Friday 28 November 2014

Piling up in style


I’m in week, whatever week it is in school, and it’s getting intense. The ability for me to pump out work is getting to be tremendous. I just wrote out a list of things to get done this weekend and I don’t even know where I’ll find the time to sleep. I love the feeling of this ‘nonstopiness’ from my first insane three-week road trip to last year’s weirdly busy-ness of balancing work, travel, and my continual trek to improve, but now my head’s exploding with life—in the best way possible—but exploding none-the-less!


Two weeks, two weeks until x-mas break, the end of semester is so near yet so far away.

Already thinking about the big event a friend and I are planning for February, about my Independent Professional Project for school next year, about the magazine project next semester and an internship for the summer.



When things have a way of piling up it puts life into perspective; It focuses me. I’m glad for this school assigned blog; it’s a mandatory way to put my thoughts out there for people to read, to be vulnerable.

I’ve never actively lived so far in the future. I LOVE it!

Friday 14 November 2014

Proud: The play


Stephen Harper private life is exactly that, private. Proud by Michael Healey portrays what might happen behind closed doors. Jisbella Lyth is a rookie Conservative MP from a fictional Quebec – where the 59 seats won by the NDP – were won by the Conservatives. An obvious comparison to NDP MP Ruth Ellen Brosseau, a rookie not expected to win in the 2011 federal election.

I love going into any entertainment blind and without expectation. I only found out about the play while getting a soy-cappuccino at Across The Board café in the Exchange 10-minutes before showtime. I bumped into Jane Testar a local celebrity of sorts who gave me the low down.

Lyth played by Daria Puttaert a seemingly one-dimensional rookie-MP was unexpectedly voted into the House of Commons. I believe that was the point. I liked her role. She played a sexually open woman, not afraid to have her own opinions, especially towards the fictionalized prime minister.

Ross McMillan’s portrayal of the prime minister was dead-on. His body language, speech, and his socially awkward character is exactly what I would expect.

His underhanded manipulation of the Canadian people is exactly what you could expect of the shenanigans that we have seen in the real world. Farcical!

Eric Blais played the PM’s Chief of Staff Cary Baines. Typical of the politics of today he knew his time was limited. He was ready to fall at any moment for his fearless leader.

After the play the actors and director had a talkback session. It allowed us, the audience, to understand the actors’ personal experiences, methods and thoughts behind their decisions brought to the stage. The talkback is definitely additive to the play.

I would suggest anyone with an open mind to see Proud. It was money well spent.
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