Agency
by barb janes
Broken Record Productions - La Salle, MB
V.10 - The Asper Centre for Theatre & Film (U of W) 
From the company that brought you Neechies (5 STARS in 2023), Agency is a playful, poignant exposé that'll turn what you know about adoption upside down.

Twelve-year-old Jazz uncovers a shocking secret about her adoption, ditches her mom in a counselling session and promptly gets lost in the Agency. With Louisa (British Home Child) and Claire (Sixties Scoop adoptee), can Jazz find the exit before do-gooder Dr. Thomas and the mothers find them? But what if they discover the adults are lost too?

ASL Performance: Saturday, July 27 at 12:15pm

Director:
Marsha Knight

  
Show Info:
75 minutes
Genre:
Play-Dramedy

Audience:
Parental Guidance

Coarse Language, Sexual Content

Thu July 18 7:45 PM
Fri July 19 2:15 PM
Sat July 20 11:00 AM
Sun July 21 5:45 PM
Mon July 22 12:45 PM
Tue July 23 8:15 PM
Fri July 26 9:30 PM
Sat July 27 12:15 PM

Agency

Broken Record Productions—The Asper Centre for Theatre & Film (U of W)

I remember spending about a year on a community project once, where we would knock on doors and chat with folks about politics, the economy, the world and their neighbourhood. Twice, we spoke with CFS (Child and Family Services) employees, both Indigenous women, and both trying all they could to try and change the agency from inside, both aware and pessimistic about their chances, aware that structural problems are not often defeated by personal virtue, if not in those exact terms.

Agency explores the multifaceted trauma inflicted by and animating our systems intended to account for the safety of children. Without going into too many details, I greatly appreciated the malevolent representative of these systems, an ageless “protector” of children, shifting from protector of white British Empire in the past to saviour of international victims of prejudice that only adoption to Canada could “rescue” them from. Most of all, I appreciated how even he fell victim to the trauma, trapped within mazes of bureaucracy and pain, despite acting as if he was in control.

Josh Fidelak