Wednesday, 10 December 2014

Introducing Guest Artist Glenda Warkentin

Glenda Warkentin from Rosebud
plays The White Witch in The Lion,
The Witch and The Wardrobe.
We are delighted to welcome Glenda Warkentin back to the Opera House Stage. Glenda first came to Rosebud as a student at Rosebud School of the Arts, and has since appeared in a number of shows; most recently Jake & The Kid, and On Golden Pond. We love watching her dominate the stage each show as The White Witch in The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe


What do you do outside of Rosebud?
  
I live in Rosebud, with my husband of six years. I have toured Canada with burnt thicket theatre's "She Has A Name" and worked on several films in the area. We own a Theatre Company called Suspension Of Disbelief with which we have produced Shakespearean plays down in the Badlands. 

What have been some favourite shows you've been a part of?

I have really enjoyed On Golden Pond, Talley's Folly, Jake & The Kid: Prairie Seasons, Troy Women, The Last Five Years.

If you got to go to Narnia, who would you look forward to meeting?

Of course my first stop would be to see my beloved Aslan. But after that I would love to have a close inspection of all the trees and learn how they communicate. As Mr. Beaver says, "Even the trees have ears", but I wonder how they would tell anyone what they heard?

What has been a highlight of being in Rosebud?

Even though I live in Rosebud, I feel a newness of community within the LWW cast and crew. It's like a smaller community within the context of the larger one. I appreciate getting to know my neighbour artists in this concentrated form.

What are some of your non-theatre related interests?

Before I came to Rosebud I was certified as an Interior Designer, so I am always looking for ways to exercise my skills and sense of aesthetic.  Sometimes that means finding new ways to decorate our little home, or help friends with their design questions, sometimes I get the chance to design costumes or sets for shows, sometimes it's just an in depth chance to enjoy  the beauty around me.

Tuesday, 9 December 2014

Introducing Guest Artist Troy O'Donnell

Troy O'Donnell from Edmonton plays
Father Christmas & Giant Rumblebuffin in
The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe.

We are delighted to welcome Troy O'Donnell back to Rosebud for his second show on the Opera House Stage. He first joined us as Mr. Van Daan in The Diary of Anne Frank this past spring and now he's tearing up the stage as Father Christmas and Giant Rumblebuffin in The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe

What do you do outside of Rosebud?
  
I'm a freelance actor, director, educator, as well as Founding Member and Artistic Associate with the Freewill Shakespeare Festival in Edmonton. 


What have been some favourite shows you've been a part of?

The 39 Steps was an amazing experience. I played one of the two clowns who takes on multiple roles that the two leads play off of. It was non-stop action from start to finish: every second I'd be either on stage or changing costumes. 

If you got to go to Narnia, what would you look forward to doing?

I'd want to steal the White Witch's Turkish Delight. I have a huge sweet tooth. When I was in Turkey I was thrilled to find entire shops dedicated to Turkish Delight and Halva. Imagine a deli with nothing but sweets. Like the fudge shop in Banff. 

What has been a highlight of being in Rosebud?

The sense of community is easily the first thing that jumps out at me as an outsider. In the theatre and out.  

What are some of your non-theatre related interests?

I love to travel. Any kind. I'll backpack and hostel for months on end just as easily as I'll go to an all-inclusive and lay on a beach for a week straight. That's part of why I love working out of town so much. Everything becomes a travel adventure. Even getting groceries becomes a special trip.  

I love to cook. It's arts and crafts that I get to eat. If I'm working out of town I throw appliances like my crockpot into the trunk. Soups for days.


Is there anything else you'd like people to know about you?

Of course I have to mention the Freewill Shakespeare Festival:
(Also on Facebook)

Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Introducing Guest Artist Neil Kuefler

Neil Kuefler from Edmonton plays
Peter in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.
It has been a true pleasure having Neil Kuefler join our ranks on the Opera House Stage.  A recent graduate of the BFA Acting Program at the University of Alberta, Neil keeps quite busy creating theatre with a number of companies in Edmonton.  So we are fortunate to steal him away to play Peter Pevensie in The Lion, The Witch, And The Wardrobe this Christmas.

What do you do outside of Rosebud?
  
I'm an actor.

What have been some favourite shows you've been a part of?


The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby, Much Ado About Nothing, and Crazyface.

If you got to go to Narnia, who would you look forward to meeting?

I think I would really enjoy the Beaver's house. They are so nice and comforting and they eat like Kings!

What has been a highlight of being in Rosebud?

The community. I think that being involved with this show in this group of people has turned into the perfect storm of community. I have enjoyed myself so much and learned so much about the kind of community I want to create theatre within.

What are some of your non-theatre related interests?

I love science! I was going to be a Chemistry teacher before I decided to start acting for a career. Also History. I spend most of my summers at Fort Edmonton Park in Edmonton.

Is there anything else you'd like people to know about you?

Check out thouartheretheatre.com and grindstonetheatre.ca to see what Neil might be up to!

Wednesday, 26 November 2014

Introducing Guest Artist Michael Dobbin

Michael Dobbin from Vancouver plays
Aslan in our production.

What do you do outside of Rosebud?
I am a free lance director and actor, based in Vancouver, working internationally, and travelling.

What have been some favourite shows you've been a part of?
As a Director, Angels in America at ATP is my fave. As an actor, Matt in Talley's Folly is my all-time fave.

If you got to go to Narnia, who would you be most excited to meet?
Every performance, during act I, I, as Aslan, am overwhelmed by my desire to meet the Children who have come to help make the Narnia of the future by fulifilling my prophesy.
It is the Children who I would seek out if it were me.

What has been a highlight of being in Rosebud for this show?
The joyful energy of the company, the deep quiet of the place, the enthusiasm of the audiences!

What are some of your non-theatre related special talents/interests?
My dog Clinton, my role as Chair of the Theatre at the Performing Arts Lodge in Vancouver where I live, my contacts with long-standing friends (friendships take effort as one grows older and people live further away), my wintering in Mexico at San Miguel d' Allende, another of the world's magical "thin places" where art-making, living, and God are very close.

Is there anything else you'd like people to know about you?
I am learning how to be a painter, taking lit-drawing classes in San Miguel d' Allende and I am directing Steel Magnolias there at the new San Miguel Theatre Company, in March 2015.

I love to ride my bicycle in Stanley Park in Vancouver, when I am there and I have a lovely balcony garden at my place at PAL in Coal Harbour.

I have an affiliation with W!LD Rice Theatre in Signapore and with The Hong Kong Repertory Theatre in Hong Kong. I am a Trustee and active member of St.Andrew's-Wesley United Church in Vancouver.

I am NOT retired!

Monday, 13 January 2014

Engineers and Storytellers

I’ve been in London for a week with Byron Linsey, our Head Set Carpenter, wandering about, seeing 5000-year-old mummies at the Royal British Museum, watching a play a night, talking about the theatre, our faith alive in the theatre, our kids and how fast they're growing up, becoming a grandparent, eating good food ... Byron has left to go back to not only work on sets for Jack’s Giant Adventure and The Diary of Anne Frank, but to learn lines, as he’ll be playing the Giant in Jack’s Giant Adventure, our Theatre For Young Audiences offering in March. 

One of the late night conversations we had upon coming back to our flat was this notion of a renassaince person and the fact that our modern world seems to have gradually squeezed out the possibility of living such a life with a need to define people by what their professions are. Further, the reason we have professions is so that the greater good can be served and we can make a living by serving them. Bridges get built because engineers are engineers in the employ of companies that build and design bridges. Families are provided for because Mom or Dad (or sometimes both) is an engineer that works for a bridge-building company. So life goes on and our time on earth is all of a sudden swallowed up serving a corporate good that many times leaves us hollow inside. I’ve had many a conversation with artist and patron alike about just such hollows and the heartache they hold. 

What if we were meant to live in community in a way in which all of the gifts we were given could be expressed in one way or another. Yes, those gifts which are most readily needed by the community would likely be the gifts whereby we made our daily bread - the gifts we have a particular aptitude for. But what if the community celebrated those particular gifts with appreciation and awe because we actually had eyes to see the miracle of them? 
Because Jo and I have older cars, we spend a bit of time at an auto mechanic. I’m fascinated when I watch him diagnose the workings of a car engine. I recognize the importance of this particular mechanic in the lives of our particular cars. I have expressed my awe at the work that he does (even though at times the wonder and awe are muted a bit by the size of the bill.) But I recognize the brilliance of the man. And then we have a conversation about a book he’s just read. It’s called The Shack, and he is filled with questions about his own evolving faith. And I feel like Philip in the Acts of the Apostles as he shares the wonder of God’s love to the Ethiopian Eunuch. And suddenly we are no longer mechanic and client. We are two dads talking about faith and family raising and more because he is so much more than a mechanic and I am so much more than a guy who can’t get his car started. Suddenly my mechanic is a scholar looking to discover the mysteries locked in a book - a renasaince person seeking out a spiritual elixir for life. It strikes me that in that moment, two or more have gathered in the name of the Creator of the Universe - the Mind that somehow engineered the whole of the story, the Maker of the laws of physics that rule the engine that needs tuning by the hands of a gifted human being created in His image. 
I’d like to believe that there is a way to participate in life that keeps the whole of us energized and awake to the possibility of contribution that each of us hold. It starts with a commitment to any person who happens to be a part of our community because of needs met, proximity, and some sort of shared understanding. Here I am, into a second week of much needed rest in London - Joanne and son Jesse having just joined me - and I am as inspired by the work of engineers as I am by moments in the theatre. There are at least as many museums celebrating the work of farmers and engineers through hundreds and thousands of years as there are museums celebrating poets and writers and painters. 

Byron has gone back to the shop and to learning lines. You see, what many may not know is that I knew him first as an actor and a man of ideas. He just happens to also have the skill to beautifully execute designs, putting his creative mind to work in the puzzle of scenic creation - the same mind that will figure out the most effective and entertaining way to create a Giant that will keep a theatre full of children laughing and learning. 

Some of you may have followed our Christmas in Alberta adventure on Facebook. The company was stuck on an impassable road for the better part of a night and a day. We had heat, so we could enjoy our little adventure without too much strain. Sometime the following afternoon after the night on the bus, a snow plough pushed past us, just inches from the bus. I watched a man operating a huge piece of machinery clear a path foot by foot through the quarter mile drift in front of us. I watched with awe the skill with which he maneuvered around the bus. I was so grateful for a larger community that included people with skills I do not possess in measures near great enough to do any good in a snow storm - not because I needed to get home for any particular reason, but because the storyteller was inspired at the wonder of it all. People are a wonder. They are so much more than meets the eye. 

Maybe that’s why I’m a storyteller. When you think of all the plays and poems and novels written, they are all in some way odes to human beings in many walks of life. The human experience is complex, but filled with common touchstones. Someone needs to tell the stories of the people who engineer and build bridges. And when we step past defining people by what they do, we find out that we all do many of the same things. Bridge-builders gathered in the pub after a day at work can be great storytellers, and storytellers bending their observational and physical skills to engineer and build can indeed be builders. ... Although, I’m not sure I’d trust a storyteller like myself to operate that snow plough without dinging the bus. Some things may well be best left to the professionals for the sake of common safety. 

- Morris -

Monday, 21 October 2013

Announcing our 2014 Season!

Artwork by MarushyDesign


It’s Anne Frank that states that “In spite of everything I still believe that people are really good at heart.” Rosebud is a place that thrives on that optimistic point of view. It permeates even our goofiest comedic offering - the musical Chickens. There’s a song where a timid chicken dares to sing about flying. Optimism! We’re bringing C.S. Lewis together with Sigmund Freud this season, so we can unpack two of the 20th Century’s most dynamic thinkers and their very contrary beliefs about what makes a human being tick. Even a play called Doubt holds the possibility of redemption. And then we end the season with a brand new musical version of The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe - imaginatively staged  Rosebud style - that will transport you and your family to a wintry Narnia at Christmas, a place where four children follow their destiny toward great goodness. 
Those of you who buy Season’s Tickets to Rosebud Theatre get first dibs on our Rosebud Presents series, which brings a delightfully eclectic collection of music, story and comedy to our valley. Please join us in 2014. We’ll serve you a meal, point you to our gallery and shops, and show you to your seat in what promises to be our most dynamic season yet!  

- Morris


For more information, or to purchase season tickets, visit rosebudtheatre.com

Thursday, 3 October 2013

Tim Dixon talks about Our Town


“This play is called Our Town.” 

These words open Thornton Wilder’s play, currently running at the Rosebud Theatre Opera House. The production itself, however, is an echo, and a mirror image, of the Our Town that is Rosebud, Alberta. I’m a guest artist in the production, and I’ve been mulling over my experience of the play and the town. Here are some of my thoughts, muddled as they may be.

I came here thanks in part to Rosebud Theatre’s artistic director Morris Ertman, a long time friend and theatre colleague. For some time he’s wanted me to return to the stage, as well as to come perform in Rosebud. He offered me the role of Simon Stimson in Our Town, and I accepted gratefully.

Stimson is the outsider in Our Town. A church choir director who can’t seem to push his choir up to his musical standards. An alcoholic who’s “seen a peck of trouble” about which we never learn the details. A man whose feelings lead him to an irreversible decision about his life.

The most we ever learn about Stimson is from the town doctor, Frank Gibbs, who says, “I guess I know more about Simon Stimson’s affairs than anybody in this town. Some people ain’t made for small town life.” As the actor portraying Stimson, part of my job in rehearsal was to reconstruct the history that led Dr. Gibbs to that conclusion. I won’t go into that history—every actor who’s played the role has created his own—but one thing is clear: he’s in this place, but not part of it.

Of all the possible reasons why Thornton Wilder chose to put such a dark and troubled character like Simon Stimson into a play like Our Town, I believe one of them is to make him the voice of the dispossessed, the excluded, those for whom life held more promise than it delivered to those around them. Stimson is there to trouble the insiders. In fact, Wilder gives him a final speech that, while a warning to all of us, is also a cry on behalf of all outsiders. It is as poignant as Mrs. Loman’s plea in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman, and in a sense carries the same message: “Attention must be paid.”

At one time or another in our lives, we’ve all been outsiders. Maybe it was at a wedding of a distant cousin, or at a college in a remote city. We’ve all watched the joy and camaraderie around us with a mixture of emotions. We’ve wondered: When will I be included? Will I ever be? Do I even want to be? The impulse is either to hasten the process of inclusion, or to flee back to a former place of inclusion. We want to feel at home, or go home.

These thoughts came to me as I attended the ROSAs, the graduation ceremony for people completing four years of training at the Rosebud School of the Arts, and the awards ceremony for students with exemplary achievements. I came because I was invited, but also because of an outsider’s curiosity.

My experience was the polar opposite of Stimson’s. Some of the cast members from Our Town were joining the Rosebud School of the Arts Guild after completing their studies, and a number of others I’d met here were also receiving awards. Some of what I saw at the ceremony and banquet didn’t have great meaning for me, but I could see how much meaning it had for them. 

As the presentation went on, I heard tributes that told me more about these highly talented people, but it had been my privilege to experience only a tiny fraction of their talent first-hand. Warm-blooded icebergs. 

My feelings were still like that of an outsider, but took on a different flavour. It was as if somehow I had always lived in Rosebud, but had been in a coma for many years and had missed all of the moments that led to this day. 

Unlike Stimson, I realized I’m an outsider with an insider’s pass. Not only at the ROSAs, but every day since I’d arrived, I had met the people that call this place Our Town; given them a wave as I passed them on the street; shared a laugh with them; and learned about their trials and triumphs.

Several people told me how glad they were that I had come to the ceremony. Even though it was a momentous day in their lives, they still took the time to say that to someone who would be leaving in a few weeks, and might not return for a long time, if ever. 

No matter, they seemed to be saying. Now that you’re here, you’ll always be here, no matter how long you’re gone. Your role may turn out to be small in the play of our lives, but it’s an important role, and the play wouldn’t be the same without you. After all…

This play is called Our Town.