Skip to main content

REVIEW: Is Tim Crouch’s An Oak Tree worth seeing twice at Luminato?

int(112670)
Promo photo for Tim Crouch's An Oak Tree. iPhoto caption: Photo courtesy of Luminato Festival.
/By / Jun 18, 2025
SHARE

The magic of live theatre is that it’s different every night… right? At least it can be. Or maybe should be. But how often is it, really? Given that the art form is constitutively premised on recreating itself in the moment every night, why do so many shows feel frozen, appearing to hope for as few surprises as possible? 

Engaging with the spontaneity afforded by liveness, many experimental theatremakers devise radical concepts that explore the medium’s potential, forcing it to deliver upon its promise of nightly difference. Long at the vanguard of such innovations, acclaimed English artist Tim Crouch has spent much of his career playfully interrogating theatrical conventions. Presented as part of the Luminato Festival in partnership with TO Live, the new stint of his landmark piece An Oak Tree (co-directed with Karl James and Andy Smith) currently running at the Jane Mallett Theatre marks the 20th anniversary of its Edinburgh Fringe premiere. 

Across those two decades, Crouch has appeared onstage with a different co-star at every performance (now upwards of 400), each time inviting a working actor to join him without any prior knowledge of what they’ll be expected to say and do. The performers receive lines from Crouch, sometimes reading from a clipboard, sometimes listening via headphones, and sometimes simply repeating exactly what he says. 

Nested within that conceptual framing, the main story follows a grieving father confronting the stage hypnotist (Crouch) who accidentally killed his daughter in a collision by a roadside oak tree. This narrative is deftly written as a meditation on mourning, remorse, and the difficulty of accepting change; on its own, however, the plot may not have seemed especially groundbreaking were it not surrounded by metatheatrical pyrotechnics. 

Nonetheless, this material is well-suited as a vehicle for Crouch’s larger exploration of the nature of performance as a site of transformation. After all, an actor following a script — entering an altered state of being and following the cues given by someone with more creative authority over the outcome — is its own kind of hypnotism. Crouch invites his temporary collaborator and the audience to succumb to the trance, to willingly accept the artist’s capacity to control what we see, even when we know we’re seeing something else entirely. 

Part of the draw of this show is the roster of familiar faces from Canadian theatre and television lined up to play the father (including Daniel MacIvor, Jean Yoon, Qasim Khan, and Mark McKinney), none of whom are publicly attached to a specific date. There’s no way of anticipating who you’ll see at whichever performance you attend, which may incentivize some to catch multiple showings and try their luck at seeing someone in particular. Luminato encourages this repetitious viewing, offering a 25 per cent discount if you buy tickets to two different performances. 

On opening night, the role was played by Karen Robinson (these days best known for roles on Schitt’s Creek and Law & Order: Toronto, though she also brings robust stage experience to the table). She admirably followed along and took directions, exuding a consistent veneer of stoic focus, with occasional pops of amusement at the unpredictability. Alternating between speaking as herself and as the father — those switches frequently happening mid-conversation, always scripted by Crouch — she made little to no vocal distinction between these two figures. It evidently took her a second to realize who she’s supposed to be in each given instance; I shared her momentary disorientation. 

Hinging the show on a fascinating premise that’s capable of fueling book-length analyses, Crouch’s prime objective appears to be testing the limits of theatrical representation, improvisation, and authorship. While I’m usually a sucker for exactly those types of experiments, I ultimately found An Oak Tree a bit underwhelming. Though there’s a partial thrill at seeing something so unconventional and trying to piece together where it’s all heading as it plays out, I personally found a lot more to enjoy while discussing it with a friend after the fact — which was riveting — than I did while seated in the auditorium. A lot of momentum is lost each time Crouch whispers lines to his scene partner. It took a long time for Robinson to receive and speak each passage, clipping the wings of her line deliveries for what could have otherwise been swift dialogue and soaring monologues.

There’s no denying that the show’s construction is all very deliberate. Crouch has had more than enough time to finesse the concept if this weren’t exactly how he wanted it. But it seems a missed opportunity, establishing a premise that foregrounds variability without embracing the full chaotic force of each unique variable. I’m inclined to compare this to Parlous Theatre’s Insert Clown Here. That show (which I saw thrice!) similarly made an unprepared actor stumble their way through a drama with a preordained plot. The difference was that the newly-joined participant needed to come up with all of their own lines on the spot, flexing their improv skills. By contrast, Crouch’s strict imposition of his text curbs the potential for variation, often impeding both figures’ responsiveness to the stimuli of the moment. 

I was both curious and skeptical that a second viewing of An Oak Tree would feel overly different from what I’d seen on opening night…. 

So I went back to catch another Oak Tree the next day. 

In previous cases of critics basing their reviews on multiple viewings of a show that’s predicated on night-to-night variability, that revisitation confirmed the wild unpredictability and advertised uniqueness of each discrete performance. My second viewing of An Oak Tree had the opposite effect; it corroborated the constancy, and perhaps even the rigidity, of the production’s scaffolding. 

On Sunday’s matinee, the father was played by Rebecca Henderson (of Russian Doll and Star Wars: The Acolyte fame). She followed the exact same beats and spoke the same words as Robinson had the night before, as prompted by Crouch. The most perceptible difference was that Henderson was slightly quicker at locating the emotional texture in the lines. Her adept cold reading allowed her to pepper the text with more outwardly presented intensity. At the end of one particularly heartrending monologue, she was visibly shedding tears, at which point Crouch handed her a tissue. That hadn’t happened the previous evening, and thus offered a rare moment of spontaneity and human connection that felt absent from the rest of the production. 

So, is An Oak Tree worth seeing twice? I’m not so convinced. If fandom motivates you to do everything in your power to see a specific performer, that’s your prerogative, but you’re unlikely to witness enough variation to appreciate it for variability’s sake alone. One viewing is enough to grasp the intriguing mechanisms behind the complex show, but this master of suggestion might not leave you fully entranced.


An Oak Tree runs at the St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts until June 22. Tickets are available here


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

Ryan Borochovitz
WRITTEN BY

Ryan Borochovitz

Ryan Borochovitz (he/him) is a Toronto-based dramaturg, director, playwright, and academic. He is currently a PhD Candidate in the Centre for Drama, Theatre, and Performance Studies at the University of Toronto, and holds an MA in Theatre Theory and Dramaturgy from the University of Ottawa. He is the founding artistic director of the (essentially defunct) independent production company, Sad Ibsen Theatre. He currently serves as the co-artistic producer – former literary manager – of Cup of Hemlock Theatre, for whom he produces and occasionally hosts the theatre enthusiasm podcast, The Cup.

LEARN MORE

Comments

  • HH Jun 22, 2025

    People wonder why the Toronto theatre scene is dying, doomed to fade away singing Broadway revivals. One reason is reviews like this. “Personally found a lot more to enjoy while discussing it with a friend after the fact — which was riveting — than I did while seated in the auditorium” is so theatre-snob-coded that I can’t believe it got published. This reviewer was only interested in analyzing An Oak Tree when it’s a performance and text that’s meant to be felt.

    The disorientation, the whispered cues, the uneven pacing—that’s the whole point. The show invites uncertainty, makes space for emotional shifts, and hands some control to the unknown. It’s alive, it’s changing. It’s growing. But this review treats that liveness like a flaw. If your takeaway is “great conversation piece, dull to watch,” maybe the problem isn’t the show: it’s that you were watching it like a critic instead of experiencing it like a human. This is why Ph.d’s should not review plays.

    I also saw An Oak Tree twice, and enjoyed two profoundly different emotional journeys, two different textual interpretations, two different audience reactions. Crouch’s brilliant construction reveals new layers depending on who steps into the second role and how the room breathes with them. It’s not meant to be pinned down or parsed apart: it’s meant to unfold along the actor and the audience in real time.

Leave a Comment

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


/
Adam Francis Proulx, Elm Reyes, Kay-Ann Ward in a Toronto Fringe Festival promo photo by Joy Adeola. iPhoto caption: Adam Francis Proulx, Elm Reyes, Kay-Ann Ward in a Fringe promo photo by Joy Adeola.

REVIEWS: Toronto Fringe Festival 2025

This collection of Toronto Fringe Festival capsule reviews will be updated throughout the festival with writing from 20 different critics.

Masae Day, Landon Doak, Michelle Fisk in 'The Wind Coming Over the Sea.' iPhoto caption: Masae Day, Landon Doak, and Michelle Fisk in 'The Wind Coming Over the Sea.' Photo by Lyon Smith.

REVIEW: A new Emma Donoghue musical takes root at the Blyth Festival

As a resident of southwestern Ontario, what struck me most is how deeply rooted in the region The Wind Coming Over the Sea feels. It's a lively reminder of the cultural inheritances that continue to shape the area today.

By Deanne Kearney
The cast of 'Major Barbara.' iPhoto caption: The cast of 'Major Barbara.' Photo by David Cooper.

REVIEW: Shaw Festival’s metatheatrical Major Barbara is sharp and subversive

Director Peter Hinton-Davis draws on a light smattering of Brechtian techniques — acknowledgements of artifice that enrich and vivify Major Barbara’s clash of morals.

By Liam Donovan
The company of Talk is Free Theatre's 'The Frogs.' iPhoto caption: The company of 'The Frogs.' Photo by Dahlia Katz.

REVIEW: In Barrie, Talk Is Free Theatre delivers well-crafted outdoor staging of rare Sondheim musical The Frogs

Staged inches from the audience by director Griffin Hewitt, the show commendably captures the free-wheeling, anarchic spirit of the text. It’s a toad-ally great opportunity to see this rarity in the froggy flesh.

By Ilana Lucas
Jeff Lillico as Ralph with Yoshie Bancroft as Mitsue in 'Forgiveness.' iPhoto caption: Jeff Lillico as Ralph with Yoshie Bancroft as Mitsue in 'Forgiveness.' Photo by David Hou.

REVIEW: Stratford Festival’s Forgiveness tells a deeply personal story on a sprawling scale

Presented in an increasingly tense political moment, Forgiveness resonates on a level that is part reflection, part warning.

By Charlotte Lilley
Jaime Lujan in 'Reina.' iPhoto caption: Jaime Lujan in 'Reina.' Photo by Eden Graham.

REVIEW: Documenting seven Toronto indie shows, from Factory Theatre to the Tranzac Club and beyond

I’ve started writing brief reviews of Toronto productions Intermission isn’t otherwise covering, and stowing them away until I collect enough to publish in a batch. And now here I am, with seven.

By Liam Donovan