Toronto Fringe Review: Bruce Dow’s intimate musical uncovers emotional depth inside Oscar Wilde’s timeless fairy tale
By Ross
The first stop on any Toronto Fringe adventure always feels like opening a book whose ending no one knows yet. Over the next three days, I would see eight productions; each one promising a different kind of surprise and engagement. But Vinyl Collection Productions and AIR Collective‘s The Wounds of Love and Other Gifts welcomed me into the festival with a tender confidence and an extraordinary musical beauty that took my breath away. As the cast took over the bare stage at Theatre Passe Muraille, reading from well-worn books, their voices gradually rose together in shimmering harmony before one simple question gently broke the spell: “What am I supposed to make of this?” That compelling invitation leads writer and composer Bruce Dow into a thoughtful meditation on Oscar Wilde’s “The Happy Prince and Other Tales“, asking whether fairy tales are ever really meant for children at all.
Dow’s musical adaptation follows the Happy Prince as he finally begins to see the suffering beyond the sheltered life he once enjoyed, enlisting a hesitant swallow to help carry compassion into a world filled with hunger, loneliness, and sacrifice. The story unfolds patiently, sometimes lingering a little too long on both its central ideas and some of its dance passages, but its emotional sincerity is difficult to resist. Dow’s elegant score, beautifully shaped by music director Ethan Rotenberg, gives the piece its richest voice, while Jeff Dimitriou’s choreography turns movement into another language for the story’s quiet acts of generosity. Erinn Bekkers brings remarkable physical presence to the two-performer role of the Swallow through expressive contemporary dance, even if some sequences could be tightened to maintain their dramatic momentum. Kendra Dyck, Ronan Hayes, Priya Khatri, and Braeden Soltys complete a wonderfully unified ensemble whose lush harmonies make this hour feel almost like a chamber opera unfolding before our eyes.

The production’s framing device, in which five readers gradually come together to discover Wilde’s story, proves especially intriguing. It’s tender and compelling, this investigation, yet I found myself wishing those exchanges dug even deeper, matching the complexity already present in the music itself. The condensed festival version occasionally simplifies ideas that seem eager to grow into something even richer as the larger work that we are told about continues to develop. Still, the piece creates thoughtful conversations between the fairy tale and our own lives, suggesting that these stories continue to evolve each time someone opens the page.
One line continues to fly around my mind long after we leave the theatre: “Stop, look, and see.” It feels like gentle advice not only to the Swallow, but to all of us sitting in the audience. The Wounds of Love and Other Gifts asks us to notice the people around us, to recognize the quiet cost of kindness, and to consider how easily comfort can prevent us from truly seeing another person’s pain. It is a tender beginning to my three-day adventure at the Toronto Fringe Festival, opening the door to music, compassion, and a story that still has something meaningful to say.















