I had heard about the Farm Show years ago in high school drama class and only now gotten around to reading it. The piece was the result of a company from Theatre Passe Muraille's six-week visit to a small farming community in southwestern Ontario. Having grown up about 60km away from the site of this collective creation, I can certainly recognize a lot of the experiences dramatized in this show from my own childhood, even 40 years later.
Organized as a series of brief and telling scenes and monologues indicative of farming life, The Farm Show paints a picture of the simplicity and the stresses of a dying (or at least rapidly changing) way of life for Canadian Families by using the words and experiences of these families.
A new addition to my list of plays I would one day like to produce, and certainly an example of great theatre with a very Canadian identity. Also, a great resource for monologues for both men and women.