
Pot play is pick of Canada's Fringe Festival
The Reefer Man wows audiences with a moving tale of one
man's love for marijuana.
Cannabis Culture, March 9, 2005, page 30
by Dana Larsen
Canada's annual Fringe Festival is a travelling mix of eclectic
plays and performances that hits most of the nation's major cities during
a lengthy summer tour.
One of the most popular plays in 2004 was The Reefer Man,
a moving one-man show about a young lawyer whose love for marijuana and
skill at growing it leads him through a variety of adventures and relationships.
Russell Bennett gives a virtuoso solo performance, taking
on over two dozen characters as he plays out the rise and fall of ganjaphile
Charlie Kovacs. From getting high for the first time to having his buds
win the Cannabis Cup, from being busted and jailed to a reconciliation
with his estranged father, the audience is taken through the highs and
lows of Kovacs' life in an authentic, well-written and powerful story.
The nature of the tale allows Bennett and his director/co-author
Gillian Stevens-Guille to weave in numerous references to current events
throughout the story. At the Vancouver showing, characters in the play
mentioned recent court decisions, Marc Emery's incarceration and the raids
on Da Kine.
The story is emotionally compelling, but also educational.
Bennett teaches his audience about the harms caused by prohibition, and
its racist origins. At one point Kovacs summons up the spirits of Canada's
first anti-pot warriors, suffragette Emily Murphy and Prime Minister William
Lyon MacKenzie King, and questions them as to their mindset and motives.
After his first Vancouver performance, the last stop on
the tour, impassioned audience members threw cannabis offerings at the
grateful actor. "It was a magical evening," said Bennett in
a subsequent interview with Cannabis Culture. "A dream came true
– that I do a good enough performance to experience a shower of
joints and bud onto the stage! What a night!"
The Reefer Man won "Pick of the Fringe" in almost
every city that it performed. "I'd love to get this play into New
York," said Bennett. "The script can easily be reworked to reference
US history and events. I think many Americans need to see this show."
Despite his play's hit status, Bennett was threatened with
expulsion from the festival if he continued his extremely pro-pot ways.
Bennett had been giving out gifts from his sponsors at the end of each
show, and one of those gifts had traditionally been a phat nug from Da
Kine. Bennett only quit giving out the ganja after Fringe officials told
him he would be "kicked out" if he didn't stop.
Bennett also produced and directed Stoned: Hemp Nation on
Trial, a 1998 documentary about the trial and legal challenge of Canadian
cannabis activist Chris Clay (CC#09, The Trial of the Century).