
Bella King, Sam Free, Jayce McKenzie and Eli Yaschuk in I Meant What I Said, Teatro Live!, photo by Marc J Chalifoux.
By Liz Nicholls, 12thnight.ca
Can it be coincidence on this, the weekend of International Women’s Day, that it’s your last chance to see …
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… I Meant What I Said, Stewart Lemoine’s first new full-length comedy in seven years, premiering at Teatro Live!. On the eve of her big 3-oh birthday, Dina (Bella King), proofreader and aspiring novelist, takes charge of her own life, and the futures of the people around her. Some characters get the hook; some get revised and edited. It’s on the Varscona stage through Sunday (tickets: teatrolive.com). Check out 12thnight’s preview interview with the playwright here.

Anne of Green Gables, NUOVA Vocal Arts. Supplied photo.
… Anne with an e, the red-haired orphan with the vivid imagination, takes charge of the lives of the people around her, in NUOVA Vocal Arts’ production of Anne of Green Gables, the Canuck musical based on the evergreen 1908 Lucy Maud Montgomery novel. There’s such a wealth of emerging and professional talent available (NUOVA blends them) that director Kim Mattice-Wanat has double- and triple-cast the show. Musical director: Simon Abbott. Through Sunday you can spend time in Avonlea, and hear the country’s most memorable musical ode to ice cream (the Act I closer) in the musical that’s onstage at the Capitol Theatre in Fort Edmonton. It’s a hot ticket, but have a go at eventbrite.ca.

Mrs. Pat’s Kitchen by Jameela McNeil, SkirtsAfire Festival 2026. Photo supplied
… Mrs. Pat’s Kitchen, a featured production at this year’s SkirtsAfire Festival. Jameela McNeil’s play takes us into an immigrant Jamaican family in Edmonton and a fraught mother-daughter relationship as they negotiate cross-cultural and inter-generational currents. It runs through Sunday at the ArtsHub Ortona. Matricia Bauer’s I Am Eagle is a strikingly theatrical Indigenous journey back to an identity and culture lost in the ’60s Scoop — in the form of an animal fantasy. Its final performance at SkirtsAfire is today at Walterdale. Theatre. And The Shoe Project, the Edmonton edition of a national initiative in which immigrant women tell their stories, runs through Sunday at Gateway Theatre. Tickets: skirtsafire.com. Check out 12thnight’s festival preview with artistic producer Amanda Goldberg here.
… shows, both live and digital, at this year’s SOUND OFF Festival, including The MaryRobin Show and Born Between Waves, Juan Man Show, and Oh Mother, Oh Brother, and more. The 10th anniversary edition of the festivities, at the Fringe Arts Barns, ends Sunday. Check out the full schedule, show descriptions, and get tickets, at soundofffestival.com. And the 12thnight festival preview is here.
And hey, it’s your only weekend to see …
Bouée (a buoy or a lifeline in English), a six-actor touring production from Satellite Theatre in Moncton, N.B, portages L’UniThéâtre, Edmonton’s francophone theatre, for the first time across the river to Theatre Network’s Roxy. Céleste Godin’s highly theatrical play has a kind of fantastical, absurdist sci-fi quality to it, with a little cosmological existentialism thrown in: a group of scientists undertake an update on the received notions of humanity’s place in an infinite universe. It runs Friday and Saturday only at the Roxy. Tickets: lunitheatre.ca.
AND ELSEWHERE …
It’s the weekend when the Citadel …
… sets off down the yellow brick road. Yes, they’re off the see the wizard. Previews start Saturday for Thom Allison’s huge-cast production of The Wizard of Oz, the 1987 musical that licenses the Harold Arlen/ E.Y. Harburg tunes from the indelible 1939 movie. Chariz Faulmino stars as Dorothy, of heel-clicking fame, with John Ullyatt as the title eminence, Luc Tellier as the Scarecrow, Hal Wesley Rogers as the Tinman, Alexander Ariate as the Lion, Nadine Whitman as the Wicked Witch of the West. And in the crucial role of Toto, the alternating pair of starry canines Scooby and Koko. It runs through April 12. Tickets: citadeltheatre.com, 780-425-1820.
And this, and every weekend, at the Exchange Theatre (Thursdays through Saturdays till March 28) …
… Rapid Fire Theatre’s The Trial, a completely improvised court case which mines, for laughter, the rich comic chaos potential and general absurdity of The Law and the justice system. Judges, juries, witnesses, defence lawyers, crown prosecutors, court reporters … the possibilities are endless for ingenious improvisers. Tickets: rapidfiretheatre.com.


Playwright/ actor Louise Casemore (Lucky Charm, Un-Dress, Gemini), a bona fide theatre innovator, is unveiling a new play at SkirtsAfire. After six years of gestation, Put Your Lips Together, billed intriguingly as “surreal neon-noir,” breathes its first public air at the festival as a staged reading. Goldberg directs, and explains that it’s based on “interviews with a hundred
Things I Shouldn’t Tell You, premiering at SkirtsAfire 2026, marks the return of the premier Canadian clown Shannan Calcutt to the world of theatre, after two decades on loan (as we Canucks see it) to circus in Las Vegas, with the Cirque du Soleil’s Zumanity and Mad Apple. Fringe audiences love Calcutt from her trilogy of hit plays starring the impulsive romance-seeking clown Izzy (Burnt Tongue, It’s Me — Only Better! and Out Of My Skin). In Things I Shouldn’t Tell You, Calcutt for the first time plays … herself. Her play, full of audience interaction as you might expect, shares personal stories, funny and relatable, about the taboo mysteries of being a mid-life woman, perimenopause included. Stay tuned for a 12thnight interview with Calcutt soon.
By Liz Nicholls, 












By Liz Nicholls,
Ryan herself directs the season’s other musical comedy, Jimmy Buffett’s Escape To Margaritaville (April 13 to June 13, 2027), a 2017 Broadway musical that’s a veritable mantra for de-stressing and escapism, full of Jimmy Buffett hits, puns, outrageous characters, and a demented plot you’ll have to figure our for yourselves. Ah, and also “an erupting volcano,” to challenge the ingenuity of the design team. Ryan calls it “our nod to the ‘lean-into-it ridiculousness of it. No-apologies fun.…kind of a Mamma Mia! meets Rock of Ages!” Musical direction by Jennifer McMillan.
Ring of Fire, a 2006 Broadway musical jukebox journey through the life and career of the Man in Black, tells its story through a song list of some 38 Johnny Cash hits. Rachel Peake, artistic director of the Grand Theatre (and a former associate artistic director at the Citadel), directs the Mayfield production Feb. 2 to April 4, 2027). Ryan was struck, she says, by the staging and musical excitement of Peake’s 2024 Arts Club Theatre production in Vancouver.
For One Night With ABBA, the Mayfield season finale concert tribute (June 29 to Aug. 8, 2027) — leave ’em burning and then you’re gone — Ryan has enlisted the services of playwright and Teatro Live! star Jocelyn Ahlf to write the text, with music direction, arrangements, and orchestration by Jennifer McMillan.














