The Drawer Boy (Interview with actor Tom Barnett)
Laura Mullin talks to actor Tom Barnett about Michael Healey’s celebrated Canadian play The Drawer Boy. Barnett was part of the original 1999 Theatre Passe Muraille production, where he played the young actor Miles in a play inspired by the creation of the groundbreaking documentary theatre project The Farm Show.In this conversation, Barnett reflects on discovering the play as a young actor before anyone knew it would become a classic, touring it across Canada, and returning decades later to play Angus, the farmer at the emotional centre of the story. He shares what it was like to experience the play from two very different characters and why The Drawer Boy continues to move audiences around the world.
The Drawer Boy (Part Two)
Morgan begins to share the story of the wartime accident that changed everything for him and Angus. But as the past comes into focus, the careful world the two farmers have built together starts to crack, forcing all three men to confront the consequences of turning memory into story.Cast: Tom Barnett, Patrick McManus, Stephen Jackman-TorkoffThe Drawer Boy by Michael Healey
The Drawer Boy (Part One)
One of the most produced Canadian plays of the past three decades, The Drawer Boy is inspired by the creation of The Farm Show, the legendary production that sent a group of actors to rural Ontario to learn directly from farming communities.On a quiet farm, lifelong friends Morgan and Angus live inside a carefully structured routine shaped by a wartime injury that altered Angus’s memory. When Miles, a young actor from Toronto, arrives to research rural life for a theatre project, his presence disrupts the balance the two men have built over the years. What follows is a funny and revealing collision between urban theatre-making and farm life, as Miles observes the farmers and begins collecting stories for the stage.Cast: Tom Barnett, Patrick McManus, Stephen Jackman-TorkoffThe Drawer Boy by Michael HealyIf you’re interested in hearing more plays about Canadian rural life, check out Between Breaths by Robert Chafe, available on our feed.
Table for Two (Interview with Akosua Amo-Adem)
Chris Tolley talks to playwright and performer Akosua Amo-Adem about her hit play Table for Two, a funny, candid, and deeply relatable look at modern dating. Set in Toronto and centred on Abby, a hopeful romantic navigating apps, expectations, and one bad date after another, the play explores the search for connection in a world that can feel both hyper-connected and isolating.Akosua shares how the play grew out of real observations and research into dating-app culture, why humour is essential to telling this story, and what audiences respond to most when they see Abby onstage. Together, they talk about vulnerability, rejection, desire, and the pressure to find love on a timeline that doesn’t always match real life.Table for Two by Akosua Amo-Adem.
Table for Two (Part Two)
Still carrying the sting of a major breakup, Abby is trying to reset and move forward, but it feels like her best friend’s love life is racing ahead while she remains stuck in the same exhausting dating cycle. With pressure building from family, friends, and her own expectations, Abby puts her hope in a promising new match and a long-awaited dinner at Lucia’s, a night that just might shift everything.Cast: Bola Aiyeola, Ryan Allen, Meghan Swaby and Akosua Amo-AdemTable for Two by Akosua Amo-Adem. If you’re interested in hearing more plays by Black female playwrights, check out the hit show Da Kink in My Hair by Trey Anthony, available on our feed.