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Quest of imagination and truth

 

Quixote’s search finds a mad, mad world

 
 
 
 
Michel Perron, left, as Sancho and Peter Anderson as Quixote perform in the Arts Club Theatre’s production of Don Quixote, presented at the Mission Foundation Theatre on Jan. 30.
 

Michel Perron, left, as Sancho and Peter Anderson as Quixote perform in the Arts Club Theatre’s production of Don Quixote, presented at the Mission Foundation Theatre on Jan. 30.

Photograph by: Emily Cooper photo , Times

We are all dreamers to some extent, some more than others.

Don Quixote’s quest in a tale of courage and madness has captivated readers for over four centuries and is reimagined with masks, magic, and mayhem in this touring production.

It is physical comedy at its finest, brought to Mission audiences by the Arts Club Theatre Company in collaboration with Axis Theatre Company, creators of the smash hit The Number 14.

This adaptation by co-creators Peter Anderson and Colin Heath explores the comical and philosophical world of Don Quixote, played by Peter Anderson, a retired country gentleman, who has become obsessed with ancient books of knighthood and chivalry.

Inspired by his readings, he sets out on a quest to defend the helpless and destroy the wicked, alongside his faithful and naive squire, Sancho Panza, performed by Michel Perron, to whom he has promised wealth and power.

Preceded by their reputations everywhere they go, they eventually find themselves asking: who’s really mad in a world gone mad?

Miguel de Cervantes’ Don Quixote, published in two volumes a decade apart (1605 and 1615), is the most influential work of literature to emerge from the Spanish Golden Age and the entire Spanish literary canon.

As a founding work of modern Western literature, it regularly appears high on lists of the greatest works of fiction ever published and was recently voted The Greatest Book of All Time by the Nobel Institute.

The envisioning of this famous book includes evocative masks by Melody Anderson and a literary-themed stage set by David Roberts that takes the audience from Quixote’s candlelit library to a field of hostile windmills to the castle of a duke.

“I’m thrilled to be bringing this inventive adaptation of the classic to communities across the Lower Mainland,” said Bill Millerd, Arts Club artistic managing director.

Co-creator Anderson explains the enduring appeal of this tragic-comic hero: “Throwing himself totally into the realm of his imagination, our hero dons the mask of a medieval knight like the ones in his beloved books. But the paradox of masks is that even as they hide our everyday appearance, they simultaneously reveal a greater truth.”

This is physical comedy at its finest; Don Quixote is a passionate tale of adventure and imagination.

Tickets are $42 for adults, $39 for students. To order call the Arts Club box office at 1-877-299-1644, or go online at www.vancouvertix.com.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Michel Perron, left, as Sancho and Peter Anderson as Quixote perform in the Arts Club Theatre’s production of Don Quixote, presented at the Mission Foundation Theatre on Jan. 30.
 

Michel Perron, left, as Sancho and Peter Anderson as Quixote perform in the Arts Club Theatre’s production of Don Quixote, presented at the Mission Foundation Theatre on Jan. 30.

Photograph by: Emily Cooper photo, Times

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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