Edmonton Journal

Circus artists to showcase skills

Unique festival combines aerobatics, acrobatics, theatre, dance, storytelli­ng

- MARK MORRIS yegarts@positmedia.com

There's a festival making its live debut in Edmonton this weekend, and it's a unique one at that. From Friday through Sunday afternoon, the Timms Centre for the Arts will be resonating to the performanc­es of the Alberta Circus Arts Festival, surrounded by a raft of ancillary events starting Thursday.

It's the brainchild of Edmonton's Firefly Theatre and Circus, known across the country for its aerial circus arts and training of new artists. This is not the circus of the Big Top and animals, nor the huge budget spectacula­rs of a Cirque du Soleil production, but, says the festival's executive producer, Annie Dugan, “somewhere in the middle.”

Artists from across Canada and beyond will cross aerobatics with dance, theatre and storytelli­ng, use traditiona­l and new circus skills and apparatus, and aim to both inspire awe and entertain.

“You can expect to see amazing human beings that are graceful, powerful and awe-inspiring,” says Dugan. “You're going to be able to see their expression­s and you're going to be able to see their sweat and their breathing and their triumph over the skills they've been working on, some for 20 years.”

Marsha Kennington, the celebrated Canadian aerialist/acrobat who co-founded Ontario's first circus school, is kicking things off with a free keynote speech at 3 p.m.

Thursday at the campus Saint-Jean auditorium.

The first festival performanc­e at the Timms Centre, Friday at 7:30 p.m., is presented by Montreal's Barcode Circus Company in its Alberta debut. Titled Sweat and Ink, it intertwine­s four stories exploring memory through acrobatics. Each of the four artists competes in technical prowess and, according to Barcode's statement, “it is a show to make you gasp, cry, laugh and wonder.”

Barcode has been touring Europe with this show, to considerab­le acclaim.

“You're going to see three people flipping a fourth person 20 feet in the air,” says Dugan. “There's no safety gear. There are no crash mats. This person flying in the air is going to come down on these three people. That's their storytelli­ng and they're doing it through physicalit­y, through video projection­s, through imagery.”

It is the turn of Firefly Theatre and Circus itself in a late-night Cabaret at the Timms at 9:30 p.m. Friday. Artists, mainly from Alberta, include Calgary's hula hooper Kate Ryan. She's the Canadian director of Spark Circus, the social circus NGO, and the first Canadian ambassador to Hoopologie hula-hoop company.

There's Edmonton's Cirquetast­ic, with its invention of a cross between a chair and a trampoline. Vancouver's Sidonie Adamson performs with a unique ariel apparatus that she co-created called the Cascorde, which indeed is a cascade of ropes.

A different kind of show can be seen on the Western Green space of Campus Saint-jean on Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m. Calgary's Léda Davies, a circus-theatre practition­er, and Toronto's Holly Treddenick, a circus-dance artist, will be presenting one-person shows titled respective­ly Fish at the Bottom of the Sea and In the Fire. The works are still in progress, and the performanc­es will be followed by Talkback on the Creative Process with the artists.

Saturday evening sees Winnipeg's Street Circus at the Timms. Street Circus — artists Daniel and Kimberly Craig — has performed all over the world, and regularly appears at the Fringe. It has combined with internatio­nally acclaimed and award-winning circus artists from Winnipeg and beyond to create a family-friendly show titled Throwback, inspired by the music, movies, games and culture of the 1980s and 1990s.

Throwback will also close out the festival with a repeat performanc­e at 2 p.m. on Sunday afternoon.

For those who want to try out a little bit of circus magic, there are free outdoor stilt workshops. The first is a drop-in on Saturday at noon, the second — titled Going Higher — on Sunday at noon, if you sign up at the end of the first workshop.

On Friday from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. the festival is picking up on an idea created by the Quebec circus community during the pandemic. They gathered circus artists to mingle in a “happy hour” online with the general public.

The Alberta Circus Arts Festival is going one better by having a live happy hour titled 5@Cirque, giving visitors the chance to meet and talk with circus performers at La Cité Francophon­e's Café Bicyclette.

For those more serious about taking part in circus arts, there's a series of workshops from Thursday through Sunday, including a contortion workshop and a hoop workshop. Registrati­on is required for these.

As Dugan says, “There are three dedicated circus schools in Edmonton. Come and see what the future could hold for you.”

 ?? ?? Alexandra Royer performs in Sweat and Ink, presented by Barcode Circus Company, at the Timms Centre as part of the Alberta Circus Arts Festival, which combines dance, theatre and storytelli­ng.
Alexandra Royer performs in Sweat and Ink, presented by Barcode Circus Company, at the Timms Centre as part of the Alberta Circus Arts Festival, which combines dance, theatre and storytelli­ng.

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