The Province [preview] - Arts Club Theatre Company

26 | entertainment
|
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
theprovince.com
buzzreport
jian ghomeshi
Reporter
writes book
on ex-host
TORONTO — A book on disgraced
former radio star Jian Ghomeshi,
written by Toronto Star investigative
reporter Kevin Donovan, is slated for
release in late June.
Kobo and ECW Press say they’ve
partnered to co-publish Jian Ghomeshi — Secret Life.
Kobo says the book will reveal
details and background about Ghomeshi and explore how he came to
be fired as host of CBC Radio’s Q.
Ghomeshi is charged with seven
counts of sexual assault and one of
overcoming resistance by choking,
but his lawyer has said he will plead
not guilty to all charges.
musicals
American, Fun Home
vie for Tony Awards
NEW YORK — The musicals An American in Paris and Fun Home each
received a leading 12 Tony Award
nominations on Tuesday, showing
two very different sides of this Broadway season.
One side is sunny — the danceheavy stage adaptation of the 1951
musical film choreographed by Gene
Kelly — and the other moody — the
dark show based on Alison Bechdel’s
coming-of-age graphic novel about
her closeted and suicidal dad.
award
Museum honours
Muppets’ Miss Piggy
NEW YORK — A prestigious award
from the Brooklyn Museum honours
women who have made outstanding
contributions in their fields.
This year’s surprise honoree is …
Miss Piggy. The Muppets character
joins a distinguished list of recipients
of the Sackler Center First Awards.
They include theatre director Julie
Taymor and former U.S. Supreme
Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor.
grand marshal
Furnish to lead pride
parade this summer
TORONTO — David Furnish will celebrate his first Pride Toronto parade
in style as he returns to his hometown to serve as grand marshal of
the annual event.
Furnish’s husband, music legend
Elton John, will be on tour in Europe
when the Toronto native takes part
in the parade on June 28.
— Postmedia Wire Services
Julio Fuentes, left, Luc Roderique and Caleb Di Pomponio star in In the Heights, from April 30 to June 7. — David Cooper
Show brings a heavy workload
in the heights:
Roderique remarks on ‘invigorating and exhausting’ preparations
Dana Gee
The Province
For actor Luc Roderique, preparing to play Usnavi in the Arts Club’s
production of the musical In the
Heights has been a real workout.
“It’s been the most invigorating
and exhausting rehearsal process
I have had in my whole life,” said
Roderique, who, it should be noted, has a fair bit of a Shakespeare
on his resume.
“Shakespeare, you can sometimes
get a little emotionally exhausted from just working the text and
getting invigorated by the text, but
here this musical is a whole different beast,” said Roderique at Studio 58 alumni.
“I haven’t done any huge musicals like this in my career yet, so it is
one of those balancing acts where
I have to try and figure out how to
maintain my voice, how to do choreography for eight hours a day and
still come back and want to do it the
On stage
In the Heights
Where: Stanley Industrial
Alliance Stage
When: April 30-June 7, 8 p.m.
Tickets and info: $29 and up,
artsclub.com, 604-687-1644
next day. But it’s been a fantastic
process so far and everyone has
been really amazing.”
Lucky for Roderique his pivotal
character, the bodega owner Usnavi, delivers a lot of his points in a
manner familiar to Roderique.
“My character mainly raps for the
most part. I feel pretty confident
about that. I used to rap in high
school,” said Roderique, who hails
from Ottawa but has called Vancouver home for the past decade.
Set in the Washington Heights
area of New York, In the Heights,
looks at family, home, communi-
ty and the fight to figure out where
you belong. The show’s words and
music are by Lin-Manuel Miranda,
who also starred in original Broadway production.
“I believe he is going to be the
next Sondheim,” said Roderique,
who had just been to New York to
see Miranda’s latest offering, the hit
Hamilton.
For Roderique the power of Tony
Award-winning In the Heights,
directed here by Bill Millerd, goes
far beyond an enjoyable night at
the theatre. He sees it as a generational magnet that has the potential
to invigorate theatre in general.
“The best thing about in The
Heights is it is something fresh
and new and appeals to the next
generation of theatre artists, the
next generation of humans, North
Americans, immigrants, but it still
holds true to all those musical theatre roots,” Roderique said.
“People who love old school theatre are going to find things they
love in this show. People who love
hip-hop are going to find things
they love in this show. People who
love salsa and dance are going to
find things in this show they love.
It’s just so universal and the story
is universal. It’s all about the community.”
A big community that Roderique
points to is younger adults — who,
whether they are in Washington
Heights or Mount Pleasant here,
in Vancouver are faced with similar concerns around cost of living,
gentrification and displacement.
It’s those very contemporary
issues that will connect with a
younger, not so financially liquid
audience.
“I think it is a call to action for
playwrights to write stories about
us,” Roderique said.
“To write contemporary stories
about what we are going through
so theatre doesn’t die.”
[email protected]
twitter.com/dana_gee