Mary Vingoe

Last updated
Mary Vingoe
Born Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
OccupationPlaywright, theatre director
Nationality Canadian
Alma mater
Period1970s-present
Notable worksRefuge
Notable awards
SpousePaul Cram

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. [1]

Contents

Early life

Originally from Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, [2] Vingoe studied theatre at Dalhousie University in Halifax. She graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (honours) from Dalhousie in 1976 and was awarded the University Medal in Theatre. [3] [4] Vingoe later attended the University of Toronto's Graduate Centre for Study of Drama. [5]

Career

Vingoe co-founded Toronto's Nightwood Theatre in 1979 with Cynthia Grant, Kim Renders, and Maureen White. [6] Vingoe was the only founding member of Nightwood to be an Equity member at the time of founding. Vingoe served as Nightwood's first artistic coordinator from 1985, when Cynthia Grant left the collective, until 1987. [7] The position was created to fulfill the same responsibilities as an artistic director but with a title that better suited Nightwood's origins as a collective. [8]

Vingoe helped to collectively create works with other Nightwood collaborators, including 1979's The True Story of Ida Johnson and 1981's The Yellow Wallpaper. [9] [10] She acted in shows such as The Yellow Wallpaper (1981) and Pope Joan (1984).Vingoe also directed several plays while working with Nightwood, including Love and Work Enough (1984), Sally Clark's St. Francis of Hollywood (1987), Margaret Hollingsworth's War Babies (1985 and 1987), and The Herring Gull's Egg (1987), which she also wrote. [11] Nightwood re-staged The Herring Gull's Egg in 1989 as directed by Maureen White. [12]

In 1984, Vingoe co-founded Ship's Company Theatre in Parrsboro, Nova Scotia with Michael Fuller. Their first production, You’ll be in Her Arms by Midnight and Other Parrsboro Stories, was performed on the M.V. Kipawo ferry. [13] With Ship's Company, Vingoe has directed several plays including Wendy Lill's The Glace Bay Miner's Museum. Vingoe directed The Glace Bay Miner's Museum again in 2012 for the National Arts Centre's English Theatre Company and served as an assistant director on the 1995 film adaptation of the play, Margaret's Museum . [14]

In 1993, Vingoe co-founded Eastern Front Theatre in Halifax with Wendi Lill and Gay Hauser. [5] [3] In 2002, Vingoe directed a production of The Drawer Boy with EFT for which she was nominated for a Merritt Award for Outstanding Direction. [15]

In 2002, Vingoe was appointed the first artistic director of the Magnetic North Theatre Festival, a festival celebrating Canadian English-language theatre. [2] She stepped down from the position after the 2007 Magnetic North Festival. [16]

In 2010, Vingoe directed the world premiere of Colleen Wagner's play Home at the Bus Stop Theatre in Halifax. [17] The two founded HomeFirst Theatre that year with the intention of producing plays written by Atlantic Canadians. [18] HomeFirst Theatre has since put on such plays as Wendy Lill's Messenger in 2015 with Neptune Theatre and the premiere of Vingoe's play Refuge in 2013 with Eastern Front Theatre. [19] [20] [21]

Vingoe portrayed Wanda Greyson in the CBC radio drama Backbencher . [22] Vingoe directed Alden by Richard Merrill, a play about poet Alden Nowlan at the 2011 NotaBle Acts Theatre Festival in Fredericton, New Brunswick. [23] During Neptune Theatre's 2014/15 season as part of the Open Spaces program with Theatre Nova Scotia, Vingoe directed the Atlantic Canadian premiere of Catherine Banks' It Is Solved by Walking. [24]

In 2018, Vingoe directed the musical Urinetown as part of Chester Playhouse's summer festival in Chester, Nova Scotia. [25] Vingoe wrote the play Some Blow Flutes and directed its 2018 premiere at the Bus Stop Theatre. [26]

Politics

In 2013, Vingoe ran for public office. [27] She ran as the NDP candidate for Dartmouth South in the Nova Scotia provincial election but lost with 33.3% of the vote. [28] [29]

2013 Nova Scotia general election - Dartmouth South
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal Allan Rowe 4,04946.24+18.34
  New Democratic Party Mary Vingoe2,91833.32-22.24
  Progressive Conservative Gord Gamble1,61218.41+5.16
Independent Jim Murray1782.03

Personal life

Vingoe was married to jazz musician Paul Cram who, before his death in 2018, worked as a sound designer on some of Vingoe's productions. [30] The two have two children, Laura and Kyle Vingoe-Cram. [31]

Plays

Ten Seconds After Closing

Ten Seconds After Closing premiered with Nightwood Theatre in 1980 under the direction of Cynthia Grant. [32]

Holy Ghosters

Holy Ghosters is a historical drama set in the eighteenth century and features a non-linear structure. [33] The play premiered 1983 at the Mulgrave Road Co-Op Theatre as directed by Jan Kudelka. A revised version of Holy Ghosters was performed Mount Allison University's Windsor Theatre in 1986. [34]

Hooligans

Hooligans was co-written by Vingoe and Jan Kudelka with contributions from Ian A. Black, Jay Bowen, Cynthia Grant, Irene Pauzer, Kim Renders, Linda Stephen, Bruce Vavrina, and inspired by an idea from Pauzer. The play uses text from the diaries of Isadora Duncan, Edward Gordon Craig, Sergei Esenin, Kathleen Bruce, and Robert Falcon Scott. Hooligans premiered with Nightwood Theatre in March 1982. [32]

The Herring Gull's Egg

In November 1987, Vingoe directed the premiere of her play The Herring Gull's Egg with Nightwood Theatre as part of the 3rd Groundswell Festival. The play received dramaturgy from Maureen Labonte. Nightwood re-staged The Herring Gull's Egg in 1989 under the direction of Maureen White. [32]

The Company Store

Vingoe based her play The Company Store on the Sheldon Currie novel of the same name. [35] The play premiered in 1996 at the Mulgrave Road Theatre Co-Op in Guysborough, Nova Scotia. [36]

Living Curiosities: Or What You Will

Living Curiosities was inspired by the 'giantess' Anna Swan. The play is set in 1963 and follows Anna and other 'curiosities' in P. T. Barnum's show as they put on a production of Twelfth Night . [37] Living Curiosities was workshopped at Word Festival! in Toronto in 1991 and then premiered in January 1992 with Anne-Marie MacDonald as Anna Swan. [38] [39] A revised version of Living Curiosities premiered in 2015 with Theatre Erindale in Mississauga, Ontario. [40]

Refuge

Refuge uses actual text from a CBC radio documentary in addition to fictive additions to tell the story of an Eritrean man seeking refugee status in Canada. [20] The play premiered with Eastern Front Theatre and HomeFirst Theatre in 2013 and was subsequently staged by Nightwood Theatre in 2016. [41] In 2014, Refuge was nominated for Outstanding Play by a Nova Scotian Playwright the Merritt Awards. [42] Refuge was a finalist for the 2014 Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia Masterworks Astounding Art Awards. [43] Refuge was also nominated for the Governor General's Award for English-language drama in 2016. [44]

Some Blow Flutes

Some Blow Flutes premiered with HomeFirst Theatre at the Bus Stop Theatre in Halifax in 2018. The play follows a teenage girl caring for her grandmother who has dementia. [45] Some Blow Flutes was nominated for Outstanding New Play by a Nova Scotian at the 2019 Merritt Awards. [46]

Awards and recognitions

YearAwardCategoryWorkResultNotesRef.
1984 Dora Mavor Moore Awards Outstanding Production of a Play - Children's CategoryLove and Work EnoughWonVingoe directed [47]
2002 Merritt Awards Legacy AwardWon [48]
Outstanding Direction The Drawer Boy Nominatedwith Eastern Front Theatre [15]
2007Mayor's Award for Achievement in TheatreWon [49]
2009 Portia White Prize Won [50]
2010Merritt AwardsOutstanding Supporting ActressIvor Johnson's NeighboursNominatedAs Minnie, with Ship's Company [51]
2011Outstanding DirectorTo Capture LightNominatedwith Mulgrave Road Theatre [52]
2014Outstanding Play by a Nova Scotian PlaywrightRefugeNominated [42]
2016 Governor General's Awards Governor General's Award for English-language drama RefugeNominated [1]
2019Merritt AwardsOutstanding Play by a Nova Scotian PlaywrightSome Blow FlutesNominated [46]

Vingoe was named an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2010. [53]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Theatre of Canada</span> Canadas contemporary theatre

Canada's contemporary theatre reflects a rich diversity of regional and cultural identities. Since the late 1960s, there has been a concerted effort to develop the voice of the 'Canadian playwright', which is reflected in the nationally focused programming of many of the country's theatres. Within this 'Canadian voice' are a plurality of perspectives - that of the First Nations, new immigrants, French Canadians, sexual minorities, etc. - and a multitude of theatre companies have been created to specifically service and support these voices.

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charlie Rhindress</span>

Charlie Rhindress is an actor, writer, director and producer living in his hometown of Amherst, Nova Scotia. He was educated at Mount Allison University and is a co-founder and former Artistic Director of Live Bait Theatre, based in Sackville, New Brunswick.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shelley Thompson</span> Canadian actress

Shelley Thompson is a Canadian actress. She is best known for her character Barbara Lahey on the hit mockumentary program Trailer Park Boys.

Réjean Cournoyer is a Canadian actor and singer, and was raised in a bilingual home. Growing up his family was members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

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.

The Robert Merritt Awards, commonly known as The Merritt Awards, were started in 2002 and are administered by Theatre Nova Scotia. The Merritts honour excellence in theatre throughout the province of Nova Scotia. They are named for Robert Merritt, who was well known to the Halifax community both as a teacher of playwriting in the Theatre Department at Dalhousie University, and as the film critic for CBC's Information Morning.

Mary-Colin Chisholm is a Canadian actress, playwright, and co-assistant director of the theatre companies LunaSea Theatre and Frankie 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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

Shauntay Grant is a Canadian author, poet, playwright, and professor. Between 2009 and 2011, she served as the third poet laureate of Halifax, Nova Scotia. She is known for writing Africville, a children's picture book about a black community by the same name that was razed by the city of Halifax in the 1960s. "Africville" was nominated for a 2018 Governor General’s Literary Award. The book also won the 2019 Marilyn Baillie Picture Book Award, and was among 13 picture books listed on the United States Board on Books for Young People's 2019 USBBY Outstanding International Books List.

Baņuta Rubess is a Canadian theatre director, playwright, and professor. 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.

Taylor Olson is a Canadian actor, writer and filmmaker from Halifax, Nova Scotia. He is best known as the director, writer and lead actor of the 2020 film Bone Cage, for which he was a Canadian Screen Award nominee for Best Adapted Screenplay at the 9th Canadian Screen Awards.

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.

References

  1. 1 2 "Governor-General’s Literary Award short list a serious case of déjà vu". The Globe and Mail , October 4, 2016.
  2. 1 2 "Vingoe, Mary". Canadian Theatre Encyclopedia, April 25, 2016.
  3. 1 2 Logan, Nick (May 27, 2011). "Women's theatre pioneer, Halifax native Mary Vingoe, receives Order of Canada". Global News. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  4. "Mary Vingoe". Playwrights Canada Press. Retrieved 2020-05-06.
  5. 1 2 Vingoe, Mary (1996). "This is not my curriculum vitae (Eastern Front Theatre and the On The Waterfront Festival of new work)". Canadian Theatre Review. University of Toronto Press (87). ISSN   0315-0836.
  6. MacArthur, Michelle (2016). "Historiographing a Feminist Utopia: Collective Creation, History, and Feminist Theatre in Canada". In Syssoyeva, Kathryn Mederos; Proudfit, Scott (eds.). Women, Collective Creation, and Devised Performance: The Rise of Women Theatre Artists in the Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries. Palgrave MacMillan. p. 163. ISBN   978-1-137-55013-2.
  7. Scott, Shelley (2014). Nightwood Theatre: A Woman's Work Is Always Done. Athabasca University Press. pp. 87–88. ISBN   978-1-897425-56-5. OCLC   982451929 via Google Books.
  8. Scott, Shelley (2014). Nightwood Theatre: A Woman's Work Is Always Done. Athabasca University Press. p. 225. ISBN   978-1-897425-56-5. OCLC   982451929 via Google Books.
  9. MacArthur, Laura Michelle (2014). "Re-viewing Reception: Criticism of Feminist Theatre in Montreal and Toronto, 1976 to Present" (PDF). Centre for Drama, Theatre and Performance Studies, University of Toronto. p. 97. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  10. Scott, Shelley (2014). Nightwood Theatre: a Woman's Work Is Always Done. Athabasca University Press. p. 227. ISBN   978-1-897425-56-5. OCLC   982451929.
  11. Scott, Shelley (2014). Nightwood Theatre: a Woman's Work Is Always Done. Athabasca University Press. pp. 234–241. ISBN   978-1-897425-56-5. OCLC   982451929.
  12. Scott, Shelley (2014). Nightwood Theatre: a Woman's Work Is Always Done. Athabasca University Press. p. 244. ISBN   978-1-897425-56-5. OCLC   982451929.
  13. "History of the Ship". Ship's Company Theatre. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  14. Langston, Patrick (October 17, 2012). "Bravery, Defiance, and Death". The Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved May 6, 2020.
  15. 1 2 "Robert Merritt Award Nominations 2002" (PDF). Theatre Nova Scotia. 2002. Retrieved May 6, 2020.
  16. Al-Solaylee, Kamal (January 1, 2007). "Theatre: Hit the Road". The Globe and Mail via Factiva.
  17. Flinn, Sean (February 18, 2010). "Home and Away". The Coast Halifax. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  18. "About". Home First Theatre. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  19. "Messenger". Chronicle Herald. October 30, 2015. pp. D4. ISSN   0828-1807.
  20. 1 2 Watson, Kate (October 3, 2013). "Refuge". The Coast. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  21. "HomeFirst Theatre Society". Theatre Nova Scotia. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  22. "About the Cast". CBC. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  23. "Fredericton theatre festival debuts play about Maritime poet Alden Nowlan: Festival debuts play about poet Alden Nowlan". The Canadian Press. Canadian Press Enterprises Inc. July 19, 2011 via Proquest.
  24. Barnard, Elissa (March 21, 2014). "Neptune floats no-holds-barred season". Chronicle Herald. ISSN   0828-1807. Through Neptune's Open Spaces program with Theatre Nova Scotia, Mary Vingoe is directing the first Atlantic Canadian production of It Is Solved by Walking, inspired by American poet Wallace Stevens's 13 Ways of Looking at a Blackbird, and written by Sambro playwright Catherine Banks, who won her second Governor General's Award for the play.
  25. "Festival in Chester opens with Urinetown, the Musical". The Chronicle Herald. July 4, 2018. p. E3. ISSN   0828-1807.
  26. Arsenault, Tim (October 24, 2018). "Vingoe directs own play at Bus Stop | The Chronicle Herald". www.thechronicleherald.ca. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  27. Arsenault, Tim (October 25, 2018). "Vingoe makes directorial debut at Bus Stop". Chronicle Herald. p. D2. ISSN   0828-1807.
  28. "District 19: Dartmouth South". CBC News. April 23, 2013. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  29. Logan, Nick (October 8, 2013). "Liberals win majority government in Nova Scotia". Global News. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  30. Winston, Iris (October 22, 2012). "The Glace Bay Miners' Museum. Neptune Theatre Celebrates Its 50th Anniversary With a Canadian Classic". Capital Critics' Circle / Le cercle des critiques de la capitale. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  31. Thorne, Tara (March 21, 2018). "Halifax loses jazz legend". The Coast Halifax. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  32. 1 2 3 Smith, Mary Elizabeth (June 1, 1997). ""ONE MUST PLEASE TO LIVE": THE SURVIVAL OF HARRY LINDLEY IN ATLANTIC CANADA". Theatre Research in Canada / Recherches Théâtrales Au Canada. 18 (2). eISSN   1913-9101 . Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  33. "Online Catalogue | Holy Ghosters". Playwrights Atlantic Resource Centre. Retrieved May 6, 2020.
  34. Barton, Bruce (June 1, 2000). "Redefining 'Community': The Elusive Legacy of the Dramatists' Co-Op of Nova Scotia". Theatre Research in Canada / Recherches Théâtrales Au Canada. 21 (2). Retrieved May 6, 2020.
  35. Grant, Laura Jean (November 22, 2012). "A Cape Breton Story". Cape Breton Post. Retrieved May 4, 2020 via PressReader.
  36. "The Company Store by Mary Vingoe". Canadian Play Outlet. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  37. Lynde, Denyse (2013). "The Past Revised". Canadian Literature (216): 178–179 via ProQuest.
  38. Adilman, Sid (January 9, 1992). "Sunday a couch potato night". The Toronto Star via ProQuest.
  39. Wagner, Vit (May 3, 1991). "Crow's crew going night and day". The Toronto Star. p. D6 via ProQuest.
  40. Gaisin, Danny (March 14, 2015). ""Living Curiosities", Theatre Erindale's ver. 2.0". Ontario Arts Review. Retrieved May 6, 2020.
  41. Nestruck, J. Kelly (April 25, 2016). "Refuge: Looking at the issue of refugees from the outside". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  42. 1 2 "Theatre Nova Scotia's Robert Merritt Award Nominations 2014" (PDF). TAG Theatre. 2014. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  43. "Winner and Finalists". The Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia Masterworks Arts Award. 2014. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  44. Kaplan, Jon (October 7, 2016). "Theatre kudos". NOW Magazine. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  45. Lewis, Lara (October 26, 2018). "Theatre review: Some Blow Flutes at the Bus Stop". The Coast Halifax. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  46. 1 2 Thorne, Tara (March 6, 2019). "Nominations for the 2019 Merritt Awards for theatre are out now". The Coast Halifax. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  47. Scott, Shelley (June 1, 1997). "COLLECTIVE CREATION AND THE CHANGING MANDATE OF NIGHTWOOD THEATRE". Theatre Research in Canada / Recherches Théâtrales Au Canada. 18 (2).
  48. "Legacy Award Winners". www.theatrens.ca. Retrieved 2020-05-05.
  49. "Something cliche about merit". The Coast. March 20, 2007. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  50. "Culture Awards Make Big Splash in Tusket". novascotia.ca. October 24, 2009. Retrieved May 3, 2020.
  51. Flinn, Sue Carter (March 17, 2010). "Merritt Award nominees reflect great year of theatre". The Coast. Retrieved May 6, 2020.
  52. "Robert Merritt Award Nominations 2011" (PDF). Theatre Nova Scotia. Retrieved May 6, 2020.
  53. Ogilvie, Megan (December 30, 2010). "Order of Canada recipients announced". thestar.com. Retrieved May 6, 2020.