Reviewed by James Karas
Cicadas are large insects that make annoying, loud, high-pitched sounds during hot summers. They are also the title of a play created by Chris Thornborrow and David Lee that is now playing at the Tarragon Theatre in Toronto. The play is about a haunted house and I am not sure what the connection with cicadas is but that may simply reflect my ignorance of the lives of the creatures.
Cicadas, the play,
is about a couple, Janie (Monica Dottor) and Trim (Ryan Hollyman) who buy a
house in the Trinity Bellwood neighborhood of Toronto and according to the
program the play “is a modern eco-thriller from the minds of….David Yee and….
Chris Thornborrow that serves as mystery and warning.” Climate dramaturg Vicki
Stroich is listed as part of the Creative Team.
The set by Jawon Kang represents a house with a first and second floors and a door leading to a mysterious basement. In the opening scene we see a woman on the second floor slithering to the main floor, grabbing a large sheer curtain and wrapping it around herself in a type of dance routine and disappearing.
We then meet the couple and their real estate agent checking the house out with a view to purchasing it. Ellora Patnaik plays the agent and several other roles in the play. She warns them that the house is haunted and has been unoccupied for many years. She recommends that they not buy it. Trim is a contractor and knows about construction and they buy the house.
We know that the house is haunted and it will be haunted until the final curtain and we have been warned that no one should go in the basement. This is 2032 so current residents of the neighborhood have no immediate concerns?
Ellora
Patnaik_Ryan Hollyman_Monica Dottor. Photo: Jae Yang
They go into the basement and find a lot of water on the floor. Was it two feet? Very disturbing especially when the insurance agent tells them that they do not have coverage for it. The water will disappear and return miraculously or is there a stream or two under the house?
The real estate agent (I think) opens a panel in a wall and is sucked in and is never seen again. The ghosts haunting the house mean business. Janie is pregnant and wants to give birth at home. The warm-water flooded basement may be ideal for underwater birth. There is a hilarious scene where Trim bangs his head, faints and Janie’s water breaks. There are many laugh-out loud moments.
The couple’s child is abducted and they search for it frantically. They even hire a spiritualist or medium to advise them about the whereabouts of their child. Trim considers her a charlatan and she is sent packing.
Finally, a building inspector from the city visits and tells them that the house is condemned and uninhabitable. Considering its condition and location it is worth nothing.
I provide these details to give you an idea about the plot outline. That does not tell the whole story, of course. The play has some hilarious and some serious parts and Trim and Janie have some horrific scenes. It is noteworthy that the play has a live band that provides background music befitting the situation. It is like watching a film with a good soundtrack that accentuates the action. The musicians deserve to be mentioned and applauded. They are Amahl Arulanandam, Marc Blouin, Nathen Petitpas and Westley Shen. Superb.
Dottor and Hollyman go through a gamut of emotions and suspenseful moments as their situation deteriorates from a scream at some unusual noise (the horror movie standard), to genuine tragedy from the loss of their child to the loss of their house.
Full marks to Nina Lee Aquino for outstanding direction of a quirky play.
The program lists Yee and Thornborrow as creators and I suppose they both composed music and wrote the text. But I still can’t figure out what the Climate Dramaturg offers. If your real estate agent tells you to stay away from a haunted house, listen to her? Stay away from Trinity Belwood? If you own a house there already, get the hell out of there?
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Cicadas created by David Yee and Chris Thornborrow, a Tarragon Theatre and NAC English Theatre co-production in association with fu-Gen Asian Theater Company continues until May 24, 2026, at the Tarragon Theatre, 30 Bridgman Ave. Toronto, Ontario. www.tarragontheatre.com







