Gateway Theatre 2026-27 season spans cake tastings to a song-and-dance musical
Secret Ingredients, 42nd Street, and Woking Phoenix amid the choices on Richmond venue’s roster
Keely Rois O’Brien’s Secret Ingredients
Gateway Theatre
RICHMOND’S GATEWAY THEATRE has just unveiled its 2026–2027 season, with a roster that encompasses a classic song-and-dance musical, an intergenerational Chinese-Canadian story, and a playful piece with cake-decorating as a central metaphor.
Kicking things off is Secret Ingredients, a “theatrical cake tasting” in Studio B, October 14 to 17. Richmond-based artist Keely Rois O’Brien’s experimental theatre performance uses cake-decorating to explore the ups and downs of human relationships.
It’s followed, on November 13 to 14 at Minoru Chapel, by the song cycle Songs for a New World , the first musical by Tony Award-winner Jason Robert Brown, directed by Gateway executive artistic director Barbara Tomasic.
Gateway’s big holiday show will be the tap-dancing classic 42nd Street, hitting its MainStage December 10 to January 2, 2027; it’s a celebration of old-time Broadway, Times Square, and showbiz.
The new year will see Green Thumb Theatre’s family-friendly She Shoots, She Scores!, Michele Riml’s story of a young girl pursuing her love of hockey; Anita Rochon directs the production, based on a book by hockey legend Cammi Granato, at Studio B.
Closing the MainStage season in March 2027, Silk Bath Collective performs Woking Phoenix, an intergenerational Chinese-Canadian story.
The season also includes the return of community events such as True Voices: Pride Storytelling & Tea, Mid-Autumn Festival and Lunar New Year celebrations.
It’s all presented under the season theme “Us. Here. Now.”, celebrating stories that unfold in the moment and live on in memory long after the curtain falls.
Subscription packages are on sale starting May 1, 2026 with single tickets available on June 1, 2026. Visit Gateway's website here for full information on the upcoming season. ![]()
Janet Smith is founding partner and editorial director of Stir. She is an award-winning arts journalist who has spent more than two decades immersed in Vancouver’s dance, screen, design, theatre, music, opera, and gallery scenes. She sits on the Vancouver Film Critics’ Circle.
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