspiring chat - and there was so much to be said that we decided to include the full interview as a separate video.

We had some time to kill before heading over to the Berkeley Street Theatre to see Une maison face au nord, so we took off to the Distillery District which is just down the street from the Gilead Cafe and grabbed a delicious turkey chili to fill up on from the Brick Street Bakery. We took some time to chat and catch up and split a delicious cookie as desert.

At 8pm the curtain was raised on Théâtre français de Toronto’s latest production:

OSCILLATING BETWEEN FAMILY DRAMA AND A COMEDY OF MANNERS, A North-Facing House takes on some serious subjects, such as the rural exodus, the integration of immigrants, and generational conflict, all of which are dramatized with the author’s humour spicing up the text. Between a son pursued for money laundering, a young Guatemalan worker, and an elderly Pole, a man in his twilight years (played by Guy Mignault) feels at a dead end despite the kindness and good sense of his wife (played by Louisette Dussault). He sees the heritage that he created and the country of his dreams inexorably losing its sense and future. Far from witnessing the collapse of a microscopic world, something quite different happens, which allows us to tackle questions of spirituality confronting today’s reality. Jean-Rock Gaudreault, whose work TfT first presented in 1999 with La Raccourcie, has since become a definite pillar of Canadian francophone theatre.

We got the chance to chat with one of the stars of the show and TFT Artistic Director, Guy Mignault. It’s not easy being the Artistic Director and one of the actors in the show, but Guy did a fantasitc job - along with the rest of the cast.

All in all another excellent night in Toronto.

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