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

The web has a new system for making AI companies pay up Canada reviews

How an obesity educator makes healthy food accessible for her 14-year-old | Canada Voices

10th Sep: Love is Blind: France (2025), 10 Episodes [TV-MA] (6/10)

Grammarly used AI to expand into five new languages Canada reviews

TIFF schedule today: Oct. 7 documentary makes world premiere and more events on Sept. 10 | Canada Voices

European Airports See 3% Passenger Traffic Rise in July Year-On-Year :: Hospitality Trends

Hands-on: Nvidia’s GeForce Now RTX 5080 is better and worse than I hoped Canada reviews

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 » At Shaw, a confounding writing choice nearly ruins an otherwise passable trip to Narnia | Canada Voices
Lifestyle

At Shaw, a confounding writing choice nearly ruins an otherwise passable trip to Narnia | Canada Voices

10 June 20254 Mins Read

Open this photo in gallery:

Michael Therriault as Mr. Tumnus and Alexandra Gratton as Lucy in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.David Cooper/Shaw Festival

Title: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe

Written by: Selma Dimitrijevic and Tim Carroll, adapted from the novel by C.S. Lewis

Performed by: David Adams, Kristi Frank, Élodie Gillett, Alexandra Gratton, Jeff Irving, Dieter Lische-Parkes, Jade Repeta, Kiera Sangster, Michael Therriault, Kelly Wong, Shawn Wright

Directed by: Selma Dimitrijevic

Company: Shaw Festival

Venue: Festival Theatre

City: Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ont.

Year: Until Oct. 4, 2025

The Shaw Festival’s production of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe isn’t horrible. Some of it’s quite fun. The production is well-paced, well-costumed and occasionally well-acted.

But Selma Dimitrijevic and Tim Carroll’s adaptation of C.S. Lewis’s classic tale – which sees the iconic Aslan imagined for the stage not as a lion, but as a man – seems to miss the point of Lewis’s source material, without adding much meaning to the story through its myriad creative liberties.

When we meet Aslan (Kelly Wong), a severed feline head hangs from his decidedly human shoulder. The Pevensie children – Lucy (Alexandra Gratton), Susan (Kristi Frank), Peter (Jeff Irving) and Edmund (Dieter Lische-Parks) – are almost as surprised as we are that Aslan, guardian of Narnia, is just as mortal as the humans they left on the other side of their magic wardrobe. When they ask about the discrepancy between the lore and the truth, the answer is, well, disappointing: Aslan appears as people want to see him.

That’s a nice idea. But… surely the Pevensies want to see the creature as the lion they’ve been promised, no? So, too, must the patrons who purchased tickets to The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe – heck, it’s in the title.

The Witch, the Wardrobe and … a guy named Aslan? Inside the Shaw Festival’s final voyage to Narnia

It’s a deeply strange choice not helped by the fact that the other creatures of Narnia are perfectly delightful animals – especially Mr. and Mrs. Beaver (Shawn Wright and Jade Repeta, respectively), dressed in whimsical furs by designer Judith Bowden. The beavers’ dam is warm, cheery and folksy; the beasts’ hokey demeanours, too. When the Pevensies join the rodents for supper, it’s the closest this jumbled production gets to capturing the wonders of Lewis’s wholly original world. (If there couldn’t be a lion, I’m at least glad there could be beavers.)

The rest of the show is a more mixed affair. When we meet the Pevensies, sent away to the countryside at the onset of the Second World War, they’re leaning on each other for support in their dreary new home, and hiding from the likes of Professor Kirk (David Adams) and Mrs. Macready (Kiera Sangster).

Of course, the real story starts when Lucy, the youngest Pevensie, stumbles across Narnia at the back of a coat closet, and tumbles into a world of kings, queens and permanent winter.

Open this photo in gallery:

Jeff Irving as Peter, Dieter Lische-Parkes as Edmund, Alexandra Gratton as Lucy and Kristi Frank as Susan in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.David Cooper/Shaw Festival

Lions aside, Dimitrijevic and Carroll mostly preserve the beats of Lewis’s story, including the White Witch’s lethal weapon of Turkish delight and a gnarly battle sequence that tops off the Pevensies’ ascendancies to the Narnian monarchy.

But Dimitrijevic helms a superficial production that doesn’t take advantage of the script’s capacity for interesting directorial interpretation. Adams and Sangster are badly underused – I found myself wondering if imaginative doubling might have drawn sweet parallels between the Pevensies’ disparate worlds – and the final battle, set to a backdrop of piercing strobe lights, is messy and under-choreographed.

Performances, too, vary throughout the cast – Gratton is the strongest of the children, followed by Lische-Parks (who’s also a standout in the festival’s Anything Goes). Michael Therriault’s Mr. Tumnus is just right, frenetic and friendly, but Dimitrijevic and Carroll’s new scenes for the faun in Act Two don’t add much to his overall arc.

Wong does what he can as the titular not-lion, but the cards are stacked against him – there’s only so much an actor can do to compensate for muddy writing.

The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe might be an OK choice for young children (though the high schoolers at the performance I saw, judging by their frequent guffaws and post-show zingers, might disagree). For the little ones, Élodie Gillett’s White Witch isn’t especially scary, and seriously – those beavers are nearly worth the price of admission themselves. Tiny kiddos new to the world of theatre will probably enjoy them.

But on the whole, while this chronicle of Narnia isn’t terrible – just blandly, forgettably fine – it’s not one I’d recommend for ardent fans of C.S. Lewis. Or, you know, lions.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email

Related Articles

How an obesity educator makes healthy food accessible for her 14-year-old | Canada Voices

Lifestyle 10 September 2025

10th Sep: Love is Blind: France (2025), 10 Episodes [TV-MA] (6/10)

Lifestyle 10 September 2025

TIFF schedule today: Oct. 7 documentary makes world premiere and more events on Sept. 10 | Canada Voices

Lifestyle 10 September 2025

Lily James leads the biopic of Tinder co-founder Whitney Wolfe Herd

Lifestyle 10 September 2025

Eight distinctive sauvignon blancs to drink now | Canada Voices

Lifestyle 10 September 2025

Chef Jonathan Tam on his journey from the Prairies to opening a Michelin-starred restaurant in Copenhagen | Canada Voices

Lifestyle 10 September 2025
Top Articles

These Ontario employers were just ranked among best in Canada

17 July 2025268 Views

The ocean’s ‘sparkly glow’: Here’s where to witness bioluminescence in B.C. 

14 August 2025251 Views

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

12 July 2025136 Views

Full List of World’s Safest Countries in 2025 Revealed, Canada Reviews

12 June 2025100 Views
Demo
Don't Miss
Travel 10 September 2025

European Airports See 3% Passenger Traffic Rise in July Year-On-Year :: Hospitality Trends

  European Airports See 3% Passenger Traffic Rise in July Year-On-Year Passenger traffic…

Hands-on: Nvidia’s GeForce Now RTX 5080 is better and worse than I hoped Canada reviews

Lily James leads the biopic of Tinder co-founder Whitney Wolfe Herd

Reddit is dropping subscriber counts on subreddits

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 web has a new system for making AI companies pay up Canada reviews

How an obesity educator makes healthy food accessible for her 14-year-old | Canada Voices

10th Sep: Love is Blind: France (2025), 10 Episodes [TV-MA] (6/10)

Most Popular

Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

28 April 202424 Views

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024345 Views

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202449 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.