
Poems for God was a hilarious one woman show at the Orlando International Fringe Festival. Victoria Watson Sepejak, a Toronto based artist looked like a 10-year-old boy with baggy pants, a yellow jacket which was a bit too big, and a skull cap. Her mannerisms and her petite size made her very convincing as a young boy. People in the audience were throwing things at her on stage. They were not tomatoes, but she made it seem she was devastated any time an audience member managed to hit her. It was a fun interactive show from the moment the audience got settled finding their seats.
For her first sketch, she wanted to go sledding. She brought a black plastic sled on stage and then she saw her father in the audience. Her father was actually a surprised member of the audience. She asked him if he would pull her up the hill while she was in the sled. He agreed and dragged her around on stage. She took delight in every moment and expressed her affection for dad helping her out.
After a quick costume change, she sang about the ideal of womanhood while Belle from Beauty and the Beast was on screen singing about wanting more that her provincial life. One clip kept repeating of a gruff baker yelling at his wife, “Marie, the baguettes, hurry up!!”. Victoria read deep into the ongoing verbal abuse that Marie must have to endure. When repeated over and over, you begin to wonder if more than bread is pounded each day by the baker in this provincial village.
Late in the show, the actress performed as a men’s club dancer. She wore a cheep blonde wig and danced with plenty of twerking. I still couldn’t get over the fact that she still seemed to be 10 years old. The man she had brought on stage to act as her father now was brought on stage to squirt body lotion on her while she acted like she was enjoying the shower as if in Flash Dance. She opened her mouth but thankfully the dad missed the mark getting it in her eye and face instead. Though funny, it also felt very wrong.
This was a very funny hour that twisted ideals of affection, womanhood and sensuality.

The Unbothering set consisted of hundreds of knick knacks hanging on screens at the back of the stage. Post its were pasted in an intricate pattern in an attempt to find order in the chaos. Marie was up against a website design job deadline that she has been putting off. Her boss was losing patience and ready to let her go. She was late on her rent and any time she started to focus on the website another advertiser or debt collector would break her concentration. From all the visual clutter and the attempts to find order in the chaos, it became clear the Marie has ADHD.
This two man show at the Orlando International Fringe Festival was quite hilarious. The show features Ashley Jones and Darren Stevenson using acrobatics, clowning, and physical theater to deconstruct and skewer outdated stereotypes of manhood. To start they asked all the men to stand in the audience. In one point in the play there was to be a call and response, and the men of the audience had to grunt out their response as loudly as they could. The second acrobat was pulled out of the audience making it seem like he was your average man.

The acclaimed one-woman show Private Parts: The Secrets We Keep, was written and performed by female actress and masterful storyteller Joanna Rannelli in Ten10 Brewing at this year’s Orlando International Fringe Festival. Her show was candid, raw and often funny.
Cindy Heen is the Founder and Artistic Director of Emergence Dance based in Orlando Florida. Having sketched Emergence Dance rehearsals in the past, I knew that
I got to sketch Zelda Grey‘s one woman show,
At this year’s Orlando International Fringe Festival, Automatic Orchestra: Just Add Music in the Blue Venue of the Orlando Shakes is an immersive improvisational orchestra where the actors are inspired by the music created by the audience. Entering the venue, there were various methods of making sound in every audience seat. I moved a rattle from my seat over to the next seat. There were kazoos, cooking pans, one of those metal barrels with metal beads wrapped around it, and so much more.
Onwards! presented by Big Empty Barn Productions from Montreal Canada starred Bremner Fletcher Duthie who sang and played instruments while telling stories. Around the stage were a series of lamps which could be activated with foot switches. Each of his variety acts would require different lighting which he initiated with taps of his toes.