DARRELL DENNIS: TWO PLAYS TALES OF AN URBAN INDIAN THE TRICKSTER OF THIRD AVEM/E EAST “At its best, Dennis’s humour comes tous ... Dennis has a tough, sometimes poi- at an angle, opening our hearts with laugh- gnant tale to tell, he does so with flare and ter so that we’ll let in something painful or humour.” tender.” —Robert Crew, Toronto Star —Colin Thomas, The Georgia Straight . . , . “Energetic, exciting and entirely original, “Harrowing and Funny” this amazing race against time by a young —Kamal Al-Solaylee, The Globe and Mail ~man facing cultural oblivion does every- thing right in mixing laughter and tears to engage our brains.” —Peter Birnie, The Vancouver Sun “Dennis is a writer and performer to keep your eye on.” —Glenn Sumi, NOW Magazine Two humorous and heartbreaking plays that focus on the lives of young, urban Aboriginals. Tales of an Urban Indian is a one-person play that follows the trials and tribulations of Simon Douglas, a young Native man who moves from his rural reservation to the big city of Vancouver. This dark comedy examines the issues of race, identity, and assimilation that drive young, native males to self-destruction. In The Trickster of Third Avenue East, Roger and Mary are spiralling out of control but are too scared to let each other go. Enter J.C., a mysterious visitor who turns their lives upside down and forces them to confront their darkest secrets. J.C. pushes Roger and Mary into the realm of the supernatural and past the brink of sanity. ’ PLAYWRIGHTS CANADA PRESS Cover painting Tales of an Urban In- dian by Luke J. Parnell,