One Little Goat Theatre Company [1] is a theatre company devoted to modern and contemporary "poetic theatre". [2] [3] Founded by poet, playwright and director Adam Seelig in New York City in 2002, and based in Toronto since 2005, the company performs provocative takes on international plays. The company takes its name from the ancient Aramaic folk song that traditionally concludes the Passover Seder.
Producing, developing, and defining "poetic theatre" has been One Little Goat's mandate since the company's inception. [4] [5] One Little Goat's Artistic Director, Adam Seelig, outlines key elements of the company's aesthetic in an essay for the Capilano Review . [6] These elements include "charactor" (Seelig's term for combining an actor's onstage persona with their offstage nature), the "prism/gap" between actor and audience, and ambiguity. In the essay, Seelig also traces the influences of Sophocles, Zeami, Luigi Pirandello, Bertolt Brecht, Samuel Beckett, Thomas Bernhard, and others on One Little Goat's dramatic approach.
“Poetic theatre attempts to find clarity through ambiguity. It's not verse theatre or prose theatre or journalistic theatre. It's theatre that treats the text as a score [...] and treats the gap between actor and audience not as an obstacle to bypass, but as a medium through which multiple meanings can emerge. There's a difference between shining a light directly into the audience's eyes, and having it pass through a prism." [7]
Antigone : Insurgency premiered November 9–25, 2007 at the Walmer Centre Theatre in Toronto. It is a post-9/11 reworking of Sophocles' tragedy from the fifth-century BC. The production explored the socio-political repercussions of combating insurgency by drawing parallels between the original Greek tragedy and current global politics, the production explores the socio-political repercussions of combating insurgency. [8] [9]
Someone is Going to Come premiered March 13–29, 2009 at the Walmer Centre Theatre in Toronto. It was written by Jon Fosse, directed by Seelig, and translated from the Norwegian by Harry Lane and Adam Seelig. The three-person play centred around feelings of jealousy involves a man and a woman who move to the middle of nowhere to be alone together, but grow anxious that "someone is going to come". [10] [11]
Talking Masks (Oedipussy) premiered from November 13–28, 2009, at the Walmer Centre Theatre in Toronto. It was written and directed by Seelig. Talking Masks is published by BookThug (Toronto 2009). [12]
Ritter, Dene, Voss premiered from September 23 – October 10, 2010 at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in New York. It was written by Thomas Bernhard, directed by Seelig, and translated from the German by Kenneth Northcott and Peter Jansen [13]
Like the First Time premiered from October 28 – November 13, 2011 at the Walmer Centre Theatre in Toronto. It was written and directed by Seelig. It is modeled on Luigi Pirandello’s 1920 play, Come Prima Meglio di Prima, and written without punctuation. [14] Like the First Time is published by BookThug (Toronto 2011). [15]
The Charge of the Expormidable Moose premiered from May 10–26, 2013 at the Tarragon Theatre Extra Space in Toronto. It was written by Claude Gauvreau, directed by Seelig, and translated from the French by Ray Ellenwood. The Charge of the Expormidable Moose (La Charge de l'orignal épormyable, 1956) revolves around a poet who is envied, plagiarized, mocked and ultimately sacrificed by his fellow housemates. [16] The Charge of the Expormidable Moose is published by Exile Editions (Toronto 1996). [17]
Ubu Mayor premiered from September 12 – 21, 2014 at the Wychwood Theatre in Toronto. It was written, composed and directed by Seelig. It combines Ubu Roi by Alfred Jarry with the antics of Toronto mayor Rob Ford and his brother Doug. It was One Little Goat's first play to feature live music. [18] [19] Ubu Mayor: A Harmful Bit of Fun is published by BookThug (Toronto 2014). [20]
Since 2016, 'PLAY: A (Mini) History of Theatre for Kids has been performed in Toronto elementary schools. [21] [22] [23] It introduces elementary school students (grades 1–6) to the theatrical "games" known as "plays". Performed by two actors, PLAY guides young audiences through four periods of drama: Prehistoric Theatre (games around the fire); Ancient Greek Theatre ( Antigone by Sophocles); Japanese Noh (Sekidera Komachi by Zeami); and Modern Theatre (Gertrude Stein, Alfred Jarry, Samuel Beckett). PLAY: A (Mini) History of Theatre for Kids is published by One Little Goat (Toronto 2019)
Smyth/Williams: An All-Female Staging of the Police Transcript premiered March 3–12, 2017 at the Theatre Passe Muraille Backspace in Toronto. On February 7, 2010, Detective Sergeant Jim Smyth of the Ontario Provincial Police interviewed Colonel Russell Williams about his possible connection to multiple crimes, including two rape murders. A mostly verbatim adaptation of the police transcript, performed by two female actors and a drummer, Smyth/Williams confronts the attitudes and norms that enable violence against women, while also challenging the conditions that support war. [24] [25] [26] Smyth/Williams elicited controversy. An online petition, claiming that One Little Goat Theatre Company was sensationalizing violence against women, eventually garnered over two thousand signatures calling for the show's cancellation, [27] [28] and the National Post published an Op-ed denouncing the production ten days before opening. [29] [30] One Little Goat issued a statement clarifying the company's empathic approach to the material. [27] [31] Protesters appeared in the theatre lobby on opening night. [32] [33] [34] Theatre critics concluded that Smyth/Williams was performed with respect and sensitivity and did not resort to sensationalism. [32] [33] [34]
Music Music Life Death Music: An Absurdical premiered 25 May – June 10, 2018 at the Tarragon Theatre Extra Space in Toronto. It was written, composed and directed by Seelig. The "absurdical" explored the unexpected dynamics between three generations of family: a grandmother, her daughter, son-in-law and teenage grandson. [35] Music Music Life Death Music is published by One Little Goat (Toronto 2018)
English Language World Premieres, 2003–2006, various venues including the 92nd Street Y and Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York, Miles Nadal JCC in Toronto, and in a podcast for Poetry magazine. [36]
Alfred Jarry was a French symbolist writer who is best known for his play Ubu Roi (1896), often cited as a forerunner of the Dada, Surrealist, and Futurist movements of the 1920s and 1930s and later the Theatre of the absurd In the 1950s and 1960s He also coined the term and philosophical concept of 'pataphysics.
Antigone is an Athenian tragedy written by Sophocles in 441 BC and first performed at the Festival of Dionysus of the same year. It is thought to be the second oldest surviving play of Sophocles, preceded by Ajax, which was written around the same period. The play is one of a triad of tragedies known as the three Theban plays, following Oedipus Rex and Oedipus at Colonus. Even though the events in Antigone occur last in the order of events depicted in the plays, Sophocles wrote Antigone first. The story expands on the Theban legend that predates it, and it picks up where Aeschylus' Seven Against Thebes ends. The play is named after the main protagonist Antigone.
Claude Gauvreau was a Canadian playwright, poet, sound poet and polemicist. He was a member of the radical Automatist movement and a contributor to the revolutionary Refus Global Manifesto.
Ubu Roi is a play by French writer Alfred Jarry, then 23 years old. It was first performed in Paris in 1896, by Aurélien Lugné-Poe's Théâtre de l'Œuvre at the Nouveau-Théâtre. The production's single public performance baffled and offended audiences with its unruliness and obscenity. Considered to be a wild, bizarre and comic play, significant for the way it overturns cultural rules, norms and conventions, it is seen by 20th- and 21st-century scholars to have opened the door for what became known as modernism in the 20th century, and as a precursor to Dadaism, Surrealism and the Theatre of the Absurd.
Sook-Yin Lee is a Canadian broadcaster, musician, film director, actress and multimedia artist. She is a former MuchMusic VJ and a former radio host on CBC Radio. She has appeared in films, notably in the John Cameron Mitchell movie Shortbus.
Le piège de Méduse is a short play of which Erik Satie wrote both the text and the incidental music.
Disney Theatrical Productions Limited (DTP), also known as Disney on Broadway, is the stageplay and musical production company of the Disney Theatrical Group, a subsidiary of Disney Entertainment, a major division and business unit of The Walt Disney Company.
Simon Stephens is a British-Irish playwright and Professor of Scriptwriting at Manchester Metropolitan University. Having taught on the Young Writers' Programme at the Royal Court Theatre for many years, he is now an Artistic Associate at the Lyric Hammersmith. He is the inaugural Associate Playwright of Steep Theatre Company, Chicago, where four of his plays, Harper Regan,Motortown, Wastwater, and Birdland had their U.S. premieres. His writing is widely performed throughout Europe and, along with Dennis Kelly and Martin Crimp, he is one of the most performed English-language writers in Germany.
Theatre Intime is an entirely student-run dramatic arts not-for-profit organization operating out of the Hamilton Murray Theater at Princeton University. Intime receives no direct support from the university, and is entirely acted, produced, directed, teched and managed by a board of students that is elected once a semester. "Students manage every aspect of Theatre Intime, from choosing the plays to setting the ticket prices."
Billy Bishop Goes to War is a Canadian musical, written by John MacLachlan Gray in collaboration with the actor Eric Peterson. One of the most widely produced plays in Canadian theatre, the two-man play dramatizes the life of Canadian World War I fighter pilot Billy Bishop. One member of the cast plays the part of Bishop in word and song, although he is also called upon to dramatize 17 other parts; the second cast member provides all the accompaniment on the piano and also sings.
The Tron Theatre is located in Glasgow, Scotland. The theatre was formerly known as the Tron Kirk. It began as the Collegiate Church of Our Lady and St. Anne.
Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, known together as Pasek and Paul, are an American songwriting duo and composing team for musical theater, films and television. Their theater works include A Christmas Story, Dogfight, Edges, Dear Evan Hansen, and James and the Giant Peach. Their original songs have been featured in Only Murders in the Building, Sesame Street, Welcome to Wrexham, Harlem, Smash and in the films Aladdin, Trolls, Pink: All I Know So Far, La La Land, for which they won both the Golden Globe and Academy Award for Best Original Song for the song "City of Stars", and The Greatest Showman. Their work on the original musical Dear Evan Hansen has received widespread critical acclaim and earned them the 2017 Tony Award for Best Musical and Best Original Score. In 2022, they won the Tony Award for Best Musical for serving as producers for the Broadway production of Michael R. Jackson's Pulitzer Prize-winning musical A Strange Loop.
Enda Walsh is an Irish playwright.
The State Theatre Company of South Australia (STCSA), branded State Theatre Company South Australia, formerly the South Australian Theatre Company (SATC), is South Australia's leading professional theatre company, and a statutory corporation. It was established as the official state theatre company by the State Theatre Company of South Australia Act 1972, on the initiative of Premier Don Dunstan.
The Canadian Stage Company is based in Toronto, and is Canada's third-largest not-for-profit contemporary theatre company. Founded in 1987 with the merger of CentreStage and Toronto Free Theatre, Canadian Stage is dedicated to programming international contemporary theatre and to developing and producing Canadian works.
The Handspring Puppet Company is a South African puppetry performance and design company. It was established in 1981 by Adrian Kohler, Basil Jones, Jon Weinberg, and Jill Joubert, and is based in Cape Town, South Africa.
The Théâtre de l'Œuvre is a Paris theatre on the Right Bank, located at 3, Cité Monthiers, entrance 55, rue de Clichy, in the 9° arrondissement. It is commonly conflated and confused with the late-nineteenth-century theater company named Théâtre de l'Œuvre, founded by actor-director-producer Aurélien Lugné-Poe, who would not take control of this performance space until 1919. His company is best known for its earlier phase of existence, before it acquired this theatre venue. From 1893 to 1899, in various Parisian theatres, Lugné-Poe premiered modernist plays by foreign dramatists, as well as new work by French Symbolists, most notoriously Alfred Jarry’s nihilistic farce Ubu Roi, which opened in 1896 at Nouveau-Théâtre.
Lev Shulimovich Shekhtman is an American theatre director and actor.
Adam Seelig, is a Canadian and American poet, playwright, director, composer and Artistic Director of One Little Goat Theatre Company in Toronto.
Mark Crawford is a Canadian theatre actor and playwright. He is best known for his plays, The Birds and the Bees (2016) and The New Canadian Curling Club (2018), which have been widely produced across Canada.