Close Menu
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Trending Now
Bumblebee is free on Tubi and remains the best Transformers movie

Bumblebee is free on Tubi and remains the best Transformers movie

Five Below's 4-Cube Shelving Unit Is a Sleek Storage Solution for Small Spaces

Five Below's 4-Cube Shelving Unit Is a Sleek Storage Solution for Small Spaces

New Brunswick woman sues OpenAI, alleging ChatGPT led to daughter’s death

New Brunswick woman sues OpenAI, alleging ChatGPT led to daughter’s death

AAHOA Central Midwest Conference Highlights Hospitality Trends in Oklahoma City

AAHOA Central Midwest Conference Highlights Hospitality Trends in Oklahoma City

Evo 2026 is struggling to attract as many competitors

Evo 2026 is struggling to attract as many competitors

What Happened to Jen Hamilton? Influencer Hints at Divorce in Crying Video

Your lookahead horoscope: June 14, 2026 | Canada Voices

Your lookahead horoscope: June 14, 2026 | Canada Voices

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 » How high is the price tag attached to working in the arts? Everyone Is Doing Fine at Workshop West, a review
How high is the price tag attached to working in the arts? Everyone Is Doing Fine at Workshop West, a review
What's On

How high is the price tag attached to working in the arts? Everyone Is Doing Fine at Workshop West, a review

10 May 20266 Mins Read

David Madawo, Christina Nguyen, Sebastian Ley in Everyone Is Doing Fine, Workshop West. Photo by Marc J Chalifoux.

By Liz Nicholls, .ca

In Everyone Is Doing Fine, the season finale at Workshop West, Calgary-based playwright James Odin Wade steps boldly up to a conundrum that leaves the arts and its practitioners stuck between a rock and a hard place, looking for wiggle room. And it’s provokingly current.

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

In Wade’s new dark, smart, and thorny comedy about selling out and moral vetting, premiering in a Heather Inglis production, we meet an unstable triangle of characters. Two of them are art school grads, stalled underachievers struggling away in poverty to find a foothold in their chosen careers, the ones they trained for.

Daniel (David Madawo), who’s Black, is a painter who quit a coveted residency and gave up painting when the (old white moneyed) sponsors “paraded him around like a lost Black artifact” and then slagged his work for not being Black enough. Anika (Christina Nguyen) is a socially aware art curator of the activist stripe who got dumped by her boyfriend for ranting at a wedding about capitalist profiteering from global warming. She currently works for MOMA — as a tour guide.

Caleb, the third character, is a successful hedge fund manager (Sebastian Ley) with rich friends and deep pockets. He’s looking to surround himself with prestige “culture” and its hip up-and-coming practitioners. And he has the means, and the desire, to fund it, and them.

He is, in short, the temptation. The seduction of solvency has begun.

As the play begins, Daniel, too strapped to even make rent for his dump of an apartment (there’s a mushroom growing out of the ceiling), has taken an easy gig as Caleb’s personal assistant while he works on his new thing, a graphic novel. And in Caleb’s swank Upper West Side brownstone apartment (suggested in high-style by Alison Yanota’s set and lighting design). Daniel is under attack for selling out from his loud, righteous, in-your-face friend Anika — as they drink Caleb’s spendy booze in his kitchen. “Someone should be in prison for this counter alone,” she jokes, a heavy dose of acid in her voice.

Daniel holds his ground; Madawo’s performance conveys decency making the best of things, of necessity (and experience with the racism of the world). And he gets roasted for “sticking up for venture capitalism” by his relentlessly sardonic friend who, in Nguyen’s outsized performance, has no inside voice, and seems to have channelled a worthy sense of outrage into wearying anger management issues.

Sebastian Ley, Christina Nguyen and David Ley in Everyone Is Doing Fine, Workshop West. Photo bty Marc J Chalifoux

It’s an intriguing set-up. And it’s made less intriguing, I think, by the high-volume, shouty way the production begins (or at least did on opening night). There’s something to be said for conversational scale in a kitchen, and for leaving room for escalation. As it is, you might mistake Anika for a theatre major.

In Ley’s performance, Caleb has a certain confident charm, and an offhand shrug about him. He’s unpretentious; he doesn’t need pretension to get what he wants. So Anika’s sneers just slide right off him. He tells them that unlike his boring banker friends, “you two are like real people. Interesting people.” And they can’t help being a bit disarmed.

Are there strings attached to Caleb’s overtures? Daniel argues for reserving judgment. But Anika is instantly suspicious of him, and wonders about a sinister agenda, a dark mystery from the past. Nonetheless she takes a gig buying art for his walls, and excoriates him for his lack of taste.

Wade’s dialogue is witty (all three characters are smart and they have things to say). And the structure of his play is a wicked double-spiral, coloured by the equivocal nature of taking money and despising the giver.  A mystery unravels, as the lives of the three characters get more and more tightly intertwined. Is there — should there be? — a heavy personal and moral price tag for having the means to work in the arts? Should you lose yourself to gain yourself?

I shouldn’t say more, except to give kudos to Darrin Hagen’s clever score; it references that structure, with its snazzy corporate sheen giving way to pulsing beats and more jagged riffs. The title of the play changes its colour, and meaning, depending on the way you say “fine” (practise this at home).

Christina Nguyen, Daniel Madawo, Sebastian Ley in Everyone Is Doing Fine, Workshop West. Photo by Marc J Chalifoux.

The questions of the play don’t dissolve in resolution, comedy notwithstanding. In a world where the arts struggle to create, and do so on the backs of impoverished artists, you can’t help extrapolating on a larger scale, outside the play. Are sponsorships, patronage, and donors tied to oil or tobacco companies dirty money and too morally dubious to accept? What about oligarchs with links to the military-industrial war machine or pollution for profit? Or big pharma with ties to the opioid crisis? The controversy about the Sackler Wing at the Met in New York, for example — family financial connections to Purdue Pharma, the notorious company behind OxyContin — springs to mind (it’s mentioned in the play). Or Imperial Tobacco’s support of jazz festivals in Canada? Everyone Is Doing Fine makes you think about things like that.

In an era of dwindling sponsorship and grant money, the line that divides having the wherewithal to move forward in your art and selling out, gets pretty smudgy. Everyone Is Doing Fine plays along that mined frontier. Think, and argue, and think again.

Have a peek at ’s preview interview with playwright James Odin Wade, here.

REVIEW

Everyone Is Doing Fine

Theatre: Workshop West Playwrights Theatre

Written by: James Odin Wade

Directed by: Heather Inglis

Starring: Christina Nguyen, David Madawo, Sebastian Ley

Where: Gateway Theatre, 8529 Gateway Blvd.

Running: May 6 through 24

Tickets: workshopwest.org (all tickets are pay-what-you-will).

 

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email

Related Articles

Here are summer concerts coming up in Edmonton you won’t want to miss

Here are summer concerts coming up in Edmonton you won’t want to miss

What's On 13 June 2026
Aritzia is hosting a massive hiring event this June for its upcoming warehouse sale

Aritzia is hosting a massive hiring event this June for its upcoming warehouse sale

What's On 13 June 2026
Washington National Opera Takes Kennedy Center to Court Over Disputed Funds —

Washington National Opera Takes Kennedy Center to Court Over Disputed Funds —

What's On 13 June 2026
The Beaver Club opens 2026 Lighthouse Festival summer season (Port Dover Maple Leaf)

The Beaver Club opens 2026 Lighthouse Festival summer season (Port Dover Maple Leaf)

What's On 12 June 2026
Lighthouse Festival Summer Season Opens This Week (Port Dover Maple Leaf)

Lighthouse Festival Summer Season Opens This Week (Port Dover Maple Leaf)

What's On 12 June 2026
One of Toronto’s most famous nightlife staples closes for good after short-lived comeback, Canada Reviews

One of Toronto’s most famous nightlife staples closes for good after short-lived comeback, Canada Reviews

What's On 12 June 2026
Top Articles
The Mother May I Story – Chickpea Edition

The Mother May I Story – Chickpea Edition

18 May 202497 Views
How to Keep Your Business Finances Organized All Year Round

How to Keep Your Business Finances Organized All Year Round

3 October 202588 Views
LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202477 Views
Rare earth elements explained – why these 17 minerals matter for energy, tech, and security

Rare earth elements explained – why these 17 minerals matter for energy, tech, and security

1 April 202639 Views
Demo
Don't Miss
Lifestyle 14 June 2026

What Happened to Jen Hamilton? Influencer Hints at Divorce in Crying Video

Beloved influencer Jen Hamilton shared a video of herself crying, leading many followers to question…

Your lookahead horoscope: June 14, 2026 | Canada Voices

Your lookahead horoscope: June 14, 2026 | Canada Voices

Montreal has a European beer spa and you can soak in beer baths while you sip

Montreal has a European beer spa and you can soak in beer baths while you sip

Ghana plans legal action after Canada denied entry to Partey amid London rape trial

Ghana plans legal action after Canada denied entry to Partey amid London rape trial

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
Bumblebee is free on Tubi and remains the best Transformers movie

Bumblebee is free on Tubi and remains the best Transformers movie

Five Below's 4-Cube Shelving Unit Is a Sleek Storage Solution for Small Spaces

Five Below's 4-Cube Shelving Unit Is a Sleek Storage Solution for Small Spaces

New Brunswick woman sues OpenAI, alleging ChatGPT led to daughter’s death

New Brunswick woman sues OpenAI, alleging ChatGPT led to daughter’s death

Most Popular
Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

28 April 202429 Views
OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024362 Views
LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202477 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.