Skip to main content

REVIEW: King Gilgamesh and the Man of the Wild at Soulpepper/Tria Theatre

int(100684)
iPhoto caption: Photo by Dahlia Katz
/By / Aug 2, 2023
SHARE

At a coffee shop in Toronto, two unlikely pals meet.

One, Jesse, is a wannabe Hollywood actor, living in Toronto out of pure circumstance. The other’s a barista named Ahmed, loquacious and curious about the world around him.

They have things in common, it turns out. They’re both actors, and they’re both permanent residents of Canada. They both feel a deep connection to music-making. 

And somewhere deep inside, they’re both terribly, terribly lonely.

On this first chance meeting, surrounded by the charm of the empty coffee shop, Ahmed (played with a gorgeous blend of humour and subtlety by Ahmed Moneka) decides to tell Jesse the story of King Gilgamesh, the oldest story in the world (Jesse LaVercombe, too, is superb). It’s a twisting, often scrambled epic, with striking images and powerful fables embedded into the fabric of the myth. 

Over the course of their evening, Jesse and Ahmed grow closer, learning more about each other and their respective cultures as they indulge in psychedelic drugs. It’s an intense bonding experience for the men, whose lives quickly become intertwined — before they separate once more, perhaps for good. 

King Gilgamesh and the Man of the Wild defies genre. It’s a great fit for Soulpepper, a dandy blend of theatre and live music (the band, called Moneka Arabic Jazz and founded by Moneka, is led with bluesy grace by bandleader Demetrios Petsalakis). Moneka doesn’t just act, he sings, too, with a youthful bravado that only adds to the complexities of Ahmed’s and Jesse’s friendship. Jesse, as well, is a wizard on the keys.

Seth Bockley directs the piece with a personal flair — he’s billed as playwright and co-creator alongside Moneka and LaVercombe — and he’s managed to find an impressive balance between making the evening feel like a concert and a play. The elements are inextricable from each other, the music and the myth-making, and the whole affair is impeccably well paced. Lorenzo Savoini’s set and lighting, too, float between concert and play, and the effect is just lovely. 

Elements of this play echo another high point of Toronto theatre this year, Maanomaa, My Brother at Canadian Stage/Blue Bird Theatre Collective. The piece similarly used real-life narrative references to explore an encounter between dissonant cultures and the delicacy of friendship between men. The two shows speak to each other, Gilgamesh with music and Maanomaa with movement, and the plays perhaps also signal a larger need for stories about men being gentle with one another. Maanomaa was a delight, and King Gilgamesh picks up right where it left off, creating a scrumptious harmony of well-conceived new works.

King Gilgamesh and the Man of the Wild is one of Soulpepper’s best pieces of programming of the past year, a perfect summer evening of live performance in the intimate Michael Young Theatre. Strongly recommended — and bring a friend. You’ll be grooving in your seats the whole time. 


King Gilgamesh and the Man of the Wild runs at Soulpepper through August 6. Tickets are available here.


Intermission reviews are independent and unrelated to Intermission’s partnered content. Learn more about Intermission’s partnership model here.

Aisling Murphy
WRITTEN BY

Aisling Murphy

Aisling is Intermission's former senior editor and the theatre reporter for the Globe and Mail. She likes British playwright Sarah Kane, most songs by Taylor Swift, and her cats, Fig and June. She was a 2024 fellow at the National Critics Institute in Waterford, CT.

LEARN MORE

Comments

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


/
Jane Spidell in 'Twelve Dinners.' iPhoto caption: Jane Spidell in 'Twelve Dinners.' Photo by Dahlia Katz.

REVIEW: Family tensions run high in TIFT’s intimate Twelve Dinners

In the now-closed Twelve Dinners, an autobiographical play written and directed by Steve Ross, audiences received intimate access to an unvarnished version of a younger Ross through 12 evening meals with his parents.

By Phillip Dwight Morgan
Members of the company of 'Narnia.' iPhoto caption: Members of the company of 'Narnia.' Photo by Dahlia Katz.

REVIEW: Bad Hats’ Narnia is a joyful, heartwarming escape

The spirit of openness and the joy of discovery rule over this Narnia. Open the wardrobe and see.

By Ilana Lucas
Members of the company of 'Robin Hood.' iPhoto caption: Members of the company of 'Robin Hood.' Photo by Dahlia Katz.

REVIEW: Canadian Stage’s Robin Hood panto is anti-capitalist fun for the whole family

Following Ross Petty’s legacy of scene-stealing, Damien Atkins as the evil Prince John is easily the greatest delight of the show.

By Gus Lederman
Lauren Gillis and Alaine Hutton in 'Public Consumption.' iPhoto caption: Lauren Gillis and Alaine Hutton in 'Public Consumption.' Photo by Eden Graham.

REVIEW: Lester Trips’ stylish Public Consumption captures the internet’s profound emptiness

Rather than directly representing online life, Public Consumption speculates — with virtuosity — about how the digital world affects our bodies. And the show's findings are by no means comfortable.

By Liam Donovan
Tony Ofori and Daren A. Herbert in 'Moonlight Schooner.' iPhoto caption: Tony Ofori and Daren A. Herbert in 'Moonlight Schooner.' Photo by Dahlia Katz.

REVIEW: Necessary Angel’s Moonlight Schooner offers a poetic glimpse into the lives of three Caribbean sailors

Kanika Ambrose’s Moonlight Schooner is animated and visually stunning, but its individual pieces don’t come together as neatly as I would've expected.

By Abi Akinlade
iPhoto caption: Fiona Mongillo in 'Reproduktion.' Photo by Ann Baggley.

REVIEW: Here For Now’s well-acted Reproduktion attempts to tackle too much

Amy Rutherford’s world premiere script is ambitious and the material it covers is complex — but the narrative feels disjointed.

By Charlotte Lilley