Matches 1 - 10 of 21.
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A consortium of German developers shows up on the fictional Otter Lake Reserve with a seemingly irresistible offer to improve the local economy: the creation of "Ojibway World," a Native theme park designed to attract European tourists to their destination... [ More...]
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A troubled teenager's life on a reservation is complicated when her father rents her room to an ancient vampire, newly returned to his tribal home from Europe. A blending of Gothic romance and modern coming-of-age, this is unlike any other vampire story.
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A very liberal contemporary couple have a dinner party. The guests represent what by now have become the cliched extremes of both society.
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The Baby Blues is Drew Hayden Taylor's highly wrought farce of patrimony in a stifling, politically correct, post-colonial milieu of "fancy dancers" of every stripe on the Pow wow trail.
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Is Cree really the sexiest of all languages? Do Native people have less or more public hair? Does Inuit sex have a dark side? These are some of the questions answered in this witty, thoughtful collection. Twelve important voices in the Native culture... [ More...]
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A dilemma results when a man is asked to donate a kidney to his dying father. Cast of 2 men.
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A troubled teenager's life on a reservation is complicated when her father rents her room to an ancient vampire, newly returned to his tribal home from Europe. A blending of Gothic romance and modern coming-of-age, this is unlike any other vampire story.
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The emotional struggle of a Native woman who was adopted by a White family to acknowledge her birth family. Cast of 2 women and 2 men. James Buller Award for Playwright of the Year, 1997 Dora Mavor Moore Award for Outstanding New Play, Small Theatre... [ More...]
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In this collection of two plays about the process of children becoming adults, Drew Hayden Taylor works his delightfully comic and bittersweet magic on the denials, misunderstandings and preconceptions which persist between Native and Colonial culture in... [ More...]
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The third play in Taylor's ongoing zany, often farcial examination of both Native and non-Native stereotypes in what is to become what he calls his "Blues Quartet." Cast of 3 women and 3 men.
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