Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Trending Now
Canada Child Benefit payments just got a raise — Here’s how much parents can get in July

Canada Child Benefit payments just got a raise — Here’s how much parents can get in July

I finally got my Trump phone

I finally got my Trump phone

The Latest from the 2026 FIFA World Cup in Canada

The Latest from the 2026 FIFA World Cup in Canada

Neighbourhood Crawl: Is funky Bermondsey becoming the next Geary Lane , Canada Reviews

Neighbourhood Crawl: Is funky Bermondsey becoming the next Geary Lane , Canada Reviews

Honkai Star Rail version 4.4 livestream codes

Honkai Star Rail version 4.4 livestream codes

You can enjoy a rooftop yoga session above the Calgary skyline this summer

You can enjoy a rooftop yoga session above the Calgary skyline this summer

Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith’s Daughter Stella Is So Stunning at the World Cup

Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith’s Daughter Stella Is So Stunning at the World Cup

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 » An ‘industrial puppet symphony’ by the transgender/gender-diverse community: Fantasies in Trash: in eleven movements, at Nextfest. A preview
An ‘industrial puppet symphony’ by the transgender/gender-diverse community: Fantasies in Trash: in eleven movements, at Nextfest. A preview
What's On

An ‘industrial puppet symphony’ by the transgender/gender-diverse community: Fantasies in Trash: in eleven movements, at Nextfest. A preview

5 June 20266 Mins Read

Fantasies in Trash: in eleven movements, Coarse Arts Collective at Nextfest 2026. Rehearsal photo supplied.

By Liz Nicholls, .ca

“It’s not a play it’s a puppet show!” declares Emilia Fox Hillyer, the artist who instigated and “assembled” Fantasies in Trash: in eleven movements. The collectively written “industrial puppet symphony” that opens Saturday at Nextfest is the only show of the festival, and indeed the season, in which dumpster-diving for cardboard is an essential part of the creative process.

To help support .ca YEG theatre coverage, click here.

The 13-member ensemble, from the transgender/gender-diverse community, fashioned puppets as “giant cardboard sculptures that we throw around,” as director Fox Hillyer puts it. “All very crude. And  very intentional since it’s the result of the community engagement aspect of the show…. If I were working with a group of fabricators who’d worked in puppetry before, the puppets would have been much more kinetic.”

“A play is very text-based,” says Fox Hillyer, who emigrated across the border to work on a master’s degree in theatre practice at the U of A. “A puppet show exists in this other world where text is part of the world we create, but living sculpture is primary.” And “mediation through the performing object” is how the ensemble connects to the audience. Meaning-making is something to be shared, “important to the enjoyment of the show.”

Is the big foot in the show just … a big foot? In vertical position, toes on top, heel on the bottom, it’s a biggie, at six-and-a-half feet tall. “I’ve had people say to me ‘it’s so obvious that the foot belongs to Bruno’. And I’ve had other people say ‘oh my gawd, I am the foot’. Or ‘the big foot is surveillance culture’…. Eye of the beholder sort of thing: that’s what we’re going for.”

Fox Hillyer, an Emerson College acting grad originally from Massachusetts, learned how to “do giant cardboard things” in two years working with the celebrated Vermont-based activist Bread and Puppet Theatre, celebrated for large-scale pageantry and processions. And she discovered that puppetry, as a frame for performer-created work, was more satisfying than acting gigs in more conventional theatre.

There are a striking number of transgender and gender-diverse people amongst puppeteers, “and there are lot of reasons for that,” Fox Hillyer thinks.” Among them, “puppetry is a way for people who are experiencing discomfort with their appearance and the way they’re perceived can resist, or deflect, the attention of the audience on to a performing object.” And her historical researches uncovered parallel experiences between transgender and gender-diverse people and performing objects.”

Puppetry appeals, too, to that community’s need to “build something, to have control over something” in a world that’s sliding into more repressive societies. “Transgender people,” of which Fox Hillyer is one, “offer dignity to those in our community who are a really low place.”

Fantasies in Trash: in eleven movements. Coarse Arts Collective at Nextfest 2026. Rehearsal photo supplied.

“We’re engaging with ‘rubbish theory’, at the way society values and re-values things. Transgender and gender-diverse people are being pushed forth and further into the proverbial dumpster.” Hence the collective’s use of discarded cardboard is meaningful. And there’s a kind of theatrical activism in that.

When she was applying to grad schools — and being a transgender woman in the U.S. didn’t seem to be a promising scenario — what she had in mind “was some sort of big grand community engagement-devised puppet project. And this is what came out of it … very much what I was expecting and also very much what I was not expecting.”

It takes a village (and time)…. An ensemble of 13 — three musicians, me and eight performers, one technician — is “tough to organize that many people in a community engagement project,” Fox Hillyer says cheerfully. “There was just one rehearsal before tech week when everyone showed up.”

Fantasies in Trash: in eleven movements, Coarse Arts Collective in rehearsal. Nextfest 2026. Photo supplied

Fantasies in Trash was a (school) year in the making. “We spent the first semester generating content and building the ensemble,” says Fox Hillyard. “The ensemble was whoever was in the room, a drop-in rotational sort of thing. Sometimes there were three plus me and the stage manager. Sometimes 40…. Basically if you showed up you had a voice, and you had authorship.”   

“We often used play-making games that included text, or video-editing and recorded text that happened….” Fox Hillyer assembled versions of the script, “and we did a lot of voting on things to make decisions.”

Does a story emerge in the course of the show? “Symphony,” as in ‘industrial puppet symphony’, implies a narrative arc, as she says. “Fantasy,” as in the show title, “means it’s all over the place…. Each movement could be its own performance. But I believe they weave themselves together to create something cohesive.”

Fantasies in Trash: in eleven movements, Coarse Arts Collective, Nextfest 2026. Rehearsal photo supplied

The arc has to do with the Fascist character, who has a large blue mask on which someone is constantly drawing in pink marker, and wings. “At the end the Fascist undergoes emancipatory self-mutilation, the loss of wings,” in parallel to the way transgender women “have to shed male privilege when they go into this whole new world of feminine expression.”

It turned out to be easy to acquire a transgender/gender-diverse cast from the community, which says something about need here. “I posted on Instagram and was buried by interest!” And in the end, making the show “created a space where we could all be ‘normal’, and also a space where young transgender people in their 20s could experiment, in a non-judgmental (environment), with being the gender they know themselves to be.”

“To have a community and see transgender people over 30 living happy lives….” Beyond everything else, in a darkening world for transgender and gender-diverse people, that has made it all worthwhile.

Fantasies in Trash: in eleven movements runs at Nextfest Saturday and Sunday plus June 10 and 14 on the Lorne Cardinal Stage at the Roxy. Tickets and times: theatrenetwork.ca.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email

Related Articles

Neighbourhood Crawl: Is funky Bermondsey becoming the next Geary Lane , Canada Reviews

Neighbourhood Crawl: Is funky Bermondsey becoming the next Geary Lane , Canada Reviews

What's On 3 July 2026
You can enjoy a rooftop yoga session above the Calgary skyline this summer

You can enjoy a rooftop yoga session above the Calgary skyline this summer

What's On 3 July 2026
Famiglia Baldassarre pasta is coming to Adelaide Street and the lines are going to be insane, Canada Reviews

Famiglia Baldassarre pasta is coming to Adelaide Street and the lines are going to be insane, Canada Reviews

What's On 3 July 2026
One of the largest and oldest standing churches in Ontario is known for its stained-glass

One of the largest and oldest standing churches in Ontario is known for its stained-glass

What's On 3 July 2026
5 hidden gem attractions in Ontario you need to visit before the end of summer, Canada Reviews

5 hidden gem attractions in Ontario you need to visit before the end of summer, Canada Reviews

What's On 3 July 2026
Iconic Ossington vintage shop’s new location is proof that Summerhill is the new fashion district, Canada Reviews

Iconic Ossington vintage shop’s new location is proof that Summerhill is the new fashion district, Canada Reviews

What's On 3 July 2026
Top Articles
Grace Gummer, Meryl Streep’s Daughter, Owns the Red Carpet After Haunting Portrayal of Caroline Kennedy

Grace Gummer, Meryl Streep’s Daughter, Owns the Red Carpet After Haunting Portrayal of Caroline Kennedy

15 April 2026243 Views
Canadians aren’t taking their paid vacation days. Can burnout be far behind? | Canada Voices

Canadians aren’t taking their paid vacation days. Can burnout be far behind? | Canada Voices

2 June 2026206 Views
Does alcohol make you sleep better or worse? | Canada Voices

Does alcohol make you sleep better or worse? | Canada Voices

25 May 2026112 Views
Canada’s ‘most beautiful’ university campuses were revealed and so many are by water

Canada’s ‘most beautiful’ university campuses were revealed and so many are by water

15 April 2026110 Views
Demo
Don't Miss
You can enjoy a rooftop yoga session above the Calgary skyline this summer
What's On 3 July 2026

You can enjoy a rooftop yoga session above the Calgary skyline this summer

Rooftop yoga is coming to downtown Calgary this July, and it might just be the…

Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith’s Daughter Stella Is So Stunning at the World Cup

Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith’s Daughter Stella Is So Stunning at the World Cup

Famiglia Baldassarre pasta is coming to Adelaide Street and the lines are going to be insane, Canada Reviews

Famiglia Baldassarre pasta is coming to Adelaide Street and the lines are going to be insane, Canada Reviews

12 of Canada’s most beloved restaurants | Canada Voices

12 of Canada’s most beloved restaurants | Canada Voices

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
Canada Child Benefit payments just got a raise — Here’s how much parents can get in July

Canada Child Benefit payments just got a raise — Here’s how much parents can get in July

I finally got my Trump phone

I finally got my Trump phone

The Latest from the 2026 FIFA World Cup in Canada

The Latest from the 2026 FIFA World Cup in Canada

Most Popular
Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

28 April 202433 Views
OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024373 Views
LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202494 Views
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us

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