,\D It," "A Foggy Day" and "Love Is Here to Stay." In the comedy Easy Virtue, Waldman appears in one of the large scenes toward the end of the play, about an English family whose son has married a woman unlike anyone they've ever known. "The variety is lots of fun," says Waldman, 34, a competitive gymnast as a child. "I get to throw on all kinds of different costumes and become these different people. Born and raised in Toronto, Waldman attended the University of Toronto and the Banff School of Fine Arts, where she was the recipient of a musical theater scholarship. Before joining the Shaw Festival last year, she toured almost five years with Joseph, playing Judah's wife and Mrs. Potiphar. Other roles have been in A Chorus Line, Durante, Sweet Chiirity and Funny Girl, the last at the Leah Posluns Theatre, Toronto's Jewish the- ater company. "Doing several different things in one season is easier in terms of stami- na and keeping up interest," says Waldman, who spent a year perform- ing Swing and Sing for Tokyo Disneyland and touring Japan, Hong Kong and Australia. "Every day, I'm doing something different, and every week is different from the week before. We also have the opportunity to take classes in voice and acting." Waldman's father, who plays the guitar and has sung in his synagogue choir, passed along his musical inter- ests to his daughter. "Once I'm out on stage with the orchestra playing and people there, the energy just kicks in," she says. "It's really an amazing thing, and it feels wonderful when it happens." Waldman, who is divorced and makes her home in Toronto, finds the Shaw setting a great respite. "Being in Niagara on the Lake is so beautiful and relaxing," she says. "The small town is so nice, and I feel I know everybody and where everything is. I. ride my bike to beautiful orchards, vineyards and along the Niagara River. It's like being at a cot- tage doing the thing I love most with an incredible group of people." For festival information and tick- ets, which range from $25-$70 in Canadian funds, call (800) 511-SHAW (7429). s Schedule Three of the 10 plays in the 1999 Shaw Festival A Foggy Day," 'All My Sons" and "You Can't Take It With You are to the credit of Jewish writers. All the Shaw Festival produc- tions build on a stage tradition o almost 40 years. Founded in the summer of 1962 ; the festival has grown to use three distinctive the- aters — Festival Theatre, Court Houk and the Royal George — in historic Niagara-on-the-Lake in Ontario, Canada,-Almost 40 per- cent or a- udien —C7Miriefttim, the United States: The, Academy of the Shaw Festival is a broad-based profes- sional development program fea- turing voice and movement class- es, scene study and specialized workshops for members of the company and outreach programs ,: for the public. Variety marks each season, and this year's fare includes comedy and drama, romance and mys- tery. A Gershwin musical makes an encore for people turned away last year because tickets sold out so fast. Here's what audiences will see this summer: sense of life and finding larger moral responsibility. Easy Virtue — July 2-Oct. 30 By Noel Coward When a man marries a woman unlike anyone his proper English family has ever met, it brings out the worst and, funny foibles of the family and their It's_ a com- e y i.ch the the cocktail hour-a new round in the social battle. Getting Married — Through Sept. 26 By Bernard Shaw When the last: 'attic -bishop's five daughters is about to be mar- ried, the bride and groom learn of preposterous legal arrangements they must follow once they are wed. After each threatens to cancel the wedding, various members of both families reveal their own dis- satisfactions with marriage and divorce laws, leading to discussions of celibacy, monogamy, divorce and marriage. Can the group come up with an alternative to marriage? A Foggy Day - -Through Oct: 3 Words and Music by George andIr4 Gershwin; Book by John Mueller and Norm Foster- Based on the 1919 PG. Wodehouse novel A Damsel in Distress, the musical follows : a n American songwriter -as-- he falls4ty.- love with an EngliSh aristocrat and pursues her to her -raricestral He must overcome all kinds o obstacles to rescue Ins "d Inset distress." . . All My Sons — Aug.13-Oct. 31 By Arthur Miller It's just after World War II when an American family reveals secrets surrounding the death of the eldest son in the war, the father's tainted manufacturing business as it supplied defective parts to the armed forces and the remaining son's love for his broth- er's girlfriend. Ultimately, the play is about remembering, making Heartbreak House — Through Oct. 31 By Bernard Shaw Shaw's comedy is about a widely diverse group of individuals gath- ered in the outlandish home of 88- year-cild Captain Shotover. Among the characters are the captain's two daughters, who seem to have cer- _tain powers over the men they encounter, and-fa naive.y6Ung ':worfian who is being baled into marrying a wealthy, older man. The Madras House — July 11- Sept. 26 By Harley Granville Barker The Madras House is a high- class fashion house whose founder has converted to Islam and moved to Iraq. His son is the connecting link between four feminist tales that make up the play. The first is about the drap- er's six unmarried daughters. The second is about a pregnant and unrepentant salesgirl. The third is about the mannequins and an American financier. The fourth is about the son, his wife and his bizarre parents. Rebecca — Through Nov. 28 By Daphne du Maurier When a naive, young bride arrives at her new home, a grand seaside estate named Manderley, she finds that everyone seems to corn- pare her to her husband's late wife. Is her husband behaving strangely because he still loves Rebecca or is there some other reason? S.S. Tenacity — July 24-Sept. 25 By Charles Vildrac Two men who fought together in World War I decide to make a new life for themselves in Canada, but the tramp steamer on which they've booked passage is delayed for repairs. The two take rooms above a bar in a poorer section of a French seaport and soon fall in love with the barmaid. Uncle Vanya — Aug. 6-Sept. 25 By Anton Chekhov Subtitled Scenes From Country Lift, the play follows Uncle Vanya, who tries to shoot the professor, and the professor's very young wife, who tries to find out if the doctor is interested in her step- daughter only to find out that he's more interested in her. You Can't Take It With You — Through July 24 By George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart An eccentric family believes in living life to the fullest. Penny writes plays because a typewriter was accidentally delivered to their home. Her husband, Paul, manu- factures fireworks in the basement. Their daughter, Essie, takes ballet lessons in the living room from a Russian emigre ballet-master. .,:www,a;:safgam.wagz.,memoom.&:f;A:a....›NA6ugmiii 6/25 :..1999 Detroit Jewish News 91