Freelance 1991-1999

After the June 1990 Hijacking of the Canadian Stage Company I was eager to return home to Montreal. A period of struggling to survive by my wits followed. First up was going back to Moscow and opening Midsummer Night’s Dream in Russian at the Pushkin in Moscow. This is pretty well covered in Hot Ice my director’s diary about staging Shakepeare in Moscow. Dream ran for eleven years in repertory at the Pushkin. Back in Canada, with playwright Douglas Rodger we upgraded The Tivoli, the old Vaudeville House in Hamilton, and together we produced the world premiere of his play How Could You Mrs. Dick? This was one of the “lost” plays from the cancelled Canadian Stage Company season after the high-jacking. A season cancelled ostensibly because the Board was worried about ticket sales for a season of new Canadian plays. Irony is that our run of Mrs. Dick in Hamilton and the subsequent run at the Winter Garden Theatre in Toronto sold more single tickets for that one play than the entire cobbled-together replacement Canadian Stage season post-highjacking!!! I then directed a few plays free-lance, including the premiere of Sharon Pollock play, Fair Liberty’s Call, at Stratford, Ontario. The first draft of a television script that became Mama’s Boys, starring Graham Greene and Tom Jackson that was presented nationally by Global TV. I wrote many articles for a variety of newspapers. Even was a literary columnist for the Montreal Gazette. Conceived and was the driving force behind getting Mordecai Richler to permit himself to be roasted at the Ritz Carleton as a fundraiser for English-language writers and theatres. It was also during this period that I wrote and directed a number of radio drama’s for CBC including On Guard For Thee my docu-drama about the Canadian Airborne Regiment in Somalia that ended up winning national broadcast awards. After directing L’Affaire Tartuffe and then Sliding In All Directions for Theatre 1774, one morning the Artistic Director, Marianne Ackerman phoned me up and asked if I wanted to inherit her theatre. She had had enough. I jumped at her generous suggestion. In 1999, Theatre 1774 became Infinithéâtre.


One of my adventures as I was transitioning home to Montreal after the CanStage highjacking, was to send a bottle of nice scotch to Mordecai Richler and ask him if he was prepared to let himself be roasted for a good cause. He jumped at the idea. The result was a great evening in the Ballroom of the Ritz-Carleton Hotel with Peter Gzowski as the MC and a bunch of Richler cronies, including son Jakob, giving Mordecai a rough ride in great good humour. The sold-out event raised about $27K for English-language Québec writers…. A good chunk of which, natch, ended up going to the R-C Hotel itself to pay the expenses. If you want check it out, head for side B, where Jakob Richler has a great go at his dad, and then Mordecai himself swings back at everyone.


How Could You Mrs Dick

-Play by Douglas Rodger

TV ad for the Hamilton production

CHCH TV News clip on the reopening of the Tivoli Theatre with Mrs. Dick

CHCH News clip on the demolition of the Tivoli


Martin Chuzzlewitt

 

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Productions

  • Tartuffe

  • Fair Liberty's Call

  • Midsummernight's Dream at the Pushkin Theatre

    Directing Shakespeare in Russian just as the Soviet Union is metamorphosing into the Russian Republic. Dream ran for 11 years in repertory at the Pushkin.