Skip to main content

SummerWorks Performance Festival announces 2025 lineup

iPhoto caption: The cast of Fat Fables. Photo by Roya DelSol.
/By / Jun 24, 2025
SHARE

Toronto’s SummerWorks Performance Festival returns this August to mark its 35th anniversary with a multidisciplinary lineup of theatre, dance, music, and live art presented across the city.

Taking place from August 7 to 17, the 2025 festival features more than 35 projects and over 200 artists. Performances will be staged in theatres, galleries, parks, transit hubs, and other urban spaces.

This year’s programming is centred on the theme Back to the Future / Forward to the Past, inspired by the words of Elder Dr. Duke Redbird. The theme invites artists and audiences to explore time — past, present, and future — through personal, cultural, and political lenses.

Featured works include d’bi.young anitafrika’s The Sankofa Trilogy, a revisiting and reimagining of three of the artist’s earlier plays; Wayne Burns’ Cake, a solo play exploring masculinity and beauty standards; Vanessa Goodman and Caroline Shaw’s Graveyards and Gardens, an immersive blend of dance and live music; and Daniele Bartolini and Vincent Leblanc-Beaudoin’s Le Concierge, a site-specific performance set in the corridors of a Toronto secondary school.

The lineup also features artists from Taiwan and South Korea, works staged in public spaces, community engagement projects, and more.

“For our 35th anniversary, we’re not just looking back — we’re pausing in the present to listen carefully, and to imagine what’s ahead,” wrote artistic director Michael Caldwell in a press release. “This milestone festival is filled with contemporary performance works that examine memory, identity, ritual, and resistance through a temporal lens.”

Tickets will go on sale July 15, with full programming details available on the SummerWorks website.


The SummerWorks Performance Festival runs from August 7 to 17. More information is available here.


SummerWorks Performance Festival is an Intermission partner. Learn more about Intermission’s partnership model here.

Krystal Abrigo
WRITTEN BY

Krystal Abrigo

Krystal is Intermission's Publishing and Editorial Coordinator. A Scarborough-based writer of Philippine and Egyptian descent who enjoys reading bell hooks, Audre Lorde, and James Baldwin. At any given moment, you can probably find her at a concert, or on a long walk somewhere in Toronto (or elsewhere).

LEARN MORE

Comments

Leave a Comment

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


A headshot of David Leyshon. iPhoto caption: A headshot of David Leyshon. Photo provided by Lighthouse Festival Theatre.

David Leyshon named interim artistic producer at Lighthouse Festival

He joins the company as it prepares its 2026 programming, continuing its mandate of producing comedy-driven Canadian theatre in Port Dover and Port Colborne.

By Krystal Abrigo
iPhoto caption: Kateryna Larina in Paradisum. Photo by Bálint Hirling.

TO Live to present Recirquel’s Paradisum in Toronto

Next week, a circus-dance hybrid will swing into the Bluma Appel Theatre as part of TO Live’s 2025-26 season.

By Krystal Abrigo
iPhoto caption: Rick Miller in 'Boom X.' Photo by Craig Francis.

Q&A: Rick Miller reflects on his one-man multimedia portrait Boom X, now playing at Hamilton’s Theatre Aquarius

In Boom X, Rick Miller uses theatre to trace how Generation X came of age amid major shifts in media, politics, and daily life from the 1970s through the mid-1990s.

By Krystal Abrigo

CBC’s PlayME debuts 2026 season, starting with Kim’s Convenience

PlayME has featured work by more than 30 Governor General’s Award winners and nominees, making some of the country’s most celebrated plays accessible to listeners nationwide.

By Krystal Abrigo
iPhoto caption: (L to R) Kelsey Verzotti, Kennedy Kanagawa, and Ma-Anne Dionisio. Photo by Tim Nguyen.

Theatre Calgary announces casting for world premiere musical The Tale of the Gifted Prince

Starring as Prince Ren is Kennedy Kanagawa, known for his recent Broadway appearance in Into the Woods. Joining him is Ma-Anne Dionisio as the Woman, and Kelvin Moon Loh as the King and Magistrate.

By Krystal Abrigo
iPhoto caption: Headshot by Andy Moro.

Tara Beagan wins 2025 Governor General’s Award for drama

Published by Playwrights Canada Press, her multilingual play Rise, Red River connects environmental devastation with the intergenerational impacts of colonial violence.

By Krystal Abrigo