What other people say and what we say to other people:
“Instead of offering a realistic overview of scientific progress, Dedicated to the Revolutions is the creative interpretation of how change occurs.” – Walrus Blog
“Charmingly insistent on the right of non-experts and artists to grapple with what science means for how we understand progress, the world around us, and how we understand ourselves.” – Nora Young on CBC’s Spark Blog
“the point of the show isn’t so much to give the audience a useful lesson about Copernicus or Darwin, but to explore how normal people relate to science on a daily basis. Also, it’s very funny.” — Torontoist
“[Dedicated to the Revolutions] isn’t amenable to the orthodox rules.” — The National Post
“thought-provoking and aesthetically interesting, but most importantly, [...] a sense of fun.” — The Globe and Mail Preview
“Dedicated To The Revolutions is the kind of fun show that’ll appeal to those who don’t usually go to the theatre. While it’s not a conventional, well-made play, it offers thoughtful, well-made entertainment.” — NOW Weekly Review
“I’ve rarely seen productions as good-humoured, as teasingly intriguing, as these.” – NOW Weekly Preview
“It’s an effort to think through paradigm shifts and how they affect our lives, an attempt to make the ghost of C.P. Snow just a little happier, and also a shot at having some serious-minded but light-hearted fun.” — Carl Wilson on Zoilus
“Six of Toronto’s most exciting theatre artists mix live demonstration, ukulele singalongs and a Staples catalogue worth of whiteboards” — EYE Magazine Preview
Interviews:
“Art and science (and many other fields) share such basic values, and yet mostly they are separated.” — Jacob Zimmer on MaRS Blog
“I think this work in particular is an attempt to get past some of my issues with the
hard lines and to generate proposals and engagement instead of only critique and pulling apart.” — JZ in Time and Space
“I should leave my computer more often, since it’s turned into a giant procrastination machine.” — JZ under One Big Umbrella
“It feels more like hosting a dinner party than performing” — Frank Cox-O’Connell in Torontoist
“We’re talking back to the list, and asking questions, and thinking about how
that story makes our lives what they are.” — Evan Webber on Theatre is Territory