Entries in saskatchewan (4)

Wednesday
Dec112013

The Reluctant Artiste: Death Comes for Breakfast

Sometimes a reluctant writer doesn’t have a choice:

I had breakfast with Death the other day.

I have a 13 year old Aspie kid who is deep into the whole talking in role thing, so when he pitched his voice deep, and did his best to look moribund, and announced that he was the Grim Reaper, I just rolled with it.

He told me about the job—he took over for his dad 20 years back, who took over from his and so on—and the social challenges. Dating is a huge problem. He’s allowed to go out with angels, but they are snooty, and not up for much—but humans are forbidden since the incident. Seems he woke up one day expecting to see his live in girlfriend beside him, and  found a corpse. Tough way to discover his problem with Sleep Reaping.

At this point we were interrupted by his mother:

“Skully! Skully! Come in for breakfast!”

“Ma! Will ya leave me alone? I’m a grown man fer Crissakes. I'll eat when I’m ready!”

 I tried to chime in here, seeing Skully’s mom as my natural entrée into the improv.  But at my first “Skully! Don’t you talk to your mother like that…” he shut me down.

“No. She doesn’t sound like that."

Death and I went into the living room, where Ma couldn’t bother us. He looked at me quietly for a moment.

“I saw your  Dad a few weeks ago…. Is it okay if I talk about this?”

I nodded. Three weeks. To be exact.

“I think he was glad to see me.”

“I wouldn’t be surprised.” I said.

“He’s a great guy. He’s on our hockey team.”

I managed another nod.

“Now your brother,  he wasn’t nearly so easy to reap.”

“Well no. He was so…” I wasn’t quite able to get the “young” out intact.

“I have this thing I do with the tough ones. I pull down my hood, show them my fleshless skull, all horrible, crawling with maggots. Scare them to a better place….You know what he did when he saw me like that? He laughed. Can you believe that?”

“Yes. I can.”

“”We’re great friends now. He wanted you to know something.”

“Okay.”

“We’ve solved the problem of atheist heaven. “

“That’s a problem?”

“People like you who don’t believe in heaven or hell. You were a problem. But now we have an atheist heaven. Carl Sagan set it up.”

“He’d be the guy for that.”

“Yah. You get to become part of the cosmos. Like the stars and stuff. Become part of everything.”

“I will be star stuff?”

“Yah. You will be star stuff,” Death looked at me, “Just not for a long time.”

And then, Death went to school.  I sat awhile after, rocking, stars running down my face.

 

Friday
May062011

Ducks fly to the Happy Nun and the Cathedral Arts Festival

 

 

 

Ducks on the Moon" written and performed by Kelley Jo Burke

 

 

in a shared performance with Carrie Catherine

Friday, May 13 -- 7:30 pm

at the Happy Nun in Forget, Sask

 

on my own

Thursday, May 26 · 8:30pm - 9:30pm

at the Cathedral Arts Festival

Unitarian Centre

Corner of Angus Street and College Avenue, Regina

 

My "stand-up documentary" about the early years with my autistic child. Basis of my recent CBC Radio's IDEAS documentary, and released as a book this year by Hagios Press, this "99% true" play is part comedy routine, part performance piece, and ultimately entirely the story of a parent coming to love and accept the kid she has.

 

 

 

Buy the book on-line at Amazon, Chapters or McNally's!

Wednesday
Apr132011

KJB reading in Prince Albert

Kelley Jo Burke Reads from Her Book, Ducks on the Moon: A Parent Meets Autism

Ducks on the Moon: A Parent Meets Autism
by Kelley Jo Burke

Saturday, April 16, 2:30
John M. Cuelenaere Public Library - 125 12 Street East

Ducks on the Moon tells the story of Kelley Jo Burke’s “evolving” relationship with her autistic son; there are also interviews with parents of children on the autistic spectrum and leading experts in the field.

The book is a source of inspiration and support for parents and teachers with an autistic child in their lives and also engages general readers.

Kelley Jo Burke is an award-winning playwright, poet, and broadcaster. Her plays have been produced and published in Canada and around the world. She is the host and producer of CBC Saskatchewan’s Sound Xchange. She will be reading from her book at the library on April 16.

Everyone is welcome to attend. Books will be for sale.

A Saskatchewan Writers Guild Reading

Sunday
Aug162009

Kelley Jo Burke's Play 'Special' Premieres Sept. 10 in Regina

The premiere production of Regina playwright Kelley Jo Burke's new play Special opens Sept. 10 at the MacKenzie Art Gallery's Shumiatcher Theatre.

Photo from a January workshop of Special.Burke’s one-woman show is a candid, humorous, and raw journey through the early years with a child with atypical autism. The creative non-fiction performance piece, about a family dealing with a child who communicates differently, is written and performed by Burke and directed by Curtain Razors artistic director Michele Sereda.  It is one of two one-woman shows premiering on alternate nights.

Two Premieres

Solo Performance Mix Premiere Performance
presented by Curtain Razors
at the MacKenzie Art Gallery
Tickets at the door:  $15 or $20 for both shows

Special
by Kelley Jo Burke
September 10 and 12, 2009
7:30 p.m.

and

Navigating by Michele Sereda
September 17 and 18, 2009
7:30 p.m.

After opening in Regina, the two Curtain Razors productions will tour to Dancing Sky Theatre in Meacham (October 9 through 11, 2009 - call 306-376-4445), Prince Albert, North Battleford, Swift Current, and Yorkton (dates and times TBA).

For advance tickets or more information (including media), contact Carey Shaw at 306-543-4639 or saskcurtainrazors@gmail.com

About Navigating

Created and performed by Sereda, Navigating is a performance/installation that draws from a trip taken to Ukraine in 2006 shortly after the Orange Revolution.  Sereda retells a series of events in a piece centering on memory, identity, and deep ancestry. The piece was directed by Kelly Handerek.