Archive for Leah Rumack


Scene

Toronto culture picks: A trio of dance performances, and the importance of to-do lists

1 Comment

Dream of the Red Chamber

I’m going to have to polish off my Arty Girl Outfits–it’s a big week in Toronto for dance and theatre and I want to look “thinky.”

First up is a two-nights only performance of Dream of the Red Chamber from the Beijing Friendship Dance Company. The 80-dancer, 800-costume extravaganza is a sure-to-be pretty Chinese Romeo and Juliet tale combining classical ballet and traditional Chinese dance (sonycentre.ca). Catch the performance at the shiny new Sony Centre for the Performing Arts October 12 to 13.

Next up is the kickoff to the World Stage 2010-2011 performance series at Harbourfront with the internationally acclaimed Out of Context – for Pina, from the award-winning Belgian Les ballets C de la B at Fleck Dance Theatre, October 13 through 16 (harbourfrontcentre.com/worldstage1011).

And on Thursday, October 14 I’ll be adding some words to the mix with the opening of the Governor General award-winning play The List starring Allegra Fulton, a Nightwood Theatre production at Berkeley Street Theatre (nightwoodtheatre.net) about a woman who overlooks one item on her to-do list with dramatic results.

Phew. I feel more cultured already.

On now:

Two large foam blocks provide the set and metaphor for Toronto contemporary dance company ProArteDanza’s first “evening-length” production, in between (from $22, until October 9, Fleck Dance Theatre, Harbourfront Centre, 416-973-4000, harbourfrontcentre.com), which is themed around instability, transition, crisis: the moving of one state to the next. The eight athletic, powerful dancers (these are not the reedy sylphs of classical ballet, although those techniques are gorgeously incorporated) make good use of the blocks—they leap onto them and over them, sit and sprawl on them, fall off them. At one point, all the dancers attempt to stand and balance on a single upturned one, chatting loudly about how tricky it is. It’s one of a few warm, light-hearted moments that pepper the show, interspersed with fluid, intense routines infused with more serious, heartfelt emotion. It’s only on until October 9—if you miss it this time, be sure to watch for the company’s next outing.–Rani Sheen


Beauty

Getaway: A spa weekend at The Wauwinet, Nantucket

Comments

Now, knowing my husband and I—city types if there ever were a pair of grumpy people who met at 1:30 a.m. at a dirty after-hours club—you probably would never guess that the charming, low-key island of Nantucket (the less-flashy sister to nearby Martha’s Vineyard) would be the first place we’d honeymoon. But we put on our best seafaring New England, old-money, preppy faces and had a lovely old Americana time. We checked into The Wauwinet (wauwinet.com), a famous seaside retreat nine miles out of town, and well, other than port and cheese in the library at five, there isn’t much to do, so off to the spa I went. Read more »


Scene

The Stay: Fairmont Pacific Rim, Vancouver

Comments

The harbour view at the Fairmont Pacific Rim

The Olympics may be over, but the feverish rash of hotels and restaurants are here to stay in the city that was once all mountains and granola, but is now more known for its vibrant foodie scene and growing list of luxe accommodations. The latest five-star to enter the posh pillow list is the Fairmont Pacific Rim (fairmont.com/pacificrim) where I got to escape to for a night during a recent sojourn on the West Coast. Now, I’m not much of a nature girl, but the first thing that strikes even the most hard-hearted of urbanites is the stunning unobstructed views of the North Shore Mountains, Stanley Park and Coal Harbour. Read more »


Scene » Music

Hot disc: DVAS Society

Comments

Loving the DVAS new album Society (Upper Class Recordings)–out this week. The title track is a splash of funk, a dash of electro and a whole lotta disco. Move over Katy Perry, I’ve found my summer anthem.

Watch this video and more at fashionmagazine.com/music. Plus: Want to be featured on FASHION + Music? Upload your video link and you might just spot your video on our site.


Scene

Culture pick: Love, Loss and What I wore

1 Comment

Louise Pitre, Mary Walsh, Andrea Martin, Sharron Matthews, and Paula Brancati in Love, Loss, and What I Wore. Photography by Cylla von Tiedemann

I confess that when I first got the invite to the Toronto premiere of Love, Loss and What I Wore (Panasonic Theatre, 651 Yonge St., lovelossonstage.ca), I was scared. Awash in bad Vagina Monologues flashbacks (I’m sorry. Hi. That play sucked) and memories of my years as an ever-empowered 1990s feminist undergrad, I was worried that I was in for a long night of cloying female bonding and treacle-y ra ra lady feel-good times. I was very pleasantly  surprised. Read more »


Scene

Books: A portable taste of Brooklyn

Comments

I was in beautiful Brooklyn last weekend, feeling like a Real Live New Yorker for a story you’re going to see in our October issue. Turns out Brooklyn is REALLY REALLY big–a fact that somehow escaped me even though I’ve looked at it on that map thingy in the Manhattan subway a million times. Thank god I had a copy of the Food Lovers’ Guide to Brooklyn by Sherri Eisenberg ($17, Globe Pequot Press) to help me pick restaurants or I would have been wandering the backstreets of Williamsburg begging hipsters for dining advice, which never goes well.


Scene » Music

Hot Disc: Scissor Sisters, “Night Work”

Comments


My iPod, as Little Boots might say, has been stuck on repeat this weekend with Scissor Sisters‘ latest, biggest, gayest dance party. I’m loving their new album Night Work, full of disco-y bangers that you’d hear at 3:47 am (if you were still awake, which I’m not, but I can still pretend!).


Shopping » Daily steal

The daily steal: Fringed shoe accessories, $29

1 Comment

FMsteal1109redshoe_lg

Read more »


Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement