Vancouver Sun

Five female fronted shows to see

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The annual Vancouver

Fringe Festival packs in more than 700 performanc­es in its 11-day run. Obviously, there is no way to see everything. There isn’t even a way to see all the offerings falling under a specific category, such as comedy. That said, you do need to pick your plays. Here are five female fronted shows that run the gamut of content at this year’s Fringe.

In Stitches (Today, 5:05; Saturday, 3:50; Sunday, 7:05; Sept. 13, 5:20; Sept. 16, 8:20; and Sept. 17, 3:50 p.m. at Performanc­e Works, 1218 Cartwright­s St.) Canadian comedian Katherine Ferns is based in Manchester, U.K. She has built up quite an impressive list of reviews for her latest Fringe show, which began on April 21, 2016. That’s the day Prince died and Katherine ended up in stitches. A comedy based on the artist’s life experience­s.

Just Not That Woman

(Friday, 6:45; Saturday, 3:00; Sept. 11, 10:00; Sept. 13, 8:15 p.m.; Sept. 16, 1:45 p.m. at Firehall Theatre, 280 E. Cordova)

“An exploratio­n of fact, fiction and magic in the 2016 U.S. election.” Aussie-born New Yorker Ali Kennedy Scott gets into the mindset of the gender bias that led to one of the most surprising election defeats in the history of the western world: Hillary Clinton’s loss to Donald Trump. The show was created out of interviews with data experts, psychologi­sts, voters and politician­s.

Her Name Was Mary

(Friday, 6:45; Saturday, 2:45; Sept. 11, 8:30; Sept. 12, 9:30; Sept. 15, 10:20; Sept. 17, 7:15 p.m. at Studio 16) Written and directed by Metis Iroquois/Cree artist Tai Amy Grauman, the winner of the 2015 Mayor’s Emerging Theatre Artist Award, the autobiogra­phical play covers her experience­s growing up in rural Alberta and features an all-female cast and creative team working under the new Indigo Child Production­s company founded by Grauman and fellow UBC graduate Seamus Fera.

An Arrangemen­t of

Shoes (Today, 8:00; Friday, 9:45; Saturday, 6:15; Sunday, 2:45 & 9:45; Sept. 12, 6:15; Sept. 13, 8:00; Sept. 14, 9:45; Sept. 16, 6:15 p.m. at Arts Umbrella) Award-winning writer Abhishek Majumdar’s onewoman play is an intimate family portrait of a woman’s life set in the time period of the first Gulf War. Referencin­g American propaganda, Hindu-Muslim tensions and more, the show performed by Radhika Aggarwal has played London and Edinburgh to favourable reviews.

12 Minute Madness (Saturday, 12; Sunday, 6:15; Sept. 13, 9:45; Sept. 14, 10:30; Sept. 16, 7:30; Sept. 17, 6 p.m. at Firehall Arts Centre, 280 E. Cordova)

Raïna von Waldenburg gets into her own head in her latest work. It’s a play based on her sexual abuse by her grandfathe­r as a child and the aftermath of working through that. Heavy stuff, but the subject matter is handled in a fashion that includes a great deal of humour coming from the 12 female cast members. Von Waldenburg taught at NYU for two decades before coming to teach at SFU and UCFV.

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