Entering its 35th year, SummerWorks Performance Festival returns with a landmark season of bold performance, intimate creative experiences, and daring artistic interventions exploring time — personal and collective, real and imagined. From August 7–17, 2025, artists and audiences will gather across Toronto for 11 days of theatre, dance, music, and live art in theatres, in public parks, in galleries, at transit hubs, and in the spaces between.

This year’s Festival theme, Back to the Future | Forward to the Past invites reflection, imagination, and disruption with bold creative expressions that dive deep into temporality, exploring and questioning the past, present, and future, with a gentle curiosity and a critical ferocity. Inspired by the words of Dr. Elder Duke Redbird, and curated by Artistic Director Michael Caldwell, the 2025 edition features works that dive into our memories, our legacies, our bodies, and our relationship to time.

Featured works include a thoughtful reimagination of three different plays within the The Sankofa Trilogy, by legendary theatre maker, d’bi.young anitafrika.; Wayne Burns’ unflinching solo Cake, an embodied reckoning with male beauty standards; Vanessa Goodman’s collaboration with 4-time Grammy and Pulitzer Prize-winning artist, Caroline Shaw in an immersive dance/music concert, Graveyards and Gardens; and Daniele Bartolini and Vincent Leblanc-Beaudoin’s surreal and atmospheric Le Concierge, an ambulatory mystery unfolding in the quiet corners of a Toronto secondary school.

The Festival also features powerful performance interventions, including Phalanx: Revival, a reimagining of the groundbreaking 1998 work by DNA Theatre, set in a public park; Within Touch, a sonic and ecological performance by SlowPitchSound/Chel Paterson that invites audiences into sensory communion; and Xilopango by Irma Villafuerte, an urgent and poetic dance-theatre work responding to political and environmental unrest.
With 35+ projects and over 200 artists, SummerWorks 2025 is a space to gather in curiosity, conversation, and complexity — to mark the past, anchor in the present, and move collectively into imagined futures.

What’s Queer?

Cake

digitrans // analogirl

Fat Fables

Gaylord

Jason

The Sankofa Trilogy

Additional performance works include:

  • Bleu Néon by Kim-Sanh Châu – A striking, body-centered solo featuring live Vietnamese rap music, exploring Asian diasporic identity and sexual objectification.
  • the body symphonic by Charlie Khalil Prince – a solo performance-concert about resistance and liberation, with live electric guitar, loop pedals and effects processors.
  • Lucky Bastard by Breton Lalama – a new play-in-development, directed by Daniel MacIvor.
  • Be Vardų, Be Kojų by Brigita Gedgaudas – an integrated dance/new media solo, using motion capture to uncover non-binary existence in Lithuanian folk dance.
  • The Chains by Evan Webber – an innovative participatory performance, using the conventions of a personality test, to inform the staging of a live dramatic performance.
  • The Red Rose Bleeds by Gaitrie Persaud – A Deaf-led queer horror piece inflected with uncompromisingly raw emotion.
  • Public Consumption by Lester Trips (Lauren Gillis & Alaine Hutton) – A satirical, high-concept performance work exploring AI and cancel culture.

International works feature prominently in this year’s Festival, as the result of a long-term strategy for sustainable international engagement. Highlights include:
Taiwan

  • Leftover Market by Su PinWen – an interdisciplinary solo performance inspired by the term, “剩女Shèng Nǚ”, meaning “Leftover Women”, with Taiwanese Mandarin and English pop music.
  • FreeSteps – NiNi by Su Wei Chia – a site-specific exploration of contours, forms, and movements in public spaces across Toronto.

South Korea

  • The Ghosts Chat: What is a Festival? by Baram Company – a new experimental play about the ghosts in our surrounding political and natural environments.

Community-engaged programming initiatives are woven through the fabric of the Festival each year, and 2025 is no exception. Highlights include:

  • Celebrating the Year of Black Performance with The Black Pledge – a community gathering exclusively for Black performance artists, to celebrate the culmination of this year-long initiative highlighting Black performance across Canada.
  • Bringing Us Together: Dance, Description and Access with Arts Assembly – a project that pairs dancers with blind and low-vision participants to explore access through movement.

Festival Info:

When: August 7–17, 2025
Where: Venues and public spaces across Toronto
Tickets: On sale July 15, 2025 via summerworks.ca

ABOUT SUMMERWORKS

For 35 years, SummerWorks has supported and showcased innovative Canadian performance. The Festival is a nationally recognized platform for new work by local, national, and international artists, fostering risk-taking, boundary-pushing performance, and deep engagement with community. As SummerWorks celebrates its 35th anniversary, it continues to serve as a launchpad for new voices, bold ideas, and transformative experiences.

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About the Author

Bryen Dunn is a freelance journalist with a focus on travel, lifestyle, entertainment and hospitality. He has an extensive portfolio of celebrity interviews with musicians, actors and other public personalities. He enjoys discovering delicious eats, tasting spirited treats, and being mesmerized by musical beats.