Entertainment

Temperance and Temptation

August 30, 2018   ·   0 Comments

Written By CONSTANCE SCRAFIELD

For a trailer headline, Mag Ruffman delivered the best: “People basically started drinking at 9:30 in the morning – it was one hilarious meeting after another!”

Ms Ruffman was referring to the Temperance and Temptation Tours, currently running as a joint production of the Central Countries Tourism (CCT), and the Province, Ministry of Tourism, Sport and Culture.

The tours are featuring the fun and facts of the province’s drinking history in the counties of Headwaters, York and Durham.

These are, as she says, “A two day pub crawl, with really good food, interesting drinks, hilarious entertainment and great music.”

She told us, “The cast is without equal. Braden [Wright] is fantastic as the Temperance Officer, Barnabas Bailey. We were a hurtling cast -mobile to get in front of the visitors in their bus…” as they travelled from venue to venue ..” and get into position.

“It is all so goofy and unpredictable. Sometimes, we’re on the bus with them, with more of the story and the humour.”

The others in the cast are Michael Miranda as the bootlegger, Mickey Byrnes; Chris Wilson, Band leader, playing and acting as saxophonist,  Cab Caboodle (aka Dickey Byrnes); Chris Wilson also did the research for the tours.

There are as well,  Max Kelly, the band’s banjoist, Nicky Byrnes; Jesse Corrigan on guitar and piano, as Ricky Byrnes.

The tours are escorted by bus, with all the food and drink included, as is the overnight accommodation in first class hotels.

Speaking of the unpredictability of it all, she related, at lunch on one stop, “…at Terra Nova, they [the guests] all left to go to the candy shop, across the street, to buy ice cream. We were ready and  nobody was there. So, we dashed to the candy shop to do our bit but it was pretty crowded because it is such a small shop.”

Essentially, what combined to get them all to this point in the candy shop was an idea sparked  by CCT’s Executive Director, Chuck Thibeault. From there, the research was done by researcher and interpretive planner, Chris Wilson, who was hired by CCT.

For the Headwaters Tours, naturally, the newly re-named Museum of Dufferin (MOD), formerly the Dufferin County Museum and Archives (DCMA), was completely on board with the idea and was a major partner in developing the Headwaters story.

The museum contributes further during the run of the tours with a showing of its own: Temperance and Temptation, the Exhibition.

“They get to go to places they didn’t know about,” said Ms Ruffman. “The Grand Valley Spirits, which is a micro-distillery in Grand Valley. The building is amazing and really beautiful.”

There are other fine establishments to see, like the Terra Nova Public House, the Adamo Winery and the Spirit Tree Estate Cidery.

“It was great to hear people saying to each other, ‘We could have the wedding here’ – that  sort of thing. People were really on a trail of discovery.”

‘Twas Ms Ruffman herself who put the dialogue together for the actors on the tour, starting with “an outline based on Christ Wilson’s research for all the tours [including self-guided]. The details were all there. The story’s very quirky – the characters are quirky. More than anything, we killed ourselves laughing in rehearsal. We’ve really had a lot of fun. If the script had been a dog, we would have been saying, ‘Do you think we should change something here or something there…’ So, it’s basically a very solid foundation.”

She continued by saying, “The music is fabulous. They play a lot of different instruments – banjo, guitar, base, piano, accordion and the drums. Sometimes, I play the drums too. The songs are all from the era.

“The temperance movement was very motivated and the songs target the sins and consequences of drinking. They’re very intense, little numbers.. “

The songs, which were written at the time, follow such themes as about a daughter dying and people doing terrible things; some of them are rather heavy tales. Still and all, Ms Ruffman, in one of her roles, as a Woman of Temperance, sings them with all the passion of that lady trying to lead the strayed folk back to the fold.

“The Bootlegger Band are so good,” said Ms Ruffman, “they could play something together for the first time and sound as though they’d been playing it for 20 years.”

It is a packed two day tour, the cast and the band in constant attention, with their story, their changing roles and the band providing the music.

To prepare for the tours, the actors only had two days to rehearse the script and one to visit all the venues, so they would have an idea of what they were doing and where it would all fit in, in each venue.

Said Ms Ruffman, “When I got the outline, it took me about a week to write the script because I need to reflect about it, when I’m writing.  It’s 15 pages of dialogue. It’s really hilarious while we’re doing it, when the unexpected comes up, we have to make that work.”

Her wish for the future of the tours: “I hope it goes on for years. The venues are very pretty. There’s a bit of religion and great food.”

The venues were also very creative with their food, keeping it to the theme but always excellent.

“The tours could have other stops, like candle makers – blacksmiths,  a sort – of travelling pioneer village,” she suggested. “In other words, the tour could be bigger and involve other vendors.”

Seven tours are still left to run: two in Headwaters, two in Durham and three in York. There is yet the chance to sample drinks you never heard of because they were in fashion nearly a hundred years ago; taste wonderful meals, some possibly not in vogue for decades and enjoy the hilarious fun of Mag Ruffman, her cast and the Bootlegger Band.

For tickets, go to www.temperanceandtemptation.ca/the-experience-tours

         

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