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SummerWorks Performance Festival announces 2026 lineup, including a wealth of international offerings

'Golden Rez Dog.' Photo by Philippe Latour. iPhoto caption: 'Golden Rez Dog.' Photo by Philippe Latour.
/By / Jun 23, 2026
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Creations from Denmark, Hong Kong, Iran, Mexico, and beyond are featured in this year’s SummerWorks Performance Festival programming, which comprises 35 projects, including 27 live productions.

Running from August 6 to 16 at venues and public spaces across Toronto, this year’s edition of the curated contemporary performance festival showcases a higher-than-usual proportion of voices from outside Canada: approximately one third of the lineup involves international artists and creative collaborators. Centred around the theme of Fight | Flight, the 2026 festival “brings forward urgent creative responses to this troubling moment in time,” according to a press release sent out this morning.

Featured Canadian works include Sheep’s Clothing Theatre’s Blood Brothers, an immersive adaptation of Julius Caesar set in a frat house; Sara Porter’s Hello Sunshine!, a world premiere solo clown opera about living with an invisible disability; and Nate Yaffe’s Rot Hat, a new dance and live-music performance that wades through historical fiction, speculative ceremony, humour, grief, and joy.

Narratives connected to wrongfully incarcerated creators anchor both Maryam Khalili’s Date of Performance, an Iranian lecture-performance discussing censorship and collective resistance under conditions of isolation and repression; and Theatre du Poulet’s GPO Box No. 211, an object theatre performance drawing on an exchange of letters with an imprisoned Hong Kong artist.

In and around its slate of ticketed productions, SummerWorks presents an array of community-engaged events. Summer Break returns as a collection of free performances and workshops focused on rest, embodied practice, and gathering. The festival will also involve a community meal with the AMY Project, a public space intervention with the Switch Collective, conversations themed around issues affecting Toronto’s arts community, and more.

“This year’s festival feels like a powerful reflection of where SummerWorks is headed,” says Michael Caldwell, the festival’s artistic director. “We are presenting one of our most international summer festivals to date, with artists from across Canada and around the world bringing radically intimate and deeply imaginative works to Toronto. Our vision for an international hub for contemporary performance is now tangibly happening within the festival programming, alongside our continued commitment to support the development of new work.”


The 2026 SummerWorks Performance Festival runs from August 6 to 16. More information is available here. Tickets go on sale July 13.


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

Liam Donovan
WRITTEN BY

Liam Donovan

Liam is Intermission’s senior editor. He lives in Toronto. His Substack newsletter is available at loamdonovan.substack.com.

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