RHUBARB 2020 !!!
interviews with some of the rhubarb artists
________________________________
To All My Past, Present, and Future Lovers...
I'm Sorry
February 19-22
8:00pm
in the Chamber
Nickeshia Garrick lays it all bare and
offers up
an apology for herself in this
solo dance theatre
piece.
Nickeshia Garrick / choreographer,
writer,
director
+ performer
Kevin Ormsby / mentor
I'm Sorry
February 19-22
8:00pm
in the Chamber
Nickeshia Garrick lays it all bare and
offers up
an apology for herself in this
solo dance theatre
piece.
Nickeshia Garrick / choreographer,
writer,
director
+ performer
Kevin Ormsby / mentor
What attracts you to the Rhubarb Festival as a venue for your particular work?
What attracts me to Rhubarb as a venue for my work is the fact that it is a festival for experimental new works. I have certain liberties I wouldn't normally have if I were to present this work (the way I envision it) elsewhere.
Describe your performance/play in 50 words or less (or more), and could you share a favourite moment or even a quote from the piece you are presenting at Rhubarb?
My piece in 50 words or less...A revealing look into my apology to past, present and future lovers.
What are the greatest challenges of presenting at Rhubarb?
This is the first time I'm presenting at Rhubarb, but a challenge I could forsee is the audience not connecting to my work.
Could you define your work at Rhubarb as performance or theatre or any other performing arts genre?
My work at Rhubarb I would define as Dance Theatre.
Is there something about your performance/play at Rhubarb that you feel is the primary idea that you are trying to get across/share with your audiences?
The primary idea of my piece that I'm trying to get across is that relationships can be painful and ugly, but we're all accountable.
What do you think of Rhubarb as a perennial vegetable? Do you prefer Rhubarb Pie of Rhubarb Crisp? Or is Rhubarb something you prefer to avoid unless it comes in the form of a theatre/performance festival?
I definitely love me some Rhubarb Strawberry pie!!!
How queer is your work?
Well, I'm gay, so it's automatically queer in my mind.
Nickeshia Garrick (she/they)
BFA, RMF® | Dancer | Singer |
Actor | Personal Trainer|
Movement Teacher
BFA, RMF® | Dancer | Singer |
Actor | Personal Trainer|
Movement Teacher
__________________________________
The Parasite
February 12-15
8:30pm (9:30pm on Feb 12)
in the Cabaret
Through mask, burlesque, fringe, pompoms, and more,
two performers delve into what it means for their queer
bodies to create, gestate, and nurture.
Jay Northcott / creator + performer
Alisha Van Wieren / creator + performer
Jay Northcott / creator + performer
Alisha Van Wieren / creator + performer
Our work is new, experimental in form and highly visual. Rhubarb allows us - no encourages us - to really dedicate ourselves to this experimentation. There is a big focus on process rather than product which makes us feel that we can make brave choices without fear of “failure”. This is how theatre, performance and art should be as it allows audiences and performers to grow together!
Describe your performance/play in 50 words or less (or more), and could you share a favourite moment or even a quote from the piece you are presenting at Rhubarb?
Our performance combines highly visual/tactile elements (including mask, fringe and pompoms) with original sound design and live performance to delve into what it means for our queer bodies to create, gestate, and nurture.
A quote: “I want to, but I can’t. I can but I don’t want to.”
What are the greatest challenges of presenting at Rhubarb?
Short change over in between shows! We make quite the mess and we’ve only have 5 minutes to clean up before the next act. Luckily the festival provides a great team to help us with this!
Could you define your work at Rhubarb as performance or theatre or any other performing arts genre?
Both Jay and I are trained in theatre but we also both consider ourselves interdisciplinary artists. I would say this piece takes a mesh of various elements - visual art, mask work, movement, burlesque, visual art, sound design - and mixes it all up in one package.
What do you think of Rhubarb as a perennial vegetable? Do you prefer Rhubarb Pie of Rhubarb Crisp? Or is Rhubarb something you prefer to avoid unless it comes in the form of a theatre/performance festival?
I love rhubarb from the garden. It’s great as a rhubarb crisp, in smoothies and pies... definitely it’s best form is as a performance festival!
How queer is your work?
V. queer and it gets queer-er every damn day.
Eat Me
February 12-15
8:00pm (9:00pm on Feb 12)
in the Cabaret
A womxn indulges in her endless taste for cake & capitalism. Come hungry; it’s gonna be nasty.
Desirée Leverenz / the conceiver and the body
February 12-15
8:00pm (9:00pm on Feb 12)
in the Cabaret
A womxn indulges in her endless taste for cake & capitalism. Come hungry; it’s gonna be nasty.
Desirée Leverenz / the conceiver and the body
What attracts you to the Rhubarb Festival as a venue for your particular work?
I love Rhubarb because it is filled with a bunch of artists that are doing really wild work that feels like it belongs on the periphery of all other ar festivals, but at Rhubarb, the periphery is the main subject.
Describe your performance/play in 50 words or less (or more), and could you share a favourite moment or even a quote from the piece you are presenting at Rhubarb?
My piece is about the white patriarchal world, and the cycle of consumption it traps womxn into: we consume things so that we can become more consumable.
I don't talk much in my piece, but I love nasty, sexy, foody quotes so my favourite would probably be eat me ;)
What are the greatest challenges of presenting at Rhubarb?
My piece depends a lot on the audience, and also my stomach. I eat a lot of cake, and my body can take that differently on different days. So both the audience, and I are experiencing something new, together, every time!
Could you define your work at Rhubarb as performance or theatre or any other performing arts genre?
I like the term performance, because it is so broad, and really we are always performing. I'm also really interested in shaking up form, not really being performance art, not really an installation, not really theatre, I feel like I live in the inbetween of everything.
Is there something about your performance/play at Rhubarb that you feel is the primary idea that you are trying to get across/share with your audiences?
I don't think I have a primary message or idea, but I am interested in audience reaction and unpacking that. I think that all responses, interpretations, and opinions are right about my art!
What do you think of Rhubarb as a perennial vegetable? Do you prefer Rhubarb Pie of Rhubarb Crisp? Or is Rhubarb something you prefer to avoid unless it comes in the form of a theatre/performance festival?
I actually had rhubarb growing in my backyard as a kid, and once it was ready, we would eat it by sucking on it, and dipping it in a cup of sugar. In the autobiography of my life, that was a very good foreshadowing moment for my 2020 Rhubarb experience haha!
How queer is your work?
The queerest performance, with the queerest queerdo performing.
Desirée Leverenz, MFA
She/Her
Bachelor of Arts in Drama Honours
Master of Fine Arts in Theatre
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