Q&A with Mike Payette: The Bridge and Black Theatre Workshop’s Discovery Series
Shauntay Grant’s The Bridge is featured at the Black Theatre Workshop’s Discovery Series. Director Mike Payette discusses the production.
Shauntay Grant’s The Bridge is featured at the Black Theatre Workshop’s Discovery Series. Director Mike Payette discusses the production.
Moving to another country doesn’t stop a musician from playing. Egyptian born Karim Terouz found his band in Montreal’s open mic nights.
We talk with Toronto based indie-folk rockers about their upcoming album.
Montreal Rampage recently caught up with local film maker Eric Gaucher to discuss his latest film, “Sing Pedestrian Sing”, that will be screening at the 32 International Festival of Films on Art (FIFA).
Bring your underground-expctations to Peopl’s Comedy and prepare to be pampered. Shows take place in Old Montreal in a classy bar, featuring select comedians.
Jeff Gandell talks about his remount of The Balding, as well as the process of writing and creating the show.
Colin Lalonde, founder and artistic director of Studio Porte Bleue, talks about why he showcases non-traditional theatre works in a non-traditional space in St. Henri.
Long-form bilingual Montreal comedian Derek Seguin is taking St. Patrick’s day back.
Hagar Cygler found 46 pictures of a woman named Hana in a flea market. Cygler then decided to find out who Hana really was.
Julian Stamboulieh started his production company in order to make a web series one day. LARPers the Series is his company’s first production.
Jacy Lafontaine talks about being part of the weekly Blue Dog Motel comedy event.
Natalie Reis challenges viewers with less narrative work while addressing themes about motherhood and women’s role in art history.
Contemporary dance work Coming and Going uses light, spoken word, and movement to create an integrated performance.
McGill’s Tuesday Night Cafe presents Anilouh’s version of the Antigone with Creon as a sympathetic character.
Serafim and Clare follows two artists, a photographer and a dancer, who come together as lovers despite their different backgrounds in Quebec of the 1920s.
The This Many Boyfriends Club are part of a new, young emerging love n’ punk music scene in Montreal that loves guitars and puns about polyamory.
Montreal bookmobile making book about five years on the road as seen from an international, traveling zine library.
Montreal’s first improv mini series set on the American frontier, Wild Heart Acres, begins its four month run now.
You already know how it ends (the full monty, of course), but the fun is watching six lovable, unemployed men learn about themselves while creating a strip tease act.
Joe Bronzi wasn’t going to win the hearts of all the girls as a jock or a model, so he opted for comedy instead.
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