06.02.2013 Views

RichaRd iii - Stratford Festival

RichaRd iii - Stratford Festival

RichaRd iii - Stratford Festival

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

TOM PATTERSON<br />

ThEATRE<br />

may 19 TO<br />

SEPTEmBER 25, 2011<br />

OPENS JUNE 2<br />

Seana McKenna<br />

RICHARD III<br />

<strong>RichaRd</strong> <strong>iii</strong><br />

By William Shakespeare<br />

directed by Miles Potter<br />

Antoni Cimolino<br />

General Director<br />

Production support generously provided by<br />

Sylvia D. Chrominska and Delia M. Moog<br />

Des mcAnuff<br />

Artistic Director


let us take you on<br />

an adventure!<br />

Great stories transcend time and place. Whatever country or century gave<br />

them their birth, they speak to us here and now, their power to move or<br />

delight us recharged with each telling, their insights as pertinent to the world<br />

we live in as the latest work of a dramatist today.<br />

our 2011 playbill opens doors to vistas both familiar and exotic, from<br />

shakespeare’s illyria to the American dust Bowl, from contemporary<br />

canada to the legendary realm of camelot. each of the dramatic<br />

worlds created on our stages embodies universal aspects of<br />

the human heart and the human soul; each invites you into an<br />

extraordinary adventure we hope you will never forget.<br />

Artistic director GeNerAL director<br />

The 2011 season is dedicated to the memory of<br />

Michael Langham, Artistic Director from 1956 to 1967.<br />

scan with your smartphone for a<br />

free ring tone from our new 2011<br />

season song: Show Time!<br />

1


Statecraft and Stagecraft<br />

in Richard III<br />

by Jane Freeman<br />

Shakespeare wrote Richard III in the early 1590s,<br />

and it was his first big hit. It was performed often<br />

during his life and reprinted more frequently before<br />

his death than any of his plays except Henry IV,<br />

Part 1. Elizabethan audiences would have entered<br />

the theatre knowing the story from several sources.<br />

What they might not have predicted was that<br />

seeing history through the eyes of a charismatic<br />

villain could be so much fun.<br />

The story they knew was dramatic. Richard,<br />

Duke of Gloucester, an evil man with a twisted<br />

character and a twisted back, wanted to be king<br />

but he was not heir to the throne. Using subterfuge<br />

and violence, he would remove all obstacles in his<br />

path: his brother George, his brother King Edward’s<br />

power-seeking in-laws, uncooperative noblemen<br />

and – most infamously – his young nephews.<br />

This unnatural monster would be rightfully killed<br />

at the Battle of Bosworth by Henry Tudor, the<br />

Earl of Richmond, who would become the first<br />

Tudor monarch, King Henry VII. We know, though<br />

Shakespeare’s audience probably did not, that<br />

several of the facts of Richard III’s famous villainy<br />

are fictions, generated by the “Tudor propaganda<br />

machine” for political gain.<br />

Richard III is the fourth play in a series (the others<br />

being the three parts of Henry VI) that tells the story<br />

2<br />

Below | Director Miles Potter with MeMbers of the coMPany in rehearsal.<br />

Facing page, From top| seana McKenna (richarD <strong>iii</strong>), roberta Maxwell<br />

(Duchess of yorK) anD Martha henry (Queen Margaret); yanna Mcintosh<br />

(Queen elizabeth) Following page | brenDan Murray (archbishoP) anD<br />

wayne best (DuKe of bucKinghaM) with MeMbers of the coMPany;<br />

seana McKenna; gareth Potter (richMonD) anD Director Miles Potter.<br />

PhotograPhy by erin saMuell.<br />

of the Wars of the Roses: the civil war between<br />

the houses of York and Lancaster for the throne of<br />

England. Richard starts the series as a loyal brother,<br />

but by the third play he has revealed in soliloquy<br />

both his desire to be king and the means by which<br />

he hopes to succeed:<br />

Why, I can smile, and murder whiles I smile,<br />

And cry “Content” to that which grieves my heart,<br />

And wet my cheeks with artificial tears,<br />

And frame my face to all occasions. . . .<br />

I can add colours to the chameleon,<br />

Change shapes with Proteus for advantages,<br />

And set the murderous Machiavel to school.<br />

Can I do this, and cannot get a crown?<br />

Tut, were it farther off, I’ll pluck it down.<br />

– Henry VI, Part 3, Act III, scene 2<br />

Like other theatrical Machiavels of the period,<br />

all of whom draw on popular interpretations of<br />

Machiavelli’s The Prince (published in 1532), Richard<br />

is a quick-witted political strategist who is willing<br />

to use immoral means to achieve his ends. He has<br />

more lines than any other Shakespearean character<br />

except Hamlet and speaks many of them directly<br />

to the audience, thereby making us his confidants.<br />

He is self-consciously theatrical: he performs roles<br />

such as “loving brother” and “devout Christian” in


order to shape his public image and then turns to<br />

us to review his virtuoso performances in private.<br />

In this production, the dramatic irony of Richard’s<br />

constantly shifting role-playing is heightened by a<br />

casting of Richard that increases our awareness<br />

of actor as Richard, and Richard as actor. As John<br />

Jowett writes, “Richard III is conspicuously a<br />

performance piece, and in many ways it is about<br />

the nature of performance.”<br />

Richard III presents historical events while<br />

simultaneously teaching a moral lesson and<br />

exploring the psychological fallout of civil war.<br />

This tripartite focus is accomplished, in part,<br />

through Shakespeare’s blending of the features of<br />

chronicle history plays, medieval morality plays and<br />

Senecan tragedies. Richard explicitly compares<br />

himself to the “Vice” of the morality play: a comic<br />

character, servant of the devil, who steps in and<br />

out of the dramatic action to tell the audience of his<br />

nefarious schemes. While the Vice is typically twodimensional,<br />

however, Richard III is psychologically<br />

complex. Lengthy Senecan-style soliloquies<br />

deepen our understanding of Richard’s point of<br />

view, while the chorus of lamenting women function<br />

as chroniclers, “who understand and know”<br />

(Jowett). The women’s wider perspective, like their<br />

rhythmic language, sets them apart from the play’s<br />

action even as they comment on it.<br />

By combining theatrical traditions, Shakespeare<br />

gives us a version of history that is both allegorical<br />

and psychological. Richard’s famous deformity, for<br />

example, is interpreted by the other characters<br />

on stage as emblematic of his evil (as Sir Thomas<br />

More suggested in his History of Richard III), while<br />

Richard himself says it is the cause of his villainous<br />

behaviour (a point of view explored by Freud in his<br />

essay of 1916). Shakespeare breaks from tradition<br />

by making his Richard both more misshapen and<br />

more attractive than the Richard of the chronicles.<br />

In doing so, he leaves it to actors and audiences to<br />

interpret the relationship among Richard’s body, his<br />

mind and his actions.<br />

Throughout the sequence of Shakespeare’s<br />

history plays, the focus of conflict gradually shifts<br />

from battlefield, to boardroom, to bedroom. In<br />

the early plays, the central conflict is between<br />

the Yorks and the Lancasters. When Richard III<br />

opens, however, the civil war is over, and the main<br />

conflict is within the York family. As various factions<br />

vie for power, “the conquerors / Make war upon<br />

themselves, brother to brother, / Blood to blood,<br />

self against self.” The shape-shifting secretive<br />

Richard is not temperamentally suited for kingship,<br />

and after he becomes king the power he has won<br />

3


4<br />

slips away from him. In the words of Alexander<br />

Leggatt, “Ironically, the role Richard has sought<br />

so long is the one role he cannot effectively play.”<br />

By the end of the play the central conflict is within<br />

Richard himself. Unable to sleep, visited by dreams<br />

and ghosts, his guilty conscience “hath a thousand<br />

several tongues,” and every tongue condemns him<br />

for a villain.<br />

Richard is not the only one with a guilty<br />

conscience. King Edward IV and the Duke of<br />

Clarence are also haunted by past deeds – by<br />

the thought that perhaps their ends did not justify<br />

their means after all. The play is full of dreams<br />

and prophecies, omens and ghosts, blessings<br />

and curses. As Queen Margaret’s prophecies<br />

come true, and the ghosts of the dead appear, it<br />

seems that England’s unfolding history is part of a<br />

providential plan. Richmond, who considers himself<br />

God’s “captain,” will rid the world of the usurping<br />

Richard. In doing so, he will return England to<br />

political and moral health: the winter of Plantagenet<br />

discontent will yield to the glorious summer of Tudor<br />

rule. At least that’s the Tudor version of the story.<br />

The play covers the historical events of 14 years,<br />

starting with Edward IV’s restoration in 1471 and<br />

ending with King Richard’s death in 1485. It is<br />

perhaps not coincidental that in the middle of the<br />

period presented, in 1476, the first printing press<br />

arrived in England. In the century between the<br />

historical events depicted and Shakespeare’s<br />

writing, the story of the villainous Richard III had<br />

spread through the Tudor chronicles, the first of<br />

which, by Polydore Vergil, was commissioned by<br />

Henry VII. Appearing in Richard III as Richmond,<br />

Henry VII was known in Shakespeare’s time both<br />

as the first Tudor monarch and as the grandfather<br />

of Queen Elizabeth I, who was on the throne<br />

when the play was written. Awkward questions<br />

regarding whether Richard III’s right to the throne<br />

was stronger than Richmond’s were put aside as<br />

chroniclers retold history in a form that generated<br />

patriotic pride.<br />

This play about political manipulations – about<br />

ends justifying means, as Machiavelli had written<br />

– was based on politically manipulated historical<br />

texts. Like the sources on which it is based,<br />

Shakespeare’s Richard III draws our attention<br />

to issues of representation and right rule at the<br />

intersection of medieval and early modern world views.<br />

Dr. Jane Freeman is a faculty member at the<br />

University of Toronto and a member of the <strong>Stratford</strong><br />

Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong>’s Senate.


Family Tree<br />

Edward<br />

the Black Prince<br />

Richard II<br />

(1377-99)<br />

Henry V<br />

(1413-22)<br />

Henry VI<br />

(1422-61, 1470-71)<br />

Thomas<br />

Duke of Clarence<br />

Edward,<br />

Prince of Wales<br />

m.<br />

m.<br />

m.<br />

The Story<br />

Lionel<br />

Duke of Clarence<br />

Philippa<br />

Plantagenet<br />

Katherine<br />

of France<br />

Edward III (1327-77)<br />

house of lancaster house of yorK<br />

John<br />

Duke of Bedford<br />

m.<br />

Margaret of Anjou<br />

Anne Neville<br />

Edmund Mortimer<br />

3rd Earl of March<br />

Owen Tudor<br />

Humphrey<br />

Duke of Gloucester<br />

this simplified chart shows the relationships<br />

between principal members of the english<br />

royal family from edward <strong>iii</strong> to elizabeth i.<br />

the names of historical personages who appear<br />

as characters in Richard III are shown in boldface.<br />

the dates in brackets indicate the reigns of<br />

monarchs.<br />

m.<br />

Blanche<br />

of Lancaster<br />

Edmund Tudor<br />

Earl of Richmond<br />

m.<br />

Henry Bolingbroke<br />

Duke of Hereford,<br />

later Henry IV<br />

(1399-1413)<br />

John Beaufort<br />

1st Duke of Somerset<br />

m.<br />

Margaret<br />

Beaufort<br />

Henry Tudor<br />

Earl of Richmond<br />

later Henry VII<br />

(1485-1509)<br />

John Beaufort<br />

Earl of Somerset<br />

Henry VIII<br />

(1509-47)<br />

Edward Aumerle<br />

2nd Duke of York<br />

Edmund Beaufort<br />

2nd Duke of Somerset<br />

Edward IV<br />

(1460-70,<br />

1471-83)<br />

Elizabeth<br />

Woodville<br />

Elizabeth Edward<br />

Prince of Wales<br />

later Edward V<br />

(April-June 1483)<br />

Elizabeth I<br />

(1558-1603)<br />

Henry Beaufort<br />

Bishop of Winchester<br />

(later Cardinal)<br />

Anne Bullen<br />

Edmund of Langley<br />

1st Duke of York<br />

Richard<br />

Earl of Cambridge<br />

Thomas Beaufort<br />

1st Duke of Exeter<br />

Cicely Neville<br />

Duchess of York<br />

George<br />

Duke of Clarence<br />

Richard<br />

Duke of York<br />

(The Princes in the Tower)<br />

Thomas of Woodstock<br />

Duke of Gloucester<br />

Anne Mortimer<br />

Richard<br />

3rd Duke of York<br />

Richard<br />

Duke of Gloucester<br />

later Richard III<br />

(1483-85)<br />

Anne Neville<br />

A period of civil war in England (“the winter of our discontent”) has ended with the victory of the<br />

York faction and the ascent to the throne of King Edward IV (“this son of York”). However, Edward’s<br />

deformed youngest brother, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, disdaining this “weak piping time of peace,”<br />

is already plotting the elimination of those who stand between himself and the crown – beginning<br />

with his elder brother George, Duke of Clarence.<br />

m.<br />

m.<br />

John of Gaunt Katharine Swinford<br />

m.<br />

m.<br />

m.<br />

m.<br />

m.<br />

5


The Triumph of Evil<br />

costuMe Designs for richarD by Peter hartwell.<br />

6<br />

Ideas and Insights<br />

ArcelorMittal Dofasco applauds the artists, artisans<br />

and sta� behind every outstanding experience at the<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong> Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong>.<br />

“And so they said that these matters be<br />

Kings’ games, as it were,<br />

Stage plays, and for the most part played<br />

upon scaffolds.<br />

And they that wise be would meddle no farther.”<br />

– From Sir Thomas More’s<br />

History of King Richard III<br />

More wrote his history in 1513, twenty-eight years<br />

after the death of the historical Richard, and long,<br />

long before Shakespeare took up the story. Two<br />

things struck me about More’s quote: one, that he<br />

had already picked up the theme of theatricality,<br />

and two, that his pun on scaffold was even more<br />

meaningful then than now.<br />

The earliest meaning of scaffold was a platform<br />

where a performance of a mystery or morality play<br />

might occur; its meaning as a place for executions<br />

came later. Richard’s theatrical ancestors, the Vice<br />

characters of those medieval plays, performed their<br />

acts on those very scaffolds as they went about<br />

their stated mission, to destroy virtue wherever they<br />

found it. In order to do so, they would do anything,<br />

assume any role, in order to suborn the natural<br />

order and attempt the triumph of evil.<br />

The great appeal of Vice, the appeal of the<br />

villain, was so strong that this character survived<br />

theatrically long after his pallid cousins Virtue<br />

and Honesty and Plaindealing had faded into<br />

the theatrical mists of time; in fact, his popularity<br />

with audiences assured his survival well into the<br />

Elizabethan era in the guise of such characters<br />

as Richard and Iago and Don John (in Much Ado<br />

About Nothing).<br />

I believe that it is this theatrical heritage that<br />

provides the character of Richard and the play<br />

he shows up in with so much of its appeal. He<br />

is not just a villain; he is The Villain as Actor,<br />

willing to assume any role to achieve his ends.<br />

He is an actor, playing an actor, sharing a secret<br />

with his audience: “I am not what I appear to<br />

be.” My second favourite quote concerning<br />

Richard comes from the Polish critic Jan Kott:<br />

“Richard is not; he just pretends to be.”<br />

In small but significant flashes throughout the<br />

play, Shakespeare appears to be semaphoring<br />

a message to us. It comes and goes amidst the<br />

twists and turns of political manoeuvring, amongst<br />

the emotional turmoil of lies and manipulation,<br />

throughout the emotional wreckage caused by<br />

death and destruction. It is a simple message, but<br />

as Shakespeare sensed, it bears repeating:<br />

“All that is required for the triumph of evil is for<br />

good people to do nothing.”<br />

Miles Potter<br />

Director<br />

costuMe sKetch for richarD by Miles Potter.


Richard III<br />

by William Shakespeare<br />

Artistic Credits<br />

Director Miles Potter<br />

Designer Peter hartwell<br />

Lighting Designer Kevin fraser<br />

Composer Marc Desormeaux<br />

Sound Designer Peter Mcboyle<br />

Movement wendy allnutt<br />

Fight Director Daniel levinson<br />

Assistant Director sharon bajer<br />

Assistant Designer sara brzozowski<br />

Assistant Lighting Designer Jennifer lennon<br />

Fight Captain wayne best<br />

Stage Manager Janine ralph<br />

Assistant Stage Managers Martine beland,<br />

ivory seol<br />

Apprentice Stage Manager Jessica stinson<br />

Production Assistant genevieve Magtoto<br />

Production Stage Managers Janine ralph,<br />

Maxwell t. wilson<br />

Technical Director sean hirtle<br />

Cast<br />

King Edward IV David ferry<br />

Queen Elizabeth wife of King Edward IV yanna Mcintosh<br />

Prince Edward, later King Edward V<br />

sons of King Edward IV<br />

teddy gough<br />

Richard, Duke of York Jeremy harttrup<br />

George, Duke of Clarence<br />

Richard, Duke of Gloucester<br />

later King Richard III<br />

brothers of King Edward IV<br />

Michael spencer-Davis<br />

seana McKenna<br />

Duchess of York mother of King Edward IV roberta Maxwell<br />

Lady Anne widow of Prince Edward (son of King Henry VI),<br />

and later wife of Richard, Duke of Gloucester bethany Jillard<br />

Queen Margaret widow of King Henry VI Martha henry<br />

Anthony Woodville, Lord Rivers brother of Queen Elizabeth David collins<br />

Marquess of Dorset<br />

sons of Queen Elizabeth<br />

e. b. smith<br />

Lord Grey Dion Johnstone<br />

William, Lord Hastings Lord Chamberlain nigel bennett<br />

Lord Stanley andrew gillies<br />

Duke of Buckingham<br />

wayne best<br />

Sir William Catesby sean arbuckle<br />

Sir Richard Ratcliffe oliver becker<br />

Duke of Norfolk Richard, Duke of Gloucester’s followers<br />

skye brandon<br />

Sir James Tyrrel Paul fauteux<br />

Thomas, Earl of Surrey Paul fauteux<br />

Murderer shane carty<br />

Henry, Earl of Richmond stepson of Stanley, later King Henry VII gareth Potter<br />

Earl of Oxford David ferry<br />

Sir James Blunt Richmond’s followers<br />

David collins<br />

Sir Walter Herbert shane carty<br />

Cardinal Bourchier cyrus lane<br />

Archbishop brendan Murray<br />

Sir Robert Brakenbury Lieutenant of the Tower of London bruce godfree<br />

Lord Mayor of London shane carty<br />

Scrivener cyrus lane<br />

Citizens laura condlln<br />

carmen grant<br />

claire lautier<br />

Gentleman, Soldiers, Messenger, Coffin Bearers, Monks played by members of the company.<br />

7


costuMe Designs by Peter hartwell for laDy anne, Queen elizabeth anD<br />

the DuKe of bucKinghaM with bucKinghaM's ghost.<br />

8<br />

The Birmingham Conservatory for Classical Theatre<br />

From General Director Antoni Cimolino and Artistic Director Des McAnuff<br />

Thirty-two members of the <strong>Stratford</strong> Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong>’s 2011 company have come out of our<br />

professional training program, now known as the Birmingham Conservatory for Classical Theatre.<br />

Founded in 1998, the Conservatory has helped to launch the careers of some of our leading young<br />

actors, many of whom we have had the great pleasure of directing. Providing opportunities for young<br />

Canadian artists is part of our mission at the <strong>Festival</strong>, and we hope you will find it as satisfying as we<br />

do to watch their growth as they share the stage with some of the finest actors in the world.<br />

Under the leadership of Martha Henry, the Conservatory is made possible by the support of the Birmingham<br />

family, the <strong>Stratford</strong> Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong> Endowment Foundation and the Department of Canadian Heritage.<br />

We thank them for helping us to nurture and support these talented artists in our 2011 company:<br />

Understudies<br />

oliver becker (Lord Stanley), skye brandon (Sir William Catesby,<br />

Murderer), shane carty (Duke of Buckingham), David collins<br />

(Lord Hastings), laura condlln (Queen Elizabeth), Paul fauteux<br />

(Sir Robert Brakenbury), David ferry (Lord Mayor of London),<br />

bruce godfree (Sir Richard Ratcliffe, Earl of Surrey), carmen<br />

grant (King Richard III), ethan ioannidis (Duke of York), Dion<br />

Johnstone (Sir James Tyrrel), cyrus lane (Lord Grey, Marquess of<br />

Dorset, Lord Rivers), claire lautier (Lady Anne), brendan Murray<br />

(King Edward IV, Duke of Norfolk), irene Poole (Queen Margaret,<br />

Duchess of York), gareth Potter (Duke of Clarence), evan rueb<br />

(Prince Edward), e. b. smith (Earl of Richmond, Cardinal),<br />

Michael spencer-Davis (Archbishop).<br />

Interval<br />

there will be one interval of 20 minutes.<br />

Audience Alert<br />

this production includes haze.<br />

Production Credits<br />

Responsibilities backstage during the performance accomplished by:<br />

Stage Carpenter Paul gorman<br />

Master Electrician timothy hanson<br />

Property Master alan hughes<br />

Head of Sound Jim stewart<br />

Wardrobe Mistress helen basson<br />

Wardrobe Attendants John bynum, inez Khan,<br />

Jane Mallory<br />

Swing bonnie Deakin<br />

Wigs and Makeup Show Head Julie scott<br />

Wigs and Makeup Crew angela Moncur<br />

Children’s Supervisors tracey coleman,<br />

Jane Mallory<br />

Acknowledgements<br />

Special thanks to norman cruz, MD, <strong>Stratford</strong>;<br />

Jennifer anderson, MD, St. Michael’s Hospital, Toronto; brian<br />

hands, MD, FRCS (C), medical voice consultant, Vox Cura voice<br />

care specialists, Toronto; simon Mcbride, MCISc, MD, London<br />

Health Sciences Centre Vocal Function Clinic, London; John yoo,<br />

MD, London Health Sciences Centre, London.<br />

Thank you to David Klausner.<br />

Pianos tuned and maintained by Don stephenson.<br />

Front cover image provided by steaMco., creative advertising<br />

agency for the <strong>Stratford</strong> Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong>. Front cover and<br />

page 1 photography by andrew eccles.<br />

Skye Brandon 08/09<br />

Evan Buliung 99<br />

Shane Carty 03<br />

Dan Chameroy 03<br />

Laura Condlln 04<br />

Victor Dolhai 10<br />

Miranda Edwards 10<br />

Josh Epstein 10<br />

Martha Farrell 04<br />

Paul Fauteux 02<br />

Bruce Godfree 09/10<br />

Carmen Grant 10<br />

Ashleigh Hendry 10<br />

Dion Johnstone 03<br />

Chilina Kennedy 09<br />

Sarah Kitz 10<br />

Ian Lake 07/08<br />

Amanda Lisman 09<br />

Keira Loughran 05 (new plays)<br />

Kennedy C. MacKinnon 99 (voice coach)<br />

Brendan Murray 00<br />

Paul Nolan 09<br />

Trent Pardy 07/08<br />

Gareth Potter 03<br />

Christopher Prentice 08/09<br />

Andrea Runge 09<br />

Tyrone Savage 10<br />

E.B. Smith 10<br />

Evan Stillwater 04 (tailor)<br />

Sara Topham 00<br />

Dylan Trowbridge 10<br />

Sophia Walker 05


Orchestra<br />

Marc Desormeaux, Recorders/Zither/Mandolin/Bodhran/Keyboard<br />

(playing Javanese Gamelan and other sampled world instruments).<br />

Director of Production John tiggeloven<br />

Production<br />

Technical Director – Scenic Construction andrew Mestern<br />

Wardrobe Manager anne Moore<br />

Production Administrator cheryl bender<br />

Assistant Technical Director David campbell<br />

Technical Management Assistant Michael besworth<br />

Administrative Assistant cindy Jordan<br />

Design Coordinator alix Dolgoy<br />

Resident Sound Designer Peter Mcboyle<br />

Director of Music rick fox<br />

Music Administrator Marilyn Dallman<br />

Electronics Technologist chris wheeler<br />

Transportation charlie fox, ian a. fraser,<br />

Michael taylor, James thistle<br />

Properties<br />

Head of Properties Dona hrabluk<br />

Assisted by eric ball, lucas commerford,<br />

Ken Dubblestyne,<br />

carolyn horley,<br />

Michelle Jamieson,<br />

shirley lee,<br />

Jennifer Macdonald,<br />

brian Mcleod, Dylan Mundy,<br />

heather ruthig,<br />

Jennifer stevens,<br />

elizabeth thomas<br />

Properties Buyer tracy fulton<br />

Assistant Properties Buyer Penelope schledewitz<br />

Scenic Art<br />

Head Scenic Artist christopher Klein<br />

Assistant Head Scenic Artist Daniel McManus<br />

Assisted by Kevin Kemp, amparo Patterson,<br />

lisa summers, laurie tomé,<br />

Jo-anne Vezina, blair yeomans<br />

Scenic Carpentry<br />

Head Carpenter neil r. cheney<br />

Lead Hand gary geiger<br />

Assisted by Jeff baici, hal harley,<br />

alex Kordics, John roth,<br />

b.J. shaver, Mark smith,<br />

brad stephenson<br />

The Michael Langham Workshop for<br />

Classical Direction<br />

“The Michael Langham Workshop for Classical Direction will continue<br />

Michael Langham’s tradition of mentorship in a risk-free environment,<br />

allowing directors to develop their craft with the rich history and evolving<br />

artistry of the <strong>Stratford</strong> Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong>.”<br />

– Des McAnuff<br />

We extend our thanks to the Department of Canadian Heritage,<br />

the Philip and Berthe Morton Foundation and Johanna Metcalf.<br />

Participants in the<br />

2011 workshop:<br />

Sharon Bajer<br />

Eric Benson<br />

Dian Marie Bridge<br />

Heather Davies<br />

Alan Dilworth<br />

Varrick Grimes<br />

Thomas Morgan Jones<br />

Rachel Peake<br />

Andrew Shaver<br />

Rachel Slaven<br />

Lezlie Wade<br />

Wardrobe<br />

Head of Wardrobe bradley Dalcourt<br />

Assistant Head of Wardrobe elizabeth copeman<br />

Seasonal Wardrobe Supervisor linda sparks<br />

Cutters Johanna billings, Mary logan,<br />

luci Pottle<br />

Junior Cutter Jennie wonnacott<br />

First Hands wendy bendle, Joanne Davies,<br />

laura snowden<br />

Sewers Amelia berzins,<br />

caroline broadley,<br />

cindy brown, Diana brown,<br />

samantha crossley,<br />

lisa Di Quinzio, susan e. Dick,<br />

evelyn gascho, anna lach,<br />

Paulette laporte, Danna link,<br />

Kelly Mcneely, Krista nauman,<br />

Magdalene raycraft,<br />

Joan scheerer,<br />

Victoria shillington,<br />

rebecca zimmerman<br />

Bijoux/Decoration rebecca Dillow<br />

Assisted by liane guttadauria,<br />

tami MacDonald, Kathi Posliff<br />

Boots and Shoes sarah cook<br />

Assisted by Karen beames, Mark fetter,<br />

Michael Karn, connie Puetz<br />

Costume Painting lisa hughes<br />

Dyeing sylvia Minarcin<br />

Assisted by linda Pinhay<br />

Millinery isabel bloor<br />

Assisted by thea c. crawford,<br />

helen flower, Kaz Maxine<br />

Millinery Apprentice Melissa nurmi<br />

Wardrobe Buyer Michelle ashbourne<br />

Assistant Buyer caitlin luxford<br />

Wardrobe Apprentice samantha aylsworth<br />

Warehouse Supervisor Madonna Decker<br />

Warehouse Assistant Valerie lariviere<br />

Additional Costumes by Martino nguyen Designs<br />

Wigs and Makeup<br />

Head of Wigs and Makeup gerald altenburg<br />

Construction Lead Hand Julie scott<br />

Construction Crew erica croft-fraser, Dave Kerr,<br />

barb newbery, alana scheel,<br />

stanley wickens<br />

Funding for artisan apprenticeships is provided by the William H.<br />

Somerville Theatre Artisan Apprenticeship Fund, funded by the J. P.<br />

Bickell Foundation, and by Robert and Jacqueline Sperandio.<br />

A member of the Professional Association of Canadian Theatres, the<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong> Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong> engages, under the terms of the Canadian<br />

Theatre Agreement, professional artists who are members of Canadian<br />

Actors’ Equity Association. Stage crew, scenic carpenters, drivers, wigs<br />

and makeup attendants and facilities staff are members of Local 357<br />

of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE).<br />

Wardrobe attendants are members of IATSE Local 924. Scenic artists are<br />

members of IATSE Local 828. The <strong>Festival</strong> acknowledges with thanks the<br />

co-operation of the <strong>Stratford</strong> Musicians’ Association, Local 418 of the<br />

American Federation of Musicians.<br />

9


PHOTO OF DAVID MIRVISH BY ROB DODA<br />

DAVID MIRVISH PRESENTS<br />

TORONTO’S PRACTICALLY<br />

2011/2012 MIRVISH SUBSCRIPTION THEATRE SEASON<br />

10<br />

‘MARVELLOUS’<br />

Mail On Sunday<br />

‘GLORIOUS’<br />

Daily Telegraph<br />

‘SPECTACULAR’<br />

Times<br />

‘REMARKABLE’<br />

Daily Express<br />

‘MAGNIFICENT’<br />

Evening Standard<br />

‘EXCELLENT’<br />

Daily Mail<br />

BEGINS MAY 2011<br />

THE ROUNDHOUSE THEATRE<br />

“A PERFECT<br />

PIECE OF<br />

MUSICAL<br />

THEATER.”<br />

—NY Post<br />

7 GREAT SHOWS • 1 LOW PRICE<br />

NOV/DEC 2011<br />

PRINCESS OF WALES THEATRE<br />

SEPT/OCT 2011<br />

ROYAL ALEXANDRA THEATRE<br />

b y M a riE MichauD anD robEr T lEpagE<br />

“One has no choice<br />

but to simply<br />

be mesmerized.”<br />

THE AUSTRALIAN STAGE<br />

English TranslaT i o n b y<br />

MichaEl MackEnziE<br />

DirE c TED b y<br />

robEr T lEpagE<br />

pErforMED b y<br />

MariE MichauD,<br />

hEnri ch assé<br />

anD Tai WEi foo<br />

Ex Machina<br />

JAN/FEB 2012<br />

ROYAL ALEXANDRA THEATRE<br />

PHOTO OF KIM CATTRALL BY NOBBY CLARK<br />

photo © Yannick Macdonald<br />

SEPT/OCT 2011<br />

PRINCESS OF WALES THEATRE<br />

“HHHHH Stunning.”<br />

The Sunday Times<br />

BEGINS FEB 2012<br />

PRINCESS OF WALES THEATRE<br />

SUBSCRIBE NOW! 1-800-771-3933 MIRVISH.COM<br />

PHOTOS OF ORIGINAL UK PRODUCTION BY KEITH PATTINSON<br />

ART BY AMY GUIP<br />

DIRECT FROM BROADWAY<br />

“ THRILLING, INTENSE,<br />

UNADULTERATED<br />

JOY ”<br />

— THE NEW YORK TIMES<br />

WINNER! BEST MUSICAL REVIVAL<br />

2009 TONY AWARD ®<br />

MAR/APR 2012<br />

ROYAL ALEXANDRA THEATRE


William Shakespeare<br />

Playwright<br />

Born in <strong>Stratford</strong>-upon-Avon in 1564, William<br />

Shakespeare was the eldest son of John<br />

Shakespeare, a glover and tanner who rose to<br />

become an alderman and bailiff of the town, and<br />

Mary Arden, the daughter of a wealthy farmer. The<br />

exact date of his birth is unknown, but there is a<br />

record of his baptism on April 26. Since an interval<br />

of two or three days between birth and baptism<br />

would have been quite common, tradition has it<br />

that he was born on April 23 – the same date as his<br />

death 52 years later.<br />

The young Shakespeare is assumed to have<br />

attended what is now the Edward VI Grammar<br />

School in <strong>Stratford</strong>, where he would have studied<br />

ancient Roman literature in its original Latin. In 1582,<br />

when he was 18, he married Anne Hathaway, a<br />

farmer’s daughter who was eight years his senior.<br />

Anne was pregnant at the time, and the couple’s<br />

first daughter, Susanna, was born a few months<br />

afterwards in 1583. Twins followed two years later:<br />

a son, Hamnet, who died at the age of 11, and a<br />

second daughter, Judith.<br />

Nothing further is known of Shakespeare’s<br />

life until 1592, by which time he was sufficiently<br />

established as an actor and writer in London to be<br />

the target of a literary attack by a jealous fellow<br />

playwright, Robert Greene. Soon afterwards, an<br />

outbreak of plague forced the temporary closure of<br />

the theatres, and Shakespeare turned his attention<br />

instead to his long narrative poems Venus and<br />

Adonis and The Rape of Lucrece. He also began<br />

writing the Sonnets, a series of 154 love poems that<br />

many believe to be at least partly autobiographical.<br />

By 1594, Shakespeare was back in the theatre,<br />

writing and acting for the Lord Chamberlain’s<br />

Men. His income as one of the country’s most<br />

successful dramatists enabled him, in 1597, to buy a<br />

mansion back in <strong>Stratford</strong>, and in 1599 he became a<br />

shareholder in London’s newly built Globe Theatre.<br />

In 1603, Shakespeare’s company was awarded a<br />

royal patent, becoming known as the King’s Men.<br />

Possibly as early as 1610, the playwright retired<br />

to his home in <strong>Stratford</strong>-upon-Avon, living there<br />

until his death on April 23, 1616. He is buried in the<br />

town’s Holy Trinity Church.<br />

williaM shaKesPeare<br />

11


the company<br />

Wendy Allnutt<br />

Second season: Movement for The Merry Wives of Windsor and Richard<br />

III. Elsewhere: Master of Movement, Shakespeare’s Globe. Revival<br />

choreographer, The Magic Flute (Welsh National Opera). Choreographer/<br />

movement director, Royal National Theatre, Manchester Royal Exchange,<br />

Mercury, Clwyd, Sphinx, BBC-TV. Actress: West End, RSC, tours of U.S.A,<br />

U.K., Sweden. TV: Jennifer (Sorry), Wendy (Dear John), Charlotte Gaunt (The<br />

Regiment), Cordelia (King Lear), Rough Justice. Film: Oh! What a Lovely War, When Eight<br />

Bells Toll, Tales From Beyond the Grave, All Coppers Are, Priest of Love. Teaching: Head of<br />

Movement, Guildhall School of Music and Drama; <strong>Stratford</strong> Conservatory; Colorado College;<br />

Penn State/Colby (London); San Miniato; Rome. Directing: Watermans: Leave My Hair Alone.<br />

Medieval mystery plays, restoration comedy, musical theatre. Training: Central School of<br />

Speech and Drama. Et cetera: Son, Andrew McCormack, is a jazz musician and daughter,<br />

Katherine McCormack, is a film unit publicist.<br />

Sean Arbuckle<br />

10th season: Sir William Catesby in Richard III and Saturninus in Titus<br />

Andronicus. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Cabaret (Cliff), Three Sisters (Tuzenbach), The<br />

Winter’s Tale (Camillo), The Merchant of Venice (Bassanio), Who’s Afraid<br />

of Virginia Woolf? (Nick), The Swanne (Leopold/Popple), Twelfth Night<br />

(Orsino), London Assurance (Dazzle), Macbeth (Banquo), The Trojan Women<br />

(Talthybius), Electra (The Beggar), As You Like It (Oliver), The Tempest<br />

(Antonio), Timon of Athens (Alcibiades). Elsewhere: Broadway: The Importance of Being<br />

Earnest. National tour: Copenhagen. Regional: The Turn of the Screw (Grand Theatre);<br />

Phèdre (ACT); Humble Boy, Picasso at the Lapin Agile (Pioneer Theatre Company); The<br />

Magnificent Ambersons (Indiana Rep); The Spitfire Grill (George Street Playhouse – world<br />

première); King John (Shakespeare Theatre Company); The Triumph of Love (Walnut Street);<br />

The Collected Works of Billy the Kid (Dallas Theater Center); Woman in Mind (Berkshire<br />

Theatre <strong>Festival</strong>). TV: Law & Order, Sex and the City, Hope and Faith. Training: Juilliard.<br />

Sharon Bajer<br />

Second season: Assistant director of Richard III. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Assistant director<br />

of The Two Gentleman of Verona. Elsewhere: Directing: To the Country<br />

(Winnipegger Ensemble); Bloodless (White Rabbit); Our Country’s Good,<br />

Road (ABC); You in the Shadow, Prince of Paupers (MCIC). Playwright:<br />

Burnin’ Love, Hersteria, Molly’s Veil, To the Country, Scrabble for the Apple.<br />

Acting: Top Girls, Steel Magnolias, Angels in America, Humble Boy, Of Mice<br />

and Men, Romeo and Juliet, Our Country’s Good, Les Belles-Soeurs (Royal Manitoba Theatre<br />

Centre); Six Degrees of Separation (Canadian Stage); The Weir (Belfry); The Stone Angel<br />

(National Arts Centre); Molly’s Veil, Boeing-Boeing (FAST); Going Home (Haifa/Tel Aviv); over<br />

20 shows at Prairie Theatre Exchange. Training: Graduate of Studio 58. Awards: Nominated<br />

for Merritt Award (actress/Boeing-Boeing), Blizzard Award (actress/Children of My Heart and<br />

Betty), Manitoba Writers’ Guild (Molly’s Veil). Website: sharonbajer.com.<br />

Oliver Becker<br />

Third season: Sir Richard Ratcliffe in Richard III and Cuirette in Hosanna.<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong>: Peter Pan, King of Thieves, Cyrano de Bergerac, Zastrozzi.<br />

Elsewhere: The Seafarer, The Diary of Anne Frank (MTC); Woman in White<br />

(Aquarius); Beyond Mozambique, Better Living, Escape From Happiness,<br />

The Glace Bay Miners’ Museum (Factory); Wild Mouth, Sideman, Soldier’s<br />

Heart (Tarragon); The Pillowman (Birdland); Frozen (Citadel); A Whistle in<br />

the Dark (Company Theatre, Toronto); Hamlet, The Bear, La Ronde (Soulpepper); Cherry<br />

Docs, Macbeth (Grand); The Cripple of Inishmaan (Centaur); The Weir, The Beauty Queen of<br />

Leenane (Canadian Stage); Playboy of the Western World (Shaw <strong>Festival</strong>). Film/TV: Oliver is<br />

a series regular in The Line (TMN) and Rent a Goalie (Showcase). Other TV: Queer as Folk,<br />

Street Time, Odyssey 5 (Showtime), Salem Witch Trials (CBS), Chasing Cain (CBC). Et cetera:<br />

Oliver is very pleased to be back at the <strong>Festival</strong> for a third season.<br />

Martine Beland<br />

13th season: Assistant stage manager of Richard III and Shakespeare’s<br />

Will. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Production stage manager: Avon Theatre (2004-2006).<br />

Stage manager: Birmingham Conservatory (2003 and 2005), Fuente<br />

Ovejuna, Pentecost, Don Juan, The Elephant Song/The Human Voice, The<br />

Birds, Quiet in the Land. Assistant stage manager: Dangerous Liaisons,<br />

Peter Pan, Bartholomew Fair, Phèdre, Othello, Richard III, Henry IV, Part<br />

1, Falstaff, Measure for Measure, Love’s Labour’s Lost, Romeo and Juliet, Much Ado About<br />

Nothing, Carousel and Treasure Island. Elsewhere: Stage manager: 15th Asian Games; Billy<br />

Bishop Goes to War, Hedda Gabler, The Matchmaker, Tartuffe, She Stoops to Conquer, A<br />

Flea in Her Ear (Atlantic Theatre <strong>Festival</strong>); Beauty and the Beast, The Affections of May, Loot,<br />

A Moon for the Misbegotten, Salt-Water Moon (Theatre New Brunswick); Three Tall Women,<br />

All Fall Down, Broadway Bound (Grand Theatre). Film: Script supervisor: The 4th Floor and<br />

Frozen in Fear.<br />

12<br />

Nigel Bennett<br />

Second season: Doctor Caius in The Merry Wives of Windsor and Lord<br />

Hastings in Richard III. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Peter Pan, King of Thieves. Elsewhere:<br />

Nightwood: That Face. MTC/Mirvish: Medea. Neptune: Scrooge, Art, Closer,<br />

Hamlet, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Retreat from Moscow, A Few Good<br />

Men, The Price, The Goat, The Sound of Music, Blue/Orange, Betrayal.<br />

Grand, London: Kingfisher Days. ATF: Blithe Spirit, Three Sisters. Ship’s<br />

Company: The Parrsboro Boxing Club. Citadel, Edmonton: Kafka’s Dick. Wyndham’s (London,<br />

England): The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole. Film/TV (among others): The Border, Lexx,<br />

Forever Knight, At the Hotel, Psi Factor, Strike, Murder at 1600, The Skulls, Narrow Margin,<br />

Murdoch Mysteries, The Kennedys, Counterstrike, The Sea Wolf. Radio: Backbenchers.<br />

Awards: Gemini, best supporting actor, 1996; ACTRA Maritimes Award, best actor, 2008 and<br />

2009. Other: Co-author, Keeper of the King, His Father’s Son, Siege Perilous. Website: www.<br />

blackhatstation.com.<br />

Wayne Best<br />

16th season: Duke of Buckingham in Richard III and appears in Titus<br />

Andronicus. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Boatswain (The Tempest), Antonio (The Two<br />

Gentlemen of Verona), Caliban (The Tempest), Mercutio (Romeo and<br />

Juliet), Leontes (The Winter’s Tale), Fluellen (Henry V), Victor (Private Lives),<br />

Horatio (Hamlet), Astrov (Uncle Vanya), Macduff (Macbeth), Gratiano (The<br />

Merchant of Venice), Cornwall (King Lear), Grumio (The Taming of the<br />

Shrew), Enobarbus (Antony and Cleopatra), Ben (Good Mother), Maurice (In the Ring), Le Bret<br />

(Cyrano de Bergerac). Elsewhere: Carl (Heaven), Abbott (Inexpressible Island), Antonio (The<br />

Tempest), Brutus (Julius Caesar), Billy (The Collected Works of Billy the Kid), Johnny Regan<br />

(Balconville), Captain Keller (The Miracle Worker), Quinn (The Affections of May), Jacob<br />

Mercer (Of the Fields, Lately), Jacob Mercer (Salt-Water Moon).<br />

Skye Brandon<br />

Third season: Duke of Norfolk in Richard III and Bassianus in Titus<br />

Andronicus. <strong>Stratford</strong>: The Winter’s Tale, As You Like It, A Midsummer<br />

Night’s Dream, Julius Caesar and Bartholomew Fair. Elsewhere:<br />

Reflections/The Little Prince, Mary’s Wedding (Dancing Sky Theatre); The<br />

Pillowman, Fat Pig (Wild Side Productions); Henry IV, Part 1, The Tempest,<br />

The Taming of the Shrew (Shakespeare on the Saskatchewan); Chimera<br />

(PTE); Julius Caesar, The Shape of Things (Theatre Ecstasis); Twelfth Night (Globe Theatre);<br />

The Coronation Voyage, It’s All True (Last Exit Theatre). Directing credits include Pageant<br />

(Last Exit) and The Busy World is Hushed (Northern Light Theatre). Radio: Yann Martel’s The<br />

Facts behind the Helsinki Roccamatios (CBC). Training: Birmingham Conservatory, ACT<br />

(San Francisco), U of S (BFA Honours). Awards: SAT Award (Paulo Coelho’s The Alchemist,<br />

Dancing Sky), Sterling nomination (The Credeaux Canvas, Northern Light), Equity Emerging<br />

Artist 2005.<br />

Sara Brzozowski<br />

Third season: Assistant designer of Richard III. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Wardrobe<br />

apprentice 2010; stitcher for Cyrano de Bergerac, Macbeth, The<br />

Importance of Being Earnest, The Trespassers, Zastrozzi and Rice Boy.<br />

Elsewhere: Fashion designer in Redefining Design, 2008 (Kool Haus),<br />

dresser for Corset Fashion Show, 2010 (Creativ <strong>Festival</strong>). Training:<br />

Advanced Diploma in Fashion Arts, Seneca College. Awards: Dama Lumley<br />

Bell Award for recognition of achievement in production crafts, 2010. Et cetera: Sara sends<br />

her warmest thanks to the family and friends who have shown her their tremendous support.<br />

Shane Carty<br />

Seventh season: Lord Mayor of London in Richard III and understudy<br />

in The Homecoming. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Love’s Labour’s Lost, Much Ado About<br />

Nothing, The Duchess of Malfi, The Brothers Karamazov, Peter Pan, Present<br />

Laughter, King of Thieves, Measure for Measure, Sticks & Stones, My Fair<br />

Lady, The Threepenny Opera, The Count of Monte Cristo, The Taming<br />

of the Shrew, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Swanne. Elsewhere:<br />

Tom’s A-Cold (NextStage); This Is How It Goes (Neptune); Einstein’s Gift, It’s a Wonderful<br />

Life, The Wizard of Oz (Grand); Treasure Island (Theatre New Brunswick); Rosencrantz and<br />

Guildenstern Are Dead (Touchmark); Sweeney Todd, A Year With Frog and Toad (Sudbury<br />

Theatre Centre); Hockey Mom, Hockey Dad, Les Misérables, Hay Fever, The Red Priest<br />

(Thousand Islands); A Christmas Story (Theatre & Company); Sticks & Stones, The Mikado<br />

(NAC); Beauty and the Beast (Citadel/Theatre Calgary); Romeo and Juliet (Resurgence).<br />

Training: Queen’s University, Birmingham Conservatory.


David Collins<br />

Fourth season: Lord Rivers in Richard III and appears in Titus Andronicus.<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong>: Recent: Francisco (The Tempest), Host (The Two Gentlemen of<br />

Verona), Seyton (Macbeth), Publius (Julius Caesar), Apothecary (Romeo<br />

and Juliet), Theodotus (Caesar and Cleopatra). Elsewhere: Shakuntala<br />

(Premiere Dance Theatre); The Adventures of a Black Girl in Search of God<br />

(Mirvish); The Comedy of Errors, Twelfth Night, Donut City (Canadian Stage);<br />

Pusha Man, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom (Theatre Passe Muraille); The Taming of the Shrew<br />

(ShakespeareWorks); Top Gun the Musical (Factory Theatre/N.Y.C.); El Paso (Factory); Romeo<br />

and Juliet (Shakespeare in Action); Walls (VECC). He is a founding member of Obsidian<br />

Theatre Company. Film/TV: Trojan Horse, 11Cameras, ReGenesis, Owning Mahowny, Shoot<br />

’Em Up, The Incredible Hulk, MVP, Warehouse 13, Nurse.Fighter.Boy, The Listener, Rookie<br />

Blue, XIII, Stag, Against the Wall. Training: MFA, York University. Awards: Dora nominations<br />

for Twilight Café and The America Play.<br />

Laura Condlln<br />

10th season: Mistress Margaret (Meg) Page in The Merry Wives of Windsor<br />

and appears in Richard III. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Favourite credits include Peter Pan<br />

(Mrs. Darling), King of Thieves (Polly), A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Helena),<br />

Shakespeare’s Universe (Her Infinite Variety) – conceived and directed<br />

by Peter Hinton – (the Moll), Pentecost (Amira), The Liar (Clarice/Lucrece/<br />

Sabine), The Duchess of Malfi (Cariola), As You Like It (Audrey), Henry IV,<br />

Part 1 (Lady Mortimer), Timon of Athens (Phrynia) and Cymbeline. Elsewhere: Having Hope<br />

at Home, Marion Bridge (Globe Theatre, Regina), A Christmas Carol (The Grand Theatre) and<br />

Over the River and Through the Woods (Theatre Aquarius). Training: Laura holds a BFA from<br />

the University of Windsor and is a graduate of the Birmingham Conservatory (2005). Awards:<br />

Recipient of the Mary Savidge Award, <strong>Stratford</strong> Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong>.<br />

Marc Desormeaux<br />

Ninth season: Composer for Richard III and Shakespeare’s Will. <strong>Stratford</strong>:<br />

The Winter’s Tale, Three Sisters, The Trojan Women, The Glass Menagerie,<br />

The Lark, The Taming of the Shrew. Elsewhere: Orpheus Descending<br />

(Mirvish/MTC); The Drawer Boy (Mirvish/MTC, national tour, Vienna English<br />

Theatre); Othello, Much Ado (Chicago Shakespeare); Written on Water<br />

(Canadian Stage/NAC); One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Proof, A Streetcar<br />

Named Desire (MTC/Citadel); Summer and Smoke, Pygmalion, A Room of One’s Own (Shaw<br />

<strong>Festival</strong>); Zadie’s Shoes (Mirvish/Factory); Love’s Labour’s Lost, Hamlet, The Vaudevilles<br />

of Chekhov (NAC); The Syringa Tree (Grand/GCTC). Radio: Romeo and Juliet, A Room of<br />

One’s Own, Stephen and Mr. Wilde (CBC). Awards: Nominations: Jeff, Jessie, Sterling, two<br />

Doras. Et cetera: Creator/featured actor (Chet Baker) of Time After Time (GCTC). Composer/<br />

playwright of Cyberia (NAC 1997). Co-writer/performer of Brigit’s Reel with fiddler Trish<br />

Barclay.<br />

Paul Fauteux<br />

Second season: Sir James Tyrrel in Richard III and Lucius in Titus<br />

Andronicus. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Cecco in Peter Pan and Stringer in King of<br />

Thieves. Birmingham Conservatory. Elsewhere: The Ends of the Earth /<br />

Belfry Theatre; The Pillowman, Tillsonburg / Canadian Stage, Scorched<br />

/ Tarragon Theatre and NAC; That Time / Theatre Centre; Dr. Chekhov:<br />

Ward 6 / Factory Theatre; Cringeworthy, Boxhead and The Kabbalistic<br />

Psychoanalysis of Adam R. Tzaddik / Theatre Passe Muraille; Kaspar / Go Chicken Go.<br />

Film/TV: Committed, Rookie Blue, The Sea Wolf, This Is Wonderland, Missing, Flashpoint,<br />

Hustle: The Pete Rose Story, Chasing Cain, Due South, L’Ombre de l’épervier. Radio:<br />

Dean Donaldson on CBC radio drama Afghanada. Training: UVic and the National Theatre<br />

School of Canada. Awards: Five Dora Mavor Moore Award nominations. One ACTRA Award<br />

nomination. Et cetera: Paul lives in Toronto with his wife, Camille, their son, Hanlon, and their<br />

daughter, Illia.<br />

David Ferry<br />

Fifth season: King Edward IV in Richard III and Marcus Andronicus in Titus<br />

Andronicus. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Prince Hal in Henry IV, Part 1; Dogberry in Much Ado;<br />

Dumaine in Love’s Labour’s Lost; Fair Liberty’s Call; Ahab in Moby Dick.<br />

Elsewhere: Most recently he reprised his Dora-nominated performance<br />

in Eternal Hydra (Crow’s Theatre) and was praised for his work in Blasted<br />

(Buddies in Bad Times). He won a 2009 Dora (best actor) for his work in<br />

Someone Who’ll Watch Over Me and the Critics Choice best-actor award in Victoria for his<br />

Willy Loman in Death of a Salesman. Film/TV: His second season of Dan for Mayor is airing<br />

now on CTV. Awards: He has also won a best-director Dora and a best-lighting Dora. Et<br />

cetera: David has directed in Canada and in Italy, most recently with the première of Daniel<br />

MacIvor’s Inside. Website: www.davidferryactor.com.<br />

16-29?<br />

Get $25 tickets!<br />

Get the behind-the-scenes<br />

scoop and fabulous ticket<br />

deals with the Play On<br />

program at the <strong>Stratford</strong><br />

Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong>. Youth<br />

certainly has its privileges!<br />

P L A Y O N P L A Y O N P L A Y O N<br />

The program provides $25<br />

tickets for patrons 16-29,<br />

plus exclusive deals where<br />

you shop, eat and stay!<br />

For more details, check out<br />

www.stratfordshakespeare<br />

festival.com/playon<br />

and get with the program!<br />

SPONSORED BY<br />

Stay connected! Follow us on<br />

13


Kevin Fraser<br />

25th season: Lighting designer of Richard III and Shakespeare’s Will.<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong>: <strong>Stratford</strong> designs include Evita, Peter Pan, Forum, West Side<br />

Story, The Importance of Being Earnest, The Music Man, Cabaret, My<br />

One and Only, To Kill a Mockingbird, Shakespeare’s Will, South Pacific,<br />

The Glass Menagerie, Guys and Dolls, Inherit the Wind and many more.<br />

Elsewhere: Kevin has designed lighting for many theatre and opera<br />

productions across Canada. Recent credits include Medea at the Canon Theatre in<br />

Toronto (Mirvish Productions), Jake and the Kid (Theatre Calgary), Sweet Charity (Drayton<br />

Entertainment) and Acis and Galatea (Toronto’s Opera Atelier). Training: Kevin is a graduate<br />

of Ryerson Theatre School. Awards: Kevin has received five Dora Mavor Moore Award<br />

nominations (Toronto) and one Jessie Richardson Award nomination (Vancouver). Et cetera:<br />

Member of Associated Designers of Canada.<br />

Andrew Gillies<br />

Fourth season: Hugh Evans in The Merry Wives of Windsor and Lord<br />

Stanley in Richard III. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Islander in The Tempest, Panthino/Outlaw<br />

in The Two Gentlemen of Verona, Orlando in As You Like It, Macduff in<br />

Macbeth, Valère in Tartuffe, Bassanio in The Merchant of Venice, Benvolio<br />

in Romeo and Juliet. Elsewhere: Hamlet in Hamlet (Vancouver Playhouse),<br />

Cyrano in Cyrano (Royal Alex), Tony Blair in Stuff Happens (Royal Alex),<br />

General Burgoyne in The Devil’s Disciple (Neptune). Fourteen seasons at the Shaw <strong>Festival</strong>.<br />

Theatre Calgary, ATP, National Arts Centre, Tarragon Theatre, Necessary Angel, Canadian<br />

Stage. Manitoba Theatre Centre, including Frank in Educating Rita, 2010. Film/TV: The<br />

Virgin Suicides, Wild Girl, That Touch of Pink, The Associates, Paradise Falls, Flash of Genius.<br />

Training: Simon Fraser University. Awards: Best-actor nominations: Andrew Allen Award for<br />

radio, Dora for theatre. 2009 Merritt Award (best supporting actor) for The Devil’s Disciple<br />

(Neptune).<br />

Bruce Godfree<br />

Fourth season: Sir Robert Brakenbury in Richard III and Demetrius in<br />

Titus Andronicus. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Peter Pan, Dangerous Liaisons, A Midsummer<br />

Night’s Dream (Lysander), Macbeth, Julius Caesar (Titinius), Hamlet<br />

(Laertes), The Taming of the Shrew, All’s Well That Ends Well. Elsewhere:<br />

In the U.K.: Romeo in Romeo and Juliet (The Lord Chamberlain’s Men);<br />

Phoebus in The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Avery in Charlotte’s Web, Tom<br />

in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (Duke’s Theatre, Lancaster); Edgar in King Lear (Royal<br />

Shakespeare Company); Luka in Sitting Pretty (Really Useful Group); and Kip in Tennessee<br />

Williams’s Something Cloudy, Something Clear (U.K. première, Finborough Theatre). In<br />

Canada: The Fantasticks (Chester Playhouse); Dickon in The Secret Garden, Gavroche in<br />

Les Misérables (Neptune Theatre); and Hank in Marvin’s Room (<strong>Festival</strong> Antigonish). Film:<br />

The Magic of Marciano, Parsley Days. Radio: Peyton Place (BBC Radio 4), The Family Canoe<br />

(CBC). Training: Bristol Old Vic Theatre School.<br />

14<br />

Teddy Gough<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong> debut: Prince Edward in Richard III. About Teddy: Teddy lives in<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong> and is completely delighted and grateful to have the opportunity<br />

to act on the <strong>Stratford</strong> Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong> stage. Teddy is an all-Canadian<br />

boy who loves hockey and reading late into the night, and spending time<br />

with his friends, his sisters, Anna and Enya, his little brother, Ivan, and the<br />

best dog in the world, Doug. He would like to thank his family for all their<br />

awesome support.<br />

Carmen Grant<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong> debut: Appears in Richard III and Titus Andronicus. Elsewhere:<br />

Helena (A Midsummer Night’s Dream), Kent (King Lear) (Calgary); Lady<br />

Macduff (Macbeth), Lady Capulet (Romeo and Juliet), Phebe (As You Like<br />

It) (Halifax); Viola (Twelfth Night) (Globe Theatre); title role in The Miracle<br />

Worker (LKTYP); Ruth (Zadie’s Shoes) (ATP); Catherine (Proof) (Neptune); The<br />

Syringa Tree (Neptune, Belfry, MTC, Grand); Catherine (Doc) (Soulpepper).<br />

Training: Mount Royal College, National Theatre School, Birmingham Conservatory. Awards:<br />

Dora nomination (The Miracle Worker), ATP Rising Star (Zadie’s Shoes), Merritt Award (The<br />

Syringa Tree). Et cetera: Carmen is deeply grateful for the generosity of her teachers,<br />

colleagues, friends and family who have supported and encouraged her through some<br />

profoundly difficult years in this business. She is ecstatic to be working at the <strong>Stratford</strong><br />

Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong> and to be understudying the roles of Richard in Richard III and Tamora<br />

in Titus Andronicus.<br />

Jeremy Harttrup<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong> debut: Duke of York in Richard III. Elsewhere: Malcolm in<br />

Hollywood Arms (Elmira Theatre Company); Bubba in Bubba Begonia,<br />

You’ll Be Sorry (Growing in the Arts), based on the book by Gerry O’Brien;<br />

Romeo in Romeo and Juliet (classroom production). Film/TV: Clyde in<br />

the web series Mind’s Eye (www.mindseyeseries.com), feature voice for<br />

short animation (in pre-production, Animotion Arts). Training: Growing in<br />

the Arts, Kitchener. Et cetera: Jeremy has always loved to perform and was bitten by the<br />

acting bug while making videos produced by his older brother. Jeremy would like to thank<br />

Mom, Dad, Vincent, Lindsay, his grandparents and extended family for all their help and<br />

encouragement. Thanks also to Gita Ashley and Krista Hovsepian who helped so much<br />

along the way!<br />

Peter Hartwell<br />

Ninth season: Designer of Richard III and Shakespeare’s Will. <strong>Stratford</strong>:<br />

King of Thieves, Fuente Ovejuna, The Glass Menagerie, Orpheus<br />

Descending, The Threepenny Opera, Good Mother, Inherit the Wind,<br />

Medea and the set for Twelfth Night. Elsewhere: Shaw <strong>Festival</strong>: Serious<br />

Money, The Cherry Orchard, The Entertainer, The Devil’s Disciple, A Month<br />

in the Country, An Inspector Calls, Summer and Smoke, Waste. Across<br />

Canada: The Globe, Canadian Stage, Manitoba Theatre Centre, Neptune, Alberta Theatre<br />

Projects, Centaur and Belfry; in England: the Royal Court Theatre (Cloud Nine, Top Girls,<br />

Serious Money, Our Country’s Good, Aunt Dan and Lemon and King Lear), the National<br />

Theatre, the Royal Shakespeare Company, the English National Opera, Joint Stock and the<br />

West End; in the U.S.: New York Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong>, Mark Taper Forum, Folger Theatre,<br />

Steppenwolf Theatre and Guthrie Theater. Training: Sadler’s Wells Theatre Design School.<br />

Martha Henry<br />

37th season: Queen Margaret in Richard III. Director of the Birmingham<br />

Conservatory for Classical Theatre. <strong>Stratford</strong>: First season 1962: Miranda<br />

to William Hutt’s Prospero; Lady Macduff in Christopher Plummer and Kate<br />

Reid’s Macbeth. Subsequently: Titania, Helena (Dream and All’s Well),<br />

Luciana, Cressida, Viola, Countess of Rossillion, Cymbeline’s Queen, Lady<br />

Anne, Queen Eleanor, Cordelia, Goneril, Rosaline, Princess of France,<br />

Thaisa, Desdemona, Lady Macbeth, Widow, Doll Tearsheet, Lady Percy, Joan la Pucelle,<br />

Constance, Phrynia, Isabella, Beatrice, Paulina, Volumnia. Also: Yelena (Uncle Vanya), Sister<br />

Jeanne (The Devils), Olga (Three Sisters), Mary Tyrone (Long Day’s Journey Into Night),<br />

Martha (Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?), Mrs. Alving (Ghosts), Dunyasha/Ranyevskya (The<br />

Cherry Orchard), Elizabeth Proctor (The Crucible), Agnes (A Delicate Balance), Linda Loman<br />

(Death of a Salesman). Elsewhere: Artistic Director, Grand Theatre, London, Ontario, 1988-<br />

1994. Awards: Equity Lifetime Member; Governor General’s Lifetime Achievement, Sterling,<br />

Gemini, Genie awards; Order of Ontario; Companion of the Order of Canada.<br />

Ethan Ioannidis<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong> debut: Understudy in Richard III. Elsewhere: Narrator in Beauty<br />

and the Beast Jr. (Registry Theatre and Cambridge Arts Theatre); Mr. Mayor<br />

in Seussical Jr. (Registry Theatre); Sultan in Aladdin Jr. (Registry Theatre). Et<br />

cetera: Ethan is excited to be a part of the <strong>Stratford</strong> Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong><br />

for the first time.<br />

Bethany Jillard<br />

Second season: Lady Anne in Richard III and Young Kate/Tanya in The Little<br />

Years. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Cécile Volanges in Dangerous Liaisons and appeared<br />

in Peter Pan. Elsewhere: Miss Julie in After Miss Julie (MTC Warehouse);<br />

My Name is Rachel Corrie (Theatre PANIK); Brooke in How It Works<br />

(Tarragon); Mia in That Face (Nightwood/Canadian Stage); Peaseblossom<br />

in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Perdita in The Winter’s Tale, Hero in Much<br />

Ado About Nothing and Juliet in Romeo and Juliet (Driftwood Theatre Group); Tina in Tough!<br />

(Factory); Adele in A Man of No Importance (Acting Up Stage); fIBBER (Theatre Gargantua).<br />

Film/TV: If I Were You (Paragraph); Murdoch Mysteries (Shaftesbury); Bloodletting and<br />

Miraculous Cures (TMN/Shaftesbury); Rookie Blue (ABC/Global). Awards: In 2010, Bethany<br />

was honoured by the Canadian Actors’ Equity Association with the Stage West – Equity<br />

Emerging Theatre Artist Award.


Dion Johnstone<br />

Seventh season: Lord Grey in Richard III and Aaron in Titus Andronicus.<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong>: Caliban (The Tempest), Valentine (The Two Gentlemen of Verona),<br />

Oberon (A Midsummer Night’s Dream), Macduff (Macbeth), Octavius (Julius<br />

Caesar), Tom Robinson (To Kill a Mockingbird), Edmund (King Lear), Orlando<br />

(As You Like It), Iachimo (Cymbeline), Orestes (Electra and The Flies), King<br />

John, Timon of Athens, The Swanne, part two, Agamemnon. Elsewhere:<br />

George (A Raisin in the Sun) (Soulpepper); Boromir (The Lord of the Rings) (Mirvish<br />

Productions, world première); Davey Battle (Take Me Out, Canadian première) (Canadian<br />

Stage); Octavius (Antony and Cleopatra), Richmond (Richard III) (Bard on the Beach). Film/<br />

TV: Guest-star and principal roles include Sea Wolf (mini-series), Ice Twisters (TV movie), The<br />

Core, Stargate SG-1. Training: BFA (acting), University of Alberta; Birmingham Conservatory<br />

for Classical Theatre.<br />

Cyrus Lane<br />

Second season: Cardinal Bourchier in Richard III and Mutius in Titus<br />

Andronicus. <strong>Stratford</strong>: King of Thieves, Peter Pan. Elsewhere: Ferdinand<br />

in Rock ’n’ Roll (Canadian Stage and Citadel Theatre); Habeas Corpus,<br />

Take Me Out, Amadeus, Sweeney Todd (Canadian Stage); Valentin in<br />

Kiss of the Spider Woman (Talk Is Free Theatre); Charlie Brown in You’re<br />

a Good Man, Charlie Brown (Lorraine Kimsa Theatre); Step Right Up!<br />

(Theatre Orangeville); The Mercy Seat (Alchemy Theatre); Mickey in Blood Brothers (Theatre<br />

Aquarius); SARSical and An Inconvenient Musical (Factory Theatre); Lord of the Flies, The<br />

Doctor’s Dilemma, Uncle Vanya and SS Tenacity (Shaw <strong>Festival</strong>). Film/TV: The Summit (CBC),<br />

Anne of Green Gables: A New Beginning. Recordings: Voices on video games Resident<br />

Evil: Outbreak, Onimusha 2 and Far Cry 2 (Ubisoft). Training: London Academy of Music and<br />

Dramatic Art. Et cetera: “Love to Joanne and Eliza.”<br />

Claire Lautier<br />

Third season: Tamora in Titus Andronicus and appears in Richard III.<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong>: Silvia (The Two Gentlemen of Verona), Ceres (The Tempest), Aricie<br />

(Phèdre). Elsewhere: N.Y.C.: Isabella (Edward the Second), Duchess (The<br />

Revenger’s Tragedy) (Red Bull Theatre); The Dining Room (Keen Company);<br />

Hedda Gabler (Broadway); Chaucer in Rome (Lincoln Center). Regional/<br />

International: Aricie (Phèdre) (ACT); Lady Anne (Richard III), Roxane (Cyrano)<br />

(Shakespeare Theatre Company); Princess of France (Love’s Labour’s Lost) (RSC and<br />

Shakespeare Theatre Company); and many others across the U.S. Film: Margarita, My Soul<br />

to Take, Ghost Town, Confessions of a Shopaholic, Elf, House of D, By Courier (Academy<br />

Award nomination, 2001). TV: 3lbs, Grey’s Anatomy, Numb3rs, Law and Order, All My<br />

Children, Guiding Light. Training: Honour graduate, Duke University and Juilliard. Awards:<br />

Drama Desk (The Dining Room), William Shakespeare Award (as member of Shakespeare<br />

Theatre Company), Michel and Suria St. Denis Award, John Houseman Award.<br />

Complete your experience<br />

with a trip to the<br />

Take home a piece of the drama with<br />

original clothing and giftware, books and<br />

music; this is the place for every theatre<br />

lover! Make every visit unforgettable with<br />

a memento to take home.<br />

TWO LOCATIONS<br />

Discovery Centre, across from the<br />

<strong>Festival</strong> Theatre.<br />

Downtown in the Avon Theatre lobby.<br />

Or shop online at:<br />

stratfordshakespearefestival.com/store<br />

Jennifer Lennon<br />

Second season: Assistant lighting designer of Richard III and Titus<br />

Andronicus. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Assistant lighting designer of Kiss Me, Kate and Evita.<br />

Elsewhere: Lighting designer of Romeo and Juliet (Shakespeare in Action);<br />

Gingerbread Guy (Cow Over Moon Children’s Theatre); Almost, Again (Go<br />

Go Go Productions); Double Double (Caterwaul Theatre); The Penelopiad<br />

Director’s Showcase (Nightwood Theatre); Nursery School Musical (Fence<br />

Post Productions); Dog Sees God, Good As New <strong>Festival</strong>, Autobahn (Fly By Night Theatre);<br />

and The Bewitched (Theatre@York). Assistant lighting designer of Hairspray (Charlottetown<br />

<strong>Festival</strong>); Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, The Wizard of Oz (Grand<br />

Theatre); Intimate Apparel (Obsidian Theatre/Canadian Stage); and That Face (Nightwood<br />

Theatre/Canadian Stage). Training: BFA, Theatre Production and Design, York University.<br />

Daniel Levinson<br />

Third season: Fight director of Richard III and Jesus Christ Superstar and<br />

stunt coordinator of The Grapes of Wrath. Elsewhere: A certified fight<br />

master with Fight Directors Canada, Daniel is the owner of Rapier Wit,<br />

Canada’s oldest stage combat school, and is a founding member of the<br />

Riot ACT stunt team. He has fight-directed for such companies as Volcano<br />

Theatre, Canadian Stage, Actors Repertory Company, ACT Productions,<br />

Shakespeare in the Square, Factory, Tarragon, Shakespeare in the Rough and RBC <strong>Festival</strong><br />

of Classics. He teaches stage combat internationally, and is the resident stage combat<br />

instructor at Sheridan College, University of Toronto at Mississauga and Canadore College.<br />

Workshop highlights: Fight Directors Canada National Workshop (Banff, Victoria, Toronto,<br />

Montreal), Boston University, Arcadia University, the International Scuola Brancaleoni Stage<br />

Combat Workshop (Italy) and the Paddy Crean International Art of the Sword Workshop<br />

(Banff). Training: Daniel holds a BFA (acting) from York University. Websites: www.rapierwit.<br />

com and www.riotact.ca.<br />

Roberta Maxwell<br />

15th season: Duchess of York in Richard III and Nurse in Titus Andronicus.<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong>: Began her career as apprentice under Sir Tyrone Guthrie and<br />

Michael Langham (1957). Roles: Oenone, Lady Macbeth (Des McAnuff,<br />

director), Rosalind, Nina (The Seagull 1980/Robin Phillips). Broadway:<br />

Equus, Our Town, The Carpetbagger’s Children, Othello, The Merchant.<br />

Off-Broadway: Three Sisters (2011/CSC), Richard III, Ashes, Stevie (MTC),<br />

The Cripple of Inishmaan (N.Y. Public). Regional U.S.: Ahmanson Theatre (Pygmalion), Old<br />

Globe (Othello, Rashomon), Seattle Repertory (Saint Joan), the Guthrie Theater, Connecticut<br />

Shakespeare (Juliet), ACT (Phèdre), Lincoln Center (The Plough and the Stars). Films:<br />

Brokeback Mountain, Dead Man Walking, Philadelphia, Popeye, Psycho 3. TV: Warehouse<br />

13, Rookie Blue, Mourning Becomes Electra (PBS), Law & Order. Awards: Two Obies (A<br />

Whistle in the Dark, Ashes), Drama League Award (Slag), Helen Hayes nomination, Villager<br />

(Mary Stuart, director Des McAnuff), Carbonelle (Lettice and Lovage, starring Julie Harris).<br />

15


Peter McBoyle<br />

16th season: Resident sound designer of the <strong>Stratford</strong> Shakespeare<br />

<strong>Festival</strong>. Sound designer of Camelot, Richard III and Shakespeare’s Will.<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong>: Favourites include The Tempest, Jacques Brel..., Kiss Me, Kate,<br />

West Side Story, Bartholomew Fair, Julius Caesar, Fuente Ovejuna, Krapp’s<br />

Last Tape, Oklahoma!, Pentecost, Oliver!, King Lear and Fiddler on the<br />

Roof. Elsewhere: Highlights include Sinatra Dance With Me (Vegas); Come<br />

Fly Away (Broadway); High Society, Gypsy (Shaw); Sweeney Todd, Beauty and the Beast,<br />

Cabaret (Citadel); Fire, Little Shop of Horrors, The House of Martin Guerre (CanStage);<br />

The Wrong Son, Trying, Mary’s Wedding (NAC); Medea, Orpheus Descending (MTC/<br />

Mirvish); Beauty and the Beast, Robin Hood, Cinderella (Ross Petty); Barrymore (Toronto<br />

and Broadway). Training: Bachelor of Music and Masters in sound recording from McGill.<br />

Awards: Suzi (Atlanta) for Come Fly Away and a Dora nomination for Fire. Et cetera: “Special<br />

thanks to Meghan, Ella and Beatrice for all their love, patience and encouragement.”<br />

Yanna McIntosh<br />

Seventh season: Queen Elizabeth in Richard III and Grace in The Little<br />

Years. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Hermione, Mme. Volanges (Dangerous Liaisons),<br />

Lady Macbeth, Titania, Helen (The Trojan Women), Maria, The Illusion.<br />

Elsewhere: Ruined (Obsidian/Nightwood); Cloud 9 (Mirvish); Condoleezza<br />

Rice in David Hare’s Stuff Happens (Studio 180); Mary in Mary Stuart,<br />

Phèdre (Soulpepper); Colleen Wagner’s The Monument (Obsidian); title<br />

roles in Hedda Gabler (Volcano) and Florence Gibson’s Belle (Factory/NAC); The Syringa<br />

Tree, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Petruchio in The Taming of the Shrew (Canadian Stage);<br />

Michael Healey’s Generous, Hare’s Skylight (Tarragon – Dora Award); Valley Song (New<br />

Globe – Dora Award ); Love’s Labour’s Lost, The Bear (NAC); André Alexis’s Lambton Kent<br />

(Volcano/Edinburgh <strong>Festival</strong>); Tartuffe (ART); Trace (co-writer/performer); guest teacher/<br />

director (National Theatre School; Humber College). Film/TV: XIII; The Line (TMN); This Is<br />

Wonderland, Riverdale (CBC); Doomstown (CTV – Gemini Award); The Sentinel, John Q,<br />

Finn’s Girl, A Raisin in the Sun.<br />

Seana McKenna<br />

20th season: Richard III in Richard III and Anne Hathaway in Shakespeare’s<br />

Will. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Forty productions including Dangerous Liaisons, Medea,<br />

Phèdre, Trojan Women, The Glass Menagerie, Noises Off, Private Lives,<br />

Fallen Angels, Night of the Iguana, Good Mother and twenty Shakespeares.<br />

Elsewhere: In an illustrious career spanning over 30 years, she has<br />

portrayed some of the most interesting women in dramatic literature:<br />

Blanche Dubois, Cleopatra, Eliza Doolittle, Maggie the Cat, Hedda Gabler, Billie Dawn and<br />

Lady Gay Spanker. Recently, her acclaimed performance in The Year of Magical Thinking<br />

toured from the Belfry to the Tarragon and Ottawa’s NAC. Awards: Doras: Saint Joan<br />

(Theatre Plus), Orpheus Descending (MTC/Mirvish), Valley Song (director, New Globe). Jessie:<br />

Wit (Vancouver Playhouse/Canadian Stage). Genie: The Hanging Garden. Honorary MFA<br />

in Acting from San Francisco’s American Conservatory Theatre. Etc.: She lives happily in<br />

Harrington, Ontario, with husband Miles, son Cal and two indolent cats.<br />

Brendan Murray<br />

Third season: Archbishop in Richard III and Chiron in Titus Andronicus.<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong>: The Two Noble Kinsmen, Henry VI (parts one and two), Henry V,<br />

Twelfth Night, Inherit the Wind. Elsewhere: Title role in Hamlet (Resurgence/<br />

Richmond Hill Centre); Hannay in the Canadian première of The 39 Steps<br />

(Thousand Islands Playhouse); Hook in Peter Pan, Father Flynn in Doubt,<br />

A Christmas Carol (Globe); The Glass Menagerie (Red Barn); The Woman<br />

in White (Aquarius); Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliet) (BeMe Theatre, Munich);<br />

Salt-Water Moon, directed by David French (Charlottetown <strong>Festival</strong>); Lucy, Twelfth Night<br />

(Canadian Stage); Relatively Speaking, Proof, Macbeth (Grand); Long Day’s Journey Into<br />

Night (Centaur); Love’s Labour’s Lost (NAC); Descent (Passe Muraille); The Comedy of Errors,<br />

Much Ado About Nothing (Theatre by the Bay); Goodnight Disgrace (Postscript); Measure<br />

for Measure, Blue/Orange (Citadel). Training: George Brown Theatre School, Birmingham<br />

Conservatory for Classical Theatre.<br />

Irene Poole<br />

Third season: Kate in The Little Years and understudy in Richard III.<br />

Previous seasons: Katherina in The Taming of the Shrew, Olga in Three<br />

Sisters. Elsewhere: Bethune Imagined, Escape from Happiness, Better<br />

Living, Fighting Words, The Glace Bay Miners’ Museum (Factory Theatre);<br />

Age of Arousal (Alberta Theatre Projects); Possible Worlds, directed by<br />

Yoshi Oida (Canadian Rep); The Game of Love and Chance (STC); Wuthering<br />

Heights (Theatre Aquarius); Much Ado About Nothing, Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer<br />

Night’s Dream, Talley’s Folly, Salt-Water Moon (Resurgence Theatre). Film/TV: Breakout<br />

Kings with Academy Award-winning director Gavin Hood (A&E), Republic of Doyle (CBC),<br />

Rookie Blue (CTV). Awards: Dora Awards for Outstanding Performance in The Last Days of<br />

Judas Iscariot (Birdland Theatre), The Leisure Society (Factory Theatre). Directing: Canadian<br />

première of David Mamet’s Romance (Pilot Group, Berkeley Street Theatre). Et cetera: “Love<br />

to my amazing guys.”<br />

16<br />

Gareth Potter<br />

Eighth season: Earl of Richmond in Richard III and Hosanna in Hosanna.<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong>: Ferdinand in The Tempest, Proteus in The Two Gentlemen of<br />

Verona, Malcolm in Macbeth (twice), Romeo in Romeo and Juliet, Nathaniel<br />

in Love’s Labour’s Lost, Edgar in King Lear, Gratiano in The Merchant of<br />

Venice, Pierrot in Don Juan, Cromwell in Henry VIII. Elsewhere: Simon/<br />

Wahab in Scorched (Citadel/Tarragon), Pierrot in Don Juan (Théâtre du<br />

Nouveau Monde), Narrator in The Rape of Lucrece (Theatre Ste. Catherine), Henry V in Henry<br />

V (Gravy Bath), Puck in A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Elysian). Training: National Theatre<br />

School, John Abbott College, Birmingham Conservatory for Classical Theatre. Awards:<br />

Michael Mawson Award, Chalmers Training Award. Et cetera: Gareth is from Ste. Anne Des<br />

Lacs, Quebec.<br />

Miles Potter<br />

11th season: Director of Richard III and Shakespeare’s Will. <strong>Stratford</strong>:<br />

Director: Medea, Romeo and Juliet, Good Mother, The Taming of the<br />

Shrew, The Glass Menagerie, Orpheus Descending, Shakespeare’s Will.<br />

Miles’s first season at <strong>Stratford</strong> was as an actor playing Caliban in John<br />

Hirsch’s production of The Tempest. He also fondly remembers appearing<br />

in the première of Elliott Hayes’s Homeward Bound and Michael Langham’s<br />

second version of Timon of Athens. Elsewhere: Productions at virtually all of Canada’s major<br />

theatres, including 16 productions for the Manitoba Theatre Centre and three commercial<br />

shows for Mirvish Productions. Awards: Dora Award (Toronto): The Drawer Boy; Jessie<br />

Award (Vancouver): The Taming of the Shrew. Teaching: National Theatre School, University<br />

of Ottawa, George Brown College, University of Missouri at Kansas City, Dalhousie. Et<br />

cetera: When not working, Miles lives in the Ontario village of Harrington with Seana and<br />

Cal.<br />

Janine Ralph<br />

21st season: Production stage manager of the Tom Patterson Theatre.<br />

Stage manager of Richard III. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Janine is delighted to return to the<br />

<strong>Festival</strong> from Singapore. She was production stage manager for the Tom<br />

Patterson Theatre for two seasons, and stage-managed Ever Yours, Oscar<br />

and There Reigns Love at that time. In the past Janine has stage-managed<br />

a variety of shows at both the Avon and <strong>Festival</strong> theatres, including The<br />

Gondoliers, Gypsy, Carousel, Henry V, An Enemy of the People, One Tiger to a Hill and<br />

Henry VIII. Elsewhere: Janine stage-managed Voyage de la Vie for Resorts World Sentosa<br />

in Singapore and production-managed Pinocchio: The Musical for Singapore Repertory<br />

Theatre, Singapore. She has also worked on the Asian Games’ ceremonies in Qatar; in a<br />

variety of theatres in Ontario, including Young People’s Theatre, Toronto; and also for BBC<br />

TV in England.<br />

Evan Rueb<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong> debut: Understudy in Richard III. Elsewhere: Pirate in The Pirates<br />

of Penzance, Soldier in Mulan. Film/TV: Young boy in CKCO-TV commercial.<br />

Et cetera: Evan is very pleased and excited to be a part of the <strong>Stratford</strong><br />

Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong>. He sends many thanks to his family for all their love<br />

and support.<br />

Ivory Seol<br />

Second season: Assistant stage manager of Richard III and The Little<br />

Years. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Book ASM, Evita. Elsewhere: Stage manager of One of<br />

Ours, The Father, Betrayal, Death of a Salesman, Essay/The Russian Play<br />

and Lebensraum (WJT); The Cure for Everything (Theatre Passe Muraille);<br />

An Illustrated History of the Anishnabe, 2009 tour (MTYP). Assistant stage<br />

manager of Guys and Dolls, Brigadoon, Country Legends and Me and<br />

My Girl (Drayton Entertainment); Age of Arousal (TPM). Film/TV: Assistant script supervisor<br />

for Falcon Beach, season three; key production assistant/third assistant director for Elijah;<br />

locations PA on various films and TV shows from 2003 to 2008. Et cetera: “Thank you to my<br />

mother for her neverending support.”


E.B. Smith<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong> debut: Marquess of Dorset in Richard III and Alarbus in Titus<br />

Andronicus. Elsewhere: Chicago Shakespeare Theater – Seyton in<br />

Macbeth, Friar Laurence in Romeo and Juliet; First Folio Theatre – Macduff<br />

in Macbeth; Karamu House Theater – King in King Hedley II (Cleveland<br />

Scene, Best Production of 2007), Moustique in Dream on Monkey<br />

Mountain, Junior in Before it Hits Home. Other credits include work at the<br />

Cleveland Play House, the Idaho Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong> and Theater Wit in Chicago, and two<br />

seasons at the Great Lakes Theater <strong>Festival</strong>. Film/TV: The Beast (Sony Pictures Television),<br />

Ask Gilby, Maybe By Then and Thunder Bay (PBS-TV). Training: Studied acting at Ohio<br />

University and the Birmingham Conservatory for Classical Theatre. Et cetera: E.B. dedicates<br />

his work to Moira, his parents and grandmother, and to the memory of his Papa, who will<br />

always be in the front row.<br />

Michael Spencer-Davis<br />

Third season: Duke of Clarence in Richard III and Clown in Titus Andronicus.<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong>: Julius Caesar, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Bartholomew Fair,<br />

Shakespeare’s Universe. Elsewhere: Recent credits include Romeo and<br />

Juliet, Nativity (National Arts Centre); Lawrence and Holloman (Persephone<br />

Theatre/Prairie Theatre Exchange); As You Like It (Citadel); Sexy Laundry<br />

(Globe Theatre). Other credits include Medea (Manitoba Theatre Centre/<br />

Mirvish); Macbeth, Othello (NAC/Citadel); And All For Love, Twelfth Night (NAC); The Elephant<br />

Man, The Stone Angel, The Tempest, Heaven, The Beard of Avon, Twelfth Night, Unless,<br />

Amadeus (Canadian Stage); The Real Thing, Humble Boy (MTC); apple (PTE); Via Dolorosa<br />

(Winnipeg Jewish Theatre); Blithe Spirit, Einstein’s Gift (Citadel); The File (SummerWorks);<br />

A Midsummer Night’s Dream (<strong>Festival</strong> of Classics); A Phoenix Too Frequent (Touchmark<br />

Theatre). Film/TV: Murdoch Mysteries, Flash of Genius, The Eleventh Hour, Street Time and<br />

Canada: A People’s History.<br />

Jessica Stinson<br />

Second season: Apprentice stage manager of Richard III and Titus<br />

Andronicus. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Production assistant, Studio Theatre: Do Not Go<br />

Gentle, King of Thieves, The Two Gentlemen of Verona. Elsewhere:<br />

Apprentice stage manager: Sherlock Holmes: The Final Adventure, Joseph<br />

and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, The Last Five Years, Dry Streak,<br />

The Syringa Tree (The Grand Theatre); Mending Fences, Harvest, Animal<br />

Magnetism (Port Stanley <strong>Festival</strong> Theatre); Romeo and Juliet (The Driftwood Theatre Group);<br />

Mask and Madness in Macbeth (Shakespeare in Action). Stage manager: Rhinoceros<br />

(Theatre@York). Assistant stage manager: Paradise by the River (Shadowpath Theatre<br />

Productions), The Pirates of Penzance (The Grand Theatre). Training: Jessica is a graduate of<br />

the York University Theatre Program with a double specialization in Production and Theatre<br />

Studies. Et cetera: Jessica would like to thank her family for all of their support.<br />

Maxwell T. Wilson<br />

13th season: Production stage manager of the Tom Patterson Theatre.<br />

Stage manager of Hosanna. <strong>Stratford</strong>: Productions of Peter Pan; A Funny<br />

Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum (Avon Theatre 2009 and<br />

Toronto’s Canon Theatre 2010-11); Cabaret; South Pacific and My One<br />

and Only (director Michael Lichtefeld); The Winter’s Tale (director Brian<br />

Bedford); Death of a Salesman (starring Al Waxman and Martha Henry);<br />

Timon of Athens (director Michael Langham). Elsewhere: Max’s career spans 25 years<br />

including work with the Citadel Theatre, Edmonton Opera, Opera Ontario, Opera Atelier,<br />

the Canadian Opera Company, Canadian Stage, Lorraine Kimsa Theatre for Young People<br />

and Mirvish Productions on The Who’s Tommy (director Des McAnuff). Training: BA dramatic<br />

arts, University of Lethbridge. Et cetera: Venues coordinator for the Toronto International<br />

Film <strong>Festival</strong>, 2002 to 2004. He is webmaster for the Southern Ontario Orchid Society (www.<br />

soos.ca) and Ravenvision Photographic (www.ravenvision.ca).<br />

for biographies of the entire 2011 festival company, please visit the “about us”<br />

section of our website: stratfordshakespearefestival.com.<br />

Scandal. Lust. Betrayal. Irony.<br />

(And that’s just our political coverage)<br />

Proud sponsor of the <strong>Stratford</strong> Shakespeare <strong>Festival</strong><br />

FOR CONVENIENT HOME DELIVERY, CALL: 416-367-4500<br />

<strong>Stratford</strong> Fest_3 1 11-03-01 3:49 PM<br />

17

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!