Thursday, November 16, 2006

Back in Halifax

Last night we played the first of two shows at The Bus Stop Theatre on Gottingen St. in Halifax. The crowd was lively and we had a very interesting talkback session with questions about the choice of images in our slide projections and what they meant for what we were hoping to accomplish with our show, as well as whether or not Lescarbot actually staged the show when, where and how it is said he did and effect anti-colonial deconstructionalist shows like this have on the discuurse and if they possibly take time away from groups like the Mi'kmaq telling their own stories.

We've got one more show in Halifax tonight at the Bus Stop at 8pm.

Media coverage

We've been getting quite a bit of it on this trip, both local (Halifax Herald, Daily News) and national (CBC, Globe and Mail).

Most of it is already online here:

www.optative.net/neptune/media.html

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Annapolis Royal

After a long drive and a day of flyering, talking to the media and in general having a good time in Halifax, we headed to Annapolis Royal for our first Nova Scotia show, yesterday, November 14th, the 400th anniversary of Lescarbot's play.

Of course, we had to pay a visit to the "birthplace of drama" (really the birthplace of cultural genocide on Turtle Island), the Port Royal settlement. Neptune wasn't all that happy to see us and gave a rainy reception to prove it.

Neptune even blew apart the umbrella that was keeping our camera dry. Fortunately, Trickster gave us a way to use this to our advantage. You'll be able to see it all on video soon enough.

Back in Annapolis, we set up at the King's Theatre, a wonderful space run by truly kind people who really care about the arts and what they mean.

Our show went well and the talkback was, um, heated....

It started off as a discussion about whether or not we could look at a 1606 play through 2006 eyes and degenerated into an argument where members of Musique 400, clearly not getting the distunction between cultural genocide (appropriating elements of native culture, re-shaping them to serve a colonialist purpose, then widely distributing them to effectively re-create perception of natives) and actual, physical genocide (killing people), decided to call our play "bullshit".

While they seemed very dedicated to their arguments, they didn't want to have their images associated with them in our documentary and demanded we stop filming, claiming that other people in the audience felt the same, which, we found out later, wasn't the case.

In fact, the rest of the audience, and Annapolis Royal in general, seemed ready to take a closer look at the role that Lescarbot's play has really played in history.

(this post has been expanded since it originally appeared)

Saturday, November 11, 2006

We're hitting the road

The Montreal cast and crew of Sinking Neptune is leaving for Nova Scotia tomorrow morning.

We will be playing a show in Anapolis Royal at King's Theatre on Tuesday, November 14th and two shows in Halifax at The Bus Stop on November 15th and 16th.

We're going to help start the next 400 years of theatre off on a more inclusive, activist and critical foot and have already began to encounter much support and much resistance.

When something interesting happens, and it surely will, this is where it will be posted first.

Stay tuned...