Diane Roberts | |
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Born | Surrey, England, UK |
Education |
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Occupation | Interdisciplinary theatre artist |
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Diane Roberts is an interdisciplinary theatre creator. Roberts was a founding member of Obsidian Theatre. Roberts was an artistic co-director of Nightwood Theatre, the artistic director of Urban Ink Productions, and a co-founder and artistic director of Boldskool Productions. She is the creator of the Arrivals Legacy Project.
Roberts obtained her BA in theatre in 1988 at York University. In 1998, she obtained an MFA in Playmaking also at York. Roberts is currently pursuing a PhD in the Fine Arts Interdisciplinary HUMA program at Concordia University. [1] Her PhD research centres "on the praxis of embodied decolonisation in contemporary performance". [2] Roberts is a 2019 Pierre Elliott Trudeau Scholar. [3]
Roberts became involved with Nightwood Theatre when Kate Lushington was hired as Nightwood's artistic associate in 1988. Lushington and Roberts worked together to make Nightwood's mandate explicitly anti-racist and to create initiatives to be more inclusive of women of colour. [4] In October 1992, Roberts became Nightwood's associate artistic director. [5] In 1994, she was named artistic co-director of Nightwood with Alisa Palmer. Roberts, Palmer, and producer Leslie Lester served as a three-person leadership team but shared two salaries. [6] While working with Nightwood Theatre, Roberts directed several productions including Karen Kemlo's Clean (1992), Pauline Peters' Dryland: A Story Cycle (1993), Dilara Ally's Mango Chutney (1994, 1995, and 1996), Cathy Lenihan's Death and Renovation (1994), Marium Carvell's Dinah Blues of the Queen (1995), and The Coloured Girls Project (1995). [7] The Coloured Girls Project was initiated by Roberts and became an in-house workshop. [8] Roberts left Nightwood in Spring 1996. [9]
In 1997, Roberts directed Joan MacLeod's Little Sister. She was nominated for a Dora Mavor Moore Award for Outstanding Direction (mid-size theatre) for her work on that production. [10]
In 2000, Roberts co-founded Obsidian Theatre with Awovieyi Agie, Philip Akin, Ardon Bess, David Collins, Roy Lewis, Yanna McIntosh, Kim Roberts, Sandi Ross, Djanet Sears, Satori Shakoor, Tricia Williams, and Alison Sealy-Smith. [11] Obsidian was founded as a theatre centring Black voices in Canada with an emphasis on producing plays and developing new voices and works. [12]
In 2004, Roberts founded The Arrivals Legacy Project during an artistic residency at Concordia. [1] The project aims to bring together racialized artists in collective collaboration and examination of ancestry and cultural practices. [13] [14]
From 2007 to 2014, Roberts was the artistic director of Urban Ink Productions. [1] [15] With Urban Ink Productions, Roberts directed many shows including Valerie Sing Turner's Confessions of the Other Woman in 2012 (co-directed with Gerry Trentham) and Omari Newton's Sal Capone: The Lamentable Tragedy Of in 2014. [16] [17] After working with Newton on Sal Capone, Roberts and Newton co-founded Boldskool Productions, a hip hop theatre company. She is Boldskool Productions' artistic director. [1] [18] In 2018, Boldskool restaged Sal Capone once again under Roberts' direction presented with the NAC English Theatre. [19]
Roberts has taught theatre at York University and Concordia University. [20]
Roberts currently lives in Montreal, QC. She is of Garifuna, Scottish, French, Indian, African, and Caribbean ancestry. [22]
Diane Flacks is a Canadian comedic actress, screenwriter and playwright.
Obsidian Theatre Company is a Canadian professional theatre company that specializes in works by Black Canadian artists. The company is located in Toronto, Ontario. The declared mandate of the company is a threefold mission: to produce plays, to develop playwrights and to train theatre professionals. Obsidian is dedicated to the exploration, development, and production of the Black voice. They produce plays from a world-wide canon focusing primarily, but not exclusively, on the works of highly acclaimed Black playwrights. Obsidian provides artistic support, promoting the development of work by Black theatre makers and offering training opportunities through mentoring and apprenticeship programs for emerging Black artists.
Alisa Palmer is a Canadian theatre director and playwright. She was the artistic director of Nightwood Theatre from 1993 to 2001. Palmer is currently the artistic director of the English section of the National Theatre School of Canada.
Nightwood Theatre is Canada's oldest professional women's theatre and is based in Toronto. It was founded in 1979 by Cynthia Grant, Kim Renders, Mary Vingoe, and Maureen White and was originally a collective. Though it was not the founders' original intention, Nightwood Theatre has become known for producing feminist works. Some of Nightwood's most famous productions include This is For You, Anna (1983) and Good Night Desdemona (1988). Nightwood hosts several annual events including FemCab, the Hysteria Festival, and Groundswell Festival which features readings from participants of Nightwood's Write from the Hip playwright development program.
Susan G. Cole is a Canadian feminist author, activist, editor, speaker and playwright. She has spoken out on a number of issues, including free speech, pornography, race and religion. As a lesbian activist and mother, she speaks out on sexuality and family issues and is a columnist.
Hysteria: A Festival of Women was a recurring arts festival in Toronto. It was founded in 2003 by Moynan King of the Buddies in Bad Times theatre company in collaboration with Nightwood Theatre.
Omari Akil Newton is a Canadian actor. He is best known for playing the roles of Larry Summers in Blue Mountain State and Lucas Ingram in Continuum. Newton is the co-founder of Boldskool Productions.
This is For You, Anna is a 1983 play devised by The Anna Collective. Initially developed as a 20-minute production for the Women's Perspective Festival, This is For You, Anna was re-written into a longer piece that premiered in 1984. The show went on to tour Canada and Britain throughout the 1980s. The play was created collectively in response to the crimes of German woman Marianne Bachmeier, who walked into a courtroom and shot the man who killed her daughter. The feminist play explores themes of violence, revenge, domesticity, and questions the roles of western women at the end of the 20th century.
Mary Vingoe is a Canadian playwright, actor, and theatre director. Vingoe was one of the co-founders of Canadian feminist theatre company Nightwood Theatre and later co-founded Ship's Company Theatre in Parrsboro and Eastern Front Theatre in Halifax. From 2002 to 2007, Vingoe was artistic director of the Magnetic North Theatre Festival. Vingoe is an Officer of the Order of Canada and received the Portia White Prize. Her play Refuge was a shortlisted nominee for the Governor General's Award for English-language drama at the 2016 Governor General's Awards.
Kim Renders was a Canadian writer, director, actor and designer and a founding member of Nightwood Theatre, the oldest professional feminist theatre company in Canada.
Feminist theater grew out of the wider Political theater of the 1970s, and continues to the present. It can take on a variety of meanings, but the constant thread is the lived experience of women.
Kelly Thornton is a Canadian theatre director and dramaturge. She has served as artistic director of Nightwood Theatre and is the current artistic director of the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre. Thornton was the co-head of Equity in Canadian Theatre: the Women’s Initiative.
Kate Lushington is a Canadian theatre artist and teacher. From 1988 to 1993, Lushington was the artistic director of Nightwood Theatre. Lushington has worked with The Clichettes and is the writer of The Apocalypse Plays: A Legacy Project.
Cynthia Grant is a Canadian theatre director. Grant was a founding member of Nightwood Theatre and served as the company's first artistic director. Grant later co-founded Company of Sirens.
Maureen White is a Canadian theatre actor, director, and playwright. She was a member of The Anna Project, which created the play This is for You, Anna. White was a founding member of Nightwood Theatre and served as its artistic coordinator from 1987 to 1988.
Company of Sirens is a Canadian feminist theatre company formed in 1986. Company of Sirens developed the feminist play The Working People's Picture Show.
Baņuta Rubess is a Latvian-Canadian theatre director and playwright. She co-wrote This is For You, Anna as a member of the Anna Project. Rubess was a co-recipient of the 1988 Floyd S. Chalmers Canadian Play Award for children's theatre for her play Thin Ice.
Lina Chartrand (1948-1994) was a Canadian writer and theatre creator. She was a co-founder of the feminist theatre company, Company of Sirens. Her most famous work was the bilingual and partly autobiographical play, La P'tite Miss Easter Seals.
Aida Jordão is a Portuguese-Canadian playwright, theatre director, and academic. She is a co-founder of the feminist theatre group, Company of Sirens, and she co-created This is For You, Anna, a germinal Canadian feminist theatre play.
Lib Spry is a Canadian director, playwright, and academic. She is a co-founder of Company of Sirens and Straight Stitching Productions and served as the artistic director of Passionate Balance.