THIS IS AN ARCHIVE OF AN EVENT THAT HAS ALREADY HAPPENED.
Audience appreciation and feedback for UNSUNG was heartfelt and passionate. From January 25th until February 12th, they shared with us their thoughts and feelings on how UNSUNG moved them. Here are just a few reviews Workshop West was pleased to receive:
"Run, don't walk to this brilliant piece of theatre. It's risk taking, honest and immersive story telling at its finest...the UNSUNG team have created something that will stick with you long after you've left the building."
“Thank you for fine theatre, excellent storytelling, and great insight to make the stories visible. As the one physician says, being a hero is NOT what all the work and worry and political warring was about - it was about doing one’s job! And their one story represents thousands across the country and elsewhere. Thank you again!”
"It was such a stunningly impactful experience. From the staging, in that I felt like I was in the hospital overhearing conversations, to the demand of the actors to perform in the same way we ask our healthcare providers, to the lack of applause, to the perfect casting. And of course, the stories that we never heard behind it all."
"Such a beautiful and important piece! Thank you for making it happen with such grace and care!"
"I just wanted to give a hug to each actor."
WORLD PREMIERE Produced by Workshop West Playwrights’ Theatre in Partnership with Theatre Yes and Ground Zero Productions
Unsung: Tales From the Front Line
Created by Heather Inglis in collaboration with Darrin Hagen
PRESENTED BY UNITED NURSES OF ALBERTA
“We’re at a really important juncture with health care in Alberta and in Canada,” says Inglis. “It’s essential that the moment and the concern and the changes and the ideas are documented.” - Edmonton Journal Preview
“Something significant happened and it changed our lives forever.” Preview 12thnight.ca
“They’ve been up against it, these workers in a war where they’ve faced death and destruction, and been undermined by their own leaders. / You need to hear from them.” -Review 12thnight.ca
Photos by DB Photographics.
Step inside a series of living portraits
Unsung will celebrate the contributions of Alberta's health care workers in a one-of-a-kind immersive performance event. Drawn from interviews with real Edmontonians, Unsung invites audiences to experience the inspiring stories of the local health care workers who lead us through the pandemic. We invite you to step into this series of living portraits that document the lives and contributions of the people of who risk their own safety to look after ours.
Online Purchases in 3 Tiers:
I’m doing Ok - $25
I’m doing fine. - $33
I’m doing great! - $40
(Tickets at flat fee of $33 at the door)
Ticket Promos:
Previews are pay-what-you-can at the door, or $20 online.
January 31st and February 7th. $20 tickets for health care workers and artists.
Creators
Heather Inglis is a graduate of the National Theatre School of Canada and is an award-winning director, producer, and dramaturg whose career has taken her across the country. In 2019, Heather was nominated for the Playwrights’ Guild of Canada’s Bra D’Or Award, recognizing her support and promotion of Canadian women playwrights. Heather has directed and assistant-directed over 40 productions, many of which have been new Canadian works. Credits include: The Shaw Festival; Citadel Theatre; Workshop West Theatre; Northern Light Theatre; Azimuth Theatre; Theatre Junction; Gordon Tootoosis Nikaniwin Theatre (SK); Live Five (SK); The Doppler Effect Productions (NS); Alberta Playwrights Network; Saskatchewan Playwrights' Centre; Playwrights Atlantic Resource Centre; The Notable Acts Festival (NB) and Universities in Edmonton, Calgary and Saskatoon. Heather has received a Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Arts Award (2014), the Edmonton Artists’ Trust Fund (twice), the Celebration of Women in the Arts Award (twice), and the Telus Courage to Innovate Award (Edmonton). Nine of Inglis’ productions have been nominated for 17 Elizabeth Sterling Haynes Awards, including 7 nominations for Outstanding Independent Production and nominations for Outstanding Director and Outstanding Fringe Director. Heather received a special Sterling Award for Outstanding Innovation in Theatre in 2014. During her time as Artistic Producer for Workshop West, she has directed Here There Be Night (2020), Metronome (2021) and Tell Us What Happened (2022). This December, Heather received Queen Elizabeth II's Platinum Jubilee Medal for her contributions to advancing writers in Alberta.
Darrin Hagen uses verbatim technique to present real life events in plays, stories, essays and documentaries, assembling various narratives and archival sources to make history come alive.
Notable among Hagen’s verbatim-inspired works are the award-winning The Edmonton Queen, which emerged from eulogies created for funerals of Edmonton’s underground royalty during the plague decade; Witch Hunt at the Strand (2016, Workshop West Playwrights’ Theatre), which gathered letters from private archives, media, and court transcripts to present the 1942 gay sex scandal that rocked Edmonton’s theatre community; The Empress & The Prime Minister (2019, Theatre Network), which gathered personal interviews and historic political speeches, media, and debates to tell the story of the decriminalization of homosexuality in 1969; and the extensive Pisces essays for Edmonton City as Museum Project, which weave newly-released police records with eyewitness accounts to illuminate the infamous Pisces Bathhouse Raid of 1981. Most recently he curated / created the acclaimed Guys In Disguise production of The Pansy Cabaret at the 2022 Fringe Festival, gathering and revamping century-old culture from New York’s Pansy Craze era.
He is currently writing and directing two different documentaries on pivotal queer historical events in Alberta.
Content That Provokes
At Workshop West Playwrights’ Theatre, we often create theatre that deals with challenging content.We do believe that theatre should be surprising – it should be exciting, it should create discussion, and it should delve into situations and ideas that are unexpected.
While keeping you and our actors safe, our shows may contain coarse language, emotionally charged scenes, and deal with subjects that may challenge you.Unsung: Tales from the Front Line features short monologues from a variety of health care workers which deal with COVID-19. You are invited to take care of yourself and enter and leave the exhibit on your own time.