arts&life theater PHOTO BY LYNDA CHURILLA Adventure Ahoy! Juan Chioran stars as Long John Silver in Treasure Island. SUZANNE CHESSLER CONTRIBUTING WRITER Innovative director Mitchell Cushman sprinkles his magic on the classic coming-of-age action novel Treasure Island, updating it for the Stratford Festival. details Treasure Island runs through Oct. 22 at the Stratford Festival in Canada. See the sidebar for this year’s other productions. For full information, including travel accommodations, call (800) 567-1600 or visit stratfordfestival.ca. 46 May 11 • 2017 M itchell Cushman has established a theater career in Canada without any negative comments from one of the country’s go-to stage critics — Robert Cushman, his dad, whose reviews have appeared in the National Post since its start in 1999. Of course, to avoid any con- flict of interest, the father can- not write about his son, but that doesn’t mean there is any absence of attention to the plays Mitchell Cushman has written or directed. “My father comes to see my work, and we chat about it off the record,” explains the writer-director-educator, who has been recognized by a group of reviewers with a Toronto Theatre Critics Award for Best Director in 2013 and is consid- ered something of a wunderkind in Toronto’s theater world. “My parents are my biggest fans and incredibly supportive. They’ve never been anything but cheer- leaders for what I do.” jn This year, as the Stratford Festival launches its new sea- son, Cushman’s parents will get a chance to watch an updated version of Treasure Island as directed by their son, who came up with contemporary twists. It runs through Oct. 22 among 13 other productions. (See sidebar.) “The play was newly com- missioned with an adaptation by Nicolas Billon, one of our leading Canadian playwrights,” says Cushman, 30, who was raised and continues to reside in Toronto. “It looks at Robert Louis Stevenson’s [1883] story from more of a 2017 vantage point,” Cushman says of the swashbuckling adventure novel that has inspired every pirate story since. “Our story begins with a father reading the story of Treasure Island to his young son and daughter, and it quickly unfolds into how these young children imagine the story will unfold. “In the novel, almost all the parts are male, but our cast is half female. A lot of the characters, including the doc- tor and Ben Gunn, are being transformed into very dominant females. The character of Ben Gunn becomes a young girl who lives in the trees, and we’re working with a circus aerial per- former who spends the whole show dangling on silk.” In earlier Stratford seasons, Cushman has directed Breath of Kings, a cycle of Shakespeare his- tory plays, and Possible Worlds, a fantasy about alternate univers- es. He has been assistant direc- tor for The Beaux’ Stratagem and The Merchant of Venice. “I grew up going to Stratford among other places because of my father’s work,” says the director in his fifth season at Stratford. “From a very early age, I knew I wanted to be involved in theater.” Cushman started as a play- wright before completing a mas- ter’s program in directing at the University of Alberta. “I founded my company, Outside the March, so I could create work I wanted to see and didn’t think there was enough of in Toronto,” he says. “I followed my passion from one thing to the next.” Outside the March, an immersive and site-specific company, creates innovative audience experiences. The com- pany, started in 2009, is not for profit, receiving funding from government grants, individual donations and sponsorships in addition to ticket sales, and it has developed 10 mainstage pro- ductions, a national tour and a feature film. The core idea is to put view- ers, especially young people, in the center of the action, and that goal is brought into Treasure Island. “Before the show, the kids are invited to come on stage and look through Billy Bones’ spyglass and find pirates,” Cushman explains. “We’ve