Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Opening Night In Chester Was Grand

Photos with Jan Dress rehearsal....(images to follow in another posting.)



Inside the Chester Playhouse.


Opening night with my excellent SM Jen, after the show!


Scott and Sandra Starratt


Betty Lacus my inspiring grade 6 - 7 teacher and Mary Lou Martin AD Chester Playhouse, my outside eye!


Pals: Sue Healy, Laura Napier, Jan Napier, Betty Lacus, Sarah, Cathy Garson and Sandra Starratt.


New Stripes Article Preview in South Shore Now.
http://license.icopyright.net/user/viewFreeUse.act?fuid=MTM3MzQ5MTk=

Opening Chester Playhouse Tonight


Great preview story in Chronicle Herald today in the Arts section about Stripes!
http://thechronicleherald.ca/ArtsLife/1259641.html

Circus comes to Chester
Performer-playwright juggles seven characters in one-woman show
By ANDREA NEMETZ Entertainment Reporter
Tue, Aug 23 - 4:54 AM

Sarah Hayward performs in Stripes: The Mystery Circus, a one-woman show opening 8 p.m. tonight at Chester Playhouse.

Sarah Hayward draws on the spirit of her grandfather, John McCurdy, as she prepares to enter the ring for her one-woman show Stripes: The Mystery Circus.

"My grandfather was a writer and a friend of Bill Lynch and he was asked to be a circus barker for Bill Lynch’s fair," Halifax-raised Hayward said by phone from Vancouver, where she has lived and worked as an actor for the past quarter century.

"He did it for fun. My grandfather died before I was born, but I can feel that energy of a ringmaster come into me."

For Stripes, opening tonight at 8 p.m. at Chester Playhouse, Hayward creates seven different characters.

There is a bearded lady, a two-headed lady, a juggler, an escape artist, a ringmaster, a tight-rope walker and Pollyhymnia, whose name means many songs and who is "delightfully determined to be part of the circus and prepares all the parts for her circus audition."

"The circus is a metaphor for life," said Hayward, who began creating the show in collaboration with her vocal coach, Marguerite Witvoet, in 2004.

The show blurs the boundaries between physical theatre, cabaret and traditional theatre.

Hayward began touring the 50-minute metaphysical musical in 2006, visiting the Toronto, Edmonton, Vancouver, Victoria and Winnipeg fringe festivals. As well, she has performed Mystery Circus in New York at Cherry Lane Theatre, which she describes as "the thrill of a lifetime," and went to the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, where she busked with excerpts from the show and did a 10-minute opening for a 78-year-old American actress’s cabaret show.

The Chester performances will be Hayward’s first shows in her native province in more than 25 years. An Acadia University graduate who has been working in film and TV, she last appeared in Nova Scotia at Neptune Theatre as Lucy, sharing the stage with comedian Ron James, who was the title character in You’re A Good Man, Charlie Brown.

Hayward grew up in Halifax, where she fell in love with the stage at Gorsebrook Junior High School, touring the province with Modesty Clean Meets the Devil and heading off to the Dominion Drama Festival in Ottawa.

"I was an usher at the Rebecca Cohn Auditorium when I was in high school at Queen Elizabeth," said Hayward. "I was determined to create my own show. But I was always more drawn to the theatre, which encompasses emotion as well as the physical. I saw Circus as more of a show."

Stripes, which contains eight original songs, is Hayward’s first one-person show, and she said it is immensely satisfying to speak words she has written.

Among the characters are an escape artist who is eluding romantic capture and a two-headed lady who is a nun and a party girl.

"It’s symbolic of the two sides of myself, the dogmatic side and the party side, the good angel and the bad devil on everybody’s shoulders."

All the stories are drawn from her own life, except the High Wired Act, said Hayward.

"I interviewed a drug-addicted prostitute from East Vancouver and set one of her poems to music."

The show, choreographed by Vancouver’s Tara Cheyenne Friedenberg, who brought her dance-theatre show Nick & Juanita to Halifax in 2006 in a Live Art Dance presentation, is very physical and very vocal, said Hayward.

"I use my life experiences to pay tribute to my family. I wanted it to be about love."

Stripes runs nightly till Friday at 8 p.m., with a 2 p.m. matinee Friday. Tickets range from $15 to $25. Call 275-3933, 1-800-363-7529 or visit www.chesterplayhouse.ca for information and reservations.

( anemetz@herald.ca)

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Arrived in Chester Nova Scotia

Arrived in Chester. Eric the Administrator / AD of the theatre picked me up in Halifax, then gave me a tour of Chester Playhouse Theatre.
What an amazing theatre!


They still have the HAVEN sign up on the theatre from TV series filming here. Chester is where Haven, the TV show is mostly filmed, they just wrapped on the weekend.

Chester Playhouse with Haven facade taken down.


Went for a swim in the pool and the ocean. The airs smells of salt and seaweed and old fashion roses. Lots of white sails darting across the harbour racing their hearts out.

Went to dinner at the Pub with Jen, the Stage manager and Bob, Head techie. We tech tomorrow.

Then I attended a super concert at the Theatre, great acoustics!

Got settled in my cottage.





Friday, July 22, 2011

Lobster - Fried Clams- Nova Scotia - Chester Playhouse Aug 23-26

What's Cooking?
More Seafood Please By Jan Napier

When my favourite out-of-town friend, Sarah Hayward, comes “home” to visit the itinerary al- ways includes a very happy reunion with all of her beloved local seafood dishes. So much seafood, so little time. A few tins of lobster tucked in the freezer and we’re ready to whip up some lobster rolls. Deep fried whole clams with a splash of lemon juice are always high on the agenda. A bowl of chowder at Peggy’s Cove is a classic sum- mer holiday treat if you can avoid the bus tour crowds......

Sarah Hayward returns this summer to per- form her one woman show, “Stripes: The Mystery Circus”, at the Chester Playhouse. Visit www.chesterplayhouse.ca for more details.

(Portion of Jan's article from Southender.)

Monday, July 18, 2011

Winnipeg Fringe Festival 2011



Exerpts of Reviews from Winnipeg Fringe

Stripes: The Mystery Circus
Posted by Kelly Stifora, CBC Review Crew, Aug 2011
Details
Company Name: Stripes: The Mystery Circus
Origin: Vancouver, BC
Venue: 2 - MTC Up the Alley

"Despite its title, Stripes: The Mystery Circus is more retro-cabaret act than big top confection. It's a compelling piece of fringe theatre, but not one that I would recommend for children.

Pollyhymnia, whose name means many songs, auditions for us, the circus administration, by demonstrating her ability to fill each in a roster of three ring roles. As she embodies the two-headed woman, the strong lady, etc. we are treated to a glimpse into her past in the form of Weill-esque songs sung operatically by Sarah Hayward.

The character that emerges owes as much to Gloria Steinem as she does to Mary Poppins. Pollyhymnia is torn between her fierce independence and her overwhelming desire to be loved and accepted. She's played many roles in her life, and if she gets into the circus, maybe she can have them all.

Hayward's performance is at turns hilarious and heartbreaking…"
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" …Hayward’s onstage energy and the play’s message of self-discovery and celebration help this musical end on a high note."
— Lindsey Wiebe - Winnipeg Free Press 2011

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Hanging out at Fringe Central MTC with fellow Fringe performers John Grady (Fear Factor: Canine Edition) and Una Aya Osato (Recess), both based in New York. Second to last photo I'm standing with Tara Travis from Houdini's Last Escape.




Thursday, July 14, 2011

Winnipeg Fringe Festival 2011

 

Had a few rehearsals in the Can West Theatre and Flim building seen in photo behind me. My lovely new stage manager James Moore booked the space and found me a chair and black box for my set and yesterday we had a tech run of the show in Venue #2 Up The Alley Theatre MTC.


My friends Lianne Judt and Richard (that I haven't seen in about 8 years) helped me put up posters and took me for dinner at the Kings Head Pub a popular fringe hang out.


My billitor and old friend Renee and I saw TJ Dawe Show - Lucky 9 last night and it was great! Had a tour of the childrens Hospital Life Centre that Renee runs, producing an in hospital tv show for the kids in Hospital which they appear on. Games and toys to prepare them for their hospital proceedures, it's an amazing program complete with huge fish tank with a big albino frog (one of the most amazing creature I'v ever seen.)

Meeting other Fringe performers, having a great time in Winnipeg. Going to see my friend John Grady's show today Fear Factor: Canine Edition, which I saw in New York and wept buckets and then hopefully see Curriculum Vitae and Happy Slap Venue #10 and This is Cancer Venue 16.
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Gals from "The Seminar" - Sarah & Mellissa - met at Media Showcase.