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Showing 1 - 7 of 7 matches in All Departments
Burying Father Tim is a fictional story rooted in the power of the human spirit. Narrated by a doctor who returns to his old neighborhood for the first time in nearly forty years to attend the funeral of his boyhood parish priest, the story blends hilarious accounts of childhood escapades with the timelessly poignant theme of loss. Reminiscences resonate as the story unfolds, evoking laughter in one moment and tugging on heartstrings the next. Whether you attended Catholic school or merely know someone who did, there is a lot of all of us in the story of Father Tim.
Burying Father Tim is a fictional story rooted in the power of the human spirit. Narrated by a doctor who returns to his old neighborhood for the first time in nearly forty years to attend the funeral of his boyhood parish priest, the story blends hilarious accounts of childhood escapades with the timelessly poignant theme of loss. Reminiscences resonate as the story unfolds, evoking laughter in one moment and tugging on heartstrings the next. Whether you attended Catholic school or merely know someone who did, there is a lot of all of us in the story of Father Tim.
In a time when greed is good and money talks, one man has had enough of living in the big, rotten apple. 1986 is coming to an end, the economy is booming, Manhattan looks beautifully white and festive from the back of his private limo. From the outside he seems to have it all, the great job, the money, the clothes, the looks, the women but Toby Robinson is having a crisis of conscience. A typical small town guy who just wanted to make it big in the city but no sooner had his dreams came true he started to see how different dreams where once they became reality.
Napoleon Vs. the Turk is an exciting minute-by-minute drama loosely
based on the real Turk and its match against Napoleon. It was first
performed at the 2006 Toronto Fringe Festival, directed by Luke
Davies. 1809. Napoleon Bonaparte has invaded Austria and is working out
a treaty at Schonbruun Palace. Also visiting Schonbruun is The
Turk, a mechanical man seemingly able to play chess and defeat many
seasoned players. Napoleon, a chess enthusiast, challenges the Turk to a game. But
as Johann Nepomuk Maelzel, the last steward of the famous Turk,
drunkenly recalls, all is not what it seems. Before the match, Maelzel feuds with his love, Lotte, who wants
to stop the match and for Maelzel to give up the Turk. Meanwhile,
the brilliant chess player Allgaier matches wits with defeated
Austrian general Sterzl, in a conflict that could spell disaster
for Napoleon and Maelzel. Author Bio Tom Robertson has written and produced plays in Toronto, Canada,
since graduating from Queen's University in 2002 where he studied
Drama and History. His past work includes collaborating on Ninja Heaven, an 'action
play', at the National Film Board Cinematheque stage in 2005,
Napoleon Vs. The Turk, which was performed at the Toronto Fringe
Festival in 2006, and writing for the production Sit On It, a
monthly live 'sit-com'. He is the winner of the J.C.W. Saxton Prize for Playwriting from
Queen's University for his play, Horses, and won first prize in the
2004 Toronto Fringe Festival 24-hour Playwriting Contest with his
play, Let's Start Over. Tom makes his living as Senior Project Manager for Shaw Communications.
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