43 and me
At Waterfront Theatre — Granville Island (1412 Cartwright St.)
$18 + $10 Fringe membership; proceeds going to Anastasia’s family memoir project, The mirrors of me, supported by Canada Council for the Arts
Shows are 75 minutes long
Photo credit: Antonia Nicholas, Mi’kmaq Acadia First Nation
A renovation, a clown and a funeral. A raw, lighthearted and improvised storytelling of the season leading up to her mother’s passing—Anastasia intimately shares her reflections on life, death and the unearthing of her ancestral history through ceremony, song and story.
A witty play of light and dark whereby words lead the way, song takes us deeper and the truth sets us free.
“You may cry or laugh, or both, and you’ll certainly be touched.” —Anastasia
Awaiting the permit to renovate her parents’ bathroom, Anastasia gets a call that her mother was admitted to hospital in Greece and has 24 to 48 hours to live. A raw, lighthearted and improvised storytelling of the season leading up to her mother’s passing, 43 and me invites you into the personal life and times of Anastasia Koutalianos as she recounts a shit-show three months. From a renovation that won’t quit, ten weeks of clowning around, to a crash course into grief and what it is like to die for those who stay behind.
A Vancouver-based writer and shamanic practitioner, Anastasia is stretching beyond the page in her first stage performance in what she’s calling an exercise in being seen and heard. And as such, is gifting audiences with an intimate glimpse into her truth, and the unfolding of her latest project: a three-book memoir on her female family line as a way to unveil its shared intergenerational trauma across three generations.
Come witness a life in progress, about the things we often leave unsaid, spiced with a dash of laughter, song and Greek ancestral story.
With love,
Anastasia