Picture
Adam Paolozza & Ravi Jain in SPENT
By Melissa Farmer

So let’s get a few things straight.  This will be a very personal and biased response to Spent.  There will be no money puns, none at all, to be found in the next150 words.  If I don’t know you,  if you know nothing about “that Lehman guy”, if you hate everything all the time, I still think you should go and see this show.  Here’s why:

 Spent is relatable and smart.   Set within the framework of a BBC news broadcast, we meet not only a pair of Bay street traders who have lost their jobs, but also the media  who are reporting on the catalytic economic collapse.  As the two downtrodden buffoons leap from a building in an effort to make it all go away, we are right there with them (and, we have been here before) pre-fall, mid-plummet, post-collapse.  We giggle at a twitching Richard Fuld, the former CEO of Lehman Brothers who has managed to keep his pockets full;  we giddily abhor the greedy devils and their maniacal gluttonous Hell and we recognize that guy we’ve all seen on the news who just wants to know how he’s going to afford his next burger.   In its swift seventy minutes, we meet a bunch of absurd characters (all skilfully played by Ravi Jain and Adam Paolozza) who offer different ways in to the bigger question:  to a collective who can put a price on everything, how much is an individual worth?  It’s inventive, energetic, clever, fun theatre. 

My cheeks hurt from smiling for seventy minutes straight.   From Jain’s entrance with a “Hire Me” sign and a shaky, hopeful smile, I was sold.  As Bay street traders, these two out-of-luck sad sacks are just trying to make tomorrow better than today.   As the sundry other characters they play, Ravi and Adam emerge as  masters of their craft.   Their rapid-fire precision is incredible.  On this stage, they are having fun and they are working really really hard.  They are sweaty and spitty and you will still want to shake their hand,  pat them on the back and give them a spitty, sweaty hug.   It’s such a gift to be able to watch someone do something that he’s really really good at doing.  It’s something I want to do more often.

Go see Spent.  It has a short run, so hurry.  Theatre like this is a rare commodity.

SPENT is on now until at the Young Centre for the Performing Arts (50 Tank House Lane). For tickets call: 
416-866-8666 or click here.
 
 
Picture
Joe Dinicol (Natwick), David Reale (Silvio) and Benjamin Blais (Gately) in PVT WARS.
Red One Theatre Collective has spent the past five years dedicating themselves to  site-specific theatre all over Toronto. From art galleries to parks to abandoned buildings, Red One produces shows that attempt to break down the fourth wall even further by mounting theatre in less-than-conventional spaces. Oh, and they're shows are typically pretty f*cking good too.  
Amos Crawley, the director for Red One's latest show PVT WARS answers a few questions about their latest show and how the heck site-specific theatre is created.

1. Tell us about the play. Why this play? Why now?
PVT WARS is a one act comedy about three soldiers recuperating from their injuries, physical and mental, that they've sustained at war. When the play was originally produced, it was very much a product of the then-recent Vietnam war. It's not exactly a stretch to see the parallels between that conflict and the wars the U.S. is engaged in today.  With minimal changes to the text, I think we've managed to not so much update the play, but highlight how timeless the experience of having wasted yourself in the favour of an abstract concept like "God & Country" really is.  
I think that James McLure is adamant that it's our inner conflicts that warrant our energies, hence the title of the play. However, that makes it all sound rather high-minded, when the fact is that despite the fact that the 3 men in the play are figuratively paralysed (making them the lucky ones I guess), they are also all very funny and the play reflects that; it's quick paced and with any luck, full of laughs.  

2. Red One Theatre's mandate is to use unique, unconventional venues in Toronto; how did you find directing/rehearsing in a non-traditional theatre space? How did it affect the blocking? The LX design The acoustics?

Red One's mandate is to bring the theatre to the people, not the other way around. The guys feel like there are a dearth of performance spaces in our city so they just go ahead and make them. In our case, we've certainly lucked out as far as location is concerned-- we're right at Bathurst & Bloor, TTC accessible, near all kinds of cool stuff.  The Red One team had actually been sitting on this space, waiting to find the right play to put up there-- it had to be something funny, quick and punchy. It certainly limits you as far as design is concerned, however sometimes being out in a small box is the best way to come up with cool ideas. The whole show is lit with 100 watt household bulbs in clip lights and I think that what Melissa Joakim was able to do will surprise you; it really is a full lighting design. Likewise, Matt Dash was able to make sure that all his sound cues were recorded and mixed in such a way that we're getting minimal bounce, especially considering we're in a small, concrete box. 
Jason Pooley, who has designed several shows for Red One, was in his element, he knows how the company works and came up with some clean, simple and efficient ways for us to turn the room at Gallery 561 into a theatre. As far as blocking, the unique challenge for me was the decision (to a large degree necessitated by the space) to do the show in the round. I've never done that before, and I found the experience to be humbling and exciting.

3. What's something that we might not know about this play?
 
As I mentioned before, Ben and Joe and the other Red One'ers had found this space and wanted to do something with it-- they had recently come off a production of David Auburn's PROOF and wanted to do something funny and fast. It seemed like a good fit. There are actually 2 versions of the play, the one act that we're doing, as well as a longer script. One of the interesting bits for me is that the while McLure (who died this time last year I think) dealt with his war experience in more than one play, this one really mines his Jesuit upbringing to some pretty funny results. He puts a lot of his strange and hilarious religious memories into the mouth of Silvio, an Italian-American sort of dirtbag kind of guy. Between Silvo and Gately who, like McLure himself, is a product of the South and the tightassed Natwick from Long Island, the plays shows a pretty great cross section of who goes to war, rich man, poor man-- everything in between.

4. Your last directorial foray (RATON LAVEUR at the Toronto Fringe) was a smash; how did this experience measure up?  
Awfully nice of you to refer to Raton as a smash, I'm hoping more people get to see it in the not to distant future. As a side note you can see it right now, if you happen to be in Melbourne, Australia where a local company has produced it.... Working with Red One is a totally different beast in that with Raton, we had the support of a great festival (Toronto Fringe) and all the amenities that come along with that. These guys are straight up Indie Theatre. They are consistently producing work that looks like it cost more than it did and giving everything over to it-- I think that it's great that they are doing so without the aid of grants or any corporate support (not that I'm necessarily ideologically opposed to either of those things) and I really hope people can make the effort to support this company and other companies at this level. I think it's a really great and important strata for theatre in this city to exist in.

5. What's coming down the pipe for you next; what can T.O. look forward to?
I am hoping there will be another life for RATON LAVEUR, and I have one or two other projects kicking around the recesses of my brain that I'd like to see come to fruition in the next year. Otherwise if anyone's hiring, I'm available come opening night...

PVT WARS is on now at 561 Studios (@ 561 Bathurst St., Bathurst & Bloor) until Feb. 19.
For tickets click here.