I’m premiering a new work, Always Be Closing, next week as part of At The Wrecking Ball V.
Always Be Closing is a bruising, physical, virtuosic solo for Montreal dancer Catherine Larocque. It takes the form of a hardcore sales seminar, putting the audience in the middle of the action.
It has a double musical accompaniment: Alec Baldwin’s testosterone-drenched monologue from David Mamet’s Glengarry Glen Ross, and the virtuoso Presto movement from Samuel Barber’s Violin Concerto.
At The Wrecking Ball is happening at the Lower Ossington Theatre, at 100A Ossington Ave. There are four shows: Thursday February 9th through Saturday February 11th at 8pm, and a matinee on Sunday February 12th at 4pm. Tickets are $15.
The show also features work by eight of Toronto’s leading dance artists. It should be a great night!
Dancers: all ages (9 – 99), male & female, contemporary experience preferred
Traceurs: 18+, male & female
What’s the upshot?
I’m shooting a short film set to Buck 65’s cover of Leonard Cohen’s ‘Who By Fire’, and I’m looking for performers. Read this, watch the video, and if you’re interested, email me and come to the open rehearsal this weekend (Oct 15 / rain date Oct 16).
What’s the concept?
Something based on this concept: http://vimeo.com/30174940 (password is ‘jacob’). There’s a fair bit more info about the concept in the video description.
When?
We’ll be shooting either Saturday Oct 29 or Sunday Oct 30.
Is this a paid gig? How much?
All performers will be paid. We’ve got a bit of support from MuchMusic’s MuchFACT (to make a ‘viral web video’, not a high-budget music video). The plan is to split the funding evenly among all performers and crew, so the exact amount depends, but performers can expect to make between $150 and $200. Like Bravo!FACT, we get the funding upon submission of the finished film, but because it’s a web video, there’s almost no editing; performers can expect to be paid within 30 days of the shoot.
What’s the time commitment?
A half-day shoot (about four hours) and two rehearsals, for a total time commitment of 8-10 hours.
I’m interested. What do I need to do?
- Contact me at jake@jacob-n.com and tell me so. If I haven’t worked or trained with you, please tell me a bit about your training and experience, and if you can, include a link to some video of yourself performing. I’ll send out an email in the next day or two with a time & location for the open rehearsal call and any other details.
- Come to the open rehearsal call this weekend. You’ll need to bring:
- an iPhone / iPod touch (if you don’t have one and can’t borrow one, let me know; I may have some extras). We’ve built a custom microapp to make this concept possible.
- earphones (that will stay in your ears if you move)
- dark-ish clothing that you can move in (sweats are fine, please no capital-D dancewear). Make sure you’ve got a safe pocket for your phone / pod!

A few months ago I got an email from Toronto director Diana Kolpak. I’d heard of Diana’s amazing 2004 clown show, The Gorgonetrevich Corps de Ballet Nationale in “Bethany’s Gate”, though I was unable to see it as I was performing at the time. Diana invited me to collaborate on a show she was working on with actor David Tomlinson, creating video imagery and projections; the connection came through their lighting designer Sharon DiGenova, who I worked with on Bastard Fugue. The script hooked me instantly: it was sexy, contemporary, and brilliantly written.
The last two weeks have been a blur of preparation, as we worked to turn the DeLeon White Gallery (1139 College St. at Dufferin — not on Queen West anymore, despite what Google will tell you!) into a fabulous performance space, with a specially curated exhibition of art from residents and special guests complementing the show. David blogged the process at No Rest for the Wingéd.
The show is a set of three linked monologues based on characters from different mythologies, tracing an arc from falling to taking flight again: Icarus, Lucifer, and Phoenix. We run every night from now ’til next Sunday, May 8th, except for Monday May 3rd. You can get tickets at the door ($20 / $18 students or Equity) or online at Brown Paper Tickets. Tix for next weekend are going fast so come early next week for best availability. It’s hilarious, inspired, and stunningly performed. Come and check it out!
I’ll be premiering a new work at The Chimera Project’s Fresh Blood at 8pm on October 29th, at the Enwave Theatre. Bastard Fugue features the National Ballet of Canada’s Naoya Ebe (at right) and is set to the Fugue from Bach’s Toccata, Adagio, and Fugue in C Major, arranged for mixed percussion. Including cowbell. Bach + cowbell is like chocolate + bacon: two great tastes that go great together! You can buy tickets here.
Bastard Fugue fuses live performance and projection to explore fugal composition with a single dancer. The Bach fugue, originally composed for organ, is stripped of melody and becomes a propulsive rhythmic fundament for a powerful performance. Some preliminary special thanks:
- Naishi (Kamen) Wang of Toronto Dance Theatre for his valuable participation in the creation process;
- The National Ballet School and the National Ballet of Canada for donating rehearsal space;
- Malgorzata Nowacka for the opportunity to show this work;
- Jeff Morris and Robert Stephen for participating in the technical workshop which spawned some of the ideas explored in this work.