
Andrew Ritchie in Cycle, Thou Art Here Theatre at Expanse Festival. Photo by Mat Simpson.
By Liz Nicholls, 12thnight.ca
It starts with bodies, all bodies, in motion, and moves onward and outward from there. Azimuth Theatre’s ever-expanding Expanse, their signature movement arts festival, is back Friday, with a 10-day edition dubbed Intersections.
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Community engagement, “the spaces where people, art, and environment converge,” is what Expanse is all about. And as Azimuth’s co-artistic producer (with Morgan Yamada and Andrés Moreno) Sue Goberdhan explains, the 21st annual edition embraces new work, experiments, and artistic collaborators at every stage of development. “At Azimuth we’re always, proudly, in progress,” she says. In the Expanse program each artist is asked “what point in process is your piece at?” The question is at the heart of the festivities.
The lineup, which invades the Fringe Arts Barns (the Westbury and the Studio Theatres and the lobby) and expands to include Moment Discovery headquarters downtown, includes half a dozen mainstage offerings, original between- and pre-show contributions collectively created by the five-member troupe of “Lobbyists,” workshops, artist labs, and community gatherings.
Expanse 2026 launches Friday with a double-bill. The Living Room Party, by name a nod to Azimuth’s origins in a tiny performance space called The Living Room Playhouse, is a showcase for Edmonton-based artists and their in-progress experiments in dance, clown, poetry, theatre. And audiences get to catch exciting glimpses of the process of creation. As Goberdhan describes, the party includes excerpts from new dance pieces and a new musical by Cynthia Jimenez-Hicks, and more.
The F Word, billed as “a playfully political pop-art piece,” is the creation of its two Calgary-based performers Keshia Cheesman and Bianca Miranda. On their journey to self-acceptance, the fulsome pair take on such controversial subjects as fat phobia, diet culture and the intersection of fatness and race in this whimsical melange of fairy tale, dance, and song. Clare Preuss directs.

Ultra Violets, Expanse Festival. Photo by Chelsey Stuyt
In the dance-theatre piece Ultra Violets, Vancouver’s Alexandra Caprara (Hot Dyke Party) leads a cast of 15 dancers, five from the West Coast, five from Edmonton, and five Expanse Fest Lobbyists, in an exploration of transformation that pairs queer club culture and plant life, disco balls and dirt. The inspiration, as Caprara explains in their program notes, is the uncanny similarity of violet lighting in gay clubs and greenhouses.

Phantom Limbs by and starring Kristi Hansen, Expanse Festival. Photo by Ian Jackson.
In Phantom Limbs, created by amputee theatre artist Kristi Hansen, in tandem with Moment Discovery body-sensing technology that leaves her in control of lighting and sound, she unravels the haunting mystery of the presence of absence — both physically in light and poetically in metaphor. The ultra-sophisticated technology registers a right leg and foot that do not physically exist on the artist’s body: that’s the start of it. Read more about this fascinating meditation on memory in an upcoming 12thnight interview with Hansen.
Binding is a freewheeling absurdist theatrical conversation between the playwright/actor Calla Wright and their body, specifically an unwelcome body part that defines them in a visibly, not to say graphically, distressing and misleading way. I saw Binding in an earlier incarnation at RISER, and witty arguments put forward by an impressively mouthy pair of boobs gives this unique solo show a wild personality all its own. Sarah Emslie directs.

Calla Wright in Binding, Expanse Festival 2026. Photo by Brianne Jang
In Cycle, Thou Art Here’s Andrew Ritchie creates and delivers a provocative hands-on (which is to say bums-on-bike seat), experience from atop his bike, in which we confront questions about how we live in cities, who gets to dominate the urban culture, who owns the city streets. I’ve seen it a couple of times, and the show is a rush and an eye-opener, with unique audience participation and an engaging star.
Each year at Expanse, Good Women Dance sponsors a new work award to an artist who will premiere a piece the following festival. Mpoe Mogale used their year to launch a new dance theatre collective. And BDC is throwing a welcome gathering March 23.
Expanse puts a priority on community-building. In honour of “Intersections,” this year, for the first time, Expanse will host an “immersive lobby installation” created by the art students of Eastglen High. In an initiative to bond with the neighbouring Whyte Avenue businesses, “Collect The Constellations” is a way for festival patrons to collect stamps from assorted local cafes, bakeries, restaurants on a festival “coffee card” and win prizes. And a “night market” of neighbourhood vendors will activate the Westbury Theatre lobby each Friday and Saturday night 5 to 9 p.m..

The F Word at Expanse Festival. Photo by Aira Ang
Since a sustaining principle of Expanse is “as many access points as possible,” all tickets are pay-what-you-can. And the festival’s accessibility profile includes sensory informed, audio-described, relaxed experience, captioned, and ASL and DTI-interpreted performances available. And there’s a “brown-out” performance of The F Word for BIPOC audiences.
Expanse Festival 2026 runs Friday through March 29 at Fringe Arts Barns (10330 84 Ave.), with one show Phantom Limbs at Moment Discovery (Edmonton Centre). Tickets (all pay-what-you-can), full schedule, and show descriptions: azimuththeatre.com.











It’s the weekend when the Citadel …

Playwright/ actor Louise Casemore (Lucky Charm, Un-Dress, Gemini), a bona fide theatre innovator, is unveiling a new play at SkirtsAfire. After six years of gestation, Put Your Lips Together, billed intriguingly as “surreal neon-noir,” breathes its first public air at the festival as a staged reading. Goldberg directs, and explains that it’s based on “interviews with a hundred
Things I Shouldn’t Tell You, premiering at SkirtsAfire 2026, marks the return of the premier Canadian clown Shannan Calcutt to the world of theatre, after two decades on loan (as we Canucks see it) to circus in Las Vegas, with the Cirque du Soleil’s Zumanity and Mad Apple. Fringe audiences love Calcutt from her trilogy of hit plays starring the impulsive romance-seeking clown Izzy (Burnt Tongue, It’s Me — Only Better! and Out Of My Skin). In Things I Shouldn’t Tell You, Calcutt for the first time plays … herself. Her play, full of audience interaction as you might expect, shares personal stories, funny and relatable, about the taboo mysteries of being a mid-life woman, perimenopause included. Stay tuned for a 12thnight interview with Calcutt soon.
By Liz Nicholls, 












By Liz Nicholls,
Ryan herself directs the season’s other musical comedy, Jimmy Buffett’s Escape To Margaritaville (April 13 to June 13, 2027), a 2017 Broadway musical that’s a veritable mantra for de-stressing and escapism, full of Jimmy Buffett hits, puns, outrageous characters, and a demented plot you’ll have to figure our for yourselves. Ah, and also “an erupting volcano,” to challenge the ingenuity of the design team. Ryan calls it “our nod to the ‘lean-into-it ridiculousness of it. No-apologies fun.…kind of a Mamma Mia! meets Rock of Ages!” Musical direction by Jennifer McMillan.
Ring of Fire, a 2006 Broadway musical jukebox journey through the life and career of the Man in Black, tells its story through a song list of some 38 Johnny Cash hits. Rachel Peake, artistic director of the Grand Theatre (and a former associate artistic director at the Citadel), directs the Mayfield production Feb. 2 to April 4, 2027). Ryan was struck, she says, by the staging and musical excitement of Peake’s 2024 Arts Club Theatre production in Vancouver.
For One Night With ABBA, the Mayfield season finale concert tribute (June 29 to Aug. 8, 2027) — leave ’em burning and then you’re gone — Ryan has enlisted the services of playwright and Teatro Live! star Jocelyn Ahlf to write the text, with music direction, arrangements, and orchestration by Jennifer McMillan.