Small Fish
By Glenys Marshall & Maggie Harder
Small Fish - Ottawa, ON
V.8 - The Rachel Browne Theatre 
Lasers! Horses! Dolly Parton? Small Fish is like if your Saturday morning cartoons were acted out by two people at a house party who are WAY too comfortable with each other. Glenys Marshall (she/her) and Maggie Harder (they/them) have combined their love of sketch, improv, stand-up and music to create a comedy revue filled to the gills with silliness. The duo has headlined at the Great Canadian Theatre Company, Capital Pride Festival and the Toronto Sketch Comedy Festival.

Cast:
Glenys Marshall, Maggie May Harder

Director:
Glenys Marshall, Maggie Harder

  
Show Info:
60 minutes
Genre:
Sketch

Audience:
Mature

Coarse Language, Sexual Content

Thu July 17 6:00 PM
Fri July 18 11:00 AM
Sun July 20 9:30 PM
Mon July 21 2:30 PM
Wed July 23 12:45 PM
Sat July 26 7:45 PM
Sun July 27 4:00 PM

Small Fish

Small Fish—The Rachel Browne Theatre

I’m starting with the disclaimer that sketch isn’t my genre. I saw one episode of SNL in my life and while all my friends raved about it when we were still in elementary school, it didn’t do anything for me.

That continues today, where the sketches didn’t do anything for me; however the audience was aroar in laughter. I will defer to the audience’s assessment that this was good and funny.

Music? One of the actors isn’t great at singing, but I don’t think that’s the point; it’s more of a backyard and beer entertainment kind of idea. The other has serviceable pipes, in a “sketchy” kind of way. The songs are silly but catchy for the most part.

The storytelling? The camp story was a great tale with numerous humorous parts but I’m sorry, it’s just amateurish when you read the entire story straight out of your phone. Take the time to memorise your story—it’s not a complicated dissertation. At very least, use a few cue cards if you need.

Finally, that last story? I just found it sad, not performance-sad, but emotionally-sad. We got a puppy and before he got to adoption age, we already bonded to him from photos. The breeder (I know, we should rescue—and we already had a rescue that was(is) a huge handful and we could not take two) told us that he had a physical disability and offered a different puppy if we could wait a few weeks longer. There was no way we could reject him because—even though we haven’t physically met yet—he was already family.

It was absolutely heartbreaking to see a little girl reject a pet because of their looks and physical expectations. I know, they eventually bond but then it turns south again. For a comedy show, I didn’t leave with good feelings.

It was a bit of a roller coaster ride, with fun, laughter, then a heart-punch at the end.

Ray Yuen