About the Play
Where the Blood Mixes, by Vancouver-based actor and playwright Kevin Loring is a play about survival and reconciliation, full of humour and shrewd observation, Loring’s play is as mythic as it is modern.

Where the Blood Mixes is the story of Floyd, a native man whose daughter was taken into care by social services two decades earlier. Now, as Floyd prepares for a reunion with his child, he must find a way to cope with his guilt – a guilt that is exacerbated by the country’s growing awareness of the abuse of First Nations children in the residential school system.
The Playhouse Theatre Company
The Playhouse Theatre Company, Western Canada’s largest theatre is dedicated exclusively to producing works of the contemporary repertoire. The Playhouse has over 7,300 subscribers and an average of 15,000 patrons per production. A reputation for the highest standards enables the Playhouse to present the very best actors, directors, choreographers, designers and technicians from across Canada.
Previous Posts
Archives
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
Production Shots from Where the Blood Mixes Workshop
Tantoo Cardinal and Billy Merasty

David Ross and Billy Merasty

Billy Merasty and Quelemia Sparrow

Ben Cardinal


Photo Credit: Itai Erdal
posted by Luminato, Toronto Festival of Arts & Creativity @ 7:29 AM   0 comments
Keving Loring’s New Play on the Cutting edge of Canadian Theatre

Peter Birnie from theVancouver Sun interviews Kevin Loring about Where the Blood Mixes:

You can't get more current than Where the Blood Mixes. Kevin Loring's new work "about loss and redemption in the heart of the Fraser Canyon" will have its world premiere at Toronto's Luminato Festival just days before it's presented here at Magnetic North.

Loring's story started out as a 15-minute monologue, delivered for his solo show while a student at Langara College's Studio 58. Titled The Ballad of Floyd, it focused on a first nations father trying to come to grips with the mistakes he's made. The playwright/performer then presented his monologue at the Talking Stick Cabaret (predecessor to the Talking Stick Festival) and started to explore a bigger project."I had a 30-page draft," Loring recalls, "and the thought that maybe this will be the play that really taught me how to write a play."

Indeed it was, but not in the way Loring expected. The Ballad of Floyd was workshopped in Vancouver, then accepted for a workshop and staged reading in 2004 at the CrossCurrents Festival in Toronto.The playwright felt privileged to have veteran first nations actor Gary Farmer join the workshop. But, on the first day of rehearsals, Farmer took the script and slammed it down on a table.

"Thirty five years in the business and I'm still playing a drunk Indian in the bar," Farmer declared. "So what?". The rest of the workshop went well enough, but Loring knew the comment was correct."I never touched the play for two years after that," he recalls. "I walked away not knowing what to do with it, because I knew he was right. But I also knew that there was still something there. I just didn't know what to do with it."

When Loring met in Calgary with legendary playwright Sharon Pollock (Blood Relations, One Tiger to a Hill), he had already started a thorough rewrite of what would become Where the Blood Mixes. A poem he'd written and then lost to a computer crash resurfaced, becoming the bridge to carry his story to the banks of a river."It got the play out of that bar," he says.

Now, as outgoing Playhouse Theatre Company artistic director Glynis Leyshon directs the new piece for its double debut in B.C. and Toronto, Loring reflects on being a bridge between cultures.
"I think I've been that my whole life," he says. "I'm the child of a mixed marriage. My mom was native, my dad was white, and I grew up in a native/white community where there was this big politicizing event."

The town was Lytton and the flashpoint was the logging of the Stein Valley. Loring's dad was a logger and his mom "a kind of a quiet naturalist, and at the age of 12 I had to figure out where I stood. I couldn't make a clear decision; I couldn't just be on the native side, I couldn't just be on the white side, I was always in the middle. So I've always had to articulate both views, at least to myself and then to other people - even on the playground."

Source:

Birnie, Peter. "Magnetic North-The Brave New Sun". Vancouver Sun, May 28, 2008.
posted by Luminato, Toronto Festival of Arts & Creativity @ 7:01 AM   0 comments
Thursday, February 14, 2008
test
posted by Luminato, Toronto Festival of Arts & Creativity @ 1:13 PM   0 comments
Kevin Loring Playwright

Kevin is a member of the Nlakapmux First Nation (Thompson Indians) in Lytton BC. He’s a graduate of the Langara College Professional Theatre Training Program, Studio 58. Kevin is a recipient of the 2005 Vancouver Arts Award for Emerging Theatre Artist and is currently an Artist in Residence at The Playhouse Theatre Company. His play Where the Blood Mixes will premiere at the 2008 Luminato Festival in Toronto.
Glynis Leyshon Director

Glynis Leyshon, Artistic Director of the Playhouse Theatre Company, directed the critically acclaimed Equus (for which she won a Jessie Richardson Award for Outstanding Direction), and most recently directed Morris Panych in his play Vigil. In June 2008, Glynis will premiere Where the Blood Mixes by emerging First Nations artist and writer, Kevin Loring at the esteemed Luminato Festival in Toronto.
Links