Written By Jackie Sibblies Drury
Directed By Tawiah M’Carthy
Chelsea Russell & Ordena Stephens-Thompson.
Photo: Lorne Bridgman.
Season Sponsor
This sacred land has held story for thousands of years: stories that live in the fabric of who we are as a nation. Canadian Stage would like to acknowledge and thank the original caretakers and knowledge keepers of this territory: The Anishinaabe Nations (including the Mississaugas of the Credit River), The Haudenosaunee Confederacy, Wendat and Metis Nations. We give thanks to the Nations recorded and unrecorded, acknowledged and unacknowledged, who also share the responsibility for this territory. We honour the Dish With One Spoon Treaty and our responsibility to peaceably share and care for the resources that surround us. We are honoured to be in this meeting place called Tkaronto that many First Nations, Inuit and Metis people from across Turtle Island call home.
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Welcome Note
Brendan Healy Artistic Director, Canadian Stage
The word theatre comes from the ancient Greek theatron (θέατρον). Thea means eyes and tron is a place. The theatre is, literally, a place for viewing. The etymology of theatre speaks to an obvious characteristic of this space that you are in. It is a place for you to see the actors on stage. And it is also a place for the actors to see you. This reciprocal viewing is part of what makes the theatre so special.
But in addition to the act of seeing, the theatre also involves the experience of being seen. In 17th century France, being seen at the theatre became almost a fetish. Noble men and women would pay large sums of money just to sit on the sides of the stage with the actors so that they could be seen by the rest of the audience as they watched the play.
It is this unique feature of the theatre –the relationship between the viewer and the viewed / the seer and the seen – that Jackie Sibblies Drury leans into with her breathtaking play. In particular, she is interested in disrupting the racial and social dynamics that are at play in this exchange. She brilliantly utilizes this most fundamental ingredient to the theatre experience to speak truth to power.
At Canadian Stage, we are pleased to bring to Toronto the world’s most important contemporary plays such as this Pulitzer Prize-winning work. And we are so proud to be partnering with Obsidian Theatre Company on this production. We send a big thank you to everyone at Obsidian for being such extraordinary partners. Enjoy the show!
Mumbi Tindyebwa Otu Artistic Director, Obsidian Theatre
Thank you so much for joining us for this performance of Fairview!
Fairview was initially programmed to be a part of Obsidian’s 2020 season by my predecessor Philip Akin.
When I first read the script I was excited about the audacity of the piece and its potential to rattle and provoke important conversations about how we view Black bodies and consume Black stories.
The piece feels even more relevant now as we return to the making of live theatre post pandemic and continue to unpack the politics of race and power in our industry.
We are thrilled to once again partner with Canadian Stage and are full of gratitude for the incredible team that is bringing this story to life.
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Artists’ Note
Tawiah M’Carthy
Akwaaba (Welcome) to Canadian Stage and Obsidian’s premiere of Fairview. My prayer is that you leave this show feeling inspired by the work of all the artists involved in this production.
I would like to offer this space to some of the members of the ensemble to share their reflections working on Jackie Sibblies Drury’s play. Thank you for making the time to be here.
Peter N. Bailey
Fairview is one of those reading experiences that causes a double take as you begin to understand what the play is about and the journey the play demands the actors and audience to go on. At the date of writing this, the rehearsal process is still underway; my mind wrestles with the truths it unabashedly unearths. But it is my hope that audiences open their minds and hearts in such a way that allows them to understand how they’ve been taught to “see” me and comprehend what the true cost of that [mis]understanding has been for the both of us.
Sascha Cole
Tawiah reminded us in rehearsal the other day that we have been holding space for this play since 2018. I remember sitting in my living room five years ago and reading it for the first time, when it was originally programmed by Obsidian Theatre and Canadian Stage, pre-covid. I got to “End of Play” and put down the script. I was…breathless. The play scared me. The play challenged me. The play made me uncomfortable. I also thought it was very funny. It was certainly one of the best scripts I had ever read in my life. And now here we are in 2023, finally making this offer. This invitation. Buckle up.
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Chelsea Russell
I was hesitant to unpack the deeper meaning of this play despite receiving it almost three years ago, simply because I knew how many layers it brought with it. This play asks its audience, and even the actors, to consider their actions. A question that resonated with me in the rehearsal hall was: How far can good intentions get someone? The perception of the audience was a heavy topic as this play’s crux is held, quite literally, in the audience’s gaze. There were days I left the rehearsal hall emotionally and mentally exhausted, but that is the work, to carry the weight of being watched and force-fed regurgitated narratives of my colourful people. It is exhausting.
My hope is that through this experience (I say experience and not play) the audience is left questioning how they may or may not have been complicit in perpetuating a certain narrative, a narrative created by someone who has not lived that experience. It’s time that we switched for a little while, because as uncomfortable as it is to watch, it’s even more uncomfortable to perform - to live.
Ordena Stephens-Thompson
My experience working on this show was one that I had never had before working on a play. The way it is written is very informative, but the ideas and the theme were a little difficult to unpack right away. It challenged the sensibilities that I use to approach and discover a character. I had to find different strategies than I have ever used to attack most other plays that I have done.
Sophia Walker
Jackie Sibbles Drury has written a play that is somewhat complicated to write about. It’s American (New York), it’s a Pulitzer Prize Winner and it’s about the Black Experience, I can say that much. I can count on one hand in the 15+ years of my career the number of shows I have done that was for Us, by Us. Although Fairview is a comedy it has given me freedom to call out the micro-aggressions, assumptions, ignorance, and my ‘OTHERED’ experience. It wasn’t always easy to deep-dive into my pain but the beauty of Fairview, and of the theatre space, is that it allowed me to work through it, to have candid discussions, and to try to understand why we are the way we are.
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Visible - An Essay Response to Fairview
Jordan Laffrenier Associate Artistic Director, Canadian Stage
“What are you looking at?” The first line of a play often tells us what the play is about. “What are you looking at?” is the first line in Fairview. It’s a line that encapsulates something I feel deeply: That I am being looked at or looked through. That I am, at every moment, both completely visible and invisible: “What are you looking at?”
I have been the only Black person in the audience at a ballet. I have also been the only Black person in the audience at a rap concert. Look around the audience tonight and you will likely notice that I am not the only Black person, however, most of the audience is white. “What are you looking at?”
Recently, I worked on a benefit that honored two Black superstars, performed by mostly Black superstars. The audience consisted almost exclusively of white people watching in their seats, while my mother danced loudly up and out of her seat. While I was embarrassed, my embarrassment quickly turned to discomfort when I thought about the white gaze on these Black performers. It felt poignant, like we had not quite moved beyond the painful history of minstrelsy. Here these performers were singing their hearts out and the response was mostly met with white people looking at them. Maybe my mother, through her dancing, was making a point about the theatre. Maybe she was unwittingly saying that this is
a Black show and I am going to watch it the only way I know how. “What are you looking at?”
Theatre spaces have been having conversations about diversifying audiences for a long time. Though there are certain narrative comforts that get prioritized in our art form that get in the way of diversification. Who is watching the work? Who is passing judgment? Who gets to criticize? Who is programming the work? Who has a fair view?
In Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness, Simone Browne writes about the impact of surveillance on Black life. She argues that surveillance is often discriminatory, that it defines boundaries and privileges whiteness She states that “although surveillance is penetrating deeply throughout our society, its penetration is differential and has been racialized…today’s seeing eye is white.”
Jackie Sibblies Drury and Sarah Benson used Simone Browne’s book as research material when developing Fairview. The two met in 2012 at Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s Summer Residency lab while each working on different projects, and then returned to Berkeley Repertory in 2015 for The Ground Floor Summer Residency to work together. As they spent more time together, they began having more conversations about surveillance. During their process, they
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asked six actors to do a deep dive on the internet to find as much information as they could about their fellow castmates. From their unsettling results, they developed the play’s foundation.
although surveillance is penetrating deeply throughout our society, its penetration is differential and has been racialized…today’s seeing eye is white.
—Simone Browne
Jackie’s writing process always begins with an idea. Her next step is to collect materials, write materials, and participate in workshops that allow her to hear her work aloud. As a separate note on how long theatre shows take to develop: though they started working on the show in 2015, the show first premiered in 2018.
“It started as a piece about surveillance, not in terms of technology but in terms of thinking about why surveillance feels more dangerous to people of colour because of the implicit bias around the people who are actually doing the surveilling…the piece shifted to really thinking about the way that people understand worlds they observe and live in.”
- Jackie Sibblies Drury
I first saw a Jackie Sibblies Drury play when I saw a production of We Are Proud to Present a Presentation About the Herero of Namibia, Formerly Known as Southwest Africa, From the German Sudwestafrika Between the Years
1884-1915 (that is the actual title!) at the Theatre Centre produced by Why Not Theatre. In this play, a group of actors attempt to make a play about the genocide of the African Herero tribe by German colonists but they struggle because the only written records are written by Germans. “All we are doing is hearing the white version of the story over and over again” states a character in the play. The whole play is staged to be set in the round and if I remember correctly the night that I saw it the audience was segregated at the beginning of the show. The whole thing was uncomfortable, especially being one of the only Black people in the audience. The theatricalization of otherness is a consistent theme in Jackie Sibblies Drury’s work.
“I am a little bit obsessed with watching whiteness and blackness. I do think that it was about going to see a lot of plays in my teens, 20s, 30s, and often being the only person of color in an audience and often feeling very visible in that way. And even welcomed in a very ‘So what brought you to the play? We’re so happy to have you,’ on the good end of the spectrum. And then if I ever did anything wrong, if I forgot to turn off my cellphone, I’m feeling very not welcome in that space.” -
Jackie Sibblies Drury
In her most recent play, Mary Seacole, she wrote a non-traditional bioplay about Mary Seacole. “If you don’t know who she is - google her” Jackie writes in the stage directions. The play jumps between time and place, between Jamaica and America, and between characters, most of whom are named Mary (Mary, Merry, Duppy Mary), sometimes in the same monologue. In
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case you are worried that work such as this will expand your brain beyond its capabilities, don’t be. Jackie is so direct that even the most complex ideas are easy to comprehend. From Mary Seacole: “You go there and they make you work and mock you well you do it. You go there and they will not see you as human…them need us but them nah want us.” Her ability to refocus our attention towards people who do not normally receive attention is one of my favourite things about Drury’s work. There are not really plays about Mary Seacole and there are too few plays about Black middle class families, like the family you are about to see in Fairview.
said she feels “this play is equally about Blackness as it is about Whiteness.”
Jackie has echoed that this show cannot have a Blackout night for similar reasons. I believe personally this show is for a Black audience and directed to a white audience, but perhaps Jackie’s work is more complex than that. Maybe Jackie is trying to point to something that we are all culpable of or actively participate in. I, too, watched my mother dance in embarrassment (mom if you are reading this I am sorry!). I encourage you to watch this show however you feel the most inspired watching it. I encourage the laughter, the joys and the silences, the discomfort and the exuberance, I encourage you to participate the way Drury asks us to participate and to consider what it is you are looking at.
I am inspired by theatre that challenges me. Although I understand from watching a lot of theatre that theatre is not always challenging. When I watch Jackie’s work, I become a participant - it’s rarely a passive experience, it’s always challenging, and I sense that I’m part of the process. Since her work is so unique, it’s impossible to say if a Black person will like it or a white person won’t because there are so many ways to experience the play. When Sarah Benson, who is white by the way, was asked in a talk-back interview why she directed and developed this play she
“I grew up as a theater dork who memorized all the lyrics to Rent and Les Mis, and I was in plays in elementary school after school always. And so ... even as I grew older and experienced other things, I just — I really like the form. I like that you have to be in a room with other people. I like that you hear other people cough, and you get annoyed at people who have big hair sitting in front of you, and that there’s just this crazy, embodied experience. And so I like that a lot of different people can come into a room and have a similar point of focus, but really, really different experiences. And that just is something that is inspiring to me.”
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- Jackie Sibblies Drury
It started as a piece about surveillance, not in terms of technology but in terms of thinking about why surveillance feels more dangerous to people of colour”
—Jackie Sibblies Drury
Fairview
By Jackie Sibblies Drury
Creative
Tawiah M’Carthy Director
Pulga Muchochoma
Assistant Director/ Choreographer
Jawon Kang
Set Designer
Rachel Forbes Costume Designer
Des’ree Gray Assistant Costume Designer
Logan Cracknell Lighting Designer
Miquelon Rodriguez Sound Designer
Victoria Wang Stage Manager
Lani Martel
Assistant Stage Manager
Anita Nittoly Fight & Intimacy Coach
Jane Gooderham
Dialect Coach
Jamie Robinson Active Listener
Cast
Peter N. Bailey
Dayton
Sascha Cole Suze
Colin A. Doyle Jimbo
Jennifer Dzialoszynski Bets
Jeff Lillico Mack
Chelsea Russell Keisha
Ordena StephensThompson Beverly
Sophia Walker Jasmine Production
Daniel Bennett Technical Director
Marshall Kidd Assistant Technical Director
Chanti Laliberte Head of Wardrobe
Mary Spyrakis Head of Props
Chynah Philadelphia Props Assistant
Alysson Bernabe Scenic Artist
Chanti Laliberte Head of Wardrobe
Michael Zoffranieri Wardrobe Cutter
March 4 - 26, 2023 Berkeley Street Theatre
Running Crew:
Josh Vlodarchyk Head Technician, Lighting
Everett Dalingwater House Technician, Audio
Jon Cunningham Head Technician
Barbara Cardoso Dresser
Fairview was originally commissioned and presented by Soho Rep, New York, NY (Sarah Benson, Artistic Director; Cynthia Flowers, Executive Director) and Berkeley Repertory Theatre, Berkeley, CA (Tony Taccone, Artistic Director; Susan Medak, Managing Director)
Canadian Stage is a member of the Professional Association of Canadian Theatres and engages professional Artists who are members of Canadian Actors’ Equity Association under the terms of the jointly negotiated Canadian Theatre Agreement.
Stage Employees of the Bluma Appel Theatre are represented by Local 58 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees
This performance runs 90 minutes with no intermission
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Peter N. Bailey – Dayton
Peter (he/him) is an actor and voice coach whose life in the theatre continues to bring him joy. His theatre credits include: Romeo and Juliet, Sweat (Canadian Stage), A Few Good Men (Drayton Entertainment), Other Side of the Game (Cahoots Theatre Co. and Obsidian Theatre), To Kill a Mockingbird, An Ideal Husband, Richard III, All’s Well That Ends Well (Stratford Festival), Fences (Grand Theatre), Here Are the Fragments (The Theatre Centre). Peter’s voice coaching credits include: The Stratford Festival, The National Theatre School of Canada, Canadian Film Centre, and Sheridan College... And shoutout to the Bailey and Tiessen families!
Sascha Cole – Suze
Sascha is an actor and producer who has performed on stages throughout Canada. She is proud to have developed and premiered over thirteen new Canadian plays over her career so far. She is a Dora Award nominee and has been named one of NOW Magazine’s ‘Artists to Watch’. For Canadian Stage she previously performed in Tom Stoppard’s Rock N Roll and for Obsidian Theatre she previously performed in Shakespeare’s Nigga. Other favourite theatre credits include: Wedding at Aulis and It’s a Wonderful Life (Soulpepper); Theory (Tarragon); New Jerusalem (Harold Green Jewish Theatre); Goodnight Desdemona Good Morning Juliet (GCTC); The Diary of Anne Frank (Shakespeare in Action); Horses: outrage a la raison (It Could Still Happen); Jordan Tannahill’s Post Eden (Suburban Beast). Sascha is a graduate of the National Theatre School of Canada. Special thank you to Michael and Luca.
Colin A. Doyle – Jimbo
Colin is THRILLED to be making his Canadian Stage & Obsidian Theatre debut in this incredible show with this incredible cast & crew. He is an award-winning actor in TV, film, radio & theatre. He has toured all over Canada, the United States, & Europe. Recent theatre credits: Three Sisters (Howland Theatre), The Antipodes (Coal Mine Theatre), The Ministry of Mundane Mysteries (co-creator, Outside the March), The Flick (Outside the March & Crows Theatre, Toronto Theatre Critics Award), The Great Shadow, Bombers! (4th Line Theatre), The Cherry Orchard (Modern Times), Monday Nights (co-creator, Theatre Centre, LUMINATO, PuSH festival). FILM/TV: 5 Days in Memorial, American Gods, Titans, FANGBONE! (ACTRA nomination). Thank you to Tawiah & this beautiful cast & crew, Luke R, Beth W, Rae Ellen, Philip A, Amy K, and those who ran lines with him, his pals, parents, agents, his wife Katherine (THANK YOU!) and his new baby daughter Lily. www.colindoyle.ca
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Cast
Jennifer Dzialoszynski – Bets
Jennifer is an actor, fight director, stage combat instructor, and voice artist. She is incredibly proud to be among this fierce and passionate company, at long last, working on this incredible play. Canadian Stage credits include: Is God Is (Fight Director), Taming of the Shrew, Macbeth (Shakespeare in High Park). She has worked in theatres across Canada including: Four seasons at The Shaw Festival; King Lear, Othello, Richard III, Hamlet, (Shakespeare Bash’d); Antony & Cleopatra, Three Musketeers (St. Lawrence Shakespeare Festival); Jane Eyre, Gone With The Wind (Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre); August: Osage County (The Citadel); Boeing, Boeing, Perfect Wedding (Magnus Theatre); Kindertransport (Harold Green Jewish Theatre); Hana’s Suitcase (The Grand Theatre); among others.
Jeff Lillico – Mack
Jeff is thrilled to be making his Obsidian Theatre debut. Previously with Canadian Stage, Jeff appeared in Cruel & Tender, directed by Atom Egoyan. Past productions at the Berkeley Street Theatre include Clybourne Park (Studio 180); Grey Gardens, The Light in The Piazza (Dora Award) (Musical Stage Company); & Company (Theatre 20). Jeff has performed in 23 productions for Soulpepper (including at the Signature Center – 42nd St, NYC), 5 seasons with the Shaw Festival, as well as Stratford, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, Crow’s, Tarragon, Factory, Buddies in Bad Times & many others. On screen, Jeff can be seen as Coffey on Netflix’s Locke & Key, as well as in On the Basis of Sex, Designated Survivor, Murdoch Mysteries, Hudson & Rex, Nurses, Rocky Horror Picture Show (2016), Copper & Flashpoint
Chelsea Russell – Keisha
Chelsea is a Jamaican-bred DORA and Canadian Screen Award nominee. Her theatre credits include Da Kink in My Hair (Soulpepper Theatre), Pipeline (Soulpepper Theatre), Judas Noir (Obsidian Theatre/BDB Productions) and Bella Donna (Tarragon Theatre). Her film and television credits include Fellow Travellers (Showtime), Skymed (Paramount Plus), 21 Black Futures, Rebirth of the Afronauts (CBC Gem), See (Apple TV) and short film Woman Meets Girl
When Chelsea is not working on the stage or screen, she is working on releasing her musical projects. Her Instagram handle to follow her journey is @chelsearussell0. She is currently working on releasing an EP available on Spotify and Apple Music. She would like to thank her mother Maxan Russell and her agent Alix Kazman.
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Ordena Stephens-Thompson – Beverly
Ordena is a two-time Dora nominated actress whose selected theatre credits include: ’Da Kink in My Hair 20th Anniversary (Soulpepper/TO Live), Contraction (Studio 180 Reads), Sweat (Canadian Stage/Studio 180), Fences (Grand Theatre), Harlem Duet (Tarragon Theatre), Risky Phil (YPT), Other Side of the Game (Cahoots/Obsidian Theatre), For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow Is Enuf (Soulpepper Theatre), How Black Mothers Say I Love You (Factory Theatre). Selected TV and film credits include: Christmas at the Drive Inn, Brother (feature film), Ruby and the Well (seasons 1 and 2), Kings of Napa, Hudson & Rex, Salt n’ Pepa, Grand Army, Umbrella Academy, The Handmaid’s Tale, ‘Da Kink in My Hair (TV series seasons 1 and 2).
Sophia Walker – Jasmine
Sophia is a Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson University) Theatre graduate, Alum of the Canadian Film Centre’s CBC Actors Conservatory, and an award-winning actor. Her film and television appearances include: Neil Burger’s The Marsh King’s Daughter, MGM/ HULU’S The Handmaid’s Tale, Paramount’s The Mayor of Kingstown, CBS’S Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, ABC’s Designated Survivor, a recurring role on AMC’s series The Divide, Y: The Last Man and the feature Born to be Blue. She also played recurring roles on Carmilla and Shadowhunters. Theatre credits include: Black Mary in Gem of the Ocean (Shaw Festival), Niesha in Our Place (Cahoots). Walker has spent the last 11 seasons performing at the Stratford Festival, and she was part of The Birmingham Conservatory for Classical Theatre. Love 2 Gil!
Creative
Jackie Sibblies Drury – Playwright
Jackie Sibblies Drury is a Brooklyn-based playwright. Her critically acclaimed Pulitzer Prize-winning play Fairview premiered in 2018 at Soho Rep. Other plays include We Are Proud to Present a Presentation About the Herero of Namibia, Formerly Known as South West Africa, From the German Sudwestafrika, Between the Years 1884-1915, Really, and Social Creatures
Drury’s plays have been presented by New York City Players and Abrons Arts Center, Soho Rep, Victory Gardens, Trinity Rep, Woolly Mammoth, Undermain Theatre, InterAct Theatre, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Company One, and The Bush Theatre in London, among others. Her work has been developed at The Bellagio Center, Sundance, The Ground Floor, Manhattan Theatre Club, Ars Nova, A.C.T., The Soho Rep Writer/Director Lab, NYTW, PRELUDE, The Bushwick Starr, and The MacDowell Colony. Drury is a NYTW Usual Suspect, a United States Artists Gracie Fellow, has received a Van Lier Fellowship at New Dramatists, a Jerome Fellowship at The LARK, a Windham-Campbell Literary Prize in Drama, and is a finalist for the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize.
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Tawiah M’Carthy - Director
Tawiah is a Ghanaian-born, Toronto-based theatre practitioner, notable as a director, creator, playwright, and performer. His creator/performer credits include Maanomaa, My Brother (Blue Bird Theatre Collective), Black Boys (Saga Collectif), Obaaberima (Buddies in Bad Times) and Yɛn Ara Asaase Ni, 21 Black Futures (Obsidian Theatre). His directing credits include Fairview (Canadian Stage / Obsidian Theatre), Death and the King’s Horseman (Stratford Festival) and Rihannaboi95 (Young People’s Theatre). He is a founding member and co-artistic director of Blue Bird Theatre Collective. Tawiah has worked with various organizations across Canada including Soulpepper, Factory Theatre, National Arts Center, Shaw, and MT Space. Tawiah is a Dora-nominated playwright and performer.
Pulga Muchochoma - Assistant Director/ Choreographer
Pulga was born in Mozambique where His dance training began with Montes Namuli Dance Company. In August of 2006, he came to Toronto with the company for the International AIDS Conference. With Montes Namuli/Shakespeare Link Canada, he performed in several shows in venues across Toronto. In 2006, Pulga stayed in Toronto to study at the School of Toronto Dance Theatre. By the year 2009, he graduated and then joined the Toronto Dance Theatre company, where he had the pleasure of working and collaborating with many local and international choreographers. He’s also the creator and founder of Pulga Dance, est. 2015. In 2022, he joined Stratford Festival where he played Joseph in Death and the Kings Horseman, directed by Tawiah Ben M’Carthy.
Jawon Kang - Set Designer
Jawon is a Korean-Canadian theatre designer based in Toronto. Canadian Stage credits include: Set design for Fairview; design assistance for Choir Boy. Other theatre credits include: Costume design for Armadillos (upcoming, Factory Theatre); design assistance for Of The Sea (Tapestry Opera and Obsidian Theatre); set design for Redbone Coonhound (Tarragon and Imago Theatre); set designs for Directors’ Workshop Project (Stratford Festival); associate set design for Death and the King’s Horseman (Stratford Festival); costume design for Venus (NTS); design assistance for 21 Black Futures (Obsidian Theatre). Jawon is a graduate of the set and costume design program at the National Theatre school of Canada and the recipient of 2022 Tyrone Guthrie Award for theatre design study.
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Rachel Forbes - Costume Designer
Rachel is an award-winning set and costume designer creating for theatre, dance, opera and film. Her designs have been seen on stages all across Canada. She is a board member for the Associated Designers of Canada. Rachel is particularly interested in the development of new works, interdisciplinary explorations, experimental creation methods and design lead projects. She received a Dora Mavor Moore award for costume design of The Brothers Size (Soulpepper) and a Merrit Award for set design of The Bridge (2B/Neptune). Selected Credits: Choir Boy (Canadian Stage & Arts Club) Death and the King’s Horseman (Stratford Festival); Harlem Duet (Bard on the Beach); The Doctor’s Dilemma, Trouble in Mind, Victory, 1837: The Farmers’ Revolt (Shaw Festival); New Monuments (Canadian Stage, Luminato), 21 Black Futures (Obsidian Theatre, CBC).
Des’ree Gray - Assistant Costume Designer
Des’ree is a Toronto-based Costume Designer with experience in film and theatre. She is a graduate of Toronto Metropolitan University’s Production Design Program and takes pride in her abilities in all stages of the design process. Work: Costume Designer for The Flight (Factory Theatre); Assistant Costume Designer for Yerma (Coal Mine Theatre); Assistant Costume Designer for Da Kink in My Hair (Canadian Stage); Costume Designer for The First Stone (Buddies in Bad Times Theatre); Assistant Costume Designer for Little Women (Stratford Festival); Assistant Costume Designer for 1851: Spirit & Voice (SoulPepper Theatre); Designer for Designing The Revolution (Theatre Passe Muraille).
Online: Instagram @desreegraydesigns; Website www.desreegraydesigns.ca
Logan Raju Cracknell - Lighting Designer
Logan is a Toronto-based theatre artist specializing in theatrical design and live stream creation. Canadian Stage credits include: As You Like It/Dream in High Park 2022, Dream in High Park 2021. Other Credits include: Prodigal (Howland Company), The Extinction Therapist (Theatre Aquarius), Alice in Wonderland (Bad Hats Theatre), Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill (Theatre Calgary), Dixon Road (The Musical Stage Company/Obsidian Theatre Company), William Shakespeare’s As You Like It: A Radical Retelling by Cliff Cardinal (Crow’s Theatre).
Miquelon Rodriguez - Sound Designer
Miquelon is a Dora-nominated Sound Designer/Composer and Director based in T’karonto. Canadian Stage credits include: Dream in High ParkNoWhen. Recent theatre credits include: Ok, You Can Stop Now (Theatre Passe Muraille); X and Da Spirit (Theatre Passe Muraille/bCurrent); My Sister’s Rage (Tarragon); Gem of the Ocean (Shaw Festival); and Year of the Rat (Factory). He is a graduate of the Artistic Leadership Residency at the National Theatre School of Canada and was a two-season Apprentice Artistic Director at Factory Theatre under Nina Lee Aquino. Miquelon is currently writing and directing an “audio-only video game” with Frog In Hand Theatre Company and Diaspora Games and will be making his Stratford debut this year as sound designer on King Lear
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Victoria Wang - Stage Manager
Victoria is a Toronto-based stage manager, producer, and arts administrator. Canadian Stage credits include: Love and Information, All’s Well That Ends Well, Hamlet, Julius Caesar, Comedy of Errors. Other theatre credits include: My Sister’s Rage (Tarragon Theatre); Solitudes (Aluna Theatre); Hilot Means Healer (Cahoots); Four Sisters (Luminato); Hockey Sweater: A Musical (Segal Centre/NAC). She has also worked with The Musical Stage Company, Nuit Blanche, TIFF and theatre festivals including SummerWorks and Rhubarb. Outside of theatre, Victoria enjoys practicing yoga and is a certified instructor.
Lani Martel – Assistant Stage Manager
Lani is a stage manager whose career has taken her across the country. She is delighted to be working with Canadian Stage and Obsidian Theatre for the first time. Recent favourite credits include A Thousand Splendid Suns, The Mountaintop, Intimate Apparel, The Little Prince (Grand Theatre), #34 and I Call Myself Princess (Globe Theatre), and Manman La Mer (Théâtre Catapulte), as well as various productions with Port Stanley Festival Theatre, Eldritch Theatre, Western Canada Theatre, Theatre NorthWest, Blyth Festival, The National Ballet of Canada, Dasein Dance Theatre Company, FLUX Dance Festival, CCDT, and Opera Lyra Ottawa.
Anita Nittoly – Fight & Sexual Choreography
Selected Fight Director credits: 2019 Season (The Stratford Festival); The Last Wife, The 39 Steps, Successions (Centaur Theatre); Whole World (Carousel Players); Kitchen Radio, Stag & Doe, 2018 Season (Blyth Festival); Don Quichotte, Die Walkure, Carmen (Canadian Opera Company, Associate Fight Master). Stage Combat Instructor and Fight Director/Sexual Choreographer (National Theatre School). Intimacy Choreographer: Trojan Girls and The Outhouse of Atreus (Outside The March/Factory Theatre/Factory Theatre); Our Place (Cahoots Theatre/Theatre Passe Murraille); TV/FILM: Stunt Performer/Stunt Actor (selected credits: SEE, Star Trek: Discovery, Pretty Hard Cases, Teen Titans, The Boys, Rabbit Hole, What We Do in the Shadows, various Ubisoft motion capture productions).
Jane Gooderham – Dialect Coach
For Canadian Stage: London Road, The Syringa Tree, Rock ’n’ Roll. Other: 19 seasons with The Stratford Festival; Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, Cloud Nine, The Lord of the Rings, The Producers (Mirvish); Shaw Festival; War Horse, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (Royal National Theatre/Mirvish); Matilda (Royal Shakespeare Company/Mirvish); Oroonoko, Chair (Theatre for a New Audience, New York). Television: Good Sam (CBS), Reacher (Amazon), Republic of Doyle (CBC). Teaching: Head of Voice, National Theatre School of Canada (2009-16); Centre for Indigenous Theatre; Birmingham Conservatory. Training: Royal Central School of Speech and Drama (MA Voice), Guildhall School of Music & Drama (BA Acting).
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We’re proud to be the Canadian Stage’s 2022/23 Season Sponsor.
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Photo: Lorne Bridgman
Amaka Umeh & Deborah Hay
Jamie Robinson – Active Listener
Jamie has been a Toronto-based professional artist since 1997 as an actor, director, producer, teacher and writer. Select director credits include: This summer’s Midsummer Night’s Dream in High Park, 1184 (The Aga Khan/ Phoenix Arts), Madness with Rocks (CBC Gem/Obsidian Theatre), Copy That (Tarragon Theatre), Scotian Journey (Black Theatre Workshop), She Stoops to Conquer and Romeo & Juliet (Guild Festival Theatre, also as Artistic Director). Theatre acting credits include: Four seasons with the Stratford Festival of Canada, Much Ado About Nothing and Measure for Measure (Canadian Stage), Risky Phil (Young People’s Theatre. Dora Award Winner, Outstanding Performance), Gas Girls (New Harlem Productions. Dora Award Nomination), Title role in Richard III (Metachroma Theatre. METAward nomination). Film/TV acting credits include: Condor (AT&T), Believe Me (Showcase), Hudson & Rex (Rogers), Expanse (SyFy), Murdoch Mysteries (Shaftesbury), Celeste in the City (ABC). Jamie is a professor of Acting/Directing for York University and is currently co-editing/writing for the current issue of Canadian Theatre Review focused upon Race and Casting.
Production
Chanti Laliberte – Head of Wardrobe
Chanti is a Toronto-based theatre craftsperson with a BFA from York University. A two-time nominee for the Pauline McGibbon Award, Chanti’s work has been seen on stages throughout Ontario. For Canadian Stage: Fall On Your Knees, As You Like It, All But Gone (with Necessary Angel). For Obsidian Theatre Company: School Girls; Or, the African Mean Girls (with Nightwood Theatre), The Gravitational Pull of Bernice Trimble (with Factory Theatre). Other credits include: The Men In White, Prairie Nurse, Bang Bang, trace, Little Pretty and the Exceptional (Factory Theatre). Musik Fur Das Ende (Soundstreams), Obeah Opera (Asah Productions). Chanti spent many seasons with The Blyth Festival and worked as a shoe craftsperson with the Stratford Festival & Jitterbug Boy. Drink more water.
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Obsidian is Canada’s leading culturally specific theatre company with a threefold mission to produce plays, to develop playwrights and to train emerging theatre professionals. We are passionately dedicated to the exploration, development, and production of the Black voice. Obsidian produces plays from a world-wide canon focusing primarily, but not exclusively, on the works of highly acclaimed Black playwrights. Obsidian provides artistic support, promoting the development of work by Black theatre makers and offering training opportunities through mentoring and apprenticeship programs for emerging Black artists.
Obsidian Theatre Company was born out of a passionate sense of artistic responsibility – a responsibility to bring the Black voice, in its many artistic dialects, to Canada’s cultural forefront. Obsidian encourages Black artists to expand their vision of what they perceive, create and present to a national audience. Obsidian continues to play a prominent role in Canada’s theatrical mosaic by showcasing the work of both emerging and established Black artists.
Since its inception, our development programs have led many artists to expand their professional development and create new Canadian works. Through our training programs, we produce plays, develop playwrights and train emerging theatre professionals.
17 KEEP IN TOUCH! @obsidiantheatre
Of the Sea
March 25–April 1, 2023
The Bluma Appel Theatre
Libretto by Kanika Ambrose | Composed by Ian Cusson
Directed by Philip Akin | Music Direction by Jennifer Tung
With The Canadian Opera Company Orchestra
An Obsidian Theatre Company and Tapestry Opera co-production, in partnership with TO Live
Obsidian Season Sponsor
Tapestry Season Sponsor
18
ART BY
GERDA BOATENG
S T A F F
Mumbi Tindyebwa Otu Artistic Director
Michael Sinclair General Manager
Vanessa Spence Producer daniel jelani ellis
Metcalf Intern
Artistic Director
Jay Northcott Young, Gifted & Black (YGB) Program Director
Lisa Codrington Playwrights Unit Facilitator
Beverley Thomas-Barnes Chair
Walter Gibbons Treasurer
Stacey Norton Secretary
Ashima Chopra Director Sascha Cole Director
Kevin Hanchard Director
Alistair Hepburn Director
19
B O A R D
OBSIDIAN SEASON SPONSOR
OBSIDIAN SUPPORTERS
OBSIDIAN YOUNG, GIFTED & BLACK PROGRAM SUPPORTERS
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Obsidian Supporters
Rainbow Sheen [$1000+]
B&B Hamilton Fund
Ms Jennifer Birmingham
Black Solidarity Fund
Robin Cardozo
Denham Corporation
Kamala-Jean Gopie
Ins Choi Productions Inc
Kingfisher Foundation
Professor J W Michael & Dr. Edith Lorimer
Mary McDougall Maude
Necessary Angel Theatre
Pat And Tony Adams Trust
Patricia J Fleming Fund
Penguin Random House
McLean Smits Family
Mary McDougall Maude
Canada Helps
Elizabeth Pasternak
Nicholas Eddie
Jay Fisher
Gold Sheen [$500-$999]
Burgundy Asset Management LTD
Mary Anne Chambers
Jacqueline Costa
David Crawford
Kevin & Christine Hanchard
Greg Holness
Richard Knowles
Ulla Laidlaw
Martha Loewen
Kewayn Lynch
Signy Lynch
Stacey Norton
Amanda Rosenthal
Leslie Sanders
Michael Sinclair
Wood Hart Fund
Amanda Rosenthal
Karen Lawrence
Kristin Moriah
Silver Sheen [$250-$499]
Neil Foster & Alicia Jeffery
Sarah Bay-Chen
Ashima Chopra
Sascha Cole
Lisa Cunningham
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Kardon Douglas
Eva Feldman
Daniel Levinson
Adam Pottle
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Neta Rose
Lily Sutherland
Marcus Tuttle
Marc Zwelling
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Anonymous
Faye Schepmyer
Paula Wing
Melanie McNeill
Canada On Line Giving
Colin Rivers
Kevin & Christine Hanchard
Kamala-Jean Gopie
Red Mahogany [$100-$249]
Ravi Jain & Sarena Parmar
9 Story Media Group
Diana Abraham
Amir & Aleks Realty Team
Anonymous
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Revel Coffee
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Darling Brenda & Ian Gilmour
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Christopher Dearlove
Debbie Ebanks (School)
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Walter Gibbons
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Basia Gilas
Andrew Guy
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Rose Janson
Alomar Kocur
Madeline Lunney
Stephanie Malek
Anyika Mark
Grecia Mayers
Derek Miller
Natalie Morgan
Zachery Moull
Natasha Mumba
Russel Niessen
Sonya Popovich
Grahame Renyk
Colin Rivers
Peter Roberts
Faye Schepmyer
Paula Shewchuk
Sarah Garton Stanley
Heidi Taylor
Stephanie Taylor
Leonie Thelwell
United Way
Vive Social Marketing Inc
Janet Watson
Emma Westray
Alten Wilmot
Paula Wing
Hersh Zeifman
Peter Hill
Krista Wylie
Diana Ralph
Stacey Norton
Neta Rose
Anonymous
Anyika Mark
Bernice Neil
Katherine Bishop
Joanna Decc
Charity Aid Foundation
Alistair Hepburn
Jini Stolk
Claire Hopkinson
Hilary Land
Grave Lindo Academy of Cdn
Black Glass
[up to $99]
Dalmar Abuzied
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Oritsetimeyin Agbeyegbe
Lauren Allen
Laura Ashmore
Emilie Aubin
Rebecca Ballarin
Nicola Bardell
Linda Barnett
Eva Barrie
Nicole Baughan
Madeline Billiel
Wade Bogert-OBrien
Danielle Bourgon
Ellen Brooker
Coleen Burke
Sarah By-Chen
Nathan Carroll
Annie Clarke
Gemma Clifton
Leo Compton
Shane Corkey
Kate Crome
Constance Crompton
Kate Croome
Cyber Graants TD Staff
Sara D’Agostinoi
Stacy Darko
Francis Dean
Colleen Derkatch
Loretta Diaz
Mikayla Dunlop
Kaitlain Dunn
Allison Edwards-Crewe
Fatma Sarah Elkashef
Tequeilla Faulkner
Suzanne Gerhold
Kyle Golemba
Humberly Gonzales
Joyce Henry
Nathan Heuvingh
Peter Hill
Tiffany Hong
Kayla Horn
Katie Howgate
Beverley John
Carman Johnston
Thalia Gonzalez Kane
Ms Denyse Karn
Jennifer Kelley
Robert Kempson
Erin Kim
Heather Kirkham
Victoria Laberge
Andrew Lamb
David Lee
Annie Liao
Amanda Lin
Lisa Lister
Sabrina Litherland
Frances Loiselle
Cameron MacKenzie
Bonnie MacLeod
Laura McCallum
Sonya McFarlane
Tymika McKenzie
Heather McMartin
Yago Mesquita
Clear Mortifee
Elisa Natarelli
Bernice Neal
Lise Olds
Vivian Pow
Nan Richardson
Carol Roundtree
Carla Sanchez
Julia Schultz
Vanessa Sears
Tessa Simpson
Lynn Slotkin
Barbara Stewart
Shawn Stillman
Heather Stolte
Vicki Storich
Carla Tassara
Catherine Teichman
Verie Thompson
Sean Towgood
Rebecca Tran
Diana Tso
Sarah Tumalium
Brenda Vellino
Yolanda Ferrato
Kevin Vidal
Margaret Fortuna Yassky
Anja Zelkovic
Taylor Onski
Alex Currie
Jeremy Opolsky
Romina Julian
Jeanne LeSage
Sunny Drake
On Line Giving
Aidan Morishita-Miki
Connor Copeland
Beatrice Campbell
Rachel Birnberg
Dave Deveau
Alessandro Constantini
1 Anonymous donor
22
Thank You!
Many thanks to The Slaight Family Foundation for your transformational theatre initiative. Your commitment of $15 million to 22 Canadian theatre companies and training institutions will have a profound impact as we rebuild and relaunch the performing arts in Canada.
Over the next two years, this truly extraordinary investment from the Slaight Family Foundation will exponentially support and amplify the work at Canadian Stage, full of innovative projects and programs for artists and audiences. It will ease the expected and unexpected challenges with the sector’s re-opening after the long and volatile pandemic closure period. This incredible act of faith and support from the Slaight Family Foundation will have a lasting impact across the sector for years and years to come.
— Brendan Healy & Monica Esteves
Public Enemy. Matthew Edison, Amy Rutherford, Jonathan Goad, Rosemary Dunsmore, Finley Burke, Michelle Monteith, Maja Vujicic.
Photo by Dahlia Katz. Set by Julie Fox, Costumes by Ming Wong, Lighting by Kimberly Purtell.
As part of our goal to help people feel a sense of belonging in their communities, TD supports arts and culture events, initiatives, and organizations across North America that amplify diverse voices. That’s why we’re thrilled to support Obsidian Theatre Company and the first Canadian production of Jackie Sibblies Drury’s Fairview
td.com/artsandculture
25 ® The TD logo and other TD trademarks are the property of The Toronto-Dominion Bank or its subsidiaries.
We believe that when people participate in their community, good things can happen.
Annual Donors, Sponsors and Members
Canadian Stage is grateful to the many individuals and organizations that supported our activities during the 21.22 season. They allowed us to invest in artist development, experiment with new technologies, build our pipeline of new work and present artistic experiences at the highest levels.
Artistic Director’s Circle
$100,000+
Marilyn Baillie, C.M. & Charles Baillie, O.C.
BMO Financial Group
$50,000-$99,999
David W. Binet
John & Nancy Embry
The William and Nona Heaslip Foundation
RBC Foundation
TD Bank Group Through the Ready Commitment
$25,000-$49,999
Mark & Gail Appel
The Azrieli Foundation
Alexandra Baillie
CIBC
The Council for Canadian American Relations (made possible by the
Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation)
Brendan Healy
The Henry White Kinnear Foundation
Trina McQueen, O.C.
Shawn McReynolds & Elaine Kierans
Polar Asset Management
The Sabourin Family Foundation
Producer’s Club
$10,000 - $24,999
Canada Life
Fran & Ed Clark
Hugh Clark
Davies
Deloitte Canada
Steven Endicott
The Estée Lauder Companies Inc.
Monica Esteves & Chris Bretz
Huw Evans & Kathryn Bird
Sheila Goldman
Goodmans
KPMG
The McLean Foundation
Metcalf Foundation
Remembering Otto & Marie Pick
Charitable Foundation
Sandra & Jim Pitblado, C.M.
Timothy & Frances Price
Skygrid
Sylvia Soyka
Julie Sutherland
Torys LLP
Wendigo Investments
Julie, Peter & James in Memory of John David Wood
Woodbourne
Anonymous (1)
$5,000 - $9,999
Sara & Dr. Michael Angel
The Marion Armstrong Charitable Foundation
Tony Baylis
Ellis Don Capital
Entuitive
Joan & Clifford Hatch Foundation
Linda Glover & Ian de Verteuil
Nicole Holder
Kathy Inch & Steve Simpson
RAD Marketing
Penny & Robert Richards Elizabeth
Smith & Andersen
Suulin Architects
Anonymous (1)
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$2,000 - $4,999
Rick Archbold & Rick Feldman
Renee Barrette & Gary Bryck
Benefaction Foundation
Sylvia Bethlenfalvy
Adam Burke
Communauto
Lynn Eakin
Dr. Roy Eappen
Jay Fisher
Richard & Justine Giuliani Foundation at Hamilton Community Foundation
Ludwig W. Kalchhauser
LeMay
Ian & Dorothy MacDonald
Stuart MacGregor
Gail MacNaughton & In Memory of John MacNaughton
Paul Maranger & Robert Brown
John Montesano
Robert Morassutti
Alice Morgan
Ed & Cindy Nowina
Aine O’Flynn & Steven Braun
Perry Orestes & Tim Giguere
The Pat & Tony Freedom Trust
Penny Partridge & George Staznik
The Racioppo Family Foundation
Linda Reed
Gabrielle Richards
Glenn Rogers
Helena Ruken
Greg Sharp
Jason Silzer
Doug & Gail Todgham
Antoinette & John Tummillio
Carole Winberg
City Builders Members
Principals
Kingsett Capital
SvN Architects + Planners
Vandyk Properties
Partners
Allied Properties REIT
Castlepoint Numa
Diamond Schmitt
EllisDon
ERA
Hugh Clark Associates
Multiplex
TAS
BDP Quadrangle
Boszko & Verity Inc.
Enwave Energy
KPMB
LRI Engineering Inc.
Newmark
RAW Design
Lifetime Giving
Canadian Stage wishes to thank the generous contributions from individuals and corporations whose lifetime financial contributions to the company exceed $100,000.
Above $2,000,000
Bram & Bluma Appel
The Bluma Appel Community Trust
BMO Financial Group
TD Bank Group
$1,000,000 - $1,999,999
Marilyn Baillie, C.M. & Charles Baillie, O.C
CIBC
Sandra Simpson
$500,000 - $999,999
BMO Harris Private Banking
Susan Crocker, C.M. & John Hunkin, C.M.
John & Nancy Embry
Imperial Oil Foundation
Ron Lalonde & Jane Humphreys
William MacKinnon
Manulife Financial
Maureen & Roger Parkinson
RBC Foundation
Scotiabank
St. Joseph Communications
Anonymous (1)
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$250,000 - $499,999
David W. Binet
Canada Life
Hal Jackman Foundation
The Henry White Kinnear Foundation
Laidlaw Foundation
Loblaw Companies Limited
Metcalf Foundation
Ontario Trillium Foundation
Jack & Judith Rose
Sylvia Soyka
Sun Life Financial
Anonymous (1)
$100,000 - $249,999
Alexandra Baillie
Cathy Bateman
Jill E. Black & Barry Allan
Susan & Hans Brenninkmeyer
The Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation
M. Joan Chalmers C.C., O.Ont & Barbara Amesbury
Peter & Frances Chiddy
Mark & Ann Curry
Deloitte Foundation
Ernst & Young LLP
Margaret & Jim Fleck, O.C.
GE Canada
Peter & Dianne Gillin
Gluskin Sheff & Associates Inc.
Sheila Goldman
Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation
Barbara Hackett & John Tory
The William & Nona Macdonald
Heaslip Foundation
Hewlett Packard Canada
HSBC Bank Canada
Ken Hugessen & Jennifer Connolly
Intact Insurance Company
Ed & Ann Kerwin
KPMG Canada
Adrian Lang & Ash Taylor
Don & Marjorie Lenz
Gail MacNaughton & In Memory of John MacNaughton
John & Kay McKellar Household
Trina McQueen, O.C.
Molson Coors Brewing Company
Sandra & Jim Pitblado
Polar Foundation
Emmanuel Pressman
Timothy & Frances Price
PwC Canada
Shawn McReynolds & Elaine Kierans
Penny & Robert Richards
Jim Riley & Nicole Sigouin
Edward S. Rogers
Rogers Communications Inc.
Ellen & Brian Rose
The Sabourin Family Foundation
Schuyler Bankes & Family
The Estate of Stanley Shaw
TC Energy
Tridel Corporation
Chip & Barbara Vallis
Arlene & Michael Willis
Julie, Peter & James in Memory of John David Wood
Anonymous (2)
Legacy Giving
We are grateful to the following individuals who have very thoughtfully and generously remembered Canadian Stage in their estates.
The Estate of Bluma Appel
The Estate of Kenneth C. Dawe
The Estate of John Gordon Hunter Larry Lubin
The Estate of Stanley Shaw
The Estate of Helen Joan Kates
These listings include donations received between July 1, 2021 and August 31, 2022. We have made every effort to ensure proper recognition. If, however, your name has been accidentally omitted, listed incorrectly, or misspelled, we apologize. Please notify us at donate@canadianstage.com with any corrections.
28
Coming Soon
Maanomaa, My Brother My Brother
April 11 - 30, 2023
Berkeley Street Theatre
The development of Maanomaa, My Brother was made possible by the generous support of lemonTree creations, Inter Arts Matrix, Nightswimming, the Region of Waterloo Arts Fund, artsNB, the Toronto Arts Council, the Ontario Arts Council and the Canada Council for the Arts.
Co-created by Tawiah M’Carthy and Brad Cook with Anne-Marie Donovan
Canadian Stage
Board of Directors
Alexandra Baillie Chair
Hugh Clark Vice-Chair
Adam Burke Treasurer
Huw Evans Secretary
Nimal Amitirigala
Sara Angel
Rupinder Dhillon
Paul Fletcher
Councillor Paula Fletcher
Colin Hennigar
Nina Josefowitz
Elaine Kierans
Marc Mayer
Trina McQueen
John Montesano
Penny Partridge
Vanessa Pfaff
Drew Sinclair
Julie Sutherland
Vandana Taxali
Margaritta Topielski
Raj Uttamchandani Management
Brendan Healy
Artistic Director
Monica Esteves
Executive Director
Beth Toombs Director of Finance and Administration
Heather McMartin Director of Development and Campaigns
Elissa Horscroft Director of Production and Facilities
Tanya Doroslovac Director of Marketing and Communications
Artistic
Lynanne Sparrow Producer
Jordan Laffrenier Associate Artistic Director
Laurie Merredew Company Manager
Jade Silman New Work Development Coordinator
Lucy Mee Producing Intern Development
Kathryn Liedeman Associate Director of Individual Giving
Chris Faulkner Senior Manager, Government Relations and Foundations
Derolyn Kinkead Senior Manager of Corporate Development
Gillian Hoff Manager of Special Events
Shaneill Floyd-Wlazlak Development Coordinator
Finance & Administration
Sunitha Rai Manager, Payroll Administration and HR Support
Kari Seppen Intermediate Accountant
Brian Parsons Senior Manager, IT Services
Ruth-Anne Yiu Executive and Planning Assistant
Stephanie Fung Executive Director Intern
Phillip Pike Data Entry Clerk, Accounts Payable
Marketing and Communications
Juliana Feng Digital Strategy and Communications Manager
Madison Zinger Marketing Coordinator
Derek Ma Graphic and Digital Designer
Michael Crumpton Senior Sales Specialist
Shannon Tigert Audience Services Manager
Faisal Butt Assistant Manager to Audience Services
J. Atlas Front of House Manager Production
Meg Woods Assistant Production Manager
Daniel Bennett Technical Director Gunes Agduk Production Coordinator
Jillian Wardell Assistant Technical Director
Marshall Kidd Assistant Technical Director
Mary Spyrakis Head of Properties
George Nadrous Building Operations Manager
Jon Cunningham Head Technician (Upstairs Theatre)
Josh Vlodarchyk Head Technician (Baillie Theatre)
Everett Dalingwater House Technician
30
Support
Government Support
Season Sponsor Special Foundation Support
Major Corporate Sponsors
Major Foundation Supporters
The Council for Canadian American Relations (made possible by the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation)
Henry White Kinnear Foundation
City Builders – Principal Sponsors
The Joan and Clifford Hatch Foundation
The William and Nona Heaslip Foundation
Hal Jackman Foundation Kingfisher Foundation
Otto & Marie Pick Charitable Foundation
The Sabourin Family Foundation
Hotel Sponsor
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