Unity (1918)

Thursday, November 19, 2015 8:00 pm - 9:30 pm EST (GMT -05:00) Friday, November 20, 2015 8:00 pm - 9:30 pm EST (GMT -05:00) Saturday, November 21, 2015 8:00 pm - 9:30 pm EST (GMT -05:00)
  • Written by Kevin Kerr
    Solider walking a train track
  • Directed by Andy Houston
  • Set & Props designed by Madeline Samms
  • Costumes designed by Mark Haasnoot
  • Lighting designed by Arun Srinivasan
  • Sound designed by Colin Labadie
  • ​Music composed by Meghan Bunce

In the fall of 1918, as soldiers return to Canada from distant battlefields, a world devastated by four years of war is suddenly hit by a mysterious and deadly plague – the “Spanish flu”. The illness strikes anybody, even people in the prime of life. The rapid progression toward mortality brings home the terror, the panic, and the sense of helplessness of World War I; more people die of this epidemic than are killed in battle throughout the war.

Woman and soldier looking through a window with clouds reflected

UNITY (1918) offers a moving and revealing examination of what happens when a deadly virus arrives in a town in the middle of Saskatchewan that was thought to be safe – too distant, too remote – from an epidemic devastating populations elsewhere. Canadians tend to assume such tragedies happen elsewhere, to other people. With UNITY (1918) playwright Kevin Kerr takes us back to this moment in Canadian history, and poetically places the unthinkable threat of a deadly virus in our midst. In a town where every day, familiar things become deadly, Kerr turns his focus on those with the most to lose, the youth, and how they find the strength to face illness, isolation, and death.

Two women in turn of the century dress listening to ear phones

Here is theatre for people that are trying to overcome the ‘me, myself and I’ culture that comes with social media and smart phones. When the stakes are high, and a performance may offer a sense that we are ultimately ‘all in this together’, theatre isn't a communication device, it's a site of communion. Please join us as we turn the Theatre of the Arts into a shared destination, and that place is Unity.