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Toronto play 'The Bidding War' taps into city's real estate anxiety

TORONTO 鈥 During the pandemic, Michael Ross Albert grappled with a familiar kind of stress for many Torontonians: the uphill battle of trying to buy a home in the city.

TORONTO 鈥 During the pandemic, Michael Ross Albert grappled with a familiar kind of stress for many Torontonians: the uphill battle of trying to buy a home in the city.

鈥淚 remember walking out of the bank with the money order and thinking that I was holding in my hands probably more money than I might make in my lifetime," recalls the Canadian playwright after buying his first condo.

"I was playing it cool and just pretending like this was totally a normal transaction. I got about four steps before I just puked all over Bay Street.鈥

With the average home price in the Greater Toronto Area expected to climb to $1.19 million by year鈥檚 end 鈥 a six per cent increase from 2023, per a new report by Royal LePage 鈥 Albert knows his experience resonates, given that home ownership feels out of reach for many.

So he鈥檚 channeled some of this real-estate tension into 鈥淭he Bidding War,鈥 a biting new comedy premiering Tuesday at Toronto鈥檚 Crow鈥檚 Theatre.

The play takes on Toronto鈥檚 housing crisis with a story set during a frantic, one-day bidding war over the city鈥檚 last affordable home. As the clock runs out, the fight for ownership devolves into chaos, laying bare the lengths to which people will go in their anxious quest for a foothold in the market.

Directed by Toronto鈥檚 Paolo Santalucia, the world premiere features an ensemble cast, including 鈥淏aroness Von Sketch Show鈥 star Aurora Browne as savvy real-estate agent Blayne and 鈥淟etterkenny鈥 star Gregory Walters as Charlie, one of the many buyers caught up in the madness.

Albert says he hopes 鈥淭he Bidding War鈥 exposes the 鈥渦nfairness鈥 of Toronto鈥檚 real estate system.

鈥淚 would love it to show that there is a different way we can imagine life, especially in this city, and that we don't need to be in such brutal competition with one another over what is a basic human right,鈥 says the rising playwright who garnered critical acclaim for his 2022 workplace comedy 鈥淭he Huns.鈥

鈥淲e need to find a way to fix the housing crisis somehow, and hopefully laughing at it is a very good first step.鈥

Browne says she was excited to join the 11-person cast, which is 鈥渦nusually large鈥 for a Canadian production, given the costs of staging plays with big teams.

鈥淭alk about a scarcity mindset 鈥 budgets for theatres have been getting squeezed and squeezed. I think we鈥檙e still feeling the pandemic just over our shoulders and being in a room with a lot of people doing something together feels so necessary. We鈥檙e all so alone in our problems these days.鈥

Browne says 鈥淭he Bidding War鈥 ultimately shows how self-serving those working in Toronto鈥檚 real estate market can be.

鈥淭oronto is definitely a playground for people who are interested in their own profit,鈥 she says.

Peter Fernandes, who portrays the home's listing agent, says the production captures how the scarcity-driven nature of Toronto鈥檚 housing market exposes people's 鈥渦gly sides.鈥

鈥淚t's getting exponentially harder to live in the city and to make a life in it. If it keeps going in that direction, it's just going to bring out some of the worst in people, and that could lead to more exploitation,鈥 says the actor, who played the lead in 鈥淥ne Man, Two Guvnors鈥 at this year鈥檚 Shaw Festival.

鈥淚 think the play is asking us to look at another avenue to grow as a city. There has to be another way so that it's not so cutthroat.鈥

Like Albert, Santalucia became a homeowner during the pandemic. He says he felt rushed to buy a house during a time when prices were down.

鈥淚 just remember the bloodlust that rose in that period of talking to my partner and saying, 鈥榃hatever we need to do, we鈥檝e got to do it because we've got two weeks to make the biggest financial decision of our lives.鈥欌

That 鈥渕anic鈥 energy informed the direction of the play, which he says has moments of 鈥渂loody鈥 violence and 鈥減hysical, tawdry body humour.鈥

Santalucia believes the play underscores how humanity鈥檚 intrinsic desire to own things fuels the housing crisis, and he sees comedy as the most effective means of confronting that reality.

鈥淥ur inherent desire to conquer, our inherent desire to put a flag somewhere in the ground and call something ours 鈥 that's the crisis. This play does a really amazing job at drawing attention to that fundamental aspect of our humanity,鈥 he says.

鈥淲e hope that laughing at it might allow us to recognize it. And that's going to be a little piece of the puzzle in how we fix it."

"The Bidding War" plays at Toronto's Crow's Theatre until Dec. 15.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 12, 2024.

Alex Nino Gheciu, The Canadian Press

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