Essential Toronto Magazine 2016 | Page 27

N o matter the venue, style or genre, art is a conversation between creator, performer and audience. Each encounters the work with her own perceptions and interprets it in her own way. That’s empowering, but it can also be isolating, especially given today’s increasingly fractured cultural landscape. Toronto’s biggest arts and culture organizations, however, still provide us with the opportunity to see plays, concerts and exhibitions that are as inclusive as they are challenging, proving that mass appeal doesn’t have to be mundane. ON STAGE FOR ALL The Bodyguard photo by paul Coltas. Widely accessible stories with universal themes have long comprised live theatre’s canon, from Shakespeare’s works to the biggest Broadway spectacles. Even so, Toronto’s 2016-17 stage season seems the stuff of legend—literally, with a number of shows that give life to our shared archetypes, and in one case, elevate a single man’s story to the level of myth. Opera is arguably the modern art form most indebted to mythology—both the “classical” tales of gods and heroes, as well as historical accounts that have, over time, gained many of the qualities of folklore. For centuries, operatic libretti have borrowed from or explicitly retold the fables and sagas of yore. No surprise, then, that such stories fill the Canadian Opera Company’s current slate. A new COC production of the bel canto work Norma (October 6 to November 5, 2016), for instance, has Canadian soprano Sondra Radvanovsky and South African soprano Elza van den Heever sharing the role of a druid priestess betrayed by her Roman lover, and Handel’s Ariodante (October 16 to November 4, 2016) adapts a portion of a 16th-century epic poem (Ludovico Ariosto’s Orlando Furiosa) as a meditation on sexual jealousy. But the real-life-turnedquasi-folk story of a Métis leader’s martyrdom is undoubtedly the COC’s most anticipated new offering: Louis Riel (April 20 to May 13, 2017), which dramatizes a seminal chapter in Canada’s nascent nationhood and makes a conflicted hero of its rebellious lead. Making new myths is the stock-in-trade of modern musicals. Toronto’s Mirvish Productions has some intriguing ones (plus non-singing, non-dancing theatrical offerings) on its calendar. The Bodyguard (February 11 to May 14, 2017) stages the damsel-in-distress romance of the 1992 Whitney Houston film, while Come From Away (November 15, 2016 to January 8, 2017), playing here before heading to Broadway, highlights B E v E R Ly K N i g H T i N t h e B O dy g uA R d essential toronto 2016-2017 // where.ca 27