Oakville Beaver, 16 Jun 2022, p. 33

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33 | O akville B eaver | T hursday,June 16,2022 insidehalton.com 25+ Years Experience 100% Canadian Made Cabinetry Quality Craftsmanship • Custom Made Kitchen & Bathroom Cabinetry • Closet Systems • Entertainment Units • Basement Renovations • Full Renovations & More! Visit Our 6,000 sq.ft. Design Centre: Units 2-3, 333 Wyecroft Rd.,Oakville 905.844.3332 | www.aromakitchens.ca • info@aromakitchens.ca Create Your Dream Look www.adamswindowcleaning.ca ADAMS WINDOW CLEANING & HOME MAINTENANCE Eavestrough/Gutter cleaning/repair. Deck and fence repair. 647.624.8755 Call or text for an estimate Located in Toronto's East End, Coal Mine Thea- tre is a tiny little space known for telling stories which are anything but. Coal Mine's first project back from the pandemic, Annie Baker's cerebral "The Antipodes," has been a hit with critics and audi- ences alike, and I know I'm already counting down the days until the company's next show. Playwright Lisa D'Amour's "Detroit" takes a suburban American summer fête and runs amok with it: it's a barbe- cue I'm more than a little eager to attend. HAMILTON: "Old Stock: A Refugee Love Story" at Theatre Aquarius, July 27 to Aug. 13, $55+ Hannah Moscovitch is one of Canada's most cele- brated playwrights, her prolific "Old Stock" one of the country's most inven- tive plays. Featuring musi- cian Ben Caplan as the cap- tivating Wanderer, "Old Stock" follows two Roma- nian Jews making the jour- ney to Canada in 1908. Weaving together music, humour, and poignant sto- rytelling, Moscovitch's deeply personal play is a modern classic, and with Caplan at its forefront, I can't imagine a better way to spend a summer day at the theatre. NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE: Shaw Festival, various programming year-round, $28+ Stop by Niagara-on-the- Lake for some wine, then stick around for this year's Shaw programming. The Jackie Maxwell Studio Theatre lineup, in particu- lar, looks promisingly in- novative: 2018 Pulitzer fi- nalist "Everybody" by Branden Jacobs-Jenkins takes an early modern mo- rality play and turns it on its head, while Keith Bark- er's "This Is How We Got Here," produced in co-pro- duction with Native Earth Performing Arts, explores the nuance and contradic- tion of grief. Over in the Royal George Theatre, Johnna Wright and Patty Jamieson's play "Gaslight" runs through Oct. 8 -- it's an excellent piece of writ- ing, and there's no time like the present to learn where the phrase "gaslighting" first originated. TORONTO: SummerWorks Festival, Aug. 4-14, $0+ I'll be finishing the warm season strong at To- ronto's SummerWorks Festival, a beloved plat- form for emerging and es- tablished artists alike. Though this year's Sum- merWorks programming remains under wraps, the festival has historically been a consistently strong forum for new writing and performance from Toronto artists. In collaboration with the City of Toronto's ArtworxTO: Toronto's Year of Public Art 2021-2022 initiative, this year's Sum- merWorks lineup has also expanded to include large- scale public art installa- tions alongside public per- formances and workshops. SummerWorks is a labora- tory; a playground; an in- cubator. It's everything at once -- and a fantastic way to finish out one of South- ern Ontario's most promis- ing summer seasons of the- atre ever. WHAT'S ON Continued from page 32 With warmer weather comes a powerful new season of theatre in Ontario. Toronto Star photo illustration SHAW'S PROGRAMMING 'PROMISINGLY INNOVATIVE'

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