The Mailroom
by JHG Creative
JHG Creative - Winnipeg, MB
 http://linktr.ee/jhgcreative
V.25 - The Gargoyle Theatre 
The Mailroom is a new musical comedy that follows a group of four mailroom employees. When their corporate employer opts for an AI-operated mail system, the mailroom guys must decide between giving up or finding a way to fight back and save their jobs.
The Mailroom was created by the two-time Harry S. Rintoul Award-winning JHG Creative that brought you World's Fair 1876: The Centennial Exposition (5 STARS), Breaking Up With Me (4 1/2 STARS) and The Cause (4 STARS).

Cast:
Monique Gauthier, Ian Ingram, Connor Joseph, Cuinn Joseph

  
Show Info:
60 minutes
Genre:
Musical

Audience:
Parental Guidance

Coarse Language, Sexual Content

Wed July 17 7:30 PM
Thu July 18 9:00 PM
Fri July 19 6:00 PM
Sun July 21 2:15 PM
Mon July 22 9:00 PM
Tue July 23 8:00 PM
Wed July 24 6:00 PM
Thu July 25 7:30 PM
Sun July 28 12:00 PM

The Mailroom

JHG Creative—The Gargoyle Theatre

Enormous props to this company out the gate- it’s very difficult to do a musical when you experience a total audio failure. Despite the circumstances, they pulled it together, threw in some jokes, and I had a very good time. The Mailroom, centering a group of corporate mail workers about to lose their jobs, was almost a working class call to action to demand better from the faceless corporations that oversee us. I say almost, as while the majority of the show was full of catchy songs and sticking it to the man, the solution of “That’s the best we could do, shame we still lost” left me disheartened. Maybe that was the point, but it deflated an otherwise good experience.

The cast played extremely well off each other and were obviously having fun on stage, but I found myself questioning certain decisions made. Despite the shows pleas to ignore the fact that one member of the group was a puppet, an obvious gag to the tokenization of minorities, I found it hard to when they kept bringing it up. I thought it must be coming to a head, and in a sense it did, but also felt entirely unnecessary in a show already trying to say so much. It left me wanting.

Arden Pruden