Category Archives: Events

University of Toronto Drama Festival: Day 4

The University of Toronto Drama Festival is an annual competition of student-written and -directed plays at Hart House Theatre. This year, blogUT is pleased to provide reviews and critiques of each show for your elucidation and entertainment.

The final night of the festival featured only two shows, which were as different from each other as possible. Fortunately, both seemed to be improvements of other night’s shows: Shazam! acts like the more self-aware brother of Flapjacks, while The Gully accomplishes the interpersonal drama so many other productions worked so hard to almost achieve.

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University of Toronto Drama Festival: Day 3

The University of Toronto Drama Festival is an annual competition of student-written and -directed plays at Hart House Theatre. This year, blogUT is pleased to provide reviews and critiques of each show for your elucidation and entertainment.

The penultimate night’s performances departed abruptly from the trend of tragicomedy, instead offering one dedicated drama, one dedicated comedy, and only one light drama. Interestingly, all three shows dealt with the relationships between writing and life, leaving one to wonder if maybe UofT English classes aren’t a tad one-note.

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University of Toronto Drama Festival: Day 1

The University of Toronto Drama Festival is an annual competition of student-written and -directed plays at Hart House Theatre. This year, blogUT is pleased to provide reviews and critiques of each show for your elucidation and entertainment.

The first night featured three adequate shows, of which none were eye-rollingly terrible nor edge-sittingly good. All three plays were, interestingly, united by stories of death and tragedy, and people facing terrible circumstances in unusual ways. Stylistically, all three shows had elements of tragicomedy, though the first veered more towards drama and the last two comedy.

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What To Do Over Reading Week… Aside From Reading

With January finally over and February just beginning, there’s only one thing on everyone’s mind: Reading Week. Well, if I’m going to be honest, Reading Week has been on my mind since the first day of this semester. With all the stress of upcoming midterms and papers due in every class, we could all use a break. If you’re anything like me and tend to not make plans for your breaks (aside from re-watching all the episodes of Game of Thrones) then it’s time to start! While 5 days off doesn’t seem like much, there is still so much you can do… starting with:

1. A Trip to Montreal

The trip is hosted by the Scarborough Student Union but students from any campus can attend. The Student Union’s website says: “the trip includes daytime activities like bowling, skating, and a trip to the Montreal Biodome, as well as all-day shuttles for casinos and shopping. It also includes shuttle buses, line bypasses and entry into a Montreal nightclub every night”. Registration ends on February 15th for the 4 day/3 night trip. If you’re interested, payment and the required form need to be brought to the SCSU Office on UTSC’s campus ASAP! For more information visit http://utsu.ca/content/3348.

2. Skiing/Snowboarding at Blue Mountain

For all of you daredevils (i.e. not me), skiing or snowboarding is always a fun option. When people told me that the University of Toronto has every club imaginable (the Quidditch team here was a big part in my decision to choose this campus) they weren’t lying! So, naturally there is a University of Toronto Ski and Snowboard Club. The club offers 7 day-trips to Blue Mountain a year, one of which is February 16th. Guests are welcome. Also, if you plan to go more than once a general membership for just $15 would be a good choice. For more information, visit http://ssc.sa.utoronto.ca/blue-mountain-day-pass.

3. Hart House Farm

No, it’s not located in Hart House itself… or was I the only one who naively thought that when I first heard about it? The 150-acre farm is only 1 hour from Toronto, located on the ridge of the Niagara Escarpment. The farm is open during Reading Week but is only available for booking to University of Toronto students or Hart House members.  While it is undeniably cold, the beautiful environment (or the available sauna) will surely make up for it. You can also warm up by staying overnight in the Ignatieff House with central heating, indoor washrooms, a kitchen, and a dining room with a fireplace. For pictures — as my words do the Farm no justice — and more information visit  http://harthouse.ca/learn-discover/hart-house-farm/.

4. The Royal Ontario Museum

I pass the elaborate building that houses the  Museum every day on my way to class, yet I’ve never been inside. I’ve always been hesitant about going to a museum when I was younger as a resounding “BORING!” is always heard when the word museum is mentioned. But what better opportunity to try something new than when you have nothing to lose? The ROM offers free admission to University of Toronto students every Tuesday (Reading Week included). Current exhibits range from the Giants from Gondwana dinosaur exhibit to a display of vintage textiles and costumes and unusual Chinese works of art (perfect for the upcoming Chinese New Year). My mother always told me that nothing in life is free, but this certainly is! If you’ve never been or have been and want to go again, Reading Week is the perfect opportunity.

Although our 5-day break from the madness at U of T is called “Reading Week”, it doesn’t mean that is all you have to do. I’m not suggesting you throw away the readings and scream “YOLO” like the girl from the American Idol auditions (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ei7LilofkiA), but take a much-needed break from all the work!

The New Music Festival at U of T

U of T is full of unique opportunities. They’re the bread and butter of this blog and my life; there are few things I like more than learning about a hidden spot or quirky club or meaningful volunteer position on campus. I scour the blogs and papers as often as I can, holding up event listings to my mental calendar and wondering if I can fit in a play, philosophy discussion, and homework in one afternoon. (I can.)

That’s why I was surprised and a little embarrassed to realize that U of T has had an entire faculty of performers right underneath my nose (and Museum Station) this whole time. The Faculty of Music is full to the brim of brilliant composers and performers, and features them in free shows at least once a week. Couple in the fact that a sudden epiphany (read: episode of Frasier) made me realize how much culture is missing from my life, and suddenly I’m cruising the Faculty of Music website for upcoming events.

In the past two days alone, I’ve seen the finals of a concerto competition (that bassoonist nailed it), listened to new pop pieces by students with classical backgrounds, and [I’m not sure what the verb is] an experimental theatrical music… thing in honour of the 10th anniversary of the passing of its composer. The last two events were part of the Faculty’s New Music Festival, which runs until the 27th and features nine more free shows. I’ll go to as many as I can.

Sweeney Todd by St Michael’s College Student Union

“Shatnerian” is not a mainstay of the critical dramatic lexicon, but it appears exactly four times in the notes I took while watching SMCSU’s student production of Stephen Sondheim’s  Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. It was the robotic gestures and melodramatic, segmented speech patterns of the leading man and some of the chorus that spurred those comments, but next to them in my notepad are “amazing voice”, “spooky”, and “hilarious”.

To those unfamiliar with Sondheim’s masterpiece, the combination of spooky and hilarious may be alarming; to everyone else it’s ideal. Told mostly through song straight out of the horror movie canon, Sweeney Todd follows a wrongfully-convicted barber through his return to London, his relationship with an amoral pie-maker, and his eventual pledge to seek revenge on a corrupt judge and anyone else who might get in his way. This show is driven by the crisp, haunting, voice of star Peter Mackechnie (HairsprayRocky Horror Picture Show) and the impeccable comedic timing of Victoria McEwan (Hairspray), who handle the show’s demanding rhythm and dense plot with apparent ease.

In such a tightly-wound piece, however, even the slightest imperfection pops out: a chorus that never starts or stops singing at the same time, a gunshot that’s played seconds before the trigger is pulled, a leading lady with a beautiful singing voice and hilarious delivery but rarely both at once. Missed cues and forgotten lines hit the ear harder than any correct note or clever pun.

But it is precisely because I am able to nit-pick so many foibles and slip-ups that the Sweeney Todd’s consummate excellence is clear. There were no terrible performers; no glaring accommodations in plot or score. Except possibly for director Michael Wisniowski’s decision to replace sudden, intense murders with scenes of ambling symbolism, the show pulled every heart string and pushed every laugh. In all cases, the good outweighed the bad, the humour surpassed the foibles, and the delivery, both musical and dramatic, made SMCSU’s production of Sweeney Todd an evening of enjoyable theatre.

Sweeney Todd runs at Hart House Theatre for five performances:

Friday November 30th, 8:00PM
Saturday December 1st, 8:00PM
Friday December 7th, 8:00PM
Saturday December 8th, 2:00PM & 8:00PM

Tickets cost $12 for students and $20 for adults and can be purchased online via UofT Tix Online Box Office or in person at their Box Office.

Audiences are warned of mature content and violence.