Frontmezzjunkies reports: Tickets for the Stratford Festival Go On Sale Today
by Ross
Every theatrical season, there’s one press release I read not just with interest, but with a calendar already open beside me. The Stratford Festival’s 2026 season announcement is one of them. Tickets go on sale today, Saturday, January 10th, and with that comes the familiar, delicious scramble of planning, plotting, and locking in what has become one of my favourite weeks of the entire year: the final week of May, opening week in Stratford. I plan for it obsessively. I book my VRBO apartment early. I rearrange my life around it. Because few things feel as purely celebratory as being in Stratford when the town hums with first previews, opening nights, packed patios, and that unmistakable sense that a new season is just beginning.
This year, Stratford Festival’s 2026 Season under the Theme “This Rough Magic,” a Reflection on the Importance of Theatre in our Lives, feels particularly charged. 2026 marks the final season under Artistic Director Antoni Cimolino, and the lineup spectacularly reads like a confident, generous summation of everything Stratford does best: Shakespeare in abundance, crowd-pleasing musicals, contemporary classics, and new work that isn’t afraid to take up space alongside those classics. Across four unique stages, the Festival promises a season that feels both reflective and boldly alive, one that honours the canon while continuing to expand it. As a thrilled Canadian and theatre critic, it’s hard not to feel a swell of pride reading a playbill this ambitious, this varied, and this unapologetically theatrical.
Shakespeare anchors the season in full force. The Tempest, with its magic, forgiveness, and melancholy wonder, feels like a fitting centrepiece for a transitional year. A Midsummer Night’s Dream promises enchantment and mischief, while Othello brings the darker, more devastating side of the canon into focus. These are plays Stratford knows how to hold, interrogate, and reimagine, and I’m already imagining the conversations they’ll spark over coffee, wine, and long walks along the Avon.
There’s also a deep current of joy running through the season. Guys and Dolls and Something Rotten! offer two very different, equally irresistible musical experiences: one a golden-age classic bursting with charm, the other a knowing, gleeful love letter to the madness of making theatre at all. Add to that The Importance of Being Earnest, Oscar Wilde’s exquisitely constructed comedy of manners, and The Hobbit in the Schulich Children’s Plays program, and the season opens its arms wide to audiences of every age and appetite.
What excites me just as much, though, is the breadth of contemporary and modern work. A limited engagement of Waiting for Godot alongside Death of a Salesman feels like an invitation to sit with existential dread and American disillusionment in equal measure. New work also takes a thrillingly prominent place: a new English translation of Eduardo De Filippo’s Saturday, Sunday, Monday, plus two world premières that signal Stratford’s continued commitment to living playwrights and evolving voices. Jovanni Sy’s The Tao of the World and Charlotte Corbeil-Coleman’s The King James Bible Play promise to challenge, provoke, and surprise, which is exactly what I want from a festival at this scale.
Beyond the stages themselves, the Meighen Forum offerings only deepen the appeal. Concerts, storytelling events, and special performances extend the Festival experience into something communal and celebratory. A Brian Barlow Big Band tribute to Duke Ellington, Tales of an Urban Indian, and Ron Sexsmith’s homecoming concert honouring Gordon Lightfoot all feel like perfect complements to days spent theatre-hopping.
The season runs from April 21 through November 1, but for me, it begins the moment I arrive in Stratford in late May, program in hand, ready to celebrate the many opening nights, one after the other (stamina is required). There are few places where theatre feels this central, this joyous, this necessary. I cannot wait to be there again, immersed in it all, celebrating another season that reminds me why I fell in love with this art form in the first place.








