REVIEW: Things get crazy in Stratford’s Love’s Labour’s Lost — and that’s a good thing
Nearly every moment of Love’s Labour’s Lost sparkles.
Nearly every moment of Love’s Labour’s Lost sparkles.
It’s fun (even though it’s a tragedy), easy to follow, and overall, the performances keep the production alive and energetic without sacrificing truth and objective for speed and volume.
These are the three plays and concerts that will make up Soulpepper’s Summer 2018 season.
The set is all white: floor, walls, chairs, wastepaper basket, and watercooler, as if we are in a cold, sterile science lab examining a specimen of marriage and grief.
If someone tells me that a play is “edgy” I usually have to fight the urge to roll my eyes.