Skip to main content

REVIEW: Wildfire at Factory Theatre

int(101865)
/By / Jun 4, 2022
SHARE

At the halfway-point of Wildfire, I was poised to write a different review.

“The parts don’t connect!,” I’d have written, incensed and confused. “The tone is muddled, the quirks in dialogue are unfounded and childish, the characters are flat and undeveloped!” 

But this pearl of a play kept slipping forward, complicating, twisting, unraveling. I was wrong, gloriously so.

Leanna Brodie’s translation of David Paquet’s 2016 Québécois play is sharp and fluid, the language serving as a tool for actors rather than a hurdle to overcome. Soheil Parsa’s direction is confident and sparse. The acting — oh, the acting! — is precise, funny, and endlessly effective.

What is Wildfire actually about, though? There’s no easy answer. Wildfire’s content and its structure are tangled such that explaining either in too much detail will spoil the other. Paquet’s three vignettes are puzzle pieces which interlock gracefully in Wildfire’s eleventh hour: seeing them click in real time is quite the experience.

A family seems caught in a loop of its own traumas, wrestling with destiny and curse. When the play opens, three triplets, Claudia, Claudette, and Claudine, reckon with the memory of an unloving mother. Claudine battles a love for cookies so large it might destroy her (or is it him, or them? The character’s played flawlessly by Paul Dunn). Babies are born, then lost.

And then that abstract, placeless sisterhood burns to a crisp — literally. 

From the ashes emerges a completely unrelated love story — a heartbreaking one. Claudia is now Carol (Zorana Sadiq has taken great care in differentiating the two characters, and has managed to make both likeable in the midst of innumerable quirks), and Claudine is now Callum. Callum’s and Carol’s love is transgressive and sexual — but it’s sweet, too. 

Then that story, too, fades away.

And then there was one. We conclude with Caroline, played by the brilliant and nimble Soo Garay (who portrayed Claudette in the first vignette). Caroline has a type — serial killers — and she feels a primal need to act on her sexual impulses. She does, which results in a baby — three, actually — and the play fades to a close.

Parsa‘s spare approach foregrounds the play, not spectacle or stagecraft. Lighting and set by Kaitlin Hickey and sound by Thomas Ryder Payne are, as such, simple and effective, and never distracting. Parsa has funneled his efforts into the strange little idiosyncrasies of Paquet’s text — the cookies and chocolate dragons of a world otherwise drenched in sadness — and it’s fabulous. The three actors, too, are perfectly calibrated, and each walks the thin line between naturalism and over-the-top silliness, making daring acting choices which push boundaries without pulling focus.

See the play and stick it out — don’t let any first-half confusion get the better of you. Wildfire is a sucker-punch, and its dramaturgy is robust in the extreme: I don’t know if we’ll get anything like it in Toronto again any time soon.


Wildfire runs at Factory Theatre through June 19. Tickets are available here

Aisling Murphy
WRITTEN BY

Aisling Murphy

Aisling is Intermission's former senior editor and the theatre reporter for the Globe and Mail. She likes British playwright Sarah Kane, most songs by Taylor Swift, and her cats, Fig and June. She was a 2024 fellow at the National Critics Institute in Waterford, CT.

LEARN MORE

Comments

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


/
The cast of Flex. Photo by Elana Emer. iPhoto caption: The cast of Flex. Photo by Elana Emer.

REVIEW: Flex delivers a stirring portrait of ambition, girlhood, and loyalty

The train is only as strong as its weakest link — and in Flex, every player on and offstage pulls with heart, grit, wit, and charm.

By Krystal Abrigo
Jake Epstein as Frank and Isabella Esler as Alice in Life After. iPhoto caption: Pictured (L to R): Jake Epstein as Frank, Isabella Esler as Alice. Photo by Michael Cooper.

REVIEW: Britta Johnson’s Life After shimmers in large-scale Mirvish transfer

The show’s tender excavation of grief’s ambiguities hasn’t lost any power in its journey to a bigger house; in fact, it’s clearer than ever.

By Liam Donovan
Kevin Matthew Wong watches a projected video of his grandmother. iPhoto caption: Photo by Jae Yang.

REVIEW: Tarragon’s wonderful Benevolence reflects on diaspora, community, and place

Playwright-performer Kevin Matthew Wong’s script is heartfelt, conversational, and at times poetic, moving effortlessly between heavier moments of grief and lighter moments of joy and humour.

By Charlotte Lilley
Neil D'Souza as Krishna and Anaka Maharaj-Sandhu as Arjuna in Why Not Theatre’s Mahabharata (Shaw Festival, 2023). iPhoto caption: Photo by David Cooper.

REVIEW: Why Not Theatre’s Mahabharata is a glorious theatrical banquet

This extraordinary ensemble of artists has made something truly harmonious, truly epic: a story that speaks to a mythical past, honouring a range of South Asian artistic traditions while also drawing a direct line to where — and who — we are now.

By Naomi Skwarna
Rick Roberts in Feast at Tarragon Theatre. iPhoto caption: Photo by Jae Yang.

REVIEW: Guillermo Verdecchia’s Feast is a fascinating text, but Tarragon’s new production feels hazy

I found the play really resonant and rich and layered. It’s about globalization, privilege, travel, displacement, and inequity, and it brought up many associations and past experiences for me. But I don’t feel that Soheil Parsa’s production fully comes together.

By Karen Fricker, , Liam Donovan
Karen Hines as Pochsy. iPhoto caption: Karen Hines as Pochsy. Photos by Gary Mulcahey.

REVIEW: VideoCabaret’s Pochsy IV is bizarre, vicious, and hilarious

I can confidently say that you don’t have to have a 30-year-plus background with Karen Hines’ clown character Pochsy to quickly understand her mix of oddball conviction, sly wordplay, and bland narcissism.

By Ilana Lucas