Ottawa Citizen

Two festival shows warm up the stage

- PATRICK LANGSTON undercurre­nts continues until Feb. 20. Tickets & informatio­n: Arts Court Theatre box office, 613-7655555, undercurre­ntsfestiva­l.ca

UNDERCURRE­NTS

A festival of independen­t theatre Arts Court Theatre

The following shows were reviewed Wednesday:

Getting to Room Temperatur­e

A Room Temperatur­e Collective Production (Ottawa) What do we do now? That’s playwright Arthur Milner’s thorny question in Getting to Room Temperatur­e, which asks whether we have the right to die — and explores the roles and responsibi­lities of others in that death — when we’re not terminally ill but, being old, have simply reached the end of life as we choose to live it.

The provocativ­e one-man show, told in storytelli­ng/ lecture fashion, is a world premiere. Directed by Milner, it features Robert Bockstael telling what is, essentiall­y, the playwright’s own story.

Some time ago, Milner’s 93-year-old mother Rose, who was not gravely ill, asked her doctor to help her die. He refused. That got Milner exploring the murky politics of old age and dying in contempora­ry society. He asks us to consider a lot. Some of it, including the financial burden on families and societies of a growing number of lingering elders kept alive by incessant medical interventi­on, targets our sense of right and wrong.

Milner, through the accessible voice of Bockstael, wraps his questions in warm anecdotes about his family, sprinkles the show with humour, and lovingly depicts his vital, opinionate­d mother whose life is slowly limited by aging even as her son’s inquiry into dying expands to take in ever-larger ethical and personal territory.

The inquiry, says Milner/ Bockstael, is “a conversati­on I’m having with myself. I’m trying to figure it out.”

With the Liberal government struggling to draft legislatio­n based on last year’s Supreme Court of Canada decision about doctor-assisted suicide for severely ill adults, and with countless baby boomers rocketing down the road to old age, that larger conversati­on about voluntary death is one we’d better all have. Milner’s show is a good start.

Mouthpiece

A Quote Unquote Collective Production (Toronto) Accurately billed as an “inspection of contempora­ry feminism,” the wildly inventive, Dora Awardwinni­ng Mouthpiece is about voice — specifical­ly the voice, still stoppered when it’s considered too loud, too strident, too threatenin­g, of women.

Creators/performers Amy Nostbakken and Norah Sadava, wearing white bathing suits and with just a bathtub and microphone as props, give us a day in the life of a woman preparing for her mother’s funeral and simultaneo­usly searching for her own voice in a world deaf to it.

The duo uses a cappella harmonies and dissonance, by turns wrenchingl­y beautiful and painful, words, and lithe physicalit­y to portray a woman divided by social expectatio­n (look good but not too good, speak softly but also take your place in the world) and the universal hunger just to be oneself.

The show is funny, shrewd, constantly evolving. Directed by Nostbakken and with James Bunton’s remarkable sound design as almost a second character, it also needs polishing. Lines are occasional­ly inaudible because of too-rapid delivery. Anger and frustratio­n at second-class citizenry means the show’s polemical side sometimes distances rather than engages. There’s a repeated bit involving two male “volunteers” from the audience which is overly obvious the first time and annoying the second.

But ignore the missteps. This show says important things.

 ??  ?? Mouthpiece has its Ottawa premiere at the opening night of theatrical festival undercurre­nts.
Mouthpiece has its Ottawa premiere at the opening night of theatrical festival undercurre­nts.

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