Categorizing this post as “Stuff” since I wanted to mention two movies and a play I saw recently: Jane Eyre, Water for Elephants and The Cosmonaut’s Last Message to the Woman He Once Loved in the Former Soviet Union.
The two films are period piece stories of main characters facing some serious tragedies, and struggling through further trials and tribulations in their quest for love. Jane Eyre is the most recent film adaptation of the famous Charlotte Bronte novel, featuring Mia Wasikowska as Jane and Michael Fassbender as Rochester; it also features Judi Dench as Mrs. Fairfax, Sally Hawkins as Mrs. Reed and Jamie Bell as St. John Rivers (Bell was Billy Elliot in the movie version). Water for Elephants is also based on a novel, by Canadian Sara Gruen, and stars Robert Pattinson, Reese Witherspoon, Christoph Waltz and Hal Holbrook (he and Pattinson play the same character in different times). Nice adaptations both – and I’ve always been a sucker for hardship and struggles in the search for true love. And, even more so, the role that chance and fate seemingly play in the characters’ journeys.
The most mind-blowing case of synchronicity and simpatico in the search for connection (and love), though, is Can Stage’s production of Cosmonaut, by Scottish playwright David Greig and directed by Jennifer Tarver – now onstage at the Bluma Appel Theatre at the St. Lawrence Centre. Characters, relationships, even bits of dialogue and objects, cross over time and space. A very fine cast featuring Fiona Byrne and David Jansen – I’m a particular fan of Byrne – and a relatively minimalist but clever, and magical, set. Two cosmonauts lost and forgotten in space grapple with each other while trying to communicate with Earth, where a husband and wife struggle to connect in a disintegrating marriage – all told in 42 very short scenes.
Added bonus the night I saw it (they’re doing pre-show chats with production folks before all Friday night performances, I believe): an introduction to the play from assistant director Birgit Schreyer Duarte, hosted by Joanne Williams (who works at Can Stage and is also a member of Alumnae Theatre).
Also, check out the interview with actor Fiona Byrne by NOW Magazine: http://www.nowtoronto.com/stage/story.cfm?content=180126








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