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Phoenix Theatre stages pre-war drama that draws parallels to social-media issues today

Note: This event has been cancelled. ON STAGE What: The Children鈥檚 Hour Where: Phoenix Theatre, 3800 Finnerty Rd.
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Mary Tilford (Sophia Radford) pressures her friends Evelyn (Ashley Richter) and Peggy (Sophi Murias) to tell her about an argument they overheard, in Lillian HellmanÕs pre-Second World War drama The ChildrenÕs Hour, at UVicÕs Phoenix Theatre.

Note: This event has been cancelled.

ON STAGE

What: The Children鈥檚 Hour
Where: Phoenix Theatre, 3800 Finnerty Rd., University of Victoria
When: March 12 through March 21
Tickets: $15-$28 from the Phoenix Theatre box office (250-721-8000)
Information:

It took a post with the University of Victoria for director Peter McGuire to see a plan come to fruition after nearly a quarter-century of waiting.

McGuire, who teaches in the school鈥檚 drama department, is finally at the helm of The Children鈥檚 Hour, playwright Lillian Hellman鈥檚 1934 stunner set in an all-girls boarding school. Despite his decades of professional experience, and the considerable reputation of Hellman鈥檚 work, it wasn鈥檛 until he started at the university in the mid-2000s that The Children鈥檚 Hour was even a possibility for McGuire, given the resources available.

He had been wanting to direct The Children鈥檚 Hour since 1997, after seeing it at the Shaw Festival in Ontario. But the opportunity did not arise in any professional capacity. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not done a lot professionally because it requires such a large cast,鈥 McGuire said.

鈥淭hey need the financial resources, and most regional theatre companies don鈥檛 have those anymore. [The university] has the benefit of having the resources in the department and the students who are engaged to do the work.鈥

The play is set at a New England school by run two headmistresses who unwittingly become the subject of scorn. When a troubled student suggests the teachers are having a romantic relationship, they are wrongly accused of sin; against a pre-war backdrop where Adolf Hitler is on the move overseas, their personal lives unravel, quickly and gravely, from there. McGuire sees a distinct parallel between old-fashioned fibbing and the endless stream of social-media chatter, only some of which can be taken at face value today.

鈥淪ocial media is in our lives, it鈥檚 not going away. It鈥檚 how most of us are getting our news and information. And do we really know what we鈥檙e being told is the truth? That鈥檚 what the play is about. The story is about a big lie, but there is an element of truth in the lie.鈥

McGuire and his production team chose not to update Hellman鈥檚 original, because it remains vitally relevant. And he鈥檚 happy that the opportunity to direct a play of societal consequence didn鈥檛 present itself until 2020, if only for the sake of his current students.

鈥淚n 1997, of course the internet existed. But how we communicate as human beings has changed significantly. Now, of course, we鈥檙e watching in real time, we鈥檙e hearing in real time. This is why it was important for me to do this play in our department, because our students are dealing with this on a day-to-day basis. I watch them. They鈥檙e affected by all of this, but they鈥檙e mindful of it. And I think that鈥檚 why our students have engaged fully in this production. I聽think it鈥檚 had an effect on them.鈥

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