Dragon’s Tale

Dragon’s Tale; music by Chan Ka Nin, text by Mark Brownell,  premiered at Harbourfront last night.  It’s a rather clever mash up of two stories which, taken together, address how we face the future without abandoning the past or, alternatively, getting stuck in it.  The first story concerns a young Chinese Canadian woman in Toronto, Xiao Lian, whose widowed father is dying.  She is torn between her desire to “get a life” and his obsessive insistence that the “old ways”, meaning essentially here looking after him, come first.

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Tanya’s Secret

Tanya’s Secret is a queer-trans adaptation of Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin.  It’s a production by Opéra Queens who seem to be a Montreal based group created during the pandemic and doing their first show in Toronto; in this case at the Betty Oliphant Theatre.  Actually it’s not a particularly radical adaptation compared to, say, some of Against the Grain’s transladaptations.  It’s sung in Russian (with some Ukrainian interpolations including a Lysenko art song) with subtitles on screens either side of the stage).  The plot isn’t really changed at all though the ball scene in Act 3 gets a sort of drag queen competition element.  The big change is that some roles are assigned to the “wrong” gender.  Tatiana is sung extremely well and acted even better by Mike Fan.  Catherine Carew is a strongly sung and impressive Gremin doubling as the very different Madame Larina. Christina Yun’s Lensky is ardent and she makes a nice fist of “Kuda, kuda”.  (Who needs tenors?)  Oddly this doesn’t really come across as all that radical.  The necessary transpositions occasionally create the odd awkward high note but it’s very singable and generally well sung.

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