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Final Four Days, Still Eight Plays!

In the final four days of the 2015 NotaBle Acts Theatre Festival, you can still catch eight new plays that are the winners of the ten-minute and one-act categories of the annual playwriting contest.

spaceman 2015 brunThe four winners of the contest’s one act category, always one of the festival’s highlights and a primary focus of NB Acts’ developmental mandate, will be presented as staged readings at Memorial Hall, UNB, from July 29-August 1, 8 PM nightly. Spaceman by Jake Martin (right) is a touching comedy about a woman who is surprised when the space-obsessed father who abandoned her comes back into her life. The Beavercreek Vacancy by Gordon Mihan is an absurd, apocalyptic comedy set in the lobby of a fading motel poised on the brink of a hydro dam that is about to fail in a massive rainstorm. Portrait of a One-Eyed Man by Bruce Allen Lynch is a Russia-set espionage thriller inspired by the real life story of an ex-Soviet agent assassinated in London, and Jolt by Tilly Jackson (below) is a dark drama about a family struggling with mental illness.

jolt 2015 brun

Spaceman and The Beavercreek Vacancy will be performed as a twin-bill on Wed. July 29 and Fri., July 31, with Portrait of a One-Eyed Man and Jolt performed together on July 30 and August 1.

Running daily at noon through Friday, July 31 in Barracks Square, Taking it to the Streets is a production featuring free outdoor lunchtime theatre, staging the four winners of NB Acts 2015 ten-minute playwriting contest. Always popular with audiences and suitable for all ages, this years plays offer an hour of fast-paced, winning comedy. Alexa Higgins’ Bergman Gets Results takes us inside the minds of the members of a hilariously dysfunctional yoga class; Jake Martin’s Someone Gets Shot is a comic thriller that ends with a bang; Jeff Lloyd’s A Curious Incident at the Park in the Daytime (below) makes a bestselling book the possible dealmaker/breaker in a chance romantic encounter; and Gordon Mihan’s Rest in Peace, Mr. Fish is part murder mystery, part bereavement session for four people who love their goldfish way too much, and features a toilet as its central set piece (for obvious reasons..).

curious incident edited
Click the links above for full show, schedule and ticket details, and don’t miss the final action-packed days of the 2015 festival!

NB Acts 2015 Hits the Streets for Week Two

Eight New Plays will Debut Sunday and Monday at the Festival…

..Starting with Street Scenes: Two Site-Specific Plays. Since premiering at the 2011 NB Acts festival, Street Scenes has been an audience favorite, staging new plays in unconventional settings around downtown Fredericton, with the works written specifically for and about those places.the field 2015 donovanThis year’s pairing of plays will be set in the scenic environs of the Green by the St. John River. Alex Donovan’s The Field tells the story of a years-long relationship in the space of fifteen minutes, aided by movement and music. The Field is directed by Jean-Michel Cliche and stars Kat Hall and Alexa Higgins, with original music composed and performed by Caitlin Leonard.

Jon and richard high res 2The second work in this year’s Street Scenes is the stirringly titled Jon and Richard Duel for Honour, by Jean-Michel Cliche (seriously, how could you resist a play called Jon and Richard Duel for Honour?). Featuring a pair of long-lost friends, a couple of swords rummaged from a dumpster, and a cutting, witty commentary on codes of masculinity and honour, Jon and Richard stars Jake Martin and Kevin Belyea.

Performances of Street Scenes: Two Site-Specific Plays will take place on July 26 at 5 PM and at 7:30 on July 27 and 28, with tickets ($10/$7) available on site.

A night of readings at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery (July 26, 7:30) will feature the winner of the 2015 NotaBle Acts High School Playwriting Contest, Kira Smith’s entertaining fairytale sendup The Damsel in Distress Who Saved Herself, and Iago Speaks, a work in progress by the NB Acts’ 2015 Playwright/Dramaturge in Residence, Daniel Macdonald. Originally from PEI but now based at Saskatoon’s largest professional theatre company, Persephone Theatre, Macdonald is an award-winning playwright whose works have been produced widely both nationally and internationally.

someone gets shot 2015 brunOpening on Monday and running daily at noon in Barracks Square, Taking it to the Streets is a production featuring free outdoor lunchtime theatre (July 27-31), staging the four winners of NB Acts’ 2015 ten-minute playwriting contest. Always popular with audiences and suitable for all ages, this year’s plays offer an hour of fast-paced, winning comedy. Alexa Higgins’ Bergman Gets Results takes us inside the minds of the members of a hilariously dysfunctional yoga class; Jake Martin’s Someone Gets Shot is a comic thriller that ends with a bang; Jeff Lloyd’s A Curious Incident at the Park in the Daytime makes a bestselling book the possible dealmaker/breaker in a chance romantic encounter; and Gordon Mihan’s Rest in Peace, Mr. Fish features a toilet as its central set piece (for obvious reasons..).

Depending on the weather, you can slap on some sunscreen and head down to Barracks Square (corner of Carleton and Queen Streets), or, if it’s raining, catch the shows under the tent in the Square. Lawnchairs are available on site, or bring a blanket if you’d like to sit on the grass.

Click the links elsewhere on this site everything else you need to know, and to find out what’s happening later in the week!