PuSh Play Episode 27: “Collaboration over Competition (2013)” Transcript
Gabrielle Martin 00:02
Hello and welcome to PuSh Play, a PuSh Festival podcast featuring conversations with artists who are pushing boundaries and playing with form. I’m Gabrielle Martin, PuSh’s Director of Programming, and in this special series of PuSh Play, we’re investigating the legacy of PuSh and talking to creators who’ve helped shape 20 years of innovative, dynamic, and audacious festival programming.
Gabrielle Martin 00:24
Today’s episode features Marcus Youssef and is anchored around the 2013 PuSh Festival. Writer, performer, and cultural activist, Marcus Youssef’s 15 or so plays have been produced in multiple languages in more than 20 countries across North America, Europe, and Asia, and at the PuSh Festival many times, often with Neworld Theatre.
Gabrielle Martin 00:46
His work is often collaborative, highly personal, and almost always investigates questions of difference, belonging, and descent. He is a recipient of Canada’s largest theater award, the Siminovitch Prize for Theatre, as well as the Vancouver Mayor’s Arts Award, an honorary fellowship from Douglas College Berlin, Germany’s Icarus Prize, the Rio Tinto Alcan Performing Arts Award, the Chalmers Canadian Play Award,
Gabrielle Martin 01:12
and the Vancouver Critics Innovation Award three times. And for Neworld Theatre, since its founding in 1994, it has created, produced, and toured new plays, performance events, and digital works. Its mission is to center stories and perspectives that seek to dismantle systems of oppression, and its motto is, plays well with others.
Gabrielle Martin 01:33
Here’s my conversation with Marcus.
Gabrielle Martin 01:38
We are here on stolen traditional and ancestral territories of the Coast Salish peoples, the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh. It’s an absolute privilege to be here. We are also on this land. This is your backyard.
Marcus Youssef 01:56
It’s nice in a very nice backyard, yeah.
Gabrielle Martin 01:58
in the Commercial Drive area, which is the area, the neighborhood where I met you, you know. When you were 10 years old. Many years ago, yes, yes. And so this is a, it’s always nice to speak with Marcus, but Marcus has been a mentor of mine, and so today will be a nice opportunity to dive into your history, your relationship with PuSh, mostly through your role with New World Theatre, though it still continues today in other,
Gabrielle Martin 02:23
you know, working in other aspects of your practice, because you’re an actor, you’re a director at times, still. Sometimes, yeah. Yes, yeah, writer. The very first Neworld Theatre project with PuSh was Crime and Punishment in 2005, and we did have the chance to talk to Camyar the other day about that project.
Gabrielle Martin 02:44
I’m just gonna go through these productions, and then we’ll kind of walk chronologically through the relationship with PuSh. So my name is Rachel Corrie, who was presented in 2008 by PuSh. Nanae, a testimonial play with Urban Ink
Gabrielle Martin 03:00
and Philippine Women’s Center of BC in 2009. Peter Panties with Leaky Heaven Circus in 2011. Pod Plays, The Quartet with Playwrights Theatre Center in 2011. Deustry F. Skis, The Idiot with Vancouver Moving Theatre in 2012.
Gabrielle Martin 03:18
Winners and Losers with Theatre Replacement in 2013, which we’ll definitely be speaking about today, because there’s a long history with theatre replacement and New World, so that’s a great project to highlight.
Gabrielle Martin 03:29
And Leftovers in 2016, King Arthur’s Night, and Inside Out in 2018, and The Democratic set with Back to Back Theatre in 2020. Finally, in this last festival, 2024, you were a writer on Because I Love the Diversity, This Micro Attitude, We All Have It, a project by Rakesh Sukesh.
Gabrielle Martin 03:50
Okay, so take us to the beginning. How did your relationship with PuSh start?
Marcus Youssef 03:57
Yeah, wow, it’s weird hearing you just go through that list. It both makes me feel really proud and makes me feel really old at the same time. I think, I actually, if it’s OK, just want to say something that came to me as I was listening to you, which I think speaks to both PuSh and Neworld and the relationship and also the scene that was built in the last 20 years.
Marcus Youssef 04:22
Which is, if you just think about all those shows, and many people, of course, won’t know many of the shows, and all the different organizations of partners and artists who were working on those shows, and the vast array of styles, and forms, and agendas, and ideas, and questions that were at the heart of those shows.
Marcus Youssef 04:43
Vastly different, and yet, at the same time, I would argue, united by something that I think has been central to PuSh’s way of working in the community for two decades, which is this ravenous curiosity and appetite for material and performance that challenges us, both in terms of its content, but also in terms of its form.
Marcus Youssef 05:08
And just if I think about the variety of forms and what you just described, and the variety of, again, organizations and artists working in communities, working on those pieces, it makes me feel really proud of PuSh, of Neworld, and of the work we’ve been able to do over the last couple of decades.
Marcus Youssef 05:26
But to answer your question, to go back to the beginning, and it feels like, I mean, you’ve talked to Camyar about Crime and Punishment, which Neworld produced in 2004, very early days for PuSh, year two, or three, or something?
Gabrielle Martin 05:39
The first official festival. The first official festival.
Marcus Youssef 05:42
presentations, but the first official festival and at that time Camyar had asked me to take I was teaching at Concordia University of Montreal and Camyar, who was artistic director of the Neworld at the time, wanted to step down and the New World was still quite small at the time and he’d asked me to come out and said, you know, I’ll pay, you could make twenty thousand dollars plus free like artistic fees if you come out and take over the company.
Gabrielle Martin 06:04
He said yes.
Marcus Youssef 06:05
Well, not one of the reasons I said yes.
Gabrielle Martin 06:07
Yeah.
Marcus Youssef 06:08
was because he said, you have to come out and see Crime and Punishment. You have to see what’s happening here, because I’ve been gone for a year. And he flew me out to see Crime and Punishment, and I saw this extraordinary piece, which I’m sure Kamir has described, Jimmy Tate and Jelisa Pankaniyya’s extraordinary piece that featured, you know, as you know, actors from the downtown east side, students of wide variety of people,
Marcus Youssef 06:30
and in this unbelievably rigorous and precise retelling in which every performer on stage was allowed to be exactly who they were in relationship to the precision that was staged so that it wasn’t all exactly the same, but it was so precise and different, how people were different, how the performers were different, was actually the whole point and was like beautifully held and highlighted.
Marcus Youssef 06:55
And I watched that extraordinary production that had, PuSh had been around longer at the time, had Neworld been more established as a touring company at that time. There were presenters from all over the place that wanted to bring it with its 18 cast members or whatever, but we just didn’t have the capacity.
Marcus Youssef 07:10
And so that had a huge influence on me going, oh, there’s a sting going on here. PuSh, Neworld, also the other companies that I’m sure you’ve talked about and are talking with at the time, it was like there’s a scene growing here, and that was a big part, not the only part of it, but a big part of my decision and my family’s decision to come back.
Gabrielle Martin 07:30
Yeah, that’s a big decision. And then you stepped into the role as artistic producer with Adrienne Wong at first.
Marcus Youssef 07:41
No, it was just, well, anyways, boring stuff, it was just me at first, and she was like the producer, and then it was like, oh, we work really well together, and so then we just became co-equal, and then, you know, the leadership model changed over time organically, but it doesn’t, nobody really cares about that.
Gabrielle Martin 07:56
So what was your role with realizing, my name is Rachel Corrie for the 2008 PuSh festival?
Marcus Youssef 08:02
So it’s funny to talk about Rachel Corrie in this moment. My name is Rachel Corrie. It’s a play by, well, it wasn’t a play, it’s edited versions of Rachel Corey from Olympia Washington’s journals and emails that were, after she was murdered by an Israeli Defense Forces bulldozer in the Gaza Strip when she laid down, attempting to block the destruction of a Palestinian pharmacist’s home.
Marcus Youssef 08:31
And run over by the bulldozer. The actor Alan Rickman and the now Guardian Editor-in-Chief, Katherine Viner, read her writing online and went in the early days of the internet and went, oh my God, she’s an extraordinary writer.
Marcus Youssef 08:48
And they edited it together into a one person documentary play that was just literally her writing. And when that,
Gabrielle Martin 08:58
And how did you decide to do that work, and where was that in relation to your work with Neworld? Was that the first production? Was that early on?
Marcus Youssef 09:10
It was early on, I can’t remember, it was certainly one of the first big programming decisions I made and I knew that the writing was extraordinary.
Gabrielle Martin 09:22
to hear them.
Marcus Youssef 09:22
Rachel’s from Olympia which is just across the border from here and I knew that that it was critically important to me that we share that work. The play caused controversy. It was called anti-Semitic usually by people who never read the play.
Marcus Youssef 09:37
There’s nothing anti-Semitic about the play. It is absolutely opposed to the Israeli occupation of Palestine but Rachel is an extraordinary humanist and PuSh jumped on board right away.
Gabrielle Martin 09:52
So what was your, how did that conversation happen with PuSh and how, what was your relationship with PuSh at that time? Like the Neworld had had a relationship through crime and punishment.
Marcus Youssef 10:01
Yeah, I mean, it’s Vancouver and these were early days and everything was smaller for us in our scene then. So it’s like Norman was like, we all we all, Norman was our mentor, many of us, right? Adrian, myself, Camyar, like Maiko and Jamie from Theatre Replacement.
Marcus Youssef 10:13
He was our mentor. We used to all at one point or other made ten dollars an hour sitting in his kind of grotty apartment of Commercial Drive doing data entry for him. You know, when he was running Rumble Theatre, another small company.
Marcus Youssef 10:24
So these were relationships that had already existed. And so because it was a scene that was just beginning to emerge, right? But the thing about working with Norman and it was true from the very beginning, always.
Marcus Youssef 10:43
Whatever his trickiness with budget sometimes. He was the most collaborative artistic leader I have ever worked with. He believed in those around him and their impulses and enabling their impulses and doing everything he could.
Marcus Youssef 11:01
I mean, crime was, I’m sure Camyar told this, but crime was a great example. He just kept telling Camyar, how many people do you need? You know, when Camyar would be would go to Jimmy and like and that was what happened with Rachel Corrie.
Marcus Youssef 11:13
I was like, this is an important piece. I think it should be a PuSh. I think it should be in our international festival now that we seem to maybe have one. And Norman said, yes, absolutely. And yeah, and all sorts of amazing things.
Marcus Youssef 11:28
I mean, you don’t want to. I don’t know. It’s easy when doing these things to kind of do rose tinted, make everything sound great. Like it was, you know, but a lot of really great things happen. Like we did it at the Vanna on commercial drive, a very unusual venue.
Marcus Youssef 11:42
But because it was in this neighborhood, because it felt like in the community, because we wanted to be in an unorthodox space for this. And Norman was completely into that. I mean, the show, the only problem with it was it was too small and, you know, we sold out so quickly.
Marcus Youssef 11:59
It was, you know, it was it was impossible to get people access to the show who want everybody wanted to see it. But also PuSh was immediately very, you know, community partnerships. And, you know, one of the things we did, I was connected to and a rabbi of a liberal congregation here, Rabbi David Mivis, a really beautiful man and thinker and provocative kind of activist.
Marcus Youssef 12:22
And we created community nights for his congregation to come and see the show on their own like in a kind of safe space. Long before we were using words like safe space and to talk with us afterwards.
Marcus Youssef 12:34
And those are some of the most productive and exciting conversations I’ve ever had after shows. They weren’t easy, but they were fantastic. So, yeah, that level of like attention, care and detail and also support of mine and my collaborators, artistic impulses and and also community, communitarian impulses were always at the center of of how the relationship worked.
Marcus Youssef 12:58
Budgets sometimes got a little tricky.
Gabrielle Martin 13:01
I know that’s really clear in what you’re sharing, that care, I think, is really clear with regard to also really thinking about how the audience is going to best experience the work or how the kind of space that will do justice to the piece and the kind of conversations that need to happen around it to really…
Gabrielle Martin 13:19
Yeah, exactly.
Marcus Youssef 13:21
Yeah, we were doing that work, and it was it was good And there were protests and there was a big article in the Globe and Mail and people called me and denounced me and you Know for being anti -Semitic and because you didn’t there was no social media at the time Or it was very early days, but but that was fine, too I mean, it’s interesting it’s different now with the social media to everything just goes In a way that it you know it just it’s all it all feels like a tire fire immediately now and at the time it didn’t It was stressful,
Marcus Youssef 13:50
but it also felt like you could address things
Gabrielle Martin 13:53
And it sounds like you were creating and realizing it within a community that was quite supportive between the company and also it sounds like in partnership with the festival, which I’m sure made a difference in fielding that criticism.
Marcus Youssef 14:09
How can we, like for me the question is always like, how can we engage others who may, you know, may be critical but want to engage? Do you know what I mean? Like that’s always the, I mean, people who don’t want to engage or just want to, you know, shit all over you, that’s fine.
Marcus Youssef 14:24
Like you just kind of have to ignore that as you well know. But creating opportunities for real engagement with folks who, yeah, who may be troubled or upset but have the desire to engage. That’s where for me it gets really exciting.
Gabrielle Martin 14:41
And I know that Back-to-Back Theatre, which is an international company which has been presented at PuSh, it’s now been presented at PuSh a few times, but that seeing their work was quite influential and the beginning of future collaborations, can you just talk about where that fits into this stream of PuSh?
Marcus Youssef 15:01
Let’s just maybe, you know, maybe hop over Nene, a, I can’t remember the exact, a documentary play. A documentary play, is that right? Nene, a documentary play?
Gabrielle Martin 15:15
A testimonial play. A testimonial play. Sorry, I forgot. In 2009. And we didn’t kind of…
Marcus Youssef 15:18
briefly skip over that but just to mention it because that was like another great example of like I had nothing artistically to do with that but it was Alex Ferguson and Caleb Fraser but but like another beautiful example of like these you know this incredible show about Filipino nannies and caregiving workers and in based on all this research whatever I won’t go into it all but installation play then again at the end had this incredible community event where the audience sat around in the final kind of act of the play or the event sat around and had a facilitated conversation and many people who employed Filipino nannies brought their Filipino nannies to the show and again it was so complicated because the the employers would often be like hey so you don’t talk talk say what you think you know oh my god yeah and then nannies in these the employed in this very interesting and weird complicated situation where almost being expected sometimes to perform their own liberation or something inside this like so dramatic so complicated and again really for me indicative of how push created opportunities for you know the kinds of complicated formal and content events like to take place that that I don’t think there would have been a place for in the city prior to push existing so anyway but just skip briefly over that or to just say that about that one but but yeah so shortly after that I guess is when I began working with Niall McNeil who people who pay attention might might be familiar with a playwright and an actor whose life includes Down syndrome and we’d started writing this project together Peter Panties he’d wanted to adapt Peter Pant he doesn’t really write or writes at the level of a sort of kindergarten somebody in kindergarten but he always is identified as a writer and we’d started work on that and but you know I had to figure out how we were gonna do that together and that around that time PuSh presented back to back which is a mixed ability company and kind of international art stars as well based near Melbourne and we went I went and saw the small metal objects at PuSh and I won’t you know I can go on and on I won’t describe the show in too much detail but was in the library and we were in the atrium of the library and we were all on risers and the library was still functioning people were coming and going and we all had headsets or earphones I should earbuds and at some point there was music and it all just looked like real life was a dance and then there was at some point we started hear people talk and then we suddenly realized the action was happening in the midst of real life when we started we could identify where they were and it was mixed about both neurotypical and neurodiverse actors and one of the most extraordinary shows I’ve ever seen and it was a talk back that night and I stayed for the talk back and the talk back was really complicated and confusing between the neurodiverse and neurotypical artists and when I saw that I went okay it’s gonna be okay because that’s just as complicated as what I’m experiencing with Nile and these guys who are international art stars they haven’t figured it out either so it’s gonna be okay and that was huge huge for me and and then you know we you know you know fast -forward nine years or ten years or whatever it is and we were collaborating with back -to -back on the Democratic Senate push you know and working quite closely with them and I was doing workshops for them and you know
Gabrielle Martin 18:48
And so that relation, you just kept in touch from that point, or you got back in touch, you were put in touch by PuSh, or did that relationship come about to the point that you collaborated? Yeah. I always say that, like…
Marcus Youssef 19:00
you know I have a lot of international relationships now and I do a lot of international collaboration and I would say that hey you can’t like parse it exactly but honestly 80% of it like at some point usually fairly recently is because of PuSh like literally like without I mean that’s where it becomes really obvious to me it’s like without PuSh my career would look nothing like it looks period
Gabrielle Martin 19:25
Mmm.
Gabrielle Martin 19:28
let’s talk about winners and losers a bit so yeah a collaboration with theater replacement what was winners and losers and what was the process of realizing that for the festival in 2013
Marcus Youssef 19:40
Yeah, I mean, Winter’s Losers in some ways is a bit different in that it was more of just a straight -up presentation of something that already existed. But I’ll tell you, and this is actually kind of in the PuSh context that, again, I don’t know how interesting to people.
Marcus Youssef 19:53
So, Winter’s Losers is myself and James Long. It’s a show that had a very long touring life and a kind of signature production for both New World and theater placement and in the international touring scene a bit too.
Marcus Youssef 20:04
And it had a big life. It got us to New York and all that stuff. Actually, that’s my favorite. This is just braggy anecdotal, but it was when we were in New York performing it off-Broadway and I came upstairs.
Marcus Youssef 20:19
And there was Wallace Shawn. Do you know Wallace Shawn? No. Well, you’re not a theater person. Do you see Princess Bride?
Gabrielle Martin 20:27
Oh yeah. The little… Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Marcus Youssef 20:30
at Swellish, and also probably one of the most extraordinary avant-garde playwrights. Yeah, he was the dino in Toy Story, but actually, he’s a legendary avant-garde and political playwright. Anyway, he was there, and it was just that he loved the show.
Marcus Youssef 20:47
He stuck around, stuff like that. Anyway, you can cut that up. That’s just a brag. But one of the cool things about Winners and Losers was we had already made the show, but we did an excerpt of it at PuSh -Off.
Gabrielle Martin 21:04
Hmm
Marcus Youssef 21:05
which is the sort of ancillary event that that that grew up inside of our next two PuSh that the industry people who are at PuSh come and visit and that was i’ve never had that happen before we did like i don’t know a half hour excerpt of it and you know it was at progress i have the space i helped co -found on the east side and we were literally swarmed with people going afterwards going yeah when can we bring it to iceland when can we bring it to ireland when can we bring it to the uk when can we bring it to italy like it was never happened to me before hasn’t happened really in the same way since but it was like it was wild and that was very much again like
Gabrielle Martin 21:44
This piece spoke to people for the experimentation in form, for the performance, what was so attractive to people and to presenters.
Marcus Youssef 21:55
in time to some extent I think but it was like it’s a game that we made up called winners and losers and we name a person place your thing and debate whether it’s a winner or loser and over the course of the show it becomes more it becomes it starts as a game a very funny and about pop culture and stupid things and then becomes very personal it becomes about us and I think there are two maybe off the top of my head two things that spoke to people in the moment in a way one was like the authenticity of the performance like we were playing ourselves was all edited versions of real of transcripts of real debates we had and we were ruthlessly and brutally honest but also very funny because we’re good improvisers so there was that and it was a moment where yeah we’re always seeking in I remember being on it was showing up at something we were applying for money or whatever it was a city thing and walking into the room and it was an interview and this woman who was kind of just whatever not a not an arts person went oh my god I saw winners and losers I like that so much I hate plays and we’re always searching for for similitude right like what feels real what feels and they’d have that I would say that’s one and then we think about polarization and the binary it was all about the binary and the kind of bankruptness of the binary but we made it in 2012 so it was a bit of a head of its curve in that so I those are two things also Jamie and I are you know we’re charming
Gabrielle Martin 23:19
Okay, so there’s obviously Neworld and is prolific. You’ve been prolific in terms of, you know, all the projects that you’ve realized and worked on. Can you talk about the evolution or the growth of New World from crime and punishment or my name is Rachel Corrie, you know, right through to the democratic set and also your own personal trajectory in terms of practice into the current, it’s to now.
Marcus Youssef 23:55
Yeah, well, to speak to New World, I think that, and this is so tied to PuSh, it became possible for Neworld to become, I mean, a bigger, like, you know, and to talk about it in business terms, which isn’t maybe the point, but is also really important, the only growth market in Vancouver for live performance in the last 20 years has been largely because of PuSh.
Marcus Youssef 24:18
The arts club, I guess, has grown a bit. You know, the traditional theatre, but traditional theatre hasn’t grown much here, but the marketplace for work that is more experimental, more political, plays with form has grown because of PuSh, because suddenly there were, you know, 20 or 30 artistic directors or presenters from all over the world coming here to see work with the intention of, like, trying to buy something if they liked it,
Marcus Youssef 24:43
and thought it made sense for their venues.
Gabrielle Martin 24:46
Hmm
Marcus Youssef 24:47
That’s huge, and New World was able to be a part of that, as was theater placement and many others. So, in business terms, that, in more artistic terms for both, I mean, I guess I’ll speak for myself.
Marcus Youssef 25:01
I talked at the beginning about the range of work, or the range of styles, the range of questions. I would say that my personal relationship with PuSh has made it possible, and I’d say this is also true of my personal relationship with BAMF, the BAMF Center.
Marcus Youssef 25:20
There are certain places that have made it possible for me to follow my impulse. I am not the sort of artist who makes one thing, or one kind of thing. I have an unbelievably varied practice, which, you know, works to my advantage and disadvantage, right?
Marcus Youssef 25:35
It’s not a great brand, but it’s fantastic for being able to respond to the real curiosities and questions and frustrations that I have. Because I’m like, okay, well, there’s that thing that’s happening, and I can respond to that, and I have to figure out how to respond to that in this way, because that’s what makes sense for that, and I’m not limited in the same way.
Marcus Youssef 25:59
And again, because of what PuSh is, it helped make that possible for me to do that. And I would say the last piece, maybe, that occurs to me, I think this is true of me as an individual, but I think it’s also true of Neworld.
Marcus Youssef 26:17
Like, that idea of collaboration, not competition.
Gabrielle Martin 26:22
Hmm
Marcus Youssef 26:23
um which has been you know for the for the little the indie scene in Vancouver, indie theater and performance scene in Vancouver of in my generation so central and so key to its success and growth um that began with Norman.
Gabrielle Martin 26:41
Yeah.
Marcus Youssef 26:41
And that began with PuSh. And we, and it didn’t end with norm. We took it and made it better and fucked up sometimes and whatever, but that way Norman would look at you and you do it now too and it’s awesome.
Marcus Youssef 27:00
Like you did it with Rakesh and I for Because I Love the Diversity. You had an impulse about a connection that might be possible. And I didn’t go, oh, he’s not a very well-known maker. So I’m better than he is.
Marcus Youssef 27:13
And so it’s not enough money or you know what I mean? I went, oh, Gabe has an impulse about this and I trust Gabe. So I’m gonna see what this is. And you know what? Like it’s been a slightly chaotic process as we know, but I look forward to working on that piece and I love him and Alessia and we’ve become friends and collaborators across from India to Belgium to Vancouver and the work is having life.
Marcus Youssef 27:41
And so, and that’s that. It’s not going, because there is a way of thinking that’s more corporatist and that is like, you come to me and I go, okay, is that gonna further my career? And if I had asked myself that question, I would have been like, maybe not.
Marcus Youssef 27:58
Do you know what I mean? Yeah.
Gabrielle Martin 28:00
Yeah.
Gabrielle Martin 28:00
We’ll be right back. KATHRYN We’ll be right back.
Marcus Youssef 28:01
but actually it furthers my practice, which ultimately I think does further Wedge career actually. But yeah, so I’d say that idea, which I think you’re such a great inheritor, or like inheritor, I don’t know if that’s the right word, but like you also practice that in my experience.
Marcus Youssef 28:22
Oh, thank you Marcus. And that’s what’s so great about, for me, about having, I mean, other than that something, known each other for a long time, but also like having you at the helm.
Gabrielle Martin 28:34
Well, it has really been nice to be in conversation with so many of the companies that have been in relationship with PuSh since the early days and that theme has been so present. This identifying the generous spirit of Norman and then that collaborative spirit that grew and developed with the festival and around, you know, in Vancouver amongst these companies at this time, but that real sense of collaboration over competition and it’s just really exciting to hear about that.
Gabrielle Martin 29:04
And also we see what all these companies have done and how that’s also supported the growth of PuSh.
Marcus Youssef 29:13
That’s been reciprocal and yeah.
Tricia Knowles 29:17
That was a special episode of PuSh Play, in honor of our 20th PuSh International Performing Arts Festival, which will run January 23rd to February 9th, 2025 in Vancouver, British Columbia. To stay up to date on Push 20 and the 2025 Festival, visit pushfestival.ca and follow us on social media @PushFestival.
Tricia Knowles 29:38
And if you’ve enjoyed this episode, please spread the word and take a moment to leave a review. PuSh Play is produced by myself, Tricia Knowles, and Ben Charland. A new episode of our 20th Festival series with Gabrielle Martin will be released every Tuesday, wherever you get your podcasts.