PRUDE

- Creator and Performer
-
Lou Campbell
- Runtime
- 50 minutes
PRUDE is a hilarious and high-energy blend of stand-up and drag. The piece begins as a motivational talk, given to the audience by the King of the Party, there to show everyone HOW TO HAVE A GOOD TIME. Slowly, through lip-syncs and mortifying personal tales, we watch them unravel onstage, digging into the complex experience of being asexual in an (allo)sexual world.. PRUDE has been called "a mystifying piece born for the stage" (Parton and Pearl).
Show trailer
Credits
- Director
- Stevey Hunter
- Stage Manager
- Dylan Tate-Howarth
- Sound Designer
- Peter Sarty
- Costume Designer
- Everette Fournier
Venue
More about the show and company
white, queer, trans, neurodivergent
Land acknowledgement
Probably Theatre Collective is an interprovincial and interdisciplinary arts collective based in Kjipuktuk and Tkaronto. Kijipuktuk, later known in English as Halifax, is in Mi'kma'ki, the unceded territory of the Mi'kmaq. Tkaronto, known in English as Toronto is the territory of many Indigenous nations including the Haudenosaunee, the Anishinaabe, the Wendat, and the Mississaugas of the Credit. Land acknowledgements allow us to express our gratitude for the ability to live and work on the land we currently reside on, but more importantly, If you are a settler like the three co-runners of Probably Theatre, it is a moment to acknowledge and reflect on the violent and ongoing effects of colonization our communities. Go to nativeland.ca and learn about the land you live on. Research history outside of what we were taught in school. Learn about your own ancestry, and how it is connected to the history of colonization. Stay informed about and advocate for those affected by the ways colonization is enacted today in your own community. Give as much as you can to mutual aids and organizations where Indigenous people are uplifted and supported.
Content advice
Not recommended for persons under 14 years of age Sexual content Abrupt cues Mature language
Audience engagement and interaction, not participation