Toronto Star

How ‘Come From Away’ came back

THEATRE Last December’s news the musical would close in Toronto kick-started the journey to its return

- KAREN FRICKER THEATRE CRITIC JOSHUA CHONG STAFF REPORTER KAREN FRICKER IS A TORONTO-BASED THEATRE CRITIC AND A FREELANCE CONTRIBUTO­R FOR THE STAR. FOLLOW HER ON TWITTER: @KARENFRICK­ER2

The news last December that the Toronto production of “Come From Away” was closing permanentl­y sent shock waves through the Canadian arts community and caused hardship for the 300 or so workers who lost their jobs as a result.

But the bad news didn’t stay bad: it set off a flurry of behind-the-scenes activity that resulted in last week’s announceme­nt that “Come From Away” was coming back in 2024, with a National Arts Centre premiere then a move to Toronto.

The unpreceden­ted partnershi­p that made that possible between the federal government, the arts centre and Mirvish Production­s is the result of dogged lobbying, a newly receptive stance from the department of Canadian Heritage and a healthy dose of serendipit­y.

It’s a “complicate­d silver lining” in the words of Michael Rubinoff, the musical’s originatin­g producer and one of the people who lobbied for its return.

The Tony Award-winning “Come From Away,” which tells the story of 38 planes grounded in Gander, N.L., following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, has been playing on Broadway since 2017. The Toronto version was one of five production­s playing worldwide, including in London’s West End, and touring companies in Australia, New Zealand and North America.

The Canadian version of this Canadian musical was the first to permanentl­y shutter. Lead producer David Mirvish placed responsibi­lity for this at the feet of the Canadian government, which did not offer financial safety nets like the American, Australian and U.K. government­s to help commercial theatres meet the increased costs of COVID-19-related shutdowns and restarts.

Although the Canadian government had programs to support the arts from the start of the pandemic, they did not include commercial theatre, something Rubinoff and others, including Mirvish associate general manager Kendra Bator, had been quietly working to address.

“We set out to speak to people from Heritage and Finance, and members of Parliament, to ring the bell that this was problemati­c,” said Rubinoff.

Bringing back theatre after the pandemic, they argued, is an expensive and complicate­d business. “We just can’t turn the light switch back on. You’ve got to build consumer confidence. You’ve got to make sure you’ve had enough tickets sold to be able to cover your costs,” said Rubinoff.

These efforts started to bear fruit following the reappointm­ent of Pablo Rodriguez as the minister of Canadian Heritage in late October 2021, a post he previously held from 2018 to 2019. The day after the “Come from Away” closing was announced, Rubinoff phoned Rodriguez’s chief of staff and soon spoke to the minister himself.

“The second that I heard that they were putting an end to ‘Come From Away’ I said, ‘This can’t happen,’” Rodriguez told the Star. “I spoke with Michael Rubinoff, then I introduced their team to different players in Ottawa, including people at (the Department of) Finance, people in my department … I asked the team and everyone to be creative because we did not have a tradition of working with commercial theatres.”

Meanwhile, another conversati­on had begun between Mirvish Production­s and David Abel, the National Arts Centre’s managing director of English theatre.

The NAC had long been interested in producing or hosting “Come From Away” and Mirvish had left the door open to the musical coming back in several years’ time.

In early January, “I just reached out to Mirvish to see if there was any way that we could keep the show warm for them,” said Abel. “I thought, ‘long shot,’ but maybe there was some way … to do the show sooner.”

The NAC was already talking with the Department of Canadian Heritage

about financial support via pandemic recovery programs. These conversati­ons started to include the possibilit­y of earmarking money to bring “Come From Away” back.

The federal budget unveiled April 7 included $12.1 million for the NAC over two years, starting in 2022-23, “to support the creation, co-production, promotion and touring of production­s with Canadian commercial and not-for-profit performing arts companies.”

The “commercial” part of that funding stream is why the NAC can fully fund the “Come From Away” remount, at a cost of $3 million to $5 million. After playing at the NAC in July and August 2024, the production will move to Toronto where Mirvish will take over running costs and profits. (The involvemen­t of New York’s Junkyard Dog Production­s, which produced the Broadway staging and four replica production­s, is being discussed for both the Ottawa and Toronto runs.)

John Karastamat­is, Mirvish Production­s’ director of sales and marketing, said he hopes the show being away from Toronto for several years will build demand. “It’d be nice to get at least a year if not longer for all that time we lost.”

In David Mirvish’s experience, such government support for the commercial sector is unpreceden­ted.

“In 55 years of being in theatre, I’ve never seen anything like this … Pablo Rodriguez has really good ears … That’s a game-changer, when you get somebody who can listen,” said Mirvish.

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR ?? The Tony Award-winning “Come From Away,” which tells the story of 38 planes grounded in Gander, N.L., following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, has been playing on Broadway since 2017.
STEVE RUSSELL TORONTO STAR The Tony Award-winning “Come From Away,” which tells the story of 38 planes grounded in Gander, N.L., following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, has been playing on Broadway since 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada