Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Trending Now

The Wharf Mooloolaba Listed in Queensland, Australia Listed for Sale

Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes Unveil 'Mind-Blowing' Opening Day Details for Highly Anticipated New Restaurant Venture

Hotel Industry Leaders Present Rocky But Optimistic Outlook For Rest Of 2025

StratFest’s August Three-Play Theatre Assault That Promise Power, Passion, and Perspective – front mezz junkies, Theater News

Tennis Star Naomi Osaka’s Latest Look Has Fans Absolutely Captivated

Quiet Luxury: The Art of Understated Wealth

Your daily horoscope: August 19, 2025 | Canada Voices

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Newsletter
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
You are at:Home » Comfort Food concludes Crow’s Theatre season with a socially resonant garnish | Canada Voices
Lifestyle

Comfort Food concludes Crow’s Theatre season with a socially resonant garnish | Canada Voices

21 May 20255 Mins Read

Open this photo in gallery:

Zorana Sadiq stars as cooking-show host Bette in the play that she also wrote, Comfort Food. She cooks waffles in real time, filling the intimate studio at Crow’s Theatre in Toronto with the scents of cinnamon and batter.Dahlia Katz/Crow’s Theatre

Title: Comfort Food

Written by: Zorana Sadiq

Performed by: Zorana Sadiq and Noah Grittani

Director: Mitchell Cushman

Company: Crow’s Theatre in association with Zorana Sadiq

Venue: Crow’s Theatre

City: Toronto

Year: Until June 8, 2025

Parenting teenagers has always been hard.

But I think most would agree that the proliferation of the internet has made that already-herculean task even harder: Kids these days have phones, Discord accounts and TikTok profiles. They have a language all their own, syntax peppered with words such as “skibidi” and “rizz.” Their politics, too, are influenced by red-hot online culture wars – today’s teenagers feel things deeply.

As one of the older members of Gen Z, I have some sympathy for the young adults who lost crucial chunks of their adolescence to the pandemic. And in her own way, so does mom Bette, the host of the eponymous cooking show in Comfort Food, writer and actor Zorana Sadiq’s inconsistent yet alluring new play about family, nourishment and the seductive whirlpool of online fame.

When we meet Bette, she’s on TV, sharing a family-friendly recipe for waffles. (Sadiq cooks the confections in real time, filling the intimate studio theatre with the aromas of cinnamon and batter.) She makes two plates: One waffle, topped with sophisticated crème fraîche, is drenched in vinegary berry coulis, and the other dons a chocolate chip smiley face bathed in syrup. Kids prefer uncomplicated breakfasts, she says.

Open this photo in gallery:

In the play, Bette suggests her content-creator son Kit, played by Noah Grittani, appear as a guest on her show and is surprised by his enthusiasm to join in.Dahlia Katz/Crow’s Theatre

Soon enough, we meet her teenage son Kit (Noah Grittani), who spends hours each day on Discord, chatting with strangers about climate change and society’s complicity in rising temperatures and sea levels. When Bette suggests Kit, a budding content creator, appear as a guest on her show – she could use a ratings boost, and her producers have decided it’s time for Comfort Food to embrace a live format – she’s surprised by his enthusiasm for the gig.

Then, the Incident happens, and Bette’s daytime TV empire starts to crack. The beleaguered chef gets her ratings jump, Kit gets a platform to air his grievances with the modern world, and all at once, Comfort Food finds itself rebranded into an agora for all things viral – a televised platform for the disruptors, influencers and provocateurs who keep the wheels of the internet spinning. (People who resemble, in more ways than one, Bette’s troubled son.)

Open this photo in gallery:

Bette’s relationship with sourdough bread provides some humour as her son Kit aims for virality to promote a greener Earth.Dahlia Katz/Crow’s Theatre

Sadiq’s play taps into the zeitgeist of the mid-2020s and twists, asking the same questions about parenthood and online safety as TV shows such as Adolescence and The Social Dilemma, but coming up with different answers. As Kit crusades toward virality in service of a greener Earth, he becomes something of a chameleon – if you squint, he might remind you of the resident Gen Z boy in your own life.

But that ubiquity sometimes makes Kit seem a touch clichéd and underwritten, particularly in contrast to Bette, who Sadiq brings to life with gorgeous care and nuance. Sadiq’s play prescribes compelling, dramaturgically juicy actions to Bette – a moment that sees her literally consume a piece of her son is one of Comfort Food‘s highlights. Bette’s crusty relationship with sourdough bread, too, is funny, significant and well-executed by Sadiq and director Mitchell Cushman.

Open this photo in gallery:

By appearing on Bette’s TV show, Kit gets a platform to air his grievances with the modern world.Dahlia Katz/Crow’s Theatre

Grittani tries his best to capture Kit’s inner life, and his shared scenes with Sadiq ring with truth. But there’s a gaping remove between Sadiq’s portrait of the internet and the real, dripping sites that have forever shaped how children today process the world around them, and Kit’s characterization suffers for that gap. In Max Wolf Friedlich’s Job, the “dark web” is, quite accurately, a terrifying chasm of humanity’s worst traits, difficult to access without special software and a strong stomach. In Comfort Food, the “dark web” is a fairly tame Google Drive link. It’s a small terminology quibble, but one that demonstrates Comfort Food’s somewhat misplaced stakes.

That said, Sim Suzer’s tech-savvy set is a stunner, with stylish kitchen flourishes and sliding doors that reveal Kit’s online lair. Tori Morrison’s video design, too, pads Comfort Food’s walls with digital intrigue, alongside Echo Zhou’s moody lighting.

Review: Job is a taut two-hander that takes its audience on a bleak journey

Crow’s and Soulpepper joining forces in bid to bolster audience

Comfort Food finishes off Crow’s Theatre’s 2024-25 season with a socially resonant garnish, and in a way, the play perfectly synthesizes this year’s roster of plays, from Wights’ somewhat muddy critique of the American intelligentsia, to Flex’s exploration of teenage perseverance through hard times, to Dinner with the Duchess’ damning portrait of a middle-aged celebrity. Those ideas come to a simmering head here – but the play’s anti-climax unfortunately keeps them from boiling over.

There’s a lot to like in Sadiq’s play, and parents in particular will leave the theatre with something to gnaw on. But Comfort Food could use a few more minutes in the oven – and a few more drafts before it tours to other kitchens.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email

Related Articles

Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes Unveil 'Mind-Blowing' Opening Day Details for Highly Anticipated New Restaurant Venture

Lifestyle 19 August 2025

Tennis Star Naomi Osaka’s Latest Look Has Fans Absolutely Captivated

Lifestyle 19 August 2025

Your daily horoscope: August 19, 2025 | Canada Voices

Lifestyle 19 August 2025

Elvira Meets 'Happy Days' Star in Fun Crossover and Fans Are All Saying The Same Thing

Lifestyle 19 August 2025

18th Aug: Bumping Mics with Jeff Ross & Dave Attell (2018), 3 Episodes [TV-MA] (6.85/10)

Lifestyle 18 August 2025

Giant Squid’s latest is as deep as you want it to be

Lifestyle 18 August 2025
Top Articles

These Ontario employers were just ranked among best in Canada

17 July 2025260 Views

What Time Are the Tony Awards? How to Watch for Free

8 June 2025155 Views

Getting a taste of Maori culture in New Zealand’s overlooked Auckland | Canada Voices

12 July 2025136 Views

Fairmont Hotels & Resorts Launches New Global Brand Campaign

19 May 2025103 Views
Demo
Don't Miss
Travel 19 August 2025

Quiet Luxury: The Art of Understated Wealth

Quiet Luxury: The Art of Understated Wealth – By Dr Florent Girardin – Image Credit…

Your daily horoscope: August 19, 2025 | Canada Voices

Elvira Meets 'Happy Days' Star in Fun Crossover and Fans Are All Saying The Same Thing

What’s Needed, Not Just What’s Left: the CFO Championing Staff and Strategy

About Us
About Us

Canadian Reviews is your one-stop website for the latest Canadian trends and things to do, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

The Wharf Mooloolaba Listed in Queensland, Australia Listed for Sale

Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes Unveil 'Mind-Blowing' Opening Day Details for Highly Anticipated New Restaurant Venture

Hotel Industry Leaders Present Rocky But Optimistic Outlook For Rest Of 2025

Most Popular

Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

28 April 202423 Views

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024345 Views

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202448 Views
© 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.