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Volume 29 Issue 2 | October & November 2023

With this issue we start a new rhythm of publication -- bimonthly, October, December, February April, June, and August. October/November is a chock-a-block two months for live music, new recordings, and news (not all of it bad). Inside: Christina Petrowska Quilico, collaborative artist honoured; Kate Hennig as Mama Rose; Global Toronto 2023 reviewed; Musical weavings from TaPIR to Xenakis at Esprit; Fidelio headlines an operatic fall; and our 24th annual Blue Pages directory of presenters. This and more.

With this issue we start a new rhythm of publication -- bimonthly, October, December, February April, June, and August. October/November is a chock-a-block two months for live music, new recordings, and news (not all of it bad). Inside: Christina Petrowska Quilico, collaborative artist honoured; Kate Hennig as Mama Rose; Global Toronto 2023 reviewed; Musical weavings from TaPIR to Xenakis at Esprit; Fidelio headlines an operatic fall; and our 24th annual Blue Pages directory of presenters. This and more.

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audience for them, and some of them are brilliant pieces of work<br />

that I understand, and because of being in the business for 40 years<br />

and working with masters in their field I’ve inherited a lot of that<br />

knowledge which I would love to pass on to other people.”<br />

Hennig has already directed wonderfully received productions<br />

on the Festival stage of Irving Berlin’s White Christmas and<br />

Holiday Inn. I would love to see what she would do with Gypsy,<br />

perhaps giving the show the benefit of an experienced female eye at<br />

the helm. In the meantime Gypsy continues at the Shaw Festival,<br />

but only until <strong>October</strong> 7 www.shawfest.com.<br />

The Real McCoy, indeed: As well as all the established musicals<br />

on stage this season there are new shows in development to look<br />

forward to, including one I have been curious about since first<br />

hearing about it almost ten years ago. By the time this is printed the<br />

event will have passed but I think we will be hearing more about<br />

this show as it continues to develop. The Musical McCoy is a new<br />

musical adaptation of Toronto<br />

playwright Andrew Moodie’s<br />

hugely successful 2006 play The<br />

Real McCoy. The brainchild of<br />

adaptor Vincent de Tourdonnet,<br />

the musical uses a beat-based<br />

electronic score to tell the true<br />

story of African-Canadian<br />

inventor Elijah McCoy who<br />

revolutionised the design of the<br />

steam engine and his African-<br />

American wife Mary Delaney,<br />

an activist who envisioned a day<br />

when all women could vote.<br />

By the time you read this I<br />

Andrew Moodie<br />

will very likely have see the<br />

HELEN TANSEY<br />

public showcase of the first act of McCoy taking place September 23<br />

to 25 at the Papermill Theatre at Todmorden Mills Historic Site at<br />

67 Pottery Road in Toronto. Moodie directs (interestingly after just<br />

directing a hit remount of his original play at the Blyth Festival this<br />

summer). The cast is made up of a thrilling group of musical theatre<br />

performers including Daren A. Herbert (Onegin, the musical,<br />

CBC’s Pretty Hard Cases) and Arlene Duncan (Little Mosque on the<br />

Prairie, Diggstown). All tickets are free. For full production credits,<br />

and links to some songs from the show go to www.vincentdetourdonnet.com/musical-mccoy.html<br />

Fall for Dance: Late September and early <strong>October</strong> is also the<br />

time to catch some of the spectacular offerings of what is probably<br />

our most inclusive and accessible dance festival: Fall For Dance<br />

North. FFDN not only showcases local and Canadian dancers and<br />

companies but brings to the city artists from around the world to<br />

share their unique visions of storytelling through dance. Events<br />

take place at various locations around the city with the mainstage<br />

program occupying Meridian Hall (1 Front Street East).<br />

Tickets to main-stage events are only $15 and many events are free.<br />

September 26 to <strong>October</strong> 7 FFDN.com<br />

<strong>October</strong> will also see the Akram Khan Company’s acclaimed<br />

contemporary dance adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s The Jungle<br />

Book which has been travelling the world garnering rave reviews<br />

wherever it goes. Spectacular technology transforms the stage<br />

and the story into an urgent mythic tale for our own times as we<br />

are transported into the journey of Mowgli through the eyes of<br />

a refugee child caught in a world devastated by climate change.<br />

<strong>October</strong> 12 to 14 at the Bluma Appel Theatre, www.canadianstage.<br />

com/shows-events/season/jungle-book-reimagined<br />

Also in <strong>October</strong>, the newly established Toronto- and St John’sbased<br />

Terra Bruce Productions is bringing a new musical inspired<br />

by the music of The Irish Rovers to the beautiful WinterGarden<br />

416-366-7723<br />

1-800-708-6754<br />

TOLIVE.COM<br />

ST LAWRENCE<br />

CENTRE FOR THE ARTS<br />

27 FRONT ST E, TORONTO<br />

King for a Day<br />

UN GIORNO<br />

DI REGNO<br />

BY Giuseppe Verdi<br />

<strong>November</strong> 5 | 2:30 PM<br />

MUSIC DIRECTOR/PIANIST Suzy Smith<br />

CHORUS DIRECTOR Robert Cooper<br />

Holly<br />

Chaplin<br />

Belle<br />

Cao<br />

César<br />

Bello<br />

Tonatiuh<br />

Abrego<br />

Justin<br />

Welsh<br />

OPERA SALON<br />

Stuartissimo | A tribute to<br />

OIC’s founder Stuart Hamilton<br />

<strong>October</strong> 28, <strong>2023</strong> | 4:00 pm<br />

Tickets: $25<br />

The Edward Jackman Centre<br />

947 Queen Street East, Toronto<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>October</strong> & <strong>November</strong> <strong>2023</strong> | 13

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