Beakerhead's scent-specific extravaganza smells like a hit - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 01:36 AM | Calgary | -0.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Beakerhead's scent-specific extravaganza smells like a hit

Ghost River Theatre, one of Calgary's most innovative theatre companies, is back at Beakerhead with a show that focuses on the evocative powers of our sense of smell.

Ghost River Theatre returns to Beakerhead with another show exploring the senses

The Scent Bar focuses on our sense of smell, in a scent-specific extravaganza that's part of Beakerhead, the festival that's a smashup of arts, science and engineering. (Beakerhead)

Sometimes, the right smell can make you travel back through time.

That was what happened with The Eyeopener's Paul Karchutwhen he dropped in on Scent Bar, a scent-specific piece of original theatre that's being staged at an empty restaurant in downtown Calgary.

It's all part of Beakerhead, the uniquefestival that bills itself as "asmashup of arts, science and engineering."

Scent Bar is the work of Ghost River Theatre, one of the city's most popular and innovative theatre companies. The show is the latest in a series of plays that Ghost River, led by artistic director Eric Rose, has dedicated to exploring the role that our senses play in articulating our reality.

According to Ghost River Theatre member Louise Casemore, one of the biggest hurdles to get over, in Scent Bar, is people's anxieties surrounding smell. (Beakerhead)

"We are here in the former Chicago Chophouse Restaurantfor the purposes of taking people on a journey throughtheir sense of smell," said Louise Casemore, a Ghost River Theatre member. "So the experience literally has you enter the space andtreat it just like a bar. Our scent bartenders will actually give you a menu of five different experiences and youchoose which threeyou would like to take, just like a three-course meal."

Each audience member is asked to choose the scentsbefore donning a sleep mask that eliminates all the visual cues from the equation.

Karchuthad no trouble emotionally connecting to the first scent that wafted past his nostrils.

"That smells like hot chocolate to me. It reminds me of ski lessons. And what I would get after a ski lesson when I was waiting for my parents to pick me up," he said.

"I think how in touch we are with our sense of smell is directly related to how often we think about it. And we just don't, in our day-to-day life. We take our smellers for granted!" said scent bartender BobbiGoddard.

"We are very connected to our memories throughthe things we smell in a day."

A good amount of research and consultation went into choosing which scents to include on the menu, said Casemore.

"We spent months working with all sorts of scent experts everything from sommeliers to florists to ER doctorsto the head of neurology," she said. "Just learning about how the brain actually processes smell and then how we can sort of disseminate it in a million different ways. Anything can happen."

"We've got things in little jars, we've got things happening live in front of you, and things that will make your brain go, how did they possibly do that?"


With files from The Calgary Eyeopener