Some guy said to me, “Don’t you think you’re too old to sing rock n roll?”
I said, “You’d better check with Mick Jagger.”
~Cher
Some guy said to me, “Don’t you think you’re too old to sing rock n roll?”
I said, “You’d better check with Mick Jagger.”
~Cher
Director
Seamus Is an emerging director who is thrilled to be making his professional directing debut with Western Gold Theatre. Directing credits include Bare (Eternal Theatre Collective), MilkMilkLemonade (Awkward Stage Productions). Assistant Director credits include: Seventeen, Escaped Alone (Western Gold Theatre), Charles III (The Arts Club), The Imaginary Invalid, Taken at Midnight (United Players).
Seamus also works as an arts educator and has directed numerous productions for the Arts Umbrella Pre-Professional Training Program (The Boxcar Children, Chaos, Kindness), Coquitlam Youth Theatre (King Arthur’s Calamity, Unity (1918), A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Oh What A Lovely War 2.0, The Jungle Book, Our Town) and the Vancouver School Board (DNA, (Anon)ymous, The Secret in the Wings). Seamus is also an emerging playwright having received productions with The Or Festival, Arts Umbrella, and Vancouver School Board. He hopes you all enjoy discovering the world of A Doll’s House Part 2, and much gratitude to the WGT team.
Playwright
Born and raised in East Vancouver, Michael has been involved in the local arts scene as an actor for over forty years. Since graduating from Studio 58, he has been fortunate enough to work with and learn from artists on both sides of the border.
Having written two short one-act plays, this is Michael’s first time tackling a full-length piece. He loves writing about the old neighborhood and the characters he remembers growing up on the east side. It is an honour to be part of the first Have A Senior Moment Festival with Western Gold Theatre, and he is looking forward to hearing and seeing the other writers’ works.
Actually, this is not Mike’s first senior moment. That happened last year at the bank when they told him he was eligible for my seniors’ discount!! Soon he will be eligible for discounted prices at Provincial campsites!!!!!!!! Golden Years . . . Golden Years Bop Bop Bop!! Michael hopes you all enjoy the festival and continue to support local artists and our work.
Playwright
Susinn is a Vancouver-based actress who has worked in theatres across the country from Dawson City to Halifax. Nominated for 7 Jessie Richardson awards, she’s won for her leading roles in Menopositive the Musical! and Hello Dolly! at the Vancouver Playhouse. Susinn is one of the founders of Wet Ink Collective, whose mandate is to promote gender equity on the stage and screen by mentoring and supporting women writers. Her first play Since You Left Us was voted one of the best shows in Vancouver in 2014. They’re Naked, They’re Ugly and They Owe Us Money is her second play.
Playwright
Actor, Director, Folk Singer, Composer, and Professional Panda Fluffer, Jay Brazeau left Winnipeg in the early eighties. He left the snow, the ice, the mosquitos, and the return of the Winnipeg Jets to find his good fortune, here in Vancouver. And in all those years, he has been lucky enough to act in over 300 films, sing in over 40 musicals and act, compose, and direct over 100 plays. He was also fortunate enough to co-write and compose music for another 10.
But in all that time, he never or was too lazy or scared to write a play by himself. Well he turned 70 in December and started writing Fortunate Sons six years ago and is so happy to finally share it with you all.
Jay feels it’s important to remember an artist never stops being an artist, even after he or she or they have passed on. Jay has started writing two more plays, is having a wonderful time, and can’t wait to share them with you.
Director / Facilitator
Johnna has worked, studied, and collaborated in various parts of Canada as a director, actor, producer, dramaturg, and playwright and has supported the development of dozens of new Canadian plays.
She was a co-founder of Bard on the Beach, where her most recent project was an acclaimed adaptation of All’s Well that Ends Well set in India on the eve of Partition, co-created and co-directed with Rohit Chokhani.
With writing partner Patty Jamieson, Johnna co-wrote an adaptation of Patrick Hamilton’s Gaslight, which premiered at the Shaw Festival and will tour Australia next year. Patty and Johnna’s next play The Three Musketeers is in development. Johnna also wrote The Suspect, an adaptation of her mother’s award-winning novel.
After the challenges of the last few years, Johnna believes more than ever in the power of theatre to change the way we see the world and in the need for audiences to have that experience together.
Anne Marie
Tanja was last seen with Western Gold Theatre in Funny Money, Escaped Alone, and Jack of Diamonds. Recent theatre includes Act of Faith (Real Wheels), A Prayer for Owen Meany (ETC /Pacific Theatre), The Wolves (With a Spoon /Pacific Theatre), and The Beauty Queen of Leenane (ETC). Film/TV credits include a bunch of blink and you’ll miss ‘em plus the occasional role with an actual name!
Nominated for a number of Jessie’s, she is most proud to have received the Mary Phillips Award. Tanja is the Artistic Director of Western Gold Theatre.
Torvald
Tom has been a Vancouver-based actor since 1975 working across most of Canada with over 130 stage credits. His three Best Actor Jessies Richardson Theatre Awards include the very first Best Actor Jessie ever presented in 1983. He works in the TV and film industry appearing in productions ranging from The Beachcombers over 40 years ago to 21 Jump Street, Stargate SG1, Riverdale and many more. His 50-year career may suggest high mileage, but he’s a well maintained and serviced entity, eligible for collector status and considered, arguably, to be a classic. Tom is more than pleased to be included with this group on A Doll’s House Part 2.
Emmy
Tebo has been a part of the local art scene for the past five years. Born and raised in South Africa, she moved to Vancouver to study and pursue her dreams of being an actor. After graduating from UBC with a BFA in Acting, her dreams became a reality. She has performed on stage in plays such as Goldrausch, Much Ado About Nothing and The Crucible. You may have also seen her on screen with her television and film credits including Netflix’s Firefly Lane, The Stand, A Million Little Things and Picture of Her. A firm believer in the magic of theater, she is proud to be a part of this production of A Doll’s House Part 2..
Nora
Melissa is a Vancouver based theatre artist. Most recent stage credits include Unexpecting (ZeeZee Theatre), The Café (Itsazoo/Aphotic), A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Bard on the Beach), Lampedusa, Beautiful Man (Pi Theatre), The Twelve Dates of Christmas (Arts Club), and Like it or Not (Green Thumb) for which she received a Jessie Richardson award for Outstanding Performance. Melissa made her professional directing debut last year with Western Gold Theatre’s 90 Days. Other recent directing credits include Thy Neighbour’s Wife (United Players), Six of One (Studio 58) and Eviction Conniption (Vancouver Fringe Festival). Melissa is a graduate of Studio 58. She lives and works on the traditional and unceded territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations.
Algernon Moncrieff
Having performed in ten Western Gold shows so far, Keith, in all earnestness, is keen to be in an eleventh, The Importance of Being Earnest (he really, really means it). He is a Past President of Western Gold Theatre, a Director on the board of CAN (Canadian Artists Network), a Past President of PAL Vancouver, a Director on the board of The Motion Picture Arts & Sciences Foundation of British Columbia (the Leo Awards), Treasurer and Past President of UBCP/ACTRA, and Vice President of ACTRA.
As well as numerous stage performances, Keith has appeared in over 70 film and television productions to date including such shows as The Order, Watchmen, Center Stage, Supernatural, Alcatraz, Men in Trees, Smallville, The Dead Zone, Flight 93, The 4400, Da Vinci’s Inquest, Cold Squad, Stargate SG-1, A Storm in Summer and, being a local Vancouver actor, many Hallmark movies. Love to Tory and Sasha.
Creative Marketing Manager
Kate is a marketing and communications specialist with in-depth knowledge of British Columbia’s creative industries and over 15 years of experience working in arts administration. Kate began her career in the arts as a performer, working in theatre, film and television during the 80s and 90s. In the early 2000s, she returned to school to study professional writing and, upon graduation, worked as a marketing and editorial assistant with Anvil Press/SubTerrain Magazine.
Kate then held the position of Communications Coordinator for Place des Arts arts centre in Coquitlam for 12 years, where she was instrumental in developing and building the centre’s brand, increasing enrolment in its many and varied programs and spreading the word about its copious events, gallery exhibitions and performances.
Kate is thrilled to be working with the extraordinary artists at Western Gold Theatre and looks forward to helping the company build a strong brand and a bright future.
Lane/Merriman
Patrick graduated with a B.A. in theatre from Simon Fraser University. He has worked as an actor in Vancouver for the past 30 years in film and TV, and in theatre with The Firehall Theatre, Rumble Theatre, Touchstone Theatre, Headlines Theatre, Pi Theatre, and Main Street Theatre amongst others. Patrick has been nominated for two Jessie Richardson Awards for Acting.
Patrick recently digitized an adaptation of his play Inside/Out: A Prison Memoir that he screens in prisons and penitentiaries across the country to encourage inmates to tell their own stories. Last summer he was a keynote speaker at The International Association of Forensic Mental Health Services conference in Berlin. He is also a peer co-leader with the Transformative Health and Justice Research Cluster that supports initiatives at the intersection of Health and Justice.
This is Patrick’s first time working with Western Gold Theatre, and he is grateful to be included with these incredibly talented artists.
Lady Bracknell
Ellie King was born and raised in England where she made her stage debut aged 2 ½. She immigrated to Canada in1982. On stage, she just finished a tour of Serendipity Theatre’s Driving Me Crazy playing Liz, but is perhaps best known for her signature role of Shirley in Shirley Valentine. She also works in TV & film, both live action and animation, most recently voicing Lujanne in the hit Netflix series The Dragon Prince.
Ellie was the Founding/Managing Artistic Director of the Raymond Burr Performing Arts Centre and of the Royal Canadian Theatre Company, from which role she retired in 2022. She now looks forward to spending more time on stage rather than behind the scenes, and dedicates all of her work to her amazing family and to her dear late husband Geoff King.
John Worthing
Terence has been a professional actor for over sixty years, working in stage, television, film, and radio. He is delighted to use the experience to play with Western Gold Theatre. He says, “Western Gold Theatre keeps the traditional theatre alive to those who enjoy its magic: you, our audience. Thank you for sharing with us!”
Cecily Cardew
Denyse is earnestly delighted and grateful to be back being on stage and earning something important. Learning too! She played many an ingénue in her day, along with many other roles of note, working for such theatres as The Vancouver Playhouse, The Arts Club, Bard on the Beach, Theatre Calgary, and The Atlantic Theatre Festival. Most recently, Denyse played Juliet in A Tender Thing for United Players.
Ashley is from Dublin, Ireland. He has lived in Canada for almost 20 years and is delighted to be involved in World Theatre Day. Some info about Ashley: BFA in Acting at UBC, 2006. Some credits: A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Much Ado About Nothing, The Winter’s Tale, Richard II and All’s Well That Ends Well (Bard on The Beach), Flare Path, A Doll’s House (Slamming Door Collective), Spamalot, Blood Brothers and The Graduate (Arts Club), Someone Who’ll Watch Over Me (Dancing Monkey), A Few Good Men (Citadel), Of Mice and Men (Blue Bridge), The Full Monty (Persephone), The Pillowman (Wild Geese). Selected Film/TV: Turner & Hooch, Riverdale, A Million Little Things, Dirk Gently, DC’s Legends of Tomorrow, Zoo, Supernatural, Watchmen, Stargate: Atlantis. Four Jessie Richardson nominations and one award (Best Supporting Actor 2017).
Director
Anna’s accomplished career has been honoured with a Jessie Richardson Theatre award for Outstanding Career Achievement, as well as being inducted into the BC Entertainment Hall of Fame.
She served as assistant director of the Stratford Festival’s Young Company and was mentored by the internationally renowned director Robin Phillips. Anna then went on to be one of three Canadians invited to participate in the International Directors Seminar in London, England. Favourite directing credits include: Waiting for Godot, The Merry Wives of Windsor, She Stoops to Conquer, and all the OOF! productions for Western Gold Theatre!
Her extensive acting credits include: Streetcar Named Desire, The Music Man, Our Town, and the acclaimed World Theatre production of The Mill on the Floss (Soulpepper Theatre, Toronto). Vancouver audiences will have seen her in A Delicate Balance, Half Life, Home Child, Three Tall Women, Vigil, Red Birds, and Escaped Alone. Anna was the Artistic Director of Western Gold Theatre for a total of 12 years. She now serves on the Board of Directors.
Miss Prism
Nancy is delighted to be appearing with Western Gold Theatre again and thrilled by the opportunity to work with such a talented cast and director. In 2022, she played Leontine in the OOF! production of The Triumph of Love. Other recent performances include Miss Fozzard in Miss Fozzard Finds Her Feet and Erma Bombeck in At Wit’s End.
Working as a teacher for 35 years, Nancy was also active in the community theatre scene. Favourite roles include Vera in 4000 Miles, Annie in Calendar Girls, Nana in For the Pleasure of Seeing Her Again, and Polly Wyeth in Other Desert Cities. Her film and TV credits include many roles too small to mention, although she did appear in one movie as “Vomit Woman 3.”
Gwendolen Fairfax
Growing up, Annabel loved drama passionately, but her high school drama teacher did not love her back. When The Importance of Being Earnest was staged, Annabel desperately wanted to play Gwendolyn . . . the drama teacher cast her as the butler. Needless to say, there was a very tear stained pillow. So, it is with immense gratitude and joy that a teenage dream has finally been realized. Despite that drama teacher, Annabel has had a long and varied career.
For Western Gold she has joyously appeared in Opening Night, Funny Money, Comfort Cottages, Splitting Heirs, Jack of Diamonds and more. She is a recipient of two Jessie Richardson Awards for Aunt Dan and Lemon and The Elephant Man. Film and television appearances include Get Shorty, Unreal, iZombie, Arrow, Married Life, The L Word, Smallville and Jumanji and several Hallmark movies. Annabel is also a certified 500-hour yoga instructor and lives in Vancouver with her husband and their yoga dog Padma who does a perfect Downward Facing Dog.
Rev. Canon Chasuble
Bernard has been a professional actor/director in Vancouver for 45 years. He was born in London, UK but is now [since 1974] a Canadian citizen. Bernard has appeared or directed in major theatres in Western Canada. As an actor, he has worked on productions at National Theatre in Ottawa and has been seen in more productions at the Arts Club Theatre than any other actor.
Bernard recently directed and acted in The Woman in Black for Classical Act Company and has been seen in copious TV and film productions including a recent stint on The Good Doctor as well as a guest starring role in the new TV series Reginald the Vampire. In the year 2000, he was the recipient of the Sam Payne award, presented by UBCP/ACTRA. He received a Jessie award for his lifelong commitment to theatre and is also proud that he is a member of the BC Walk of Fame.
Raugi Yu originally from Montreal is a graduate of The Dome Theatre program at Dawson College and The BFA Acting program at UBC. Raugi now makes his home in BC with his lovely wife and their two kids. He’s been acting professionally on stage and in TV/Film since the 90’s.
Raugi has acted in various theatres across Canada and the U.S. You may recognize him from roles in Carried Away on The Crest Of A Wave, The Shoplifters, The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night Time (Arts Club) Coriolanus (Bard On The Beach) Act Of Faith (Real Wheels Theatre), Bad Parent (VACT, The Cultch, Soulpepper). Raugi is very honoured and excited to be part of this project.
Donna Wong-Juliani has had a life-long involvement in, and commitment to, the performing arts and to activities that focus on the betterment of society. Throughout her career, she has participated in and/or produced artistic works and projects that have enhanced the communities in which they have occurred. Her firsthand knowledge of the theatre, dance, television, and film disciplines, and her ongoing commitment to the encouragement and development of artists working in all these fields, has led her to play key roles in endeavors ranging from feature film producing to senior management of a film industry crown corporation, to representation of writers, directors and composers, and to administering non-profit arts organizations.
She was Managing Director of Savage God and JWJ Entertainment, two companies which she and her husband and collaborator John Juliani formed to develop and produce theatre and film/television projects. She currently serves on the Board of Directors of the Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Foundation of British Columbia, Urban Ink Theatre, and the Ryga Arts Festival, on the Advisory Board of Vancouver Civic Theatres, and has been Artistic Associate at Christ Church Cathedral, Vancouver since 2003.
Mana has been part of Vancouver Performing Stars (VPS) since she was three years old, and she is currently attending the VPS academy program. She has played the lead in many musicals for VPS. Mana loves to sing and takes vocal lessons with Eve-Lyn de la Haye. She won a gold medal for the Royal Conservatory music exam level 1 voice in province of B.C. and Yukon in 2021. She also won 1st place for classical 20th and 21st Century and Musical Theatre ballad song under nine years old for Vancouver Kiwanis Music Festival in 2022.
Most recently, Mana performed in the fairies’ chorus of A Midsummer Night’s Dream with Vancouver Opera. Next, she will play Veruca in Vancouver Performing Stars production of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory and Amanda in Theater Under the Stars production of Matilda the Musical this summer.
Helen Mintz weaves words, both English and Yiddish, spoken and written, into written texts and dramatic presentations and natural yarns into decorative wall hangings. She has performed her one-woman storytelling shows in Canada, the United States, Germany, and Lithuania.
Helen’s translation of Vilna My Vilna: Stories by Abraham Karpinowitz (Syracuse University Press, 2016), garnered three literary awards. Her translation of Janusz Korczak: Teacher and Child Advocate by Zalmen Wassertzug is under consideration by the University of Poznan Press (Poland). Helen’s translations have appeared in In Geveb, Jewishfiction.net, and Pakn Treger and her recent writing in The Jewish Independent, Words without Borders, and BC Studies.
Sanne is 13 years old and graduating elementary school this year. Born in the Netherlands, she moved to Vancouver as a toddler.
Sanne has been singing, acting and dancing with Vancouver Performing Stars for 8 years. She played in several musical theatre productions including Shrek, Junie B Jones and The Little Mermaid. As a member of the VPS Dance Team, she enjoys intensive training in Jazz, Tap, Hip Hop, Contemporary and Ballet. With the Dance Team she performs at community events and takes part in competitions.
Kareem grew up in Syria and moved to Malaysia in 2006, Hungary in 2019, and arrived in Canada as a landed immigrant in 2020. One thing he noticed was that, no matter the place, art connects us all, and Canada values theatre at a tremendous level.
Even though he has never set foot on a theatre stage, he enjoys playing a supporting part in the community from behind the scenes. Growing up in a small town, Kareem’s exposure to theatre was limited, but he enjoyed the few productions he was able to attend.
His experience with Western Gold Theatre as a box office manager allows him to appreciate art even more due to the loving and tight knit community that actively supports and appreciates each other’s’ artistry; this helped Kareem to realize that theatre is much more than just a show, it is a life changing artwork.
Despite his busy schedule, Kareem still finds time to attend theatre productions whenever he can. On World Theatre Day, Kareem is proud to celebrate the art form that has enriched his life and the lives of so many others.
Since graduating from Studio 58 over 34 years ago, Jacques has won numerous awards (Best Actor twice/Best Production numerous times/Lifetime Achievement Award Vancouver International Fringe Festival), performed at dozens of Children’s, Writing, and Comedy Festivals, hosted at the 2010 Olympics, done a TED TALK titled The Healing Power of Creativity, and appeared on Sesame Street. He is incredibly proud to be part of this awe-inspiring collection of Actor/Creators.
Libby Griffin was born and raised on a farm in northern Alberta. At 18, she set out on a journey that would change her life forever. She went to Kyiv to study choral conducting at the Conservatory of Music. After three years of study, her destiny was to come to Vancouver and lead a women’s Ukrainian choir. Along with leading a choir, she had the opportunity to sing in the Lyonok Trio. She has also written and presented the commentary for countless Ukrainian Concerts.
However, this was not enough to pay the bills, so she decided to get her teaching degree and taught in the Vancouver school system. Presently, she is retired, singing in the Barvinok Choir and sits on the executive of the AUUC. She has two kids.
Jane is a First-Generation Canadian settler—the daughter of Polish Jewish parents who escaped to Canada from Poland during WWII. She has worked in professional theatre in Canada and England as a director, teacher, dramaturge, and actor, developing new plays, mentoring young artists, and creating opportunities for women, including co-founding the Women in VIEW Festival, WestCoast Actors, and facilitating the Wet Ink Collective’s workshops for women writers.
For 20 years, she was Associate Director at Studio 58, the renowned professional theatre training program at Langara College where she taught acting. In 2001, she co-founded (with Joy Coghill) Vancouver’s Performing Arts Lodge (PAL), providing affordable housing for pioneer performing artists.
She’s directed 70+ productions including Stupid Boy in an Ugly Town (Vancouver, Edmonton, Winnipeg Fringe); Road to Mecca; Homechild (Arts Club), Three Sisters (Only Child Collective); As You Like It; King Lear (Studio 58). Nominated for three Jessie Richardson awards, she was honoured with Best Director in 1991 and Career Achievement in 2004.
In addition to sitting on a number of non-profit boards, Jane was also an elected B.C./Yukon member of the Canadian Actors’ Equity National Council from 1991 – 2000 and 2012 – 2018, co-chairing the Respectful Workplace Task Force that created the Not in OUR Space! initiative. She’s also a member of the Senior Artist Task Force that is creating ways for senior members to remain active and creative.
Neha Devi Singh is an award-winning actor originally from Mumbai, India and currently based in Vancouver. She is the first female actor to ever play an action hero on Indian television. She is known for playing an array of roles in television. Her portrayal of the unwavering mother of a child with disabilities for the Ganapati special Mann Mein Hai Vishwass was the highest rated episode aired of the religious anthology series for Sony Entertainment Television.
Neha spent her school and university years deeply involved with the theatre community, both on stage as well as in theatre production. She strongly believes that art, especially that of storytelling, connects us all – across race, borders, and beliefs. She is, therefore, especially proud to mark her Canadian theatre debut with Touchstone Theatre’s hugely successful world premiere of The Wrong Bashir by Zaheda Rahemtulla. For Neha, playing Najma Ladha alongside an all-South-Asian cast has been a highlight, not just as an actor, but also as an immigrant and a person of color.
Perla Alexandra De Leon lives in New Westminster with her family and attends the Hume Park School and VPS Academy. She is in second grade and her favourite subjects are Science and reading. Perla enjoys all forms of performing arts and loves to tell jokes and be silly. She appeared on a Snuggle commercial at the age of six and played young Silvia in the short film When We Were Younger by Anna Robinson. She enjoys fashion as much as her mom, so she walked the runway during Vancouver Kids Fashion Week and represented several clothing pieces by local designers.
Perla would like to thank her mom, dad, and brother Filip for their love and support. She also thanks her amazing teachers from VPS academy and agents Pamela Wise and Brenda Campbell for signing her with their talent agency and allowing her to enjoy this valuable experience with acting.
In addition to a busy acting career, John is also a TV and film producer and one of Canada’s most sought-after acting coaches. He is a lifetime member of the renowned Actors Studio in New York and the Founding Artistic Director of Railtown Actors Studio in Vancouver, now in its 11th year.
John’s film credits include Disney’s Alive and David Fincher’s Seven and The Game. Television credits: Robson Arms (Leo Award Best Actor) Intelligence and Davinci Inquest (Gemini Award nominations) Theatre Los Angeles: David Mamet’s Edmond, Sam Shepard’s Geography of a Horse Dreamer, and Harold Pinter’s One for the Road. Canadian theatre credits: Rabbit Hole (Arts Club), God of Carnage (Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre) and Stephen Adley Guirgis’ The Motherf**ker with the Hat, (Jessie nomination Lead Actor). Recent projects: the Fox series NeXT, sci-fi thriller Volition, (Leo nomination) horror film True Fiction (Leo Nomination), APTN’s critically acclaimed Tribal (2022 Leo Nomination and UBCP/ACTRA Nomination), Double Life for Paramount Plus slated for a 2023 release.
John produced and starred in the feature film Daughter (UBCP/Actra Award Lead Actor) which was developed through the Railtown Actors Studio Lab. In 2018, John was awarded the Vancouver Film Critics Circle Award for Achievement. In 2023, John appeared in the World Premiere of The Cull at the Arts Club Theatre.
Known for his work on groundbreaking, award winning show Sort Of and Gemini nominated Jinnah on Crime, Dhirendra’s career spans 30+ years. His Theatre Credits include Raj in Raj from Edmonton (s one person show), Dr. Aziz in A Passage To India, Dean Rebel in Totterdown Tanzi, Bakha in Mulk Raj Anand’s Untouchable, Edgar in King Lear, Nitin in Bravely Fought The Queen, Pariag in Dragon Can’t Dance and Octavius/Lucius in Julius Caesar directed by Roger Rees.
Lead Film Roles include When Christmas Was Young, Binodini, Underfunded and Possession. Television roles are too many to mention here. He co-founded British Asian Theatre Co., and Star Productions Film/Video Collective in UK. He is the voice of Simon in LEGO Jurassic World for which he received multiple nominations including The Leo, UBCP/ACTRA and SOVAS award for the Best Voice in an animated series.
Dhirendra is a Co-Chair on the UBCP/ACTRA BIPOC Committee. A firm believer in giving back, he also serves on the Governance, Scholarship Committee, and Mentorship Committee and as Board President for Medusa Theatre Society which champions works from the immigrant and refugee community, with a focus on the Middle East.
An avid cook & sommelier, he lives with actress/writer wife Peri Allan, teen daughter Saloni Miyanger and Schnoodle Hiro.
Choreographer/Movement Coach
Jessie is a Vancouver-based Chinese-Canadian dancer and actor. Her movement journey began at the age of three studying ballet at the Jean M. Wong School of Ballet in Hong Kong. Upon moving to BC, her dance training expanded to include tap, contemporary, jazz, musical theatre, and hip hop. Jessie wears many hats, as an arts administrator, dance teacher, choreographer, Special Olympics rhythmic gymnastics coach, group fitness instructor, actor, and model—needless to say, she likes to keep busy!
Her performance and choreography experiences have allowed her to collaborate with many local artists and musicians, and work with organizations such as Vancouver Fashion Week, Vancouver International Puppet Festival, The Vancouver Philharmonic Orchestra, Moving Mirror Productions, United Players of Vancouver, and The H.R. MacMillan Space Centre.
She truly believes that movement is for everyBODY and strives to create an environment that is inclusive, fun and light.
Actor
Gustavo began his career in his native Venezuela where grew up raised and pampered by his grandfather who had been a ventriloquist, theatre producer, and actor, so there’s no mystery from whom he inherited his love for the stage. He started first as a journalist, but soon found his place on stage and on screen.
Immigrating to Canada almost three decades ago to be with his (still there!) partner, he restarted his career from scratch learning English in part from small roles on the stage. He worked up to bigger roles and has appeared in: Tony and Tina’s Wedding (for seven years), Corpus Christi, Love Valour Compassion, Alley Cats, Antigone, The Frogs, School for Wives, The Impostures of Scapin, A Christmas Carol, Streetcar Named Desire and The Hypochondriac.
Though his first love has always been live theatre, he has appeared in numerous film and TV roles. A gay, mixed-race man, Gustavo loves taking on unexpected roles; he has played characters much older but his most recent role in the play Seventeen had him playing a character much younger.
Ruth Tisdale
Colleen’s career of 45+ years as an actor/director/singer/choreographer has taken her from Chemainus to Charlottetown (and most cities in between), at the Arts Club, Playhouse, Citadel, Theatre Calgary, Persephone, Tarragon, Shaw, and Stratford Festivals, to name a few. For Western Gold: Learned Ladies, Harvey, Rumours, Jack of Diamonds, Mystery at Greenfinger, and directed Queen Lear and a host of readings. On other stages, Colleen has played everything from Daisy in Driving Miss Daisy and Dolly Levy in Hello, Dolly! to Shelly Levene in Glengarry Glen Ross. She received Jessie and Ovation awards for her performance as Mrs. Lovett in the acclaimed site-specific Sweeney Todd and recently appeared as Dotty in the Arts Club’s Noises Off and in the smash Kinky Boots. She is proud to have been in the company of The Unnatural and Accidental Women, the inaugural production of the NAC Indigenous Theatre in Ottawa.
On the small screen, she lately appeared in Lost in Space, Family Law, Man in the High Castle, You Me Her, and a collection of Hallmark movies. She is grateful to Western Gold for the opportunity to once again be playing with this group of talented, lovable loons.
Having performed in nine Western Gold shows so far, Keith looks forward to being in a tenth, Opening Night.
He is a Past President of Western Gold Theatre, a Director on the board of the Canadian Artists Network (CAN, formerly CSARN), Past President and Past Treasurer of PAL Vancouver, and currently serves on the board of The Motion Picture Arts & Sciences Foundation of British Columbia (which hosts the Leo Awards), Treasurer and Past President of the Union of BC Performers (UBCP/ACTRA), and Vice President of the Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Televisión, and Radio Artists (ACTRA).
Keith Martin Gordey has appeared in over 70 film and television productions to date including such shows as The Order, Watchmen, Center Stage, Supernatural, Alcatraz, Men in Trees, Smallville, The Dead Zone, Flight 93, The 4400, Da Vinci’s Inquest, Cold Squad, Stargate SG-1, A Storm in Summer and many Hallmark movies. Love to Tory and Sasha.
Tom’s career has spanned more than 30 years. Theatre credits (selected): Harlem Duet (Bard on the Beach, Director Charissa Richard); Master Harold and the Boys (The Pacific Theatre/Director: Morris Ertman; Jessie Richardson Award), Once on this Island (Acting Up Stage/Obsidian Company/Director: Nigel Shawn Williams; Dora nomination), The Whipping Man (The Pacific Theatre/Director: Anthony F. Ingram; Jessie Richardson nomination), and Walt Whitman’s Secret (Frank Theatre Company/Director: John Jack Paterson; Jessie Richardson nomination). Film and Television credits (selected): Fire Country, Christmas Time Is Here, 27 Hour Day and Percy Jackson and The Lightning Thief.
Tom Delaney
Aidan Wright is incredibly excited to be in his first production with Western Gold Theatre. He has seen many of their productions and now is honoured to be up there on stage with such massive talent. You might have seen him in the recent production of The Woman in Black at Jericho Arts Centre. He has also just recently released his new album Kiss Your Friends with his band The Sweet Hours. He would like to thank his family for their constant support.
Jack Tisdale
This is Dave’s eighth appearance with Western Gold. Previously he played Dimas the Gardener in Triumph of Love, Bill the Minicab Driver in Funny Money, Mortimer the Lawyer in Jack of Diamonds, Arnold the Chef in Mystery at Greenfingers, Wilson the Nurse in Harvey, Sir Toby the Uncle in Twelfth Night, Officer Welch the Party Pooper in Rumors, and Roger the Dancer in Comfort Cottages. Dave has also performed with Patrick Street Productions, Itsazoo, Ensemble Theatre Co, URP, Fighting Chance, United Players, Theatre Under the Stars, UBC Players Club, Vagabond Players, and Metro.
Dave hosts the radio show Eclectic Lunch, a weekly stroll through life’s garden of musical delights, on CiTR.ca. This summer he celebrates 20 years of marital bliss with the amazing Ronaye Haynes.
Ruth Tisdale
Director
Keith Martin Gordey has appeared in over 70 film and television productions to date including such shows as The Order, Watchmen, Center Stage, Supernatural, Alcatraz, Men in Trees, Smallville, The Dead Zone, Flight 93, The 4400, Da Vinci’s Inquest, Cold Squad, Stargate SG-1, A Storm in Summer and many Hallmark movies. Having performed in eight Western Gold shows so far, he looks forward to being in a ninth, Funny Money.
Keith trained in acting at UBC and at the National Theatre School of Canada. He is a Past President of Western Gold Theatre, a Director on the board of the Canadian Senior Artists Resource Network (CSARN), Past President and Past Treasurer of PAL Vancouver, and currently serves on the board of The Motion Picture Arts & Sciences Foundation of British Columbia (which hosts the Leo Awards), Treasurer and Past President of the Union of BC Performers (UBCP/ACTRA), and Vice President of the Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Televisión and Radio Artists (ACTRA).
Libby Husniak
Angelese is an emerging artist currently residing in Vancouver, originally from Mexico City. She has been involved with all aspects of theatre throughout her time at Langley Fine Arts School and beyond, recently graduating from Capilano University’s Acting for Stage and Screen program. Angeles continues to happily pursue her passion for theatre in all shapes and avenues: from starring in The Penelopiad (CapU Theatre), to production management for a local amateur cabaret show with friends. She can often be found taking long walks around Vancouver, belting rock at the local karaoke joint, or at home cooking yummy Mexican food.
Richard Hyde-Finch
Jerry is delighted to be back at PAL with some of the theatre pals he’s known longest in this, his 50th year on Vancouver stages. Professional acting credits include Western Gold, the Arts Club, the late lamented Playhouse and City Stage, and over 200 film and TV appearances, most recently in HBO’s The Last of Us. Jerry reviews theatre for the Vancouver Sun and his website, www.vancouverplays.com. He taught English and Theatre for over 40 years at UBC, including five years as Head of the Department of Theatre and Film, and edited the anthology Modern Canadian Plays. He dedicates his performance in Opening Night to one of the funniest actors he was lucky to know, Andy Rhodes.
Artistic Director
Tanja Dixon-Warren has been working as a theatre artist / producer for over 35 + years. Previously, she was the Artistic Producer / Co-Founder of Hoarse Raven Theatre, and from 2009 – 2017, she was Managing Producer of Full Circle: First Nations Performance. She continues to work with them on a consulting basis, mentoring young theatre practitioners. She is the Transition Advisor for Carousel Theatre for Young People.
As an actor, proudly based in Vancouver, she has been seen in a number of Western Gold Theatre productions as well as on numerous stages throughout the city. Film/TV includes a bunch of blink & you’ll miss ‘em plus the occasional role with an actual name!
An active member of the community, Tanja has served on numerous boards and committees including 15 years with the Greater Vancouver Theatre Alliance, where she speared-headed and launched World Theatre Day and the annual Making a Scene Theatre conference. Nominated twice for YWCA’s Woman of Distinction Award as well as a number of Jessie Richardson Awards (for both performance and producing), she is a recipient of the Mary Phillips Award, the Vancouver Board of Trade’s Business and the Arts Award, and the 40 Under 40 Business in Vancouver Award.
Sound Designer
Shona is a UBC Acting Graduate, former Pacific Theatre apprentice, Affair of Honor company member, an actor, Intermediate FDC Actor Combatant, Advanced BADC Actor Combatant, and sound designer. They have sound designed for Arts Umbrella, Affair of Honor, Stone’s Throw Productions, The Show Must Go Online.
Emelia
Suzanne is thrilled to have the opportunity to time travel through this wonderful play. Who wouldn’t want to relive all that teenage angst after working in the performing arts for almost 50 years? Yikes!
Suzanne most recently performed in the premiere of Driving Me Crazy at Presentation House Theatre, a play she co-wrote with her friend Linda A. Carson, and she last appeared at the PAL theatre in Western Gold’s production of Comfort Cottages. She graduated high school in 1970, Studio 58 in 1984, and has appeared in film and television. Thanks to the men in her life: Jay, Jean, and Max for making the last half of her life a heckuvalot more fun than the first half!
Costume Designer
Barbara has been designing costumes and sometimes sets in Vancouver BC for over 45 years. Starting her design career with Tamahnous theatre, a Vancouver-based experimental theatre company of the 1970’s, Barbara has been largely self-taught in the art of theatre design. Working with Tamahnous introduced Barbara to the joys of collaboration with other artists and shaped how she approaches all her design work to this day.
She has designed for both small and large theatre companies and worked in numerous costume departments in film with IATSE 891 . . . always seeking new and exciting methods of approaching various elements of design from those she has the chance to work beside. Selected works in the last few years include Beauty and the Beast 2017 (Arts Club Theatre) Lysistrata 2018 (Bard on the Beach) Coriolanus 2019 (Bard on the Beach) East Van Panto 2018-20 (Theatre Replacement). She has been nominated for over 15 Jessies Richardson Awards and won eight for Outstanding Costume Design. Barbara holds a BA in Fine Arts from the University of British Columbia
Set Designer
Alaia is a theatre designer located in Vancouver, BC. Recent projects she has worked on include costume design for HMS Pinafore, Carmen Up Close and Personal, associate for Amahl and the Night Visitors (VO); Beneath Springhill, The Birds and the Bees, assistant costume design for Sweat, The Humans (Artsclub), costume design for Beautiful Man (PI Theatre), costume for C’mon Angie (Touchstone), assistant costume Romeo and Juliet, Coriolanaus, Taming of the Shrew, Macbeth (Bard on the Beach), set design for She Kills Monsters (UBC), production design for The Drawer Boy (ETC).
She has worked on a variety of smaller shows through Vancouver and has a passion for costuming dance. Alaia is a graduate of the UBC Theatre Design program in 2017 and holds an English literature degree from 2012. A selected portfolio can be found at alaiahamer.com
Lizzie
Eileen has had the privilege to work in theatres large and small over the years, including touring internationally with Green Thumb Theatre many years ago when she actually still looked like a kid. She was last seen onstage in Western Gold’s Escaped Alone. Other projects include: Les Belles-Soeurs (Gateway/Ruby Slippers), Twelfth Night (Western Gold), It’s a Wonderful Life (Arts Club), The Duchess (Ruby Slippers), Scratch (Theatre Plexus), My Mother’s Story (Presentation House), Harvest (Gateway), Dead Man’s Cell Phone (Vancouver Fringe).
Recent Film/TV/Radio/Podcasts: Invisible Women, Love and Sunshine, Web of Dreams, The Good Doctor, The Magicians, Little Pink House, Every Christmas Has a Story, Hector and The Search for Happiness.
Eileen also loves working as a live audio describer (for blind and partially sighted theatre goers) with Vocal Eye Descriptive Arts. She is a graduate of Studio 58, and she recently completed a master’s degree in Liberal Studies from SFU.
Ronnie
Allan moved to East Van from Winnipeg’s North End in the Early 1980s. Since then he has made his living as an actor here, in the city, across Canada, and abroad. Allan would like to take this opportunity to thank the lovely actors, director, designers, stage managers, staff, audiences, donors, and volunteers for the unforgettable 40 years!
Intimacy Director
Megan is a queer, neurodiverse, Chinese-Canadian Intimacy Professional working primarily in the Pacific Northwest residing on the stolen lands of the Lekwungen-speaking peoples, and the Songhees and Esquimalt Nations (Victoria, BC).
Scenic Painter
Senem Yaman is an experienced scenic artist and makeup artist. She has a Bachelor’s in Fine Arts, a diploma in makeup design from Vancouver Film School, and a diploma in stagecraft technology at Douglas College. She recently worked as a scenic artist at Bard on the Beach and makeup designer for Children’s Theatre of Richmond CATS Musical.
Audio Technician
Mert Erden Arslan is a Vancouver-based sound designer, editor, and recordist who collaborates working
in Theatre, Film, Audiobooks, and Music Production. He has a diploma in Sound Design for Visual Media from Vancouver Film School and a bachelor’s in Visual Communication Design. Currently, Mert works as a sound designer, audio technician, and recordist for theatre productions and audiobooks in Vancouver, BC.
Dramaturg
Natasha Nadir is a professional director, dramaturg, and playwright based in Vancouver, BC. She has
an MFA in Directing from University of British Columbia and a BA in Drama from Bishops’ University. While Artistic Associate at Gateway Theatre, she directed both new and classical plays (Mary’s Wedding, Burning In, The Grandkid, Brighton Beach Memoirs) and facilitated five seasons of SceneFirst: Staged Readings of New Work. Recent credits include dramaturgy for Burqa Boutique and directing/dramaturgy for View from a Window. She has worked as an acting instructor and creative facilitator throughout her career. She facilitates the Playwriting Circle for Realwheels Theatre and is a member of Playwrights Theatre Centre
and Wet Ink Collective.
Intimacy Director
Phay is an intimacy director/coordinator, theatre director, writer, internationally trained actor combatant, and professional actor who currently lives on the stolen traditional territory of the kʷikʷəƛ̓əm (Kwikwetlim) Nation.
After starting her training in 2016 with Intimacy Directors International, Phay has trained with organisations and mentors across Canada and North America and helped in the creation of the National Society of Intimacy Professionals.
Phay has supported productions all over the Lower Mainland as an intimacy professional in film, television, and theatre. Past credits include Revolt. She Said. Revolt Again., Machinal, Oil, and Coriolanus (UBC), Cuello (Crazy8s), Superman & Lois s2 (Warner Bros), 2022 Jessie Award Winner Bunny (Search Party Productions), 2021 Leo Award Winner FREYA, and Jason Karman’s Golden Delicious.
Tom, Ronnie, Mike
Gustavo began his career in his native Venezuela where he started as a journalist, but soon found his place on stage and on screen. Immigrating to Canada almost three decades ago to be with his (still there!) partner, he restarted his career from scratch learning English in part from small roles on the stage. He worked up to bigger roles and has appeared in: Tony and Tina’s Wedding (for seven years), Corpus Christi, Love Valour Compassion, Alley Cats, Antigone, The Frogs, School for Wives, The Impostures of Scapin, A Christmas Carol, Streetcar Named Desire and The Hypochondriac.
Though his first love has always been live theatre, he has appeared in numerous film and TV roles. A gay, mixed-race man, Gustavo loves taking on unexpected roles; he has played characters much older than he is but looks forward to an exciting change – playing a character much younger.
Director
Michael Fera is a director, actor and theatre educator who has been working in Vancouver for over 30 years. Favourite directing credits include the Canadian premieres of Corpus Christi, Molly Sweeney, A Boston Marriage, and Alistaire Elliot’s translation of Medea plus: Taken at Midnight; The Imaginary Invalid; Ghosts; Hedwig and the Angry Inch, and Angels in America – Parts 1&2.
For nine years Michael was an Artistic Executive for Ailanthus Achievement Centre where he worked closely with inner city youth using theatre as a tool to build character and self-esteem. He currently works extensively with youth, specifically through Theatre Temp where he has directed off and on since 1981. Theatre Temp productions Michael has directed have toured throughout BC and nationally to Ottawa performing for MPs at Canada’s parliament.
Lizzie
Award winning Nimet Kanji began her career in Nairobi, Kenya. After emigrating to Canada, she continued working in community theatre until she became a professional actor in 2001. Some of her theatre credits include Contractions (Northern Light Theatre), Victim Impact (Theatre Conspiracy), Sultans of the Street (Carousel Theatre), Mrs. Singh & Me (Vancouver Fringe), 9 Parts of Desire (The Maggie Tree), Bombay Black (Vancouver Fringe), amongst others. She also works in TV/Film and Voice. She most recently was in Regina to shoot the web series ‘ZARQA’.
Jess
Linda was born and raised in Montreal, Quebec. She earned a B.A. “With Distinction” in English Literature and Drama from McGill University. Linda’s first Equity role was as Cecily in The Importance of Being Earnest with Northern Light Theatre in Edmonton. She continued to work in Edmonton with Phoenix Theatre, Catalyst Theatre, Workshop West Theatre, and performed in the first Edmonton Fringe Festival. She co-founded Nexus Theatre, Edmonton’s lunch time theatre.
Vancouver is her home now. Her latest stage role was in Nanaimo as Cecile in TheatreOne’s production of With Glowing Hearts. Linda also works in film and TV. She can be seen on screen as Betty the grief junkie in the Canadian feature film With Love and A Major Organ when it is released later this year. Linda is delighted to be working with Western Gold theatre for the first time. She’d also like to mention that she loves to sing and dance.
Tom
Stephen graduated from Studio 58 and has worked in theatre, film, radio, TV, and opera for forty-odd years. Some of this century’s credits include Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof for the Chemainus, Western Canada, and Persephone theatres, Judge Turpin in the award-winning Snapshots Collective production of Sweeney Todd, Zeus in Ann Mortifee’s opera The Mysteries, Uncle Vince in People Like Vince (and last century, Victor in Not So Dumb and Night Light) for Green Thumb, and TV appearances on The Man in the High Castle, The L Word, and Supernatural. Most recently for Western Gold, Stephen curated and performed in Vilna My Vilna, a series of on-line readings of stories by Yiddish writer Abraham Karpinowitz.
Like the characters in Seventeen, Stephen has spent his share (or possibly more) of evenings in parks with like-minded friends in various altered states.
Photo credit: Erin Aberle-Palm
Mike
David is a playwright, director, actor, and fight choreographer. He is descended on his father’s side from the Jewish diaspora in Russia/Ukraine. On his mother’s he traces settler/colonist roots back to the Mayflower.
Performances include The Designated Mourner (Felix Culpa), and the premiere of Unity 1918 (Touchstone Theatre). Acting and fight choreography have taken him across the country, including work at Shaw Festival, Manitoba Theatre Centre, Citadel, and dozens of companies in British Columbia. Directing includes Blackbird (One Story Collective), the North American premiere of Howard Barker’s Und, The Monument (Jessie nomination, Outstanding Direction, Large Theatre), and his play Two in The Morning, produced in Vancouver and London, England. He has directed shows in Vancouver, Montreal, Winnipeg, Calgary, Kamloops, Thunder Bay, Whitehorse, and London. His plays have also been performed by Green Thumb, Felix Culpa, Studio 58, Carousel, Axis Theatre, and Theatre at UBC
Lighting Designer
John is honoured to be a back with Western Gold Theatre once again, and to be a part of the production Seventeen. A long-time designer of both sets and lighting, he has had the privilege of working with some of Canada’s most talented and adventurous artists. Past favorites include The Great Leap and Onegin for the Arts Club, and The Marriage of Figaro for Vancouver Opera. Recent credits include Wizard of Oz and Chelsea Hotel at Western Canada Theatre and Kinky Boots for the Arts Club.
Stage Manager
Ingrid is a daughter of settlers, fortunate to live here in the ancestral lands of the Coast Salish people, and grateful for their stewardship of the lands and waters here. Ingrid has been a stage manager of theatre, dance, and opera for 35 years. She particularly enjoys doing theatre for young audiences and has been fortunate to work with Green Thumb Theatre many times. She’s a House Manager at Bard on the Beach and an audio-describer for Vocal Eye, the organization that provides description of live performances for patrons with limited vision. She is currently stage-managing The Spongebob Musical at Arts Umbrella and after that, The Triumph of Love for Western Gold.
Emelia, Jess, Lizzie
Born and raised in Korea, Maki came to Canada in 2000, where she found theatre and fell in love with it. After completing a BFA in Theatre Performance at University of Regina and a MFA in Interdisciplinary Studies at Simon Fraser University, she became a permanent resident in 2010. She landed in Regina, then relocated to Vancouver in 2011 for her apprenticeship at Pacific Theatre.
Since then, Pacific Theatre has been her artistic home, where her autobiographic plays, Gramma and Suitcase Stories, have been produced. Maki was part of the touring production of Kim’s Convenience with Arts Club, the extension of a Pacific Theatre production, in the beginning of 2020 until the abrupt cancellation due to the pandemic breakout. She resumed her role of Umma when the play returned to the Stanley Theatre stage in March 2022, then toured to West Canada Theatre in Kamloops and Alberta Theatre Projects in Calgary.
Retired Canadian Foreign Service Officer
As a career Canadian foreign service officer, Michael served in Tokyo, Beirut, Kampala, Minneapolis, Geneva, Amman, Damascus and Nairobi. In 1972, he ran the selection section of the team Canada sent to Uganda to rescue 6,000 Asians under expulsion order from Idi Amin.
From 1976 to 1978, he was the immigration department’s Director of Refugee Policy, and led the design of the refugee provisions of the 1976 Immigration Act, including the Convention Refugee and Designated Classes, and the private refugee sponsorship program. He was senior coordinator of the 1979–80 Indochinese refugee program that brought 60,000 refugees to Canada. He served as Counsellor for Humanitarian Affairs at the Canadian Mission in Geneva and managed immigration and refugee operations in Jordan, Syria and Eastern Africa. After director general level assignments in Ottawa and Toronto, he served as Canada’s ambassador to Jordan (1996–2000) and special coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process (2000–2003).
Post retirement publications include three books on Jerusalem along with Running on Empty: Canada and the Indochinese Refugees 1975-80 and its Vietnamese translation Cong Lung Van Ganh. He has also published numerous articles on refugees and Middle Eastern subjects and is an Adjunct Research Professor at Carleton University.
Photo credit: Len Gilday
Performing artist, Founder and Artistic Managing Director of Full Circle: First Nations Performance
Cree-Saulteaux Métis performing artist Margo Kane is the Founder and Artistic Managing Director of Full Circle: First Nations Performance. For over 45 years she has been active as an actor, performing artist, and community cultural worker. Her desire to share artistic performance that has meaning for her people is the catalyst for her extensive work, travels, and consultation within Indigenous communities across Canada and abroad.
Moonlodge, her acclaimed one-woman show, an Indigenous Canadian classic, toured for over 10 years nationally and internationally. The Sydney Press (AU) during The Festival of the Dreaming praised it as being in the top echelon of solo performance.
She developed and runs the annual Talking Stick Festival, celebrating its 20th Anniversary this year, and numerous programs including Moccasin Trek: Arts on the Move!, Indian Acts, and an Indigenous Ensemble Performing Arts Program in Vancouver.
She has received numerous awards and honors including an Honorary Doctorate of Letters from the University of the Fraser Valley, the Order of Canada from the Governor-General, an International Citation of Merit from the International Society for the Performing Arts, and, most recently, an Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts from Simon Fraser University.
Shafana Mitha is an engaging community builder and facilitator with significant public sector and senior executive experience. She is a strategic thinker and executive leader that supports Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI).
Shafana has her CPA and Master’s in Business Administration with a greater focus on Strategic Diversity and Inclusion in the workplace. She is one of the few individuals in Alberta with a professional designation as a CCIP (Canadian Certified Inclusion Professional). With her unique partnership of having a background in business and in EDI, Shafana’s niche focus is on bringing that business case and need to organizations with the humanistic and EDI approach providing tangible tools and strategies that are both important to the success of organizations and the engagement and belongingness of Board members, staff, and stakeholders.
Her consulting company aKollage Consulting Incorporated focuses on developing EDI strategies and policies, respectful workplace policies and training, stakeholder and community engagement, employment equity policy and program development, and customized learning and development such as cultural competencies, and anti-racism/anti-oppression.
Shafana currently resides in Treaty 6 territory – Amiskwacîwâskahikan or known to many as Edmonton, where she passionately volunteers in different capacities within and outside her community in leadership positions.
Interdisciplinary artist, writer and cultural critic
Chris Creighton-Kelly is an interdisciplinary artist, writer, and cultural critic. He was born in the UK with South Asian/British roots. His performative, often ephemeral, artworks have been presented across Canada, in India, Europe, and the USA. He has received grants and awards in five countries. His work with issues of racialized art politics is internationally recognized.
Chris is the co-Director of Primary Colours/Couleurs primaires, which uses decolonizing methodologies to centre the art practices of IBPoC artists within the Canadian art system. Chris has been consistently concerned with racialized artists in their cultural contexts—both host and diasporic—as they converge with rapidly evolving media technologies—both popular and esoteric. Chris is persistently interested in questions of absence in the Western world arts discourses . . . whose worldview is unquestioned; who has power; who does not and why?
For over 30 years, Chris has also worked as an arts consultant for artists, arts organizations, cultural institutions, and government agencies. In 1989-91, he was a consultant to the Canada Council where his work launched two critical offices—the Aboriginal Arts Office and the Equity Office—that transformed the Council from a European arts agency to one in which multiple art traditions/practices are funded. In 1991-92, he worked at the Banff Centre for the Arts designing and directing an artists’ residency, Race and the Body Politic, which indirectly influenced the establishment of the Aboriginal Arts program. In 2011, he co-authored, along with France Trépanier, Understanding Aboriginal Arts in Canada Today. In 2012, they were co-recipients of the inaugural Audain Aboriginal Curatorial Fellowship awarded by the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria. Chris appreciates his audiences a lot
Advocate, writer, cultural collaborator
Zool Suleman is an advocate, writer, and cultural collaborator. He is the Editor of Rungh and the Executive Director of the Rungh Cultural Society. He co-founded Rungh (1991) as a national South Asian focused arts initiative and relaunched Rungh in 2017 as a creative platform for Indigenous, Black, and racialized artist conversations.
As an arts advocate, he protested against the Vancouver Art Gallery’s exclusionary art practices as an active member of the Artists’ Coalition for Local Colour. He was a founding member of the Minquon Panchayat, one of Canada’s first national IBPOC-led artist movements which challenged the lack of anti-racism initiatives in Canada’s artist-run-centres and arts institutions.
Appointed by the BC Minister of Culture, he co-chaired a province-wide Status of the Artist Committee, which was instrumental in the formation of the BC Arts Council. Over the last three decades, he has been involved in various capacities with the Canada Council for the Arts, Heritage Canada, the Province of BC, and the City of Vancouver. In addition to his engagements as a cultural connector, he advocates for immigrants and refugees and has been active in national and local civil society initiatives against racism, racial profiling, and Islamophobia. https://rungh.org/artists/zool-suleman/
PhD student at The Social Justice Institute at UBC
David Ng is a PhD student at The Social Justice Institute at UBC. He is a queer, feminist, media artist, and co-founder of Love Intersections, a media arts organization of queer artists of colour. His current research and artistic practices grapple with queer, racialized, and diasporic identity, and how intersectional identities can be expressed through media arts. His interests include imagining new possibilities of how queer racialized artists can use their practice to transform communities. His work has also recently included collaborations with Primary Colours / Couleurs primaires, which is a national initiative to put Indigenous arts practices at the centre of the Canadian art centre through the leadership of Indigenous artists, supported by artists of colour.
His work through Love Intersections has been exhibited at over 40 film festivals worldwide, including the KASHISH film festival (India), AKS Art and Dialogue Festival for minorities (Pakistan), Kansai Queer Film Festival (Japan), Vancouver Queer Film Festival, Image+Nation (Montreal), International Queer Migrant Film Festival (Netherlands), Scotland Queer Film Festival, Leeds Queer Film Festival, Divine Queer Film Festival (Italy), and the Queer Minorities Film Festival (Austria).
Visual Artist
France Trépanier is a visual artist, curator, and researcher. Her practice is often informed by strategies of collaboration and community engagement. Her artistic and curatorial work has been presented in many venues in Canada, the US, and Europe. France was selected by the Canada Council for the Arts to be part of the first International Indigenous Curators Exchange in Australia, New Zealand, and the Venice Biennale. She was the co-recipient of the 2012 Inaugural Audain Aboriginal Curatorial Fellowship by the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria.
France co-authored with Chris Creighton-Kelly Understanding Aboriginal Art in Canada Today: A Knowledge and Literature Review for the Canada Council for the Arts and is co-director of the Primary Colours/Couleurs primaires initiative. She worked as an arts consultant with a wide range of institutions and organizations such as the National Arts Centre, National Film Board, Cultural Human Resources Council, Banff Centre for the Arts, First Peoples Cultural Council, Indigenous Performing Arts Alliance, OCAD University, Yukon Arts Centre, and BC Museum Association. She worked at the Canada Council for the Arts before becoming a Senior Arts Policy Advisor for the Department of Canadian Heritage. She held a diplomatic post as First Secretary, Cultural Affairs at the Canadian Embassy in Paris. She directed the Centre for New Media at the Canadian Cultural Centre in Paris. France was also the co-founder and Director of the artist-run center Axe Néo-7 in Gatineau, Quebec. France is of Kanien’kehà:ka and French ancestry.
President, Naledo Belize Ltd
Umeeda was born in Uganda to a family of entrepreneurs. Her father managed an insurance company, her mother ran a Montessori school, and both raced cars!
Only fifteen, Umeeda fled Uganda for Canada as a refugee along with her family. Her mother cooked to help keep the stories of ‘home’ alive and instilled in her family a strong sense of social responsibility. Food and social responsibility formed the basis of Umeeda’s future endeavours.
Umeeda first went to Belize to volunteer with the Belizean government through CUSO International to share her business skills with youth. While there, she learned how other Indians’ ancestors had come to the country as indentured servants over 200 years ago. One showed her the turmeric that grew wild on his land, originally brought there by their ancestors. It was the most vivid orange and the best quality she had seen, so she developed a recipe for the world’s first wildcrafted, whole root turmeric paste, called “Truly Turmeric.”
She subsequently built a social enterprise that would support growers to earn additional income, employ youth, improve health around the world, and produce products sustainably. Her company’s name is derived from the district in Belize where the turmeric is sourced, Toledo, and her daughter Nareena’s name. Na + ledo = Naledo.
Artist & Retired Immigration Professional
In 1969, at the age of ten, Shahira Patni-Tejpar immigrated to Canada from Mbale, Uganda, 3 years before the mass expulsion of Asians from Uganda. Her family pioneered the establishment of Jamatkhanas (community centres) and a faith-based institutional framework, and also helped the settlement of new arrivals from Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya.
She returned to Kenya fifteen years later and worked as an Immigration Program Officer with the Canadian High Commission in Nairobi. Her work involved assessing, interviewing and issuing visas to qualified prospective immigrants, students and refugees from 18 African countries that fell under the jurisdiction of the Canadian Visa Office based in Nairobi. After her return to Canada in 1990, she worked as an Immigration Advisor to a major Vancouver law firm. In 1996, she started her own Immigration practice, representing qualified, professional persons from all over the world and assisting them to apply for and obtain work permits or immigrant status for Canada.
She is now retired and focuses her energies on community service, pottery, tennis, squash and cycling.
Artist, Poet, Writer
Taslim Samji is a multidisciplinary artist, spoken word poet and writer. She is a change-maker who uses arts and culture as a vehicle to educate and inspire and is known for curating thought-provoking exhibitions showcasing the work of Muslim artists and people of colour, as well as sharing stories of immigration in response to xenophobia. Through her work, she explores identity, diversity and shared perspectives.
Taslim studied at Emily Carr University of Art & Design and also has a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of British Columbia, where she majored in Asian Studies.
Over the past several years, she has served on various boards, including the City of Burnaby’s Public Art Advisory Committee, Acquisitions Committee, and currently the Burnaby Arts Council. She is a powerful advocate for the inclusion of BIPOC artists within the local art scene.
In 2017, Taslim received the ‘Women of the Decade in Arts and Leadership’, an international award presented by the Women Economic Forum in Delhi, India.
She is currently writing a cultural criticism/coming of age memoir where she explores cultural conditioning, generational trauma and the impact of colonialism through the eyes of a young South Asian girl.
To learn more about her work, visit www.TSamji.com
Emeritus Professor of Anthropology, Simon Fraser University
Dr. Dossa received her education in Africa, Europe, and North America. Her long-standing interest on displacement and critical feminist ethnography has led her to focus on the interface between social inequality, health, gender, and social palliation.
Based on her research on social suffering and narratives of harm and recovery, Dr. Dossa explores the differential effects of structural violence on the lived realities of largely Muslim women. She grounds her analysis in methodologies that capture reconstitution of lives on the margins of society. This orientation questions the conceptualization of the local and the everyday as discrete from the body politic, paving the way to present an alternative view of the margins as sites for the making of a just world.
Her publications include Social Palliation: Canadian Muslims’ Storied Lives on Living and Dying (2020), co-authored edited book, Transnational Aging and Reconfigurations of Kin-Work (2017) Afghanistan Remembers: Gendered Narrations of Violence and Culinary Practices (2014), Racialized Bodies, Disabling Worlds: Storied Lives of Immigrant Muslim Women (2009), and Poetics of Migration: Narratives of Iranian women in the Diaspora (2004). She has authored over 25 articles, published in national and international journals. Her book, Social Palliation: Canadian Muslims’ Storied Lives on Living and Dying was nominated for New Millennium Book Award, Society for Medical Anthropology, 2021.
Lawyer & Author
Jalal immigrated to Canada from Uganda in 1972. He obtained a B.Sc.(Econ) from the London School of Economics, an M.Sc.(Econ) from Queen Mary College and an LLB from UBC Law School. He has subsequently been practicing law in British Columbia since 1978 and, in 2015, was conferred a Queens Counsel by the Government of British Columbia.
Volunteerism being a strong foundational value as an Ismaili Muslim, in this capacity, Jalal has also held various senior leadership positions within his faith-based community in Canada. Most recently, he has published a book entitled Memories of a Ugandan Refugee: A Journey of Hope from Kampala to Vancouver.
Set Designer
Kimira is an accomplished artist gratefully creating and practicing her art on the un-ceded Coast Salish Territories. As an award-winning set designer, you can see her work on theatre stages around BC. She is also the Communications Director of Raven Spirit Dance. By combining her creative imagination and technical expertise, Kimira brings artists’ visions into the innovative world of virtual reality. Originally from sunny South Africa, she holds an MFA in Design from UBC. Credits: Featured artist for Indian Summer Festival, VR Technician for Uninterrupted (Canada Wild Arts Society), set design for Catalina La O (JKJK), Himmat (Theatre Conspiracy), Peace Country (Rice & Beans Theatre), Men Express Their Feelings (Zee Zee Theatre), Ominous Sound at the River Crossing (Touchstone Theatre); In Response to Alabama (Little Thief Theatre), we the same (Ruby Slippers), Like It Or Not (Greenthumb Theatre), Zoning Out (Blackout Theater), No Child (The Arts Club), as well as props for Foolish Operations.
Find out more about Kimira at www.kimirareddy.com
Director Mentor
Angela is a director, teacher, and dramaturg who has been working in theatre for more than 20 years. She has directed regularly at Pacific Theatre, where productions include The Cake, Outside Mullingar, Wit, Mourning Dove, Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train, Grace, Last Train to Nibroc, and Traveler in the Dark. Angela has been nominated for several Jessie Awards, winning once for Outstanding Direction and three times for Outstanding Production.
Dramaturgy credits include The Ristretto Proposal, Bride on Credit, Picture This, disPLACE, Upside-Down Christmas, and Black Skin Deep. She is Artistic Director of Dark Glass Theatre, with whom she directed disPLACE, Ruined, and The Amish Project and for whom she curates and hosts the ongoing storytelling series Trespass. Angela is a big fan of Melissa Oei, as an actor and a human, and is delighted to get to walk alongside as Melissa helms this fascinating play.
Find out more about Angela at www.darkglasstheatre.com
Costume Designer
Donnie Tejani is an award-winning costume designer and has been working consistently within the Vancouver theatre community since 2016 primarily in musical theatre. When not designing costumes, Donnie can often be found dressing backstage on shows for the Arts Club or styling wigs for performers and drag queens as, “OMG Wigs.” You may recognize some of his work from the reality competition series, Canada’s Drag Race. Notable credits: The Rocky Horror Show (Studio 58), Like it or Not (Green Thumb Theatre) and Company (Raincity Theatre) for which he won the Jessie Award alongside his mentor, Christina Sinosich. Upcoming: Cabaret (Raincity Theatre), Anne of Green Gables (Gateway Theatre).
Assistant Sound Designer
Matthias is a Multi-disciplinary Creative from Nanaimo, BC. Raised in a Hungarian refugee home, hard work and ambition were instilled at a young age, which he focuses into film-making, acting, and sound design. Past sound design credits include: Act of Faith (Realwheels Theatre), Freedom ’56 (Studio 58), The Winter’s Tale (Carousel Theatre), Jerusalem (United Players), Henry V (East End Boys Club), CLIO – A Giant Clitoris Puppet Learning to Love Herself (Puppets Not Patriarchy), We the Same (Ruby Slippers), and an Off-Broadway production of Reborning (Reality Curve Theatre). Hear his next credit at How to Believe in Anything (Dreamphase Productions). Matthias is a graduate of Vancouver Island University and Studio 58.
Composer / Sound Designer
Originally from Kenya, East Africa, Joelysa is an award-winning composer based in Vancouver, BC. A seasoned professional with over 20 years of experience in composition, musical direction, and sound design, her music has been featured in multiple theatre productions, short films, chamber orchestras, and choirs. In the realm of theatre, Joelysa has composed everything from large scale musicals to original sound designs. Her most recent score is currently featuring in Romeo and Juliet at Bard on the Beach. Thrilled and honoured to be a part of this beautiful production (that mirrors the reality of her own family history), Joelysa is especially grateful to Salim Rahemtulla for putting this moving story onto the page and stage.
Lighting Designer
Rebekah is pleased to be invited to work on this project for Western Gold! She has been a lighting designer for nearly 40 years and has worked across the country for companies such as Magnus Theatre, Prairie Theatre Exchange, and Persephone Theatre, and, closer to home, Theatre North West, Western Canada Theatre, and Kaleidoscope Theatre. She is currently the General Manager and resident designer for Blue Bridge Theatre in Victoria where favorites include Of Mice and Men and Macbeth directed by Brian Richmond, and Waiting for Godot and A Christmas Carol directed by Jacob Richmond.
Other favourites include Stones in His Pockets for Persephone Theatre—interrupted by the pandemic in March 2020 and returning this fall—and Mamma Mia for the Victoria Operatic Society. She is a sessional instructor and lighting mentor at the University of Victoria and lives in the beautiful Cowichan Valley on Vancouver Island, on the traditional territory of the Coast Salish, home of the Cowichan Tribes.
Cultural Liaison
Following a successful career in the Canadian hospitality and tourism industry, where Layla A. Jaffer developed an influential reputation for new market development, travel destination, and international cooperative marketing, she is currently a multi-media artist, muralist, and designer in fashion, graphics, interiors, and event décor. She seeks opportunities for multi-functionality by re-imagining and integrating recycled materials into her work and her creative style is eclectic, influenced by diverse cultural exposure over the decades.
Layla was born and raised in East Africa and immigrated to Canada as a young adult with her parents and siblings. As a grateful Canadian and Ismaili Muslim with volunteerism a key value, Layla generously gives back to country and community by sharing her expertise, particularly with seniors. She is a natural leader, engaging workshop facilitator, eloquent MC and moderator, and accomplished event planner.
Stage Manager
Karen Chiang 蔣家寧, is a trilingual, Vancouver-based theatre artist and translator who is fluent in Cantonese, Mandarin, and English. She has various experiences in stage management and technical direction. She is especially interested in creating art that surrounds the themes of culture, identity, and justice. Selected credits include: I Swallowed a Moon made of Iron (Music Picnic, PuSh performing arts festival), Funny Money (Western Gold Theatre), Haven (United Players), buto/buto: bones are seeds (National Pilipino Canadian Cultural Centre and Southeast Asian Cultural Heritage Society).
Assistant Stage Manager
Rachel (She/Her) is a technician, stage manager, and creative currently working and living in Vancouver. Since arriving in Vancouver from the UK in 2021, Rachel has worked in many differing roles in both film and theatre with companies such as Rumble Theatre, Warner Brothers, Apple TV, Touchstone Theatre, Playwrights Theatre Company, Presentation House Theatre, Western Gold Theatre, Pi Theatre, and Pacific Theatre. Rachel also has experience working in the UK at Sheffield Theatres, Only Lucky Dogs, Edinburgh Fringe Festival, and others. Working and learning in Vancouver has been a fresh and exciting step in her career.
Nasser Rahim
Akshaya is an actor and professor based in Vancouver. The name Akshaya means “never ending.” He was born in Montreal, Canada but raised in different parts of India. He graduated in 2019 with an MFA in Acting from the University of Southern California and currently teaches acting courses at the Vancouver Film School. Notable theatre credits include Bad Hamlet, Milkcrate Monologues, and Macbeth. His film and TV credits include the comedy pilot Last Bite and the short film Digby and Glass. He is slated to be the lead in the short film Wellington and his role in an upcoming television show will be announced soon.
Munir Kassam
Parm was born in Punjab, India and raised in London, England. He went on to study theatre at The University of Winnipeg. Stage highlights include The Arts Club productions of A Thousand Splendid Suns, The Orchard, and The Humans at The Stanley Theatre, and The Men in White at The Granville Island Stage. Additional shows include A Vancouver Guldasta at the Cultch, Macbeth at The Firehall Arts Centre, Romeo and Juliet at Kaleidoscope Theatre, and Coronation Voyage at The National Arts Centre in Ottawa.
He has also appeared in over 40 television shows and numerous Hollywood blockbusters including Watchmen, 2012, Tomorrowland, and Maze Runner.
Shamira Rahim
Sabrina Vellani is an Indo-Canadian actor, poet, and daughter of Tanzanian Ismaili immigrants. She graduated from UBC’s BFA Theatre Acting program in 2018. She has been in productions such as Killjoy Theatre’s Burqa Boutique (directed by Gavan Cheema & Jamie King), Axis Theatre’s co-production with Babelle Theatre entitled All My Friends Are Animals (directed by Marie Farsi), Brave New Play Rites Festival’s production of Breather (Directed by Rose Paine) and the Pull Festival’s production of (The) Fort (directed by Tai Amy Grauman). She recently played the role of Nafisa in the Arts Club Theatre’s audio production of The Wrong Bashir (Directed by Sherry J. Yoon). You can also find Sabrina’s work in Five Cedar Films’ short film Speak (directed by Shaheed Devji), which premiered in IFFSA’s Virtual 2020 Festival.
Sabrina’s poetry has been published in various magazines and journals across North America and the UK. Her latest writing can be found in PRISM International, The Anti-Languorous Project, Pulp Magazine and New York Quarterly. She is thrilled to be playing the role of Shamira in Salim Rahemtulla’s play 90 Days and hopes you enjoy the show!
Parin Rahim
Nimet Kanji was born in Nairobi, Kenya and began acting on stage with the local theatre company. She emigrated to Vancouver in 1989 where she continued to work on stage. She began her career in film and TV in 2001 and has had the pleasure of working with Edward James Olmos (Battlestar Galactica), Kevin Sorbo (Paradox), John Cusack (Martian Child), and Sitara Hewitt (Little Mosque on the Prairie), amongst other notable names. Her theatre credits include Sultans of the Street (Carousel Theatre), 9 Parts of Desire (The Maggie Tree), Bombay Black (2017 Vancouver Fringe), and Victim Impact (Theatre Conspiracy). She is represented by Lucas Talent.
Columpa is a playwright, actor, educator, and activist of Tsleil Waututh and Nlaka’pamux heritage. She has been a theatre practitioner for over 33 years now. She has worked across Canada and the globe. Jumping Mouse (co-written with Marion deVries), a play for young audiences, was nominated for a Dora Mavor Moore Award and a James Buller Award. She’s also an award-winning actor, known for both stage and television work
She is the founding Artistic Director of the Aboriginal Arts Training and Mentorship program as well as Urban Indigenous Theatre Company, a multi-generational troupe creating positive, multi-disciplinary expressions of cultural self-determination.
Victoria Perrie is a Metis and Swampy Cree Lawyer and Artist from Winnipeg, currently living in Nunavut. She has been working in the arts for over 16 years. Victoria approaches her work in both theatre and law from a trauma informed perspective.
Composer
Antony Knight is a Vancouver based composer, singer and actor. He holds a Bachelor of Music in both Opera Performance and Composition from the University of British Columbia. Antony has written in many different styles such as pop/contemporary, musical theatre, film music, orchestral and opera. Notably, he was awarded Best Score at the Persistence of Vision Film Festival for the film The Knockers (2019), premiered his opera “Oh Alfred!” at the Vernon Proms Classical Music Festival (2021), and had an orchestra piece read by both the Victoria and the Vancouver Symphony Orchestras (2021).
Siyam Lee Maracle is the author of a number of critically acclaimed literary works including: Sojourner’s and Sundogs [collected work of novel and short stories], Polestar/Raincoast, Ravensong [novel], Bobbi Lee [autobiographical novel], Daughters Are Forever, [novel] Will’s Garden [young adult novel], Bent Box [poetry], I Am Woman [creative non-fiction], and is the co-editor of a number of anthologies including the award winning publication, My Home As I Remember [anthology] Natural Heritage books. She is also co-editor and contributor of Telling It: Women and Language across Culture [conference proceedings].
Ms. Maracle is published in anthologies and scholarly journals worldwide. Ms. Maracle was born in North Vancouver and is a member of the Sto: Loh nation. The mother of four and grandmother of seven, Maracle was an instructor at the University of Toronto. She was also the Traditional Teacher for First Nation’s House and instructor with the Centre for Indigenous Theatre and the S.A.G.E. [Support for Aboriginal Graduate Education] as well as the Banff Centre for the Arts writing instructor.
In 2009, Maracle received an Honorary Doctor of Letters from St. Thomas University. Maracle also received the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal for her work promoting writing among Aboriginal Youth. Maracle served as Distinguished Visiting Scholar at the University of Toronto, University of Waterloo, and the University of Western Washington. Celia’s Song [novel], Work in progress Memory Serves and Other Words [creative non-fiction]. She received the Ontario Premier’s Award for Excellence in the Arts.
Ms. Maracle taught for month as a tenured professor for Kwantlen Polytechnic University – Surrey Campus. She has two books that are soon to be published.
Léonide
Jennifer-Juniper has been acting professionally for over 30 years in BC, Alberta and Ontario. A graduate of Studio 58, she is excited to be back on stage with this wonderful company, after working primarily in film & TV since becoming a mother 17 years ago. Jennifer-Juniper also performs as elegant, comical, and fantastical characters on stilts, with her children and husband, at festivals & events near and far. Let the fun romp begin!
Harlequin
Agis
Ishan is an actor and writer from India, currently residing on the traditional, ancestral and unceded territories belonging to the Squamish, Musqueam and Tsleil-Waututh Nations. He is a graduate of UBC’s BFA Acting and BA Economics program. Selected theater credits: Men Express Their Feelings (Zee Zee); Commedia Dell’arte, The Wars, and The Changeling (UBC); and The Here and This and Now (United Players). Ishan will be making his debut on Bard this summer in Romeo and Juliet as Paris
Hermocrate
Gerry Mackay is pleased to be back at WGT.He has spent the past 35 years performing in theatres across the country, including at The Stratford festival, Bard on the Beach, The Citadel, The Belfry, Touchstone, and the Arts Club theatre. Gerry lives in North Vancouver with his wife and two daughters. Enjoy the show!
Corine
Originally from Northern Manitoba, Tracy is a transplant to Vancouver via Toronto and New York. Some previous theatre credits include Beautiful Man (Pi Theatre – Vancouver), The Red Priest (United Players – Vancouver), Call Raul (Alumnae Theatre-Toronto), Alice Au Pays Des Merveilles (Soho Playhouse-NYC), Macbeth (13th Street Rep-NYC), Hamlet (Red Room-NYC), Machinal (Wings Zephyr -NYC) and Brooklyn Bets Alexi (Hudson Guild Theatre – NYC). Tracy is proud to have contributed as a member of Realize Your Beauty, a New York based not-for-profit promoting positive body image through theatre arts: http://www.realizeyourbeauty.org . Tracy is a graduate of Ryerson University & Stella Adler Studio of Acting.
Dennis is an accomplished musician. He is co-founding member of the rock and blues group Bitterly Divine. A few years ago, he joined the rocking group Whyte Feather, formed in 1968 who currently have a documentary on them in the works. More recently, he formed a group with his Haida Gwaii brother Jamie Thomson whose music is based on their respective Cultures.
Riley is an actor, writer, and filmmaker based in Vancouver. Selected theatre credits include: Mary’s Wedding (Stones throw/Pacific Theatre), girls! girls! girls! (Excavation Theatre), Lonestar, Love and Information, and Edward II (Theatre@UBC). Selected Film/TV credits: Arrow, DC’s Legends of Tomorrow, Batwoman, and the feature film Sniper: Assassin’s End, which is now streaming on Apple TV. Riley is a graduate of the UBC BFA Acting program. He hopes you enjoy the show!
2022 marks the 60th year of Mr. Kelly’s life as a professional actor. Although based in Vancouver, Terence has played in most of the major theatres across Canada, from Montreal to Victoria. His television and film credits number in the hundreds and span locations from the Yukon to Tahiti. There were also thousands of radio serials and dramas that he contributed to in the early years.
In his own words: “It is a joy to be once again playing with Western Gold Theatre and with the wonderful ensemble of veteran players they bring together for these scripted performances.”
Jack began working in the theatre as a student ASM at the Theatre Royal Haymarket in London in 1967. He joined the National Theatre at the Old Vic for a brief period in 1969 and 1970, before returning to Canada to attend Studio 58. On graduating, he worked as an actor in Vancouver in the 1970s. He spent 22 years in the Middle East teaching but managed to return to the UK as Property Master for the RSC in the summer of 1978 and later to attend The Central School of Speech and Drama (Shakespeare and Verse).
He was last on stage (before the plague) playing the Professor in Jez Butterworth’s Jerusalem at the Jericho Arts Centre. This is his first production with Western Gold, and he is extremely happy to be playing with old friends and new, in this production of Funny Money.
Dr. Julia Henderson is a Postdoctoral Fellow with Concordia University’s Department of Communication Studies and its Ageing+Communication+Technologies Lab. Her body of research considers narratives of aging and old age in contemporary North American theatre, and specifically analyses plays that challenge ageist beliefs and stereotypes. Her work offers insights to theatre practitioners on how dramatic structure, design, staging, performance style, and marketing might influence understandings of age.
Julia works with the Raising the Curtain Project of Gibsons BC, which re-imagines dementia tragedy narratives through collaborative creation with people with the lived experience of dementia. In addition to her training as a researcher, Julia has a background as both a professional actor and an occupational therapist who has worked largely with older populations. Her current roles include a position as Special Projects Manager in the Department of Occupational Science and Occupational Therapy at University of British Columbia.
Julia’s writing about age and theatre has been published in The Journal of American Drama and Theatre, Theatre Research in Canada, Canadian Theatre Review, Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance, Age, Culture, Humanities: An Interdisciplinary Journal, Geriatrics and the Thornton Wilder Journal. In 2019, her paper at the Trent Aging 2019 conference won the joint European Network in Aging Studies & the North American Network in Aging Studies emerging scholar award.
Julia is also the Vice Chair of the North American Network in Aging Studies Governing Council, and is a member of the Canadian Association for Theatre Research’s Anti-racism and Anti-discrimination Task Force. She recently co-guested edited the first special issue of Theatre Research in Canada/Recherches théâtrales au Canada that addresses age as an intersectional identity category to be released in November 2021; the issue features Western Gold’s production of Caryl Churchill’s Escaped Alone on its cover. Julia acted as Senior Access Consultant on Western Gold’s workshop and production of Martin Bellemare’s The Ballad of Georges Boivin.
Director
Cuneyt is a Business Analyst that contributes to Western Gold with his industrial background. He studied International Commerce in Bogazici University, Turkey. He moved to Canada in 2017 and has been working in the energy industry since then. He received training in energy management and renewables and is a Certified Energy Manager.
Currently, Cuneyt works for a startup IT company in the solar energy arena. In his free time, he likes flying drones over natural areas and producing videos.
She has also been an award nominee for Best Supporting Role for Yente in Fiddler on the Roof, and an award winner for Neil Simon’s play Fools. It was a real pleasure for Helen to work on The Christmas Carol – A Radio Play with Place des Arts and Western Gold Theatre.
The Coquitlam Youth Theatre is a performance-based youth theatre company. The teen actors work with professional theatre directors, master theatre artists, and designers. Based out of Place des Arts, an arts centre and music school in Coquitlam, the Coquitlam Youth Theatre Company hone acting, singing, and dancing skills and put on three presentations throughout the season.
A Christmas Carol – The Radio Play Ensemble: Jared Batac Co, Tasha Barham, Norah Rachel Benjamin, Karen (K) Castro, Ryan Coghill, Indah Del Bianco, Yvette Dunham, Mackenzie Hurd and Jaitan Malhotra
Script Adaptation / Director
Emily made her theatre debut in Real Wheels Theatre’s 2019 production of Act of Faith and last graced the stage in Alley Theatre’s 2021 Docu-theatre/Dance creation, #Whatnow.
Vancouver Jazz singer Don Stewart sings beautiful songs with a unique style and a rich voice capable of great emotional power and also delicate sensitivity. He tells stories of love, hurt, and joy in a memorable and beautiful way that leaves his audiences transfixed.
Don lives in the Performing Arts Lodge and often appears in shows in the theatre. He is well known for his one man show Unforgettable that celebrates the music and life of Nat King Cole.
Past WGT Board Member
Western Gold Theatre dedicates The Ballad of Georges Boivin Gerald Lecovin.
It takes a minute to recognize a special person, an hour to appreciate them, and a day to benefit from their friendship; but it takes an entire lifetime to forget them.
In memory of Gerald Lecovin: a friend, a supporter, a donor, and a longtime Board member of Western Gold Theatre.
Gerald was a lawyer, fisherman, tireless volunteer, and great lover of music and theatre (who was known to grace the stage himself!). He was a true community guy, and we at Western Gold Theatre have much to thank him for. His friendliness, wit, and enormous heart
are missed by everyone.
General & Production Manager
Glenn trained in all aspects of the theatre at the Manitoba Theatre Centre in Winnipeg during the magnificent tenure of the legendary John Hirsch. He has worked as an actor, Stage Manager, Production Manager and Designer for theatres across Canada and in the US including The Vancouver Playhouse, Arts Club Theatre, Stratford Festival, Charlottetown Festival and Studio Arena Theatre (Buffalo, NY). In Vancouver, he produced You’re A Good Man Charlie Brown at Metro Theatre, and co-produced T-Shirts at City Stage and Torch Song Trilogy at the Cultch. In addition he worked in Production Management for Expo ’86 Entertainment Department where he managed a $12M budget. He Stage Managed the Opening and Closing Ceremonies of the Calgary Winter Olympics and was Operations Director for BC’s MUSIC ’91 province wide music festival. He also works in television and film in set decoration and has over 100 projects to his credit. He is the President of the PAL Studio Theatre Society and sits on the Board of Trustees of PAL Vancouver. Glenn has designed over 200 stage productions including 20 in the last seven years at the PAL Studio Theatre. He is the recipient of the 2016 Jesse Richardson Award for Outstanding Set Design for the production of Annapurna. He has managed Western Gold Theatre since 2012.
Born at Vancouver General Hospital many years ago, I attended UBC and National Théâtre School, since which time I’ve been fortunate enough to work regularly in theatres across Canada. I’m the grateful recipient of four Jessie Awards and am daunted by, and delighted to be, part of this unique and challenging project. This one’s for my mum!
Playwright
A graduate of the National Theatre School of Canada’s writing program, Martin Bellemare was awarded the 2009 Gratien Gélinas Prize for “Le Chant de Georges Boivin.” His play “La Liberté” was presented at La Rubrique (Jonquière) in 2013 and in Montreal in 2015, and was scheduled to be staged in Ottawa in 2020.
“Maître Karim la perdrix” (2018 Prix SACD de la dramaturgie francophone, awarded by the Société des Auteurs et Compositeurs Dramatiques) will premiere at the Théâtre des Capucins in Luxembourg in 2021. “Moule Robert” (CNL Scholarship, shortlisted for the 2017 Prix SACD de la dramaturgie francophone and the 2018 Michel Tremblay Prize) was produced simultaneously at La Rubrique and at the POCHE/ GVE in Geneva, then at the Théâtre de Belleville in Paris.
Martin is a four-time recipient of the Aide à la création grant from the Centre national du Théâtre/ARTCENA in Paris, and two of his plays are included in the repertoire of the Comédie-Française. Two of his plays for young audiences, “Un château sur le dos” and “Des pieds et des mains,” which was first produced at the NAC, have toured in Canada and internationally.
In 2019, “Extraordinaire et mystérieux” and “Charlie et le djingpouite” were produced, and Cœur minéral premiered at the Francophonies in Limoges. The latter play was scheduled for a Montreal production in 2020. Martin was one of the five playwrights nominated for Canada’s leading theatre award, the 2020 Siminovitch Prize.
Jay is seemingly everywhere. His TV work includes Supernatural, Cold Squad, Stargate SGI, Bate Motel, Rogue, West Wing, The X-Files, 5 Star Xmas, Garage Sale Mysteries, The Exorcist, Cedar Cove, and The Killing. Films include Noelle, Double Jeopardy, Watchmen, Insomnia, Best in Show, Cool Runnings, We’re No Angels, The Possession, Andre, Head Over Heels, Sex After Kids, Gunless, Fathers and Sons, and, most recently, Attic Trunk. Countless voice roles from Sabrina: The Animated Series to My Little Pony, plus voicing the NFB Oscar-nominated The Big Snit and Playtime.
Favourite theatre roles include Man in the Chair – The Drowsy Chaperone (N. A. C., Vancouver Playhouse), Tevye – Fiddler on the Roof (California The Rubicon Theatre,MTC), The Goat (Presentation House Theatre), Urinetown (Firehall Theatre), Boy Wonder – Diddy The Musical (Citadel Theatre, NAC), Tartuffe (M.T.C.), Cyrano (Pittsburgh’s Three Rivers Shakespeare Festival), The Wiz in Andrew Lloyd Webber’s North American Tour of Wizard of Oz, and the wonderful Edna Turnblad in the Canadian premiere of Hairspray.
Assistant Director
Hannah is a filmmaker, writer, and actor from Vancouver. Most recently, she wrote and directed the short film Breathing Easy over Zoom, featuring Arts Club regulars Agnes Tong and Anita Wittenberg. She also directed, produced, and co-edited a music video for singer-songwriter David Beckingham in collaboration with Ballet BC, Plastic Wings. Additionally, Hannah co-produced a participatory documentary mini-series about homelessness shot on iPhone, Home Stream, which was distributed by NowThis and Little Dot Studios. She holds a degree in International Development from McGill, an MA in Acting from East 15, and a postgrad filmmaking diploma from the London Film Academy. www.hannahsiden.com
Translator / Director
Jack is an award-winning theatre maker whose work and practice has taken him across Canada, Europe and around the world. His work has ranged from contemporary devising, multi-disciplinary, cross-cultural and multi-lingual projects to new works and texts, contemporary approaches to classical theatre and main stages. He is a recipient of The Ray Michal Outstanding Body of Work Award, The Cole Foundation Award for Emerging Translators, and The John Moffat and Larry Lillo Award for Outstanding West Coast Artist.
In Vancouver, he is the founder of multi-award-winning Mad Duck Theatre Collective for whom he adapted and directed Vancouver’s first female Prospero in The Tempest and the Vancouver premieres of Titus Andronicus, Coriolanus and Shakespeare’s R&J. He is the Co-founder and Creative Producer of BoucheWHACKED! Theatre Collective bridging local, national, and international artists and audience separated by distance, language, and culture (Vancouver). He’s also the co-founder and creative producer of Global Hive Labs., an international network of theatre makers working together in shared creation.
19/20 pre-pandemic projects included: the international access devised creation projects Medusa USA (Steppenwolf Theatre, USA) and Medusa UK (The Pleasance Theatre & remounted at The Cockpit Theatre, London UK); a fusion of traditional Balinese performing arts and contemporary devised creation, Balinese Folk Tales (SENI, Indonesia); the community devised creation lab. Enemy of the People: After Ibsen (Jericho Arts Centre, Vancouver); the Active Access international devised creation Atlantide (Teatro Trieste 34, Piacenza Italy); and 4 months embedded with German innovation incubator flausen+ (theatre wrede+ & flausen+ Network, Germany).
He trained at leading Circle in the Square (NYC, USA), GITIS The University of Performing Arts (Moscow, RU), SENI Indonesian Institute of the Arts (Bali, INA) and received his MFA from the renown East 15 Acting School (London, UK). www.jackpatersontheatre.com
Dramaturge / Translation Collaborator
Johanna Nutter (she, euro-settler, multidisciplinary artist) developed her passion for translation through acting: being one of few perfectly bilingual theatre artists, she played leading roles at Centaur (Good People, You Will Remember Me) and La Licorne (Les Événements). The attention of both circles came thanks to the success of her solo my pregnant brother/mon frère est enceinte, which she translated during a residency in Tadoussac, accompanied by Linda Gaboriau. The show toured across Canada and Quebec in both languages, and to the UK and Belgium. Subsequently, she translated the works of Annick Lefebvre (Barbed Wire), Guillaume Corbeil (You’ll Go Looking for Her), and Florence Longpré & Nicolas Michon’s ballet-theatre hybrid CHLORINE, which she also produced and directed at Centaur, with her company creature/creature.
Paul Beckett has been out of the theatre scene due, in large part, to the pandemic. But over this time, Paul has been finding his way with writing. Please keep your eyes peeled and your ears open for he and his partner’s one-act play, The Village Girl and the Frog King, which will be airing in a radio production on Vancouver Co-operative Radio, CFRO. The play, which probably brought Paul his greatest attention, was a one-man show about the late 19th century Parisian artist Henri de Toulouse Lautrec. That had to be about thirty years ago. Currently, Paul is working under CAEA contract to workshop the translation of Quebec writer Martin Bellemare’s piece, Western Gold: The Ballad of Georges Boivin, about four men, seniors, driving from Montreal to Vancouver in search of a long-lost love.
Allan Morgan has been a professional actor for more than 30 years, with his home in Vancouver. He is currently one of the artists in residence at the Massey theatre in New Westminster. Allan’s acting work has taken him across the country, and he has been the recipient of numerous awards for his work. He has also written two one-person shows: Pride for the Young Gay, the Un-Gay and the Jaded Queen in All of Us, as well as, I Walked the Line.
Salim Rahemtulla was born in Kampala and moved to Canada in 1974, after graduation in Computer Science from the University of Manchester, England. Retired in 2019 and with encouragement from his children, he has found the time to pursue his passion for creative writing. His first foray into theatre was playing “Whale” in Jonah and the Whale at the Aga Khan School Kampala in the late 1960s. He has just finished the script of his first play, 90 Days, which is about the traumatic 90-day period in which all non-indigenous countrymen of Uganda were expelled by dictator Idi Amin. It draws on Salim’s memories of growing up in Uganda in a modest family of nine siblings who became separated after the expulsion. He is also currently writing short stories that he hopes to publish soon. He lives in Vancouver with his wife and four children.
Member
Currently, Michele works as the Manager of Realwheels’ Acting Academy, leading the design and development of a professional acting program completely devoted to people with disabilities. Since 1998, he has worked in national and international artistic productions as creator and producer in a few countries around the world. In 2007, he won the “Prova d’Attore” Italian National Contest for theatre actors. Michele holds a PhD, an MSc, and has received professional training in theatre and education. He is a first-generation immigrant and part of a multicultural family.
Jamie Thomson (Haida Nation) Dennis Joseph (Squamish Nation) have joined forces to form The Hitchhikers. Performing original music inspired by the blues, their lives, and their culture, Jamie leads the way on guitar with Dennis adding melodic highlights on harmonica. The duo has years of performance experience in bands like Bitterly Divine, White Feather, & Intellifunk. They debuted The Hitchhikers for the summer 2019 festival circuit.
Annie Katsura Rollins is a researcher, theatre and puppetry artist, and practitioner of Chinese shadow puppetry, studying as a traditional apprentice since 2008. Rollins has received a Fulbright Fellowship, the Confucius Institute Joint PhD Research Fellowship and a Canadian SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship for her research. She was recently named valedictorian for her dissertation at Concordia University’s Interdisciplinary Humanities PhD program on the precarity of safeguarding traditional puppet forms. Selected venues for exhibitions, lectures and performances include The Art Institute of Chicago, The Montreal Botanical Gardens, The Center for Puppetry Arts in Atlanta, Bucknell University, Luther College, the Linden Center in Yunnan China, and the Rietveld Academie in the Netherlands. Annie has published articles in Puppetry International, Asian Theatre Journal, Manip, and Anthropology Now and created the first comprehensive Chinese shadow puppetry site in English at www.chineseshadowpuppetry.com.
In 2018, Howard joined Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity as Vice President Arts and Leadership where he is responsible for Arts, Leadership and Presenting Programs
Prior to Banff, Howard was Professor of Professional Practice in the School for the Contemporary Arts at SFU and was the Director of the Woodward’s Cultural Unit. There, he developed a Creative Entrepreneurship Program in the School for the Contemporary Arts and was responsible for the public Cultural and Community Programs at the Goldcorp Centre for the Arts.
Howard has been a member of several volunteer boards and committees, most notably for the Canadian Arts Summit, Orchestras Canada, Manitoba Arts Stabilization, the Canada Council, BC Arts Council Music, City of Vancouver, Vancouver Alliance for Arts and Culture, Greater Vancouver Professional Theatre Alliance, and the Vancouver Foundation’s Arts and Cultural Advisory Committee.
Howard is a member of the Board for the Dancer Transition Resource Centre and Chair of the Advisory Board for the Vancouver Chinatown Storytelling Centre.
Trained as a musician, Howard has served as the Executive Director for the Arts Club Theatre Company in Vancouver (2000-2014), Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra (1997-2000), and Ballet British Columbia (1993-1997) following work as Orchestra Manager in Vancouver and NYC.
Literary Manager
Marilyn is a professional actor who has lived in the Vancouver area for 30 years. Favourite stage roles include Heidi Holland in The Heidi Chronicles (Vancouver Playhouse), Hagar Shipley in The Stone Angel (Firehall Theatre), Eleanor of Aquitaine in The Lion in Winter (United Players). On screen she has worked with directors Steven Spielberg (The BFG), Gillian Armstrong (Little Women), Brian De Palma (Mission to Mars), and with actors Johnny Depp, Sam Shepherd, Leonardo di Caprio and the many, many great actors who live and work right here. She is also the creator and producer of My Mother’s Story, a multimedia campaign encouraging people to write the story of their mothers’ lives so women’s history is valued, saved, and shared. www.mymothersstory.org
Wild Blue Herons (WBH) are Bill Sample, Darlene Cooper and a group of stellar Vancouver based musicians who play mostly groove-oriented jazz. It’s a little bit hip, a bit cool, a bit smoky, a bit bluesy. But very much ACCESSIBLE. They perform original songs and select standards, ranging from funk to blues to R & B but with a jazz twist and a definite gospel influence. Their songs are filled with themes of love and social consciousness.
Wild Blue Herons have played in numerous festivals (the Filberg Festival, Ft. Langley Jazz and Arts Festival, Vancouver Folk Festival) as well as various Jazz Clubs (Frankies Jazz Club; Pat’s Pub – Jazz at the Pat series, Vernon Jazz club, to name a few). They have been featured with such artists as Eric Bibb, Marcus Mosely and the Marcus Mosely Chorale (MMC), Shari Ulrich and debuted their show “The Great Ladies of Jazz” at the historic Columbia Theatre in 2019. Bill and Darlene began working together in 2011 as music directors for the Vancouver based MMC. In writing songs and arrangements for the choir, they discovered they had a unique affinity for song writing, and so began their musical partnership which gave birth to the ensemble known as WBH. In 2018, they released their first album, “On the Outside”, which they feel describes themselves – “in music and life, the ‘outside’ is where you are when you are different. Good things can happen there”. They have started preproduction for their 2nd album, which will be released to the world in 2021.
Here’s what David Foster had to say when he came to hear WBH at Frankies: “I had the great pleasure of getting to hear my dear friend and colleague, Bill Sample, and the band WBH a couple of months back. It was a treat from beginning to end – great vocals from Darlene – incredible musicianship from everyone on stage and unique but very musical and thoughtful arrangements on every song!! The album doesn’t disappoint at all and a perfect reflection of who they are live. If you get a chance – please give them a listen – you will thank me” – David Foster (Grammy award winning producer)
www.wildblueherons.com
www.wildblueherons@gmail.com
Director
Head Hog of Fundraising!
President
Donnie MacDonald is a designated Chartered Professional Accountant and a Fellow of the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada (FCA, FCMA). She was the Vice-President of Finance with Westminster Savings Credit Union until retiring in July 2015. Currently she is a member of the AGLG Audit Council. Active in the community, she is currently Chair of the North Shore Crisis Services Society and is as a board member and Chair of Western Gold Theatre. In addition to her community work Donnie also enjoys travelling and hiking which has taken her to many interesting parts of the world. When at home she can be found enjoying live theatre (has been a loyal fan for over 30 years) and having fun with her friends and fellow book club and hiking group enthusiasts.
Director
Info coming soon
Director
She currently sits on the board of Green Thumb Theatre . She has also served on a number of other boards over the past 20 years including those of the Unitarian Church of Vancouver, the Universal Gospel Choir and the Canadian Public Relations Society.
Kathryn sings in a 50-voice auditioned choir. She acts as the choir’s producer for up to three concerts each year. She also manages the choir’s social media presence and runs the online ticketing and box office for concerts.
She has a life-long interest in theatre as student and performer in the distant past, producer for a couple of shows, and enthusiastic audience member. She also has family connections to the theatre through her husband Stephen (actor) and daughter Rachel (actor, playwright, associate artistic director at Green Thumb).
Secretary
Diana has been a working singer and director in many years. She’s performed with United Players, Vagabond Players, The Metro, Dragon Diva Opera Company, Applause ! Musicals, North Shore Light Opera , The Shakespeare Center, PALS Chorus, and TUTS, as well as in numerous coffee houses and other dives. Back in the dawn of time, she worked with cuneiform and abacus as a computer programmer. Her proudest achievement was to usher two splendid young women into the world without messing it up too badly. She is very fond of dogs, cats, frogs, reading, swimming, single malt whisky, and travel, and persists against all odds in the attempt to learn French.
Diana firmly believes that the arts in general, and theatre in particular, are essential to humanity, noting that our most ancient ancestors, scraping a precarious existing from a harsh world, still made time for art – cave paintings, music, storytelling. They could not do otherwise. Without art, we have no hope of reaching out of our individual isolation to form community, and humans cannot survive long without community.
Treasurer
Louise has enjoyed a 38 year career in the Finance Department of a local Credit Union, retiring as the Vice President, Finance.
Volunteering has been a big part of Louise’s life, spending numerous hours volunteering with her children’s various sports teams and schools, church and a domestic abuse services organization. Served six years as a Board of Director for The North Shore Crisis Services Society, including holding the office of Treasurer.
Louise enjoys theatre from a seat in the audience and is thrilled to be on the Board of Western Gold Theatre and appreciates the love and dedication of all those attached to theatre.
Vice President
Bonnie is a retired executive from the Federal Public Service who is currently active on several Community Not For Profit Boards, including: the West End Community Centre; The Opera Club; and Western Gold Theatre (WGT). She participates as the Community Representative on three Medical Research Ethics Boards: Providence Health Care; Coastal Health; and Fraser Health.
She assists WGT with Volunteer Co-ordination and Donor Participation/p>
Casting
Stephanie was the Artist Liaison at the Arts Club Theatre Company for 25 years and facilitated the casting of hundreds of artists since 1998. Previous positions at the Arts Club include Campaign Administrator for the restoration and re-opening of the Stanley Theatre, and Tour Coordinator for the Arts Club Theatre for whom she sent out over 30 shows to 25 venues across BC and Ontario. Stephanie was also the Festival Manager for CIAO! (Children’s International Arts Organization), an international children’s theatre festival, in Bracknell and Oxford, Southwest England from 2004 – 2010. An active community member and volunteer, Stephanie has served on the Boards of the Greater Vancouver Professional Theatre Alliance, Jesssie Richardson Theatre Awards Society, British Columbia Touring Council, Rumble Productions and the Rachel Davis Foundation. Stephanie is a graduate of the University of British Columbia with a Master of Arts in English Literature. Stephanie is frequently asked to adjudicate auditions and to give workshops on audition techniques.
Publicist
Ellie O’Day has worked in music, performing arts and cultural industries for nearly 40 years. She was one of North America’s first female DJs in the 70s, a columnist for the Georgia Straight in the 80s, and Executive Director of Pacific Music Industry Assn in the 90s. For 17 years, her O’Day Productions provided media relations to The Cultch, festivals (PuSh Festival, Children’s Festival, VIFF, VIBC, Sonic Boom, KickstArt, Sound of Dragon), theatre companies, special events, CD launches and more. She has served on numerous boards, including twice as a Director of PAL Vancouver.