Kafka’s Monkey at Artesian: Simian Vaudevillian Really Makes You Think.

Kafka's Monkey

On this weekend at Artesian is Golden Apple Theatre’s production of Kafka’s Monkey – adapted by Colin Teevan from Franz Kafka’s A Report To An Academy. This is the Canadian premiere of the play, following a successful run in New York this past spring, and its world premiere at the Young Vic in London in 2009 – and it’s well worth checking out.

A chimpanzee is shot, captured, and brought to Weimar-era Germany by ship. Over time, he realizes, in order to survive, he has to depart from his ape persona, and somehow become human. After a rough introduction to alcohol, he very quickly develops the human characteristic of speech and proceeds to enchant and amaze European audiences under his new vaudevillian persona – Red Peter (so named for the red mark on his cheek from when he was shot).

And he’s a hit! He dances, he sings, and he gamely climbs an on-stage apparatus, all the while wearing a tailored little suit and bowler hat. When we meet Red Peter, it is to hear his titular report to an academy – and, in this case, we are the academy, as audience members are given white lab coats to wear upon entry to the theatre. The relationship is set up early: We might be in control in the bigger sense, but for the next hour, we’re here to listen to an animal who no longer identifies as an animal, and to, ostensibly, hear his perspective on his life “as a former ape.” But it quickly becomes very clear that what he really is is a creature tragically caught between two worlds with, as he reminds us, “no way out.”

Jodi Sadowsky gives a nuanced and very observant performance as Red Peter – not to mention an energetic one. It’s a physically demanding role. Not only because of the marathon-like nature of the text (she’s the only one on stage for the duration of this one-act play), but for the way she channels the character. Sadowsky’s performance is imbued with the physicality of Red Peter’s former ape self, occasionally reverting to full-ape mode at key moments. It’s a tic he’ll never rid himself of, but Sadowsky’s movements are also a take on the ingratiating way of the vaudevillian stage performer – a plaintive appeal to draw Red Peter’s audience in – and the combination of these two traits works well. It’s a crucial aspect of the performance that was arrived at after long hours of work with local dancer and movement coach Chancz Perry.

“I started working out a few months before, but I didn’t realize how physical it was going to be,” Sadowsky says. “I watched a lot of ape videos – that was a big thing for me before we got to rehearsals. But when we got to rehearsals, Chancz and Ryland, we really worked together to find out ‘What is the walk? How do you hold yourself? You were an ape, but now you’re a man.’”

Red Peter oscillates between regaling the audience of his dangerous passage from the other continent (and transformation to an semi-upright “human”) and compulsively climbing his little wooden jungle gym, bringing home the point that he’ll sadly never be comfortable in either environment. Sadowsky’s interpretation of the text hones in on the simultaneous admiration and resentment Peter has for his former captors – now his friends.

This split affinity also raises questions around how much our personas in general are performances, and what is given up through the process of assimilation. When Kafka wrote the story, it first appeared in Der Jude, and was interpreted by some as a satirization of the cultural assimilation of Jews in a time of rampant anti-Semitism. Director Ryland Alexander points out that the themes of alienation are still very relevant.

“Comparing what the world was like then and now, I think we’ve come a long way, but at the same time it still goes on,” he says. “We aren’t as accepting of people’s ideas, philosophies and ideologies, and we’re very quick to judge. So, what happens when we don’t embrace, and we force our ideals upon others? And I think some of the despair that comes out in the character is really what you see in society when people don’t have a way out.”

“We talked about how Red Peter just goes from one cage to another,” Sadowsky adds.

On a personal level, both Sadowsky and Alexander say they can identify with the feeling of being caught between two worlds.

“I moved back into the province about a year and a half ago,” he says. “And things have dramatically changed in the cultural landscape of the province. So, I’ve had to take stock.”

He says the play also taps into the push-pull between following one’s life’s work as an artist and having to balance that with the ability to support oneself. “That pull of ‘what is your ape?’ What is it that makes you feel alienated from society as a whole, from not giving culture its just cause?”

“One of the things I like about the metaphor is that anyone can figure that out,” Alexander says. “What they take away from this play, hopefully, is ‘What do I do to survive? And how do I feel about that?’”

In the end, we’re all just little monkeys trying to figure that out.

Kafka’s Monkey continues at Artesian until Sunday May 12.
2627 13th Ave.
Show starts at 8pm.
Tickets are available at Cobb Swanson Music, Bach and Beyond and through Golden Apple’s website.

(photo: Darrol Hoffmeister, Sharpshooter Photography)

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Six In The Morning: Sit Down For This

6-in-the-morning1 ROOMING HOUSES Some people want ‘em, some people don’t. Funny how a housing crisis causes problems and conflicts, eh?

2 PULLED ALIVE FROM THE RUBBLE Seventeen days after a sweatshop collapsed in Bangladesh, a woman has been rescued from the ruins.

3 THE HORRIBLE THINGS THAT AWFUL HUMANS DO Ariel Castro seems to be a very bad man. Also, that awesome-seeming guy who helped Castro’s prisoners escape has a checkered past, and there’s a good piece on that here. By the way, we also have missing women in Saskatchewan. What a world.

4 CANADIAN CONNECTION Accused terrorist Ahmed Abassi studied chemistry in Quebec and the FBI says he’s got a connection to one of the two Canadians accused of plotting to bomb a Via train.

5 IF YOU WANT TO STRIP WOMEN OF THEIR RIGHTS, YOU NEED TO ELECT THE RIGHT PEOPLE Oh good, it was save a fetus day again and jerkfaces be talkin’ ’bout they cray-ass agenda. What a bunch of creeps. Fuck their evil, manipulative little schemes. You know, maybe it’s not surprising that one in four Saskatchewanians now says phooey to organized religion. Eat that, Trost and Vellacott.

6 PARADE OF MISCELLANY The one-time top dog of the alternative press is in sorry shape, Saskatchewan may or may not have more jobs, the families of some Pickerton victims file lawsuits, The University of Saskatchewan projects a $3 million loss, A super-sketchy execution has been stayed in Mississippi, there’s a criminal investigation into that exploded Texas fertilizer plant, A gay rights activist in Belize is getting death threats and they buried the dead Boston asshole.

ARE YOU SITTING DOWN? Riker is, and how. Hat tip to Vanda.

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Pick Of The Day: Skydiggers

The Skydiggers, which have their roots in a duo that singer Andy Maize and guitarist Josh Finlayson formed in Toronto in 1987, were prominent members of the Canadian music community in the 1990s. Their profile’s a little lower these days, but they remain a force to be reckoned with as far as roots music goes.

Tonight, the band is in town to play a show at the Exchange (doors at 8 p.m., tickets $22). To give you a taste of what they’re like, here’s video from 2007 of the band performing “The Truth About Us”:

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Foliage Report: Thursday, May 9

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Tonight! Shotgun Jimmie

Shotgun Jimmie.

I’ve long thought that Shotgun Jimmie would make a terrific host for a Mr. Rogers-/Fred Penner’s Place-style kids program. By that, I mean the idea popped into my head last year and I just remembered it now; I don’t devote a lot of time to pretending I’m a TV exec.

But really, as the friendliest and most earnest figure in Canadian indie rock, he’s the perfect candidate for the gig, especially having gotten a roundabout thumbs-up from Mr. Penner himself during a Regina Folk Festival workshop where they collaborated. (The compliment went, I believe, “Shotgun Jimmie, you are a strange man, but I like you.”)

That’s not to say his music is juvenile. In fact, his latest album, Everything Everything, is his most mature and fully fleshed out to date. It’s the result of his holing up in a Manitoba cabin to focus entirely on the record—a move that in the wrong hands could’ve turned into semi-interesting bearded blubbering, but in Jimmie’s, helped create an expansive yet intimate album, captured on everything from jankety tape machines to handheld voice recorders and featuring friends like Julie Doiron. And it’s not just fun and games—most of it is, sure, like his explosive ode to his peers in Ladyhawk, but songs like “I Will Climb Mountains” are downright dirge-like.

Shotgun Jimmie (in his one-man, guitar/kick drum/snare incarnation) is playing tonight, Thursday, May 9 at the Artful Dodger, along with Black Drink Crier.

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Exciting Goings-On On City Square Plaza

SFWThe tent that was erected  in early April on City Square Plaza to help host the Juno Awards has been joined by a second tent that I imagine will be used as an entranceway/shelter during Saskatchewan Fashion Week. That’s probably a good idea as during JunoFest people, including those working security at the gate, were more or less exposed to the elements while they were waiting to get into the show tent.

There’s been a few smaller events associated with Saskatchewan Fashion Week already, but the main festival kicks off today. For a breakdown of all the stuff that will be happening visit the SFW website.  I believe plans are also in the works to have Prairie Dog fashion maven Amber Goodwyn do some blog coverage. So hopefully that pans out.

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Pick Of The Day: Brian Templeton CD Release

BRIAN TEMPLETONTonight local musician Brian Templeton is launching his debut CD at McNally’s Tavern. He’s been active in the local music scene for ten years or so, and tonight he’ll be sharing the stage with Toronto rock-a-billy performer Alistair Christl. The plan is for Templeton to sit in on Christl’s opening set, and then Christl will sit in on Templeton’s set where he’ll showcase his new record. 

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Pick Of The Day (Bonus Edition): Kafka’s Monkey

This theatrical adaptation by Colin Teevan is based on a short-story that Franz Kafka published in 1917 called A Report to the Academy. In it, an African ape named Red Peter recounts before a scientific conference his capture by a hunting party and subsequent voyage by boat to Europe. Caged along the way, he was denied the opportunity to do what he normally did in the jungle so he began to watch and imitate what the crew was doing. With surprising ease he was able to progress along the primate >>> human continuum until he reached an advanced state of development.

Kafka’s Monkey received its world premiere in London in 2009. May 8-12 it receives its Canadian premiere in a production Golden Apple Theatre is presenting at the Artesian. The show stars Jodi Sadowsky and and is directed by Ryland Alexander. It goes at 8 p.m. every night and tickets are $35 for adults and $25 for students. Find out more here.

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Foliage Report: Wednesday, May 8

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NHL: Requiem for a Canuck

Kesler competed like a bastard, but wasn't enough.

Kesler competed like a bastard, but wasn’t enough.

I’ll be stepping into Dan McRae territory for once to tackle the elimination of my beloved Vancouver Canucks last night against the San Jose Sharks.

Since the boys in blue lost the Stanley Cup final in 2011 and all hell broke loose, most teams learned to play against the Canucks. First, nullify the Sedins give-and-take. Second, be physical. Done.

The Vancouver team sputtered their way into the playoffs in 2012 and 2013, but was unable to pass the first round. I’m fairly positive the managing team (coach Alain Vigneault and GM Mike Gillis) was aware the gig was up, but instead of fixing the Canucks obvious problems, they failed even to address them.

The inability of Gillis to transfer Roberto Luongo is just the tip of the iceberg. During the last two years, every single trade the Canucks attempted was counterproductive (save Jason Garrison). Promising rookie Cody Hodgson was sent to Buffalo for Zack Kassian, mainly due to Hodgson’s parents’ meddlesomeness. Kassian wasn’t a factor this season and evidenced some disciplinary issues. Meanwhile, Cody thrived with the Sabres.

Not a single one of the centres the Canucks brought (Paulson, Roy) made the slightest difference. Furthermore, coach Vigneault did nothing to introduce new blood, other than a couple of defensemen who made it to the first team out of need. Let’s not even talk about management inability to lock any of the promising university prospects that entered the NHL this year.

Rebuild, you say? That would be great, if it wasn’t because the Canucks are crippled by long-term no-trade agreements, Luongo style. Vancouver is stuck with mediocre players like Ballard and Booth for years to come. With no cap space, the team will have to buy out a number of contracts just to regain some maneuverability. Otherwise, the Canucks will become aging bottom-feeders like the Calgary Flames in no time.

In short, while many players underperformed in this series, most of the responsibility lies with Vigneault and Gillis. By all accounts, the former will be released of his contract in the next few weeks. As for the GM, it’s up to the Canucks owner Francesco Aquilini to kick him to the curve (not likely).

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I Love Today’s Google Doodle!

It’s an homage to legendary graphic designer/movie title guy Saul Bass, whose work you’ve seen in films like Psycho and Casino. The Guardian has an article on today’s doodle here, and a pile of Bass’ movie titles here. This is great stuff. GO WATCH NOW! Saul Bass!

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Rider Fan Forum: The Off-Season Edition

Rider LogoAfter a disastrous 2011 campaign that saw them miss the playoffs for the first time since 2001, the Riders underwent a major rebuild, hiring a new head coach (Corey Chamblin) and jettisoning a number of veteran players in a bid to upgrade the roster.

The Green & White reached the playoffs in 2012 with an 8-10 record, and definitely performed better than in 2011. But they proved to be maddeningly inconsistent, with stretches of games where they looked formidable, and others where they looked horrible.

In our first Rider Fan Forum of 2013 Cal Corduroy, Earl Camembert and Ron Mexico dissect some of the team’s off-season moves and look ahead to training camp which opens in Saskatoon in late May.

Were you surprised at the number of moves the Riders made in the off-season?

RM I was surprised by the number of coaching changes, but not surprised by the player moves, given that the team is hosting the Grey Cup this year.

CC I was surprised, albeit pleasantly. The Riders did improve in 2012, but there were still many gaps to fill. 

What are your thoughts on:

(i) Hiring George Cortez as offensive coordinator?

EC I’ve talked to a couple of people close to the Riders and they think signing Cortez is the greatest thing since sliced bread. I don’t know about that, but you can’t argue with the guy’s success in getting big production numbers out of his quarterbacks. No doubt a positive but if he got canned in Hamilton because he was a dink then less so.

CC Great. We haven’t had a decent offensive coordinator since Paul LaPolice. Maybe Cortez can get Darian Durant to the next level… no one else has been able to so far.

RM I’m a bit reserved given Cortez’s recent colossal failure as a head coach of a team thought to have a lot of talent. However, his record as an offensive coordinator has been good. So I should probably get over my skepticism.

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Pick Of The Day: Wilderment

Wilderment IBack in 1989, Calgary artist Rita McKeough had an exhibition at the Dunlop Art Gallery called Tremor. It consisted, if memory serves, of two elongated houses that, by attaching furniture to the outside walls and roof, she metaphorically turned inside out so that what had once been contained inside was now on public display. There were also some audio tracks that referenced domestic violence, and the whole idea of the show was that domestic violence was a public issue that society needed to confront and not something that was, as  conventional wisdom once held, a private matter between a husband and wife that should remain behind closed doors.

I wasn’t writing about visual art then, so I didn’t review Tremor, but it did leave a strong impression on me.

On Saturday, McKeough was back in Regina to open an installation called Wilderment at Neutral Ground. That’s a picture of it above. When you enter the space you activate a motion sensor and the cranes start to swivel as if they were working in a prairie field — as symbolized by a plywood base which is laid out behind a barbed wire fence.

Through their movement, McKeough depicts the cranes relentlessly pulling stalks of native grass out of the “ground”. Scattered throughout the functioning cranes are many other cranes that are sprouting up like grass in the soil. Once they’re built, they’ll be put to work uprooting even more grass to clear the way for even more urban development.

Living in Calgary, that’s a narrative all too familiar to McKeough. And there are plenty of Reginans who would like nothing better than to see us follow a similar path to urban glory. We have plenty of land here, their reasoning goes, so we don’t need to worry about urban sprawl and sustainability.

Yes, we do live in a geographically expansive province. But that geography has many potential values beyond urban development — like as wilderness habitat, and productive farm and ranch land. We need to recognize that.

And while we may have plenty of land around us to develop, what we don’t have is plenty of cash to install, maintain, repair and ultimately replace all the roads, sidewalks, sewer and water lines that new developments require, along with services like transit, police, fire, garbage pick-up, street-cleaning, schools, community centres and everything else that city dwellers need and value as amenities. That’s the true cost of our low-density, vehicle-dependent lifestyle. But the eco-terrorism that McKeough depicts in her installation is no less devastating.

Wilderment is on at Neutral Ground until May 28. The gallery, at 203-1856 Scarth St.,  is open Tuesday to Saturday 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Check it out if you get a chance.

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Foliage Report: Tuesday, May 7

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And here’s the view from May 7 last year. It’s a partly different part of the same tree, but close enough to compare.

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Four In The Afternoon: I Hate Rapists

4 in the Afternoon1 CHEERS TO THE SURVIVORS As we are no doubt all aware, three awesome Cleveland women have escaped from the evil sacks of rapist shit who kept them captive for a decade. Here’s the Columbus Dispatch, here’s the New York Times and here’s the Guardian’s live blog. What else? Well, Jezebel has a round-up of what’s known about the three women, Cleveland’s WKYC has the beginning of what will no doubt be a gruesome accounting of abuse, assault and torture, and exceedingly vile multi-millionaire radio hate-ape Rush Limbaugh insinuated U.S. president Barack Obama and the people who voted for him are responsible for the kidnappings and confinement. But fuck that guy. Look at this guy, who helped the prisoners escape.

2 HARPER’S CONSERVATIVES JUST DO NOT FUCKING UNDERSTAND SCIENCE Now they’ve told the National Research Council to focus on science with commercial applications instead of “basic research and discovery science”. Which is how we learn new things. This is the stupidest fucking government in the history of Canada. It blows my mind that Conservative MPs aren’t pelted with rotten vegetables whenever they appear in public.

3 HOME EXPLOSION LEADS TO DRUG CHARGES Pro tip for weed dealers: take extra care to not draw attention to your illegal home business by detonating your house.

4 WASTEWATER MISTREATMENT There are new criticisms for the P3, or public private partnership, funding model Regina’s signed onto for our next wastewater treatment plant. Here’s Regina Water Watch’s report. I’m pretty sure the whole P3 movement exists to transfer public money to private companies, but that’s what our broken country does know.

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Aw NHL Naw: Protect and Survive

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Have you been enjoying the 2013 Stanley Cup Playoffs and Pizza ‘n’ Pop Funtacular so far? If you’re like me, it can be a bit of a struggle to follow the playoffs when your team isn’t one of the sixteen in the running for Lord Stanley’s most famous (non-sexual) prize. As a public service, I’ve put together some tips on how to make the playoffs work for you even if you don’t have a horse in the race.

(Note: Most ice hockey teams should consider replacing their human rosters with horse rosters. Once horses sort out how ice works, they’ll be unstoppable. Those mammals just want it more, y’know?)

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Rest in Peace, Ray Harryhausen

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Ray Harryhausen, special effects pioneer and stop-motion genius, died today at 92. Harryhausen capable handiwork provided his creations with character, if not a soul. His most remarkable achievements in animation are featured in the original Clash of the Titans, Jason and the Argonauts and The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad. His influence reaches even further. George Lucas singled Harryhausen as his most enduring influence and the reason he made Star Wars. Sad day.

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Pick Of The Day: The F-Holes

Based in Winnipeg, this genre-defying band has played Regina several times in the past few years. Tonight, they’re in town to play a show at  O’Hanlon’s Pub. Typically on a Tuesday, the back up band gets going around 10:30 p.m. with the headliner taking the stage around 11:30 p.m.

To give you a taste, here’s video of the band performing “Something Good” at a festival in Winnipeg in 2011:

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Meanwhile, In Real News

There was an explosion at a Cathedral area house. From CBC:

A house in Regina shook from the force of an explosion, according to people who live in the Cathedral neighbourhood where it happened. Fire crews, EMS and police rushed to the scene, on 13th Avenue near Athol Street, around 8 p.m. CST Monday. CBC News reporter Dani Mario was on the scene and noted at least one person was injured but did not need urgent care.

In a very lame twist, I heard about this actual news event while loitering around the O’Hanlon’s patio construction scene.

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Exciting Goings-On On 19 Block Scarth!

Ohanlon patio prep-0I was out for a walk on this fine evening. It included a trip to Central Library to revisit Carol Wainio’s excellent exhibition at the Dunlop, a 20-minute bask on one of the benches by the Cenotaph in Victoria Park, and a leisurely stroll up and down Victoria Avenue from Smith St. to Broad and back.

There are still clumps of snow lingering in areas that don’t get exposed to much sunlight, but as I was sitting in Victoria Park I heard the sound of a buzz saw on the eastern edge of the park. When I investigated, I discovered a group of gentlemen hard at work outside O’Hanlon’s Pub and the Copper Kettle Restaurant.

You can find more photos after the jump.

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