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  • Jack Burrill Makes Shakespeare Feel Dangerous Again
    Jan 27 2026

    About This Episode:

    In this episode of Stageworthy, host Phil Rickaby speaks with Jack Burrill, actor, director, acting coach, and Artistic Director of Unchained Theatre. What begins as a shared nerd-out over Shakespeare quickly becomes a wide-ranging conversation about why these 400-year-old plays still matter - and how indie theatre is often where their most exciting reinventions happen.

    This episode explores:

    • Founding Unchained Theatre during the pandemic

    • Modernizing classic texts without losing their soul

    • Performing Shakespeare in small, intimate spaces

    • Why indie theatre matters in Toronto’s ecosystem

    • Theatre as an irreplaceable live experience

    • And much more!

    Guest: 🎭 Jack Burrill

    Jack Burrill is an actor, a director, a writer, teacher and the proud Artistic Director and co-founder of Unchained Theatre. As Jack has taken part in productions that he has both acted in and directed (often at the same time.) Some of Jack’s credits include Denise Shepard (Laramie Project), Wargrave (And Then There Were None), Sir Toby Belch (Twelfth Night), Titania/Theseus (Midsummer Night's Dream), Falstaff (Henry IV Part 1). And recently Jack will be Claudius in Hamlet. Jack was recently nominated by Broadway World for his performance as Titania/Thesus in Thaumatrope Theatres production of Midsummer Nights Dream. Jack was trained at Centennial CollegeTheatre Arts and Performance program. As well as being trained in both the Grotowski method by Ara Glenn-Johanson and the Michael Chekhov Technique by Rena Polley and Lionel Walsh, with an aspiration to be trained in more of the legendary practitioner’s methods. He hopes to continue his work and research by producing Shakespeare and learning the different approaches to the craft of acting to pass it on to future generations of actors and artists.

    Connect with Jack Burrill & Unchained Theatre:

    📸 Instagram: @jackieb123_______

    📸 Instagram: @unchained_theatre_company___

    Support Stageworthy: If you love the show, consider supporting on Patreon: patreon.com/stageworthy Patrons get early access to episodes, participate in conversations about topics to cover, and more. With three backer levels: $2, $7, and $20.

    Subscribe & Follow: 🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Podchaser | Amazon Music | iHeart Radio 📺 Watch on YouTube – Like, subscribe & hit the notification bell!

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    54 Min.
  • The Arts Are a National Defence Strategy
    Jan 24 2026

    About This Episode:

    In this solo Stageworthy episode, host Phil Rickaby takes a deep dive into the idea of “nation-building” — and why Canada keeps getting it wrong. Sparked by post-election rhetoric around pipelines, railways, housing, and AI infrastructure, Phil argues that these are construction projects, not nation-building ones. True nation-building, he suggests, happens through culture — and specifically through the arts.

    Drawing on Canadian history, from the Massey Commission to the creation of the Canada Council for the Arts, Phil traces how arts funding was once understood as a form of national defence — a way of protecting Canadian identity from cultural erasure. He contrasts that history with today’s fixation on GDP, ROI, and “bankable” outcomes, and asks what happens to a country when its soul is treated as discretionary.

    This episode is part rant, part cultural history lesson, and part call to action — urging Canada to remember that theatres, music, film, and storytelling don’t just entertain us. They define us.

    Support Stageworthy: If you love the show, consider supporting on Patreon: patreon.com/stageworthy Patrons get early access to episodes, participate in conversations about topics to cover, and more. With three backer levels: $2, $7, and $20.

    Subscribe & Follow: 🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Podchaser | Amazon Music | iHeart Radio 📺 Watch on YouTube – Like, subscribe & hit the notification bell!

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    22 Min.
  • Gabrielle Martin is Programming the World for Local Audiences
    Jan 20 2026

    About This Episode:

    In this episode of Stageworthy, host Phil Rickaby sits down with Gabrielle Martin, Artistic Director of Vancouver’s PuSh International Performing Arts Festival. Gabrielle discusses her unconventional path into arts leadership, the realities of curating large-scale interdisciplinary work, and the responsibility of presenting challenging, global performance within a local context.

    This episode explores:

    • Gabrielle’s journey into arts leadership and festival direction

    • The role of PuSh Festival within Vancouver’s cultural ecosystem

    • Curating interdisciplinary and international performance

    • Audience engagement and accessibility in contemporary performance

    • The realities of producing large-scale work in Canada

    • Care, sustainability, and leadership in the performing arts

    • And much more!

    Guest: 🎭 Gabrielle Martin

    Gabrielle Martin is a cultural producer and live arts curator practicing transformative experiential design in one of society’s few remaining ritual spaces. Her work prioritizes embodied criticality, imagination, pluralism, and risk. It centres the body, and is framed by social and political urgencies.

    Gabrielle has a BFA in Contemporary Dance from Concordia University (Montréal), a Certificate in Dramaturgy from the Centre National des Arts du Cirque (Châlons-en-Champagne), and an MA in Arts and Cultural Management from Rome Business School.

    Recently, Gabrielle has participated on curatorial and selection juries for Denmark’s CPH Stage International Days, England’s Horizon Showcase, and Canada’s Governor General’s Performing Arts Award in Dance. Before joining PuSh in 2021, she worked as Festival Manager with the Vancouver International Dance Festival. Prior to working in arts management, Gabrielle performed over 1,400 shows internationally with Cirque du Soleil’s TORUK – The First Flight and Cavalia, participated in choreographic residencies in Belgium, Sweden and France, and presented her work in the UK, US, and across Canada.

    Connect with Gabrielle:

    🌐 Website: https://pushfestival.ca/

    📷 Instagram: @pushfestival

    Support Stageworthy: If you love the show, consider supporting on Patreon: patreon.com/stageworthy Patrons get early access to episodes, participate in conversations about topics to cover, and more. With three backer levels: $2, $7, and $20.

    Subscribe & Follow: 🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Podchaser | Amazon Music | iHeart Radio 📺 Watch on YouTube – Like, subscribe & hit the notification bell!

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    52 Min.
  • Producing Is a Relationship Job with Reid Vanier
    Jan 13 2026

    About This Episode:

    In this episode of Stageworthy, host Phil Rickaby sits down with theatre producer and arts leader Reid Vanier for a candid conversation about producing, leadership, and building sustainable theatre ecosystems. Reid reflects on his path into the industry, the realities of working behind the scenes, the theatre scene in Whitehorse, and the evolving responsibilities of producers in today’s cultural landscape.

    This episode explores:

    • Reid’s journey into theatre producing and arts leadership
    • Balancing artistic ambition with organizational sustainability
    • Leadership styles within theatre companies and cultural institutions
    • Supporting artists while managing limited resources
    • The evolving landscape of Canadian theatre production
    • Collaboration, trust, and communication in creative teams
    • And more!

    Guest: 🎭 Reid Vanier

    Reid (he/him) is a director and actor originally from Ontario but now based in Whitehorse, Yukon. He was worked on and off-stage at numerous theatres and arts organizations in Canada, including the Stratford Festival and Shaw Festival, and currently serves as the President of the Guild Hall in Whitehorse. Reid is also an award-winning podcaster and comedian.

    Selected directing: The Weir, Monty Python's Spamalot, Mustard (The Guild), Fiddler on the Roof (Yukon Theatre for Young People), Matt & Ben (Hot Cousin Productions), An Ideal Husband (KW Youth Theatre), The Real Inspector Hound, Hamlet, Romeo & Juliet (Standard Deviation Theatre).

    Selected acting: Two Gentlemen of Verona (Yukon Theatre for Young People), Good Night Desdemona Good Morning Juliet (The Guild), The Three Musketeers, Henry V (Stratford Festival), La Persistencia, The Dumb Waiter, On the Harmfulness of Tobacco (Standard Deviation Theatre).

    Selected workshops: Klondike: The Musical (The Guild), Body 13 (The MT Space).

    Training: University of Waterloo.

    Support Stageworthy: If you love the show, consider supporting on Patreon: patreon.com/stageworthy Patrons get early access to episodes, participate in conversations about topics to cover, and more. With three backer levels: $2, $7, and $20.

    Subscribe & Follow: 🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Podchaser | Amazon Music | iHeart Radio 📺 Watch on YouTube – Like, subscribe & hit the notification bell!

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    53 Min.
  • From Teacher to Director to Theatre Critic with Joe Szekeres
    Jan 6 2026

    In this episode of Stageworthy, host Phil Rickaby sits down with Joe Szekeres, founder of Our Theatre Voice, for an in-depth conversation about theatre criticism, community theatre, and why live performance still matters. As Stageworthy enters its tenth year, this discussion reflects on the changing landscape of Canadian theatre journalism, the responsibilities of reviewers, and the importance of constructive, thoughtful criticism.

    This episode explores:

    • Joe’s path from community theatre to theatre criticism

    • The founding and philosophy behind Our Theatre Voice

    • The value of training and mentorship in theatre criticism

    • Constructive criticism versus negativity

    • Funding pressures and their impact on production choices

    • Championing Canadian stories and homegrown work

    • And much more!

    Guest: 🎭 Joe Szekeres

    Actor/director for 30+ years in the local community theatre scene in Durham Region. Retired 33-year Catholic school educator. Founder, Editor and Publisher of OUR THEATRE VOICE. I had also written for Onstage Blog (founder: Chris Peterson) until 2020, when COVID hit and Onstage changed its formatting. Chris encouraged me to go out on my own.

    Connect with Joe:

    🌐 Website: www.ourtheatrevoice.com

    📸 Instagram: @ourtheatrevoice

    Support Stageworthy: If you love the show, consider supporting on Patreon: patreon.com/stageworthy Patrons get early access to episodes, participate in conversations about topics to cover, and more. With three backer levels: $2, $7, and $20.

    Subscribe & Follow: 🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Podchaser | Amazon Music | iHeart Radio 📺 Watch on YouTube – Like, subscribe & hit the notification bell!

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    50 Min.
  • Toronto Theatre Year in Review with A View From the Box and The Cup
    Dec 16 2025

    About This Episode:

    In this special roundtable episode of Stageworthy, host Phil Rickaby is joined by theatre critics and podcasters Janine Marley (A View From the Box) and Ryan Borochovitz (The Cup / Cup of Hemlock Theatre) for an in-depth conversation reflecting on the past year in Toronto theatre.

    Connect with Janine and A View From the Box:

    🌐 Website: aviewfromthebox.net

    📸 Instagram: @avuefromthebox

    🦋 Bluesky: @aviewfromthebox.bsky.social

    __

    Connect with Ryan and The Cup of Hemlock Podcast:

    📸 Instagram: @cohtheatre

    🔴 Youtube: @cupofhemlocktheatre2934

    Support Stageworthy: If you love the show, consider supporting on Patreon: patreon.com/stageworthy Patrons get early access to episodes, participate in conversations about topics to cover, and more. With three backer levels: $2, $7, and $20.

    Subscribe & Follow: 🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Podchaser | Amazon Music | iHeart Radio 📺 Watch on YouTube – Like, subscribe & hit the notification bell!

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    1 Std. und 10 Min.
  • Stephanie Malek
    Dec 9 2025

    About This Episode:

    This week, Phil Rickaby welcomes Stephanie Malek, performer and producer, to discuss the magic of improvised musicals, the history of Bad Dog Theatre, and the power of finding community through art. Stephanie, who is involved in the show Holiday, an improvised musical, shares insights into the rigorous training required for musical improv, the importance of nurturing other artists, and more!

    In this episode:

    • Holiday, the Improvised Musical at Factory Theatre

    • Bad Dog Theatre, Improv and the community

    • The Fandom Show Podcast

    • And more!

    Guest: 🎭 Stephanie Malek

    Stephanie Malek (she/her) is a producer, performer, fangirl, comedian, singer, and all around nerd from Toronto, ON. She is known for producing and performing in the Dora-nominated improvised musical Holiday! An Improvised Musical! She can be found performing at comedy venues around Toronto and the world at festivals such as JFL, New Zealand Improv Fest, and Toronto Sketchfest.

    Connect with Stephanie and Bad Dog Theatre:

    🌐 Website: baddogtheatre.com

    📸 Instagram: @baddogtheatre | @stephanie_malek

    Support Stageworthy: If you love the show, consider supporting on Patreon: patreon.com/stageworthy Patrons get early access to episodes, participate in conversations about topics to cover, and more. With three backer levels: $2, $7, and $20.

    Subscribe & Follow: 🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Podchaser | Amazon Music | iHeart Radio 📺 Watch on YouTube – Like, subscribe & hit the notification bell!

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    1 Std. und 9 Min.
  • Kanika Ambrose
    Dec 2 2025

    About This Episode:

    This week on Stageworthy, host Phil Rickaby welcomes Kanika Ambrose, an award-winning playwright, librettist, and screenwriter whose work spans theatre, opera, and television. Kanika shares her path from writing poetry as a child to becoming one of Canada’s most exciting multidisciplinary storytellers, known for blending sharp social insight with bold, imaginative worlds. She discusses her three plays in production right now: our place, at Black Theatre Workshop, The Christmas Market at Crow's in association with b Current and Studio 180 Theatre and Moonlight Schooner at Canadian Stage, in association with Necessary Angel and Tarragon Theatre.

    This episode explores:

    • Kanika’s creative beginnings and path to becoming a playwright

    • Finding her voice in writing after initially pursuing acting

    • How motherhood reshaped her creative life

    • Creating space for Black women and Caribbean stories in Canadian theatre

    • and much more!

    Guest: ✍️ Kanika Ambrose

    Kanika Ambrose is a two-time Dora Award winning playwright, opera librettist, and screenwriter. Her play “our place,” was first produced by Cahoots Theatre and Theatre Passe Muraille in November 2022 and received a Dora Mavor Moore Award for “Outstanding New Play” in 2023. She received a second “Outstanding New Play” Dora in 2024 for “Truth” which premiered at Young People’s Theatre earlier the same year.

    Moonlight Schooner Tickets: 🎟️ https://my.canadianstage.com/overview/9330

    Support Stageworthy: If you love the show, consider supporting on Patreon: patreon.com/stageworthy Patrons get early access to episodes, participate in conversations about topics to cover, and more. With three backer levels: $2, $7, and $20.

    Subscribe & Follow: 🎧 Listen on Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Podchaser | Amazon Music | iHeart Radio 📺 Watch on YouTube – Like, subscribe & hit the notification bell!

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    44 Min.