Repercussion theatre breathes new life into an old shrew

The basic skill in Shakespearean performance is the ability to toss off Bill’s best high-flying gibberish with an air. The audience goes away convinced the actors understood it all, even if they didn’t themselves. But Repercussion Theatre goes one better in its high-energy Summer 2012 production of Taming of the Shrew: the plotlines stay sharp and don’t get lost in the verbal sparring between characters.

There’s a convention in minimal Shakespeare productions of doing a frantic amount of balletic, even acrobatic action, then freezing into tableaux for the more important speeches. We see a fair bit of this here, the production being blessed with not one but two tall, freakishly skinny actors, Adrian Shepherd-Gawinski (Lucentio) and Alex McCooeye (Petruchio), both of whom are capable of taking a pratfall with style. Still, the directors need to trust the dialogue enough not to instruct their actors to jive around quite so much while speaking, as if we might get bored if they didn’t.

The addition of several familiar Italian songs like “Eh Cumpari” is a real plus. Davide Chiazzese, who plays paterfamilia Baptista Minola, has a rich tenor that brightens several scenes. There’s enough music sprinkled through the show to be fun without turning it into a weak approximation of a musical, as has happened with a couple of Repercussion productions in past years, and the Italian tunes remind us the story is set in a fantasy Italy of no particular era.

Fantasia: July 25

Slackers get horrified in DIY drama Resolution, and Fantasia’s patented brand of Japanese insanity is explored in Stray Cat Rock: Sex Hunter.

Drive live

The director, writers and stellar cast deserve no end of credit for creating Drive. But the soundtrack was key to crafting the film’s mood. Such a deliberate and nuanced piece of work needs its musical counterpart, and in several instances, the songs complete the picture.
Longtime composer (and early Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer) Cliff Martinez wrote the original score, and there are songs by a number of contemporary ’80s revivalists.

Her pregnant brother: Johanna Nutter talks about her family and Zoofest play

In the creation of her play My Pregnant Brother, Johanna Nutter cried out that she was “cannibalizing” her family for an audience, but three years later she seems more at peace with the delicate territory of the memoirist.

“I really did struggle with those fears, those fears of exploitation,” Nutter admits in a quiet café in downtown Montreal. “I had to ask myself over and over again “Why are you telling this story? [But] it wouldn’t let me go. It wouldn’t let me sleep.”

In 2006, Nutter was trying to separate herself from the caretaking role in her family, when she received a phone call from her brother. In the midst of his female-to-male transition he found himself pregnant and called upon his older sister, as he had so many times before. The call left Nutter lying prone on her kitchen floor for 26 hours.

Today’s Sounds

These grizzled metal heshers emerged from the sweltering Savannah heat in 2003, quickly making deep marks with the crusty, tuned-down Southern sludge of their EPs First and Second. But it was in 2007, when they signed with Relapse and released Red, that they truly climbed out of their metal trench.

HESSIAN SESSION

It’s summer, the time when professional skateboarders pile into cramped, stinky vans and, between rest stops filled with alcohol, porn and fireworks purchases, drive across the country and do demos for throngs of kids who can’t believe they’re seeing their heroes, hungover and quick-tempered though they may be, in person.

Just for Laughs Film Festival Ticket Giveaway

The lesser-known cinematic cousin of the larger comedy extravaganza, the Just for Laughs Film Festival brings onscreen comedy in all its forms to our fair city. This year, Cult MTL and the JFL film fest offer you the chance to check out some of the fest’s offerings for free!

Wednesday, July 25

Swing by the vernissage for local artist Catherine Benny, a gifted Alzheimer’s patient who donates the profits from sales of her amazing work to Alzheimer Groupe Inc. Galérie Espace (4844 St-Laurent), 6–2 p.m., free

Fancy yourself the great Bard of the ‘burbs? Check out the Repercussion Theatre’s summertime production of The Taming of the Shrew in Kirkland. Ecclestone Park, 7 p.m., free

Bask in the ’80s vibes of Drive live. The Drive tour features two acts who appeared on the soundtrack, College and Electric Youth, and like-minded artist Anoraak. Corona Theatre (2490 Notre-Dame W.), 8 p.m., $24.40/$26.90 (all ages)

Catch Aziz Ansari’s Buried Alive, which begins its three-night stand tonight at Just for Laughs. Metropolis (59 Ste-Catherine E.), 10 p.m., $45.95