Performances will take place January 31 - February 2, 2025 @ The Spire - Performance Hall
All dressed up with nowhere to go… Until they stumble upon an old, abandoned church. Sharing is Caring follows Calli, Percy, Helena, Lani, and Cass, on the eve of Halloween. They were meant to spend the night together, at a party, but when things don’t work out the way they planned, they must find a new way to have a fun evening. As they arrive at the church, within only a few hours, you will watch as their relationships unravel and permanently shift. When it comes to your best friends, is there such a thing as sharing too much?
Content Warning: Discussion of physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, sex addiction, alcoholism, death, religious trauma, mental illness, transphobic family, and eating disorders. Course language.
For a more specific and in-depth content warning please read the document below (please be aware it does contain spoilers):
All the information you should need about the venue, parking, accessibility, lighting, sound, cast, etc. can be found in the document below - we highly recommend checking it out when buying tickets!
Please reach out to [email protected] if you have any questions or concerns!
The Of The Sea Productions team wants to acknowledge that we are in the traditional homeland of the Anishinaabe, Haudenosaunee, and Huron-Wendat peoples. We want to acknowledge and recognize these peoples and their ancestors as peoples who inhabited these lands since time immemorial. Much of our team comes from a line of settlers and we want to acknowledge the privilege we have of being able to navigate and create art on these lands that do not belong to us. We are guests on this territory, and we are eternally grateful that we can make theatre here. We would not be who we are without the indigenous artists who came before us and who are constant inspirations. We encourage you to think of ways you can support Indigenous organizations. How are you working towards reconciliation in your own life? Or on a grander scale? While acknowledging the land is important, there is much more to reconciliation. The actions of the white settlers and Canadian government have created generations of trauma and pain and we must continue learning the truth and sitting in the discomfort of our country's past.
Below is a list of Artists and Resources in the database. We have worked hard to collect as many individuals and bands as possible, though we are certainly aware that this list is incomplete. There may be inaccuracies in the collected information. Please contact us if you find anything that needs correcting, or click the + sign at the top right of this page to add People and Resources who are missing from the listings.