Articles tagged with: humanities

  • Spring course spotlights Indigenous playwrights in Canada

    Canadian playwright and Dramatic Arts (DART) Assistant Professor Matthew MacKenzie (centre), citizen of the Métis Nation of Alberta, recently shared a reading of his new play “Strife” with the Brock community at the Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts followed by a discussion. This spring, MacKenzie will teach DART 2P95 Contemporary Canadian Indigenous Theatre for Non-majors, which is open to all students.

    published Thursday, May 07, 2026 in the Brock News | by Gillian Minaker

    Award-winning Canadian playwright and Dramatic Arts (DART) Assistant Professor Matthew MacKenzie, citizen of the Métis Nation of Alberta, is centring Indigenous storytelling through theatre education.

    MacKenzie will teach DART 2P95 Contemporary Canadian Indigenous Theatre for Non-majors this Spring. No theatre experience is required for the virtual course, which is  open to both Indigenous and non-Indigenous students.

    Cast members of “Strife” — written by Canadian playwright and Assistant Professor of Dramatic Arts Matthew MacKenzie, citizen of the Métis Nation of Albert — visited Brock’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts on April 2. The cast performed a read through of the play ahead of its run at Tarragon Theatre in Toronto from April 7 to 26. Pictured from left are Tracey Nepinak, Teneil Whiskeyjack, Jesse Gervais and Micheala Washburn.

    Students will gain a broad understanding of Indigenous plays written by Indigenous playwrights, knowledge MacKenzie believes is foundational to any Canadian dramatic arts education.

    “Embedded in these plays is teaching and wisdom about the Indigenous experience in Canada,” he says.

    Students will read works by accomplished writers such as Kevin Loring, a Governor General’s Award winner and the first Artistic Director of Indigenous Theatre at National Arts Centre; Frances Koncan, an Anishinaabe and Slovene playwright and theatre artist from Couchiching First Nation; and Kim Senklip Harvey, author of Kamloopa: An Indigenous Matriarch Story and the first female Indigenous author to be awarded a Governor General’s Literary Award for Drama.

    Through a range of works that span comedy to deeply serious themes, students will explore topics such as cultural reclamation, identity and representation of historical events.

    MacKenzie says the course will also help students understand why Indigenous theatre has only recently gained wider visibility.

    “For a long time, the cultural sharing of Indigenous stories was criminalized in Canada, so Indigenous storytelling was suppressed or done in private. Only in relatively recent history have these stories been shared more widely and taken their place in Canadian theatre,” he says.

    For MacKenzie, foregrounding the work of Indigenous artists, and students engaging with it, is a form of active reconciliation.

    “Through this learning, we are not just talking about it, we are doing the work,” he says.

    Issues explored in the plays — including the Sixties Scoop and the lasting impacting of the foster system and Residential Schools — reflect both distinct Canadian histories and broader patterns of colonialism.

    The course invites students to engage with the material from their own perspective, whether they are Indigenous, non-Indigenous or international students.

    The cast of “Strife” — written by award-winning Canadian playwright and Assistant Professor of Dramatic Arts Matthew MacKenzie, citizen of the Métis Nation of Albert — previewed the play in a read through open to the Brock community on April 2. Pictured from left are performers Jesse Gervais, Val Planche and Grace Lamarche.

    “Seeing students develop this understanding through their own lens is incredibly meaningful,” he says.

    MacKenzie brings a unique perspective to the classroom as an accomplished contributor to the Indigenous theatre canon in Canada and award-winning playwright. His works include First Métis Man of OdesaBearsAfter the Fire and The Particulars. His new play Strife recently ran at Tarragon Theatre in Toronto and was called a “a triumph” by the Toronto Star.

    He is also Artistic Director of Punctuate! Theatre, an Indigenous-led theatre company in Edmonton which frequently tours nationally.

    MacKenzie was honoured to recently be featured by the Métis Nation of Alberta, Otipemisiwak Métis Government, in its Citizen Spotlight for being a creative mentor for Métis and Indigenous people across Canada and the globe in theatre and arts spaces.

    Building up other Indigenous artists is a key driver of MacKenzie’s work.

    “Lifting up Indigenous theatre artists and helping to strengthen the Indigenous theatre ecosystem in Canada is a way to ensure a sustainable and thriving future for Indigenous artists moving forward,” he says.

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  • DART students debut new play exploring obsession

    Fourth-year Dramatic Arts (DART) students Jaxson Schut, (left), and Gabriela Queiros perform in Enjoy Your Stay a new play premiering at Brock University’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts on Friday, April 10.

    published Thursday, April 02, 2026 in The Brock News | by Gillian Minaker

    Fourth-year Dramatic Arts students are inviting audiences on a harrowing journey to a sinister hotel haunted by a controlling spirit — a hotel so grand guests might not want to leave.

    Enjoy Your Stay, a production by Kaleidoscope Collective, opens at the Marilyn I. Walker Theatre on Friday, April 10.

    The play follows the journey of staff members trapped in a seemingly lavish hotel where the spirit of a man lives inside the walls. The spirit controls the building and all within, including a woman who has been trapped for decades.

    A performer stands on a stage under dark, blue light.

    Fourth-year DART student and performer Victoria Marshall performs in Enjoy Your Stay, a new production by Kaleidoscope Collective.

    When two new faces enter the story, Edith and Lilian, the world of the hotel begins to shift. While clumsy and shy Edith falls prey to the horrors within, Lilian uses her spiritual gift to uncover the mystery of the building and the truths hidden in the walls.

    A key theme explored is humanity’s tendency toward obsessiveness and control and how it can lead to a path of destruction.

    The play was created as part of DART 4D56 Collaborative Play Development, an upper-year Dramatic Arts (DART) course in which students collaborate as a theatre company to produce and mount a new play.

    Fourth-year DART student Victoria Marshall said the sense of community in the collective has been powerful.

    “We all know theatre is a community, and this process has been both intense and beautiful,” she said.

    From scriptwriting to stage management and acting, the student collective came together throughout the year to explore their creativity while building theatre making skills.

    The experience has helped Marshall deepen her skills as an actor while gaining a broader understanding of the many gears that make the machine of theatre turn.

    “It’s been so refreshing to try my hand in every aspect of the production. Whether helping with lights, hanging curtains or helping to install a set, I am trying new things I wouldn’t have touched before,” she said.

    A person works on a costume in a wardrobe studio.

    Fourth-year DART student Nav Brar works as Head of Wardrobe, Assistant Production Manager and as part of the lighting Crew on Enjoy Your Stay.

    Like Marshall, fourth-year DART student Stewart Shaw said learning about the design process and how a show gets made has been a valuable experience.

    Shaw has worked as Lighting Designer, Technical Director, Head of Props and Projections Designer on the play, honing technical skills including how to do projections on QLab and operating various lighting and production technologies simultaneously.

    “I’ve also learned a lot about the decisions that have to be made along the way — the paperwork, the documentation and the process of creating an idea into a prototype and how things can change along the way,” they said.

    Enjoy your Stay runs Friday, April 10 at 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, April 11 at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.; and Sunday, April 12 at 2 p.m. at the Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts. Tickets can be purchased through University Tickets.

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  • Dramatic Arts mainstage brings fantasy world to life in celebration of unique identities

    Fourth-year Brock University Dramatic Arts student Nav Brar (left), the puppeteer for Melifollee, and third-year student Landon Drexler, the puppeteer for Pendamire Dragonius, enter into a scene in Escape to ILKANOR: A Fantasy Play in Nine Chapters.

    published Monday, March 02, 2026 | Brock News | by 

    Brock University’s Department of Dramatic Arts (DART) is set to whisk audiences away to a magical land of powerful beings and fantastical creatures.

    Cast members Sandra Nampiima and Daisy Ford with puppets during a technical rehearsal.

    From dragons and elves to wizards and sorceresses, Escape to ILKANOR: A Fantasy Play in Nine Chapters invites viewers to leave the real world behind and embark on a journey of the imagination. The mainstage production opens Friday, March 6 at the Marilyn I. Walker Theatre in downtown St. Catharines.

    Written and directed by DART Assistant Professor and playwright Mike Griffin, the play explores escapism and fantasy genre tropes through diverse characters and extraordinary creatures.

    “Our creative exploration of escapism began by asking why people want to escape through stories and where they want to escape to,” he says.

    Featuring bold theatrical components that incorporate puppets, masks and physical theatre, the fantasy unfolds in nine chapters, each featuring a host of characters who travel to different areas in the magical land of Ilkanor.

    Many of the characters reflect marginalized perspectives that are not often represented in leading roles, Griffin says. Through their magical transportation to Ilkanor, these characters are able to explore different parts of their identity.

    Cast members Curtis Honsberger, Sandra Nampiima and Ryleigh OBrien rehearsing with th puppets Trink and Somp.

    Among the play’s chapters, for instance, are tales of a neurodivergent individual who becomes a wizard in Ilkanor and a non-binary drag artist who becomes the leader of a kingdom.

    Griffin says the play is not a typical hero’s journey.

    “Instead, we are exploring representation in fantasy, touching on neurodiversity and disability, and wrestling with identity and self-care,” he says.

    More than 40 DART students in all years of the program will bring Ilkanor to life, advancing their learning by collaborating with both emerging and established theatre makers.

    “The show is truly magical, not only in the fantasy elements, but also in the collaborative work and care to build the world of Ilkanor,” fourth-year DART student and mainstage performer Nav Brar says. “I personally don’t know another show that has highlighted so many different people that don’t always get their time, in one production.”

    DART student Julia Foley, assistant designer for the play presents her mask and costume designs to the first year students in Scenography and Stagecraft.

    Third-year DART student Julia Foley, an assistant designer for the play, says the crew embraced a sustainability mindset while creating the fictional world, with the production incorporating recycled materials in the set, costume and puppet designs.

    Working with limited or thrifted materials meant having to explore and be open to new possibilities based on what is available, she says.

    Brock University’s Dramatic Arts mainstage performance of Escape to ILKANOR: A Fantasy Play in Nine Chapters opens Friday, March 6 at the Marilyn I. Walker Theatre.

    “The elements of transformation and rebirth are at the core of the show’s landscape, communicated not just through the set and costumes, but through the stories told by each character as they journey from the real world to Ilkanor, where they unlock their full potential,” Foley says. “We similarly saw the potential in our thrifted fabrics, books and garbage materials and transformed them into something beautiful and new.”

    Escape to Ilkanor: A Fantasy Play in Nine Chapters opens Friday, March 6 at 7:30 p.m. at the Marilyn I. Walker Theatre in the Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts in downtown St. Catharines. Performances will also take place Saturday, March 7 at 7:30 p.m., Sunday, March 8 at 2 p.m., Thursday March 12 at 11 a.m., Friday, March 13 at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday, March 14 at 7:30 p.m.

    General admission tickets are $25 and tickets for students and seniors are $20. Visit Brock University Tickets to reserve seats.

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  • Community climate symposium sparks creative conversations

    Climate action in Niagara was the focus of enthusiastic gathering of scientists, Indigenous Knowledge keepers, artists and community members co-hosted by Brock’s Environmental Sustainability Research Centre as part of the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre’s Arts in Action: Climate festival, which runs until Sunday, Feb. 8.

    published Monday, February 02, 2026 | Brock News | by

    Professor Julia Baird has long recognized the value of engaging with community about sustainability science and action.

    So, when the opportunity arose to co-lead a daylong climate symposium at the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre (PAC) with community leader Jennifer Dockstader, the Director of Brock’s Environmental Sustainability Research Centre (ESRC) says it was “an easy yes.”

    The took place Saturday, Jan. 31 as part of a 10-day Arts in Action: Climate festival at the PAC. The symposium welcomed the Niagara community for a series of panel discussions featuring a wide variety of Indigenous, scientific and artistic voices.

    Colleen Smith, CEO of the PAC and Executive Producer of the festival, says the event built on the PAC’s history of “convening community to explore and further enhance public dialogue pertaining to local, national and global topics and concerns.”

    “When designing an art and climate festival, the notion of also hosting a climate symposium, reflecting both Indigenous and western science perspectives, was a natural progression,” says Smith. “Finding two such passionate and complementary leaders as Jennifer Dockstader and Dr. Julia Baird willing to co-lead this symposium meant that Art in Action: Climate could be a festival that could truly embrace and engage a diverse community on a subject that would complement and expand on our artistic presentations.”

    Dockstader says one of her goals as co-lead was to bring brilliant Indigenous scholars, artists and community members to a wider Niagara audience, which she says should be pushing for more Indigenous voices in public conversations.

    “We have some great minds already doing this work, so it’s wonderful to bring to the stage all of these great innovators, thinkers, creators, artists and scientists,” she says. “We really shouldn’t be doing this work without Indigenous people, so it’s been an honour to bring the people I know to this symposium.”

    Several Brock faculty members, many of whom are ESRC affiliates, also participated, including:

    • Associate Professor of Chemistry Jianbo Gao
    • Dramatic Arts Instructor Shannon Hughes
    • Assistant Professor of Physics and Engineering Jasneet Kaur
    • Associate Professor of Computer Science and Biological Sciences and Canada Research Chair in Machine Learning for Biomedical Data Yifeng Li
    • Biological Sciences and Psychology Professor Gary Pickering
    • ESRC Adjunct Professor Kerrie Pickering
    • Assistant Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies and Sociology Lyn Trudeau
    • Professor of Biological Sciences and UNESCO Chair on Community Sustainability: From Local to Global Liette Vasseur

    For Vasseur, who has placed a strong emphasis on art and poetry in her work as UNESCO Chair, the symposium was a natural fit.

    “It’s a chance to open the eyes of people to realize that we all have a role to play in this — it’s the art in action, but it’s also people in action,” she says.

    Vasseur also says sharing the stage with Rick Hill Sr. was particularly meaningful.

    “It was an honour to be able to have this conversation with Dr. Rick Hill, a conversation between the settler white scientist and the Indigenous scientist about how we can have the fertility of these two knowledges connect, to be able to advance the challenge that we have with climate change,” she says.

    In addition to the one-day symposium, Brock students minoring in Environmental Sustainability are acting as Youth Ambassadors throughout the festival and will share their perspectives at Youth in Action: Next Gen Speaks on Saturday, Feb. 7.

    Baird and ESRC Research Associate Gillian Dale are also conducting a research project on how participating in the festival may build empathy and climate action. Any festival attendee can take part.

    Overall, Dockstader says the symposium shone a light on the importance of breaking down divisions in order to tackle challenges like climate change.

    “Moving forward in Niagara, we need to be walking side by side, together, all communities walking side by side,” says Dockstader. “We all have a stake in what is going to happen with the environment in Niagara, and we leave no one out of the conversation. We are all going to be focused on solutions.”

    Baird says the chance to partner with Dockstader and the PAC to create space for sharing knowledge was a wonderful opportunity, and one that typifies the community-driven research prioritized by the ESRC.

    “I’m just thrilled about how it has come together,” she says.

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  • Innovative research reimagines contemporary circus studies

    A Brock-supported initiative, Circus and its Others (CaiO), recently held a conference in Bogotá, Colombia. The conference featured a multimodal program of events that convened more than 70 scholars and showcased a circus festival featuring more than 100 artists. The Volodores de Papantla, pictured here, performed the Ceremonia ritual de los Guagas in the plaza of the Centro Cultural Gabriel García Márquez as part of the Achura Karpa festival programming. Photo credit: Nicolás Mahecha.

    published in the Brock News | Wednesday, January 21, 2026 | by 

    A multi-year initiative is uniting artists, academics and audiences from across the globe to celebrate the diversity of contemporary circus.

    Circus and its Others (CaiO), co-founded by Brock University Dramatic Arts Adjunct Professor Karen Fricker and Professor Charles Batson of Union College in New York, began in 2016 as a conference exploring representations of difference in circus.

    Since its debut in Montreal, CaiO has gained momentum and a significant following of international circus artists and academics who are expanding the boundaries of circus studies.

    “What started as a conversation between North America-based colleagues has blossomed into a truly global inquiry,” said Fricker. “And the more we’ve broadened our perspectives to include traditions and cultures from the Global South, the richer the work has become.”

    Participants in the project come from a wide array of disciplinary backgrounds, including theatre and performance studies, anthropology, sociology, history, queer and gender studies, kinesiology, cultural studies. Their explorations of otherness and difference include studies of circus performances, labour and mobility practices, education and training, and colonial and post-colonial histories, among other topics.

    The final presentation of an Indigenous circus workshop as part of the Achura Karpa festival brought together a number of Indigenous circus companies and artists, including the Artcirq Inuit Performance Collective and the Volodores de Papantla, during the CaiO Bogotá conference. Photo credit: Nicolás Mahecha.

    “At its roots, CaiO has become a diverse global community made up of people coming together to share their identities, culture, art and scholarship with each other; the deep sense of shared purpose is profound,” Fricker said.

    The most recent CaiO conference was held in March 2024 in Bogotá, Colombia. A multimodal program of events convened more than 70 scholars and showcased a circus festival featuring more than 100 artists.

    An editorial committee including Fricker, Batson and colleagues Julieta Infantino (Argentina), Marco Antonio Coelho Bortoleto (Brazil), Olga Lucía Sorzano (Colombia), and Aastha Gandhi (India) have since published the first of two special issues of the peer-reviewed journal Circus: Arts, Life and Sciences.

    Focused on the theme “Transgressions and Challenges,” the articles include an exploration of the work of female porters — strong acrobats who lift, hold and support other acrobats — in circus, an account of the Brazilian circus company A Penca, whose work engages with climate emergency and a critical look on the emphasis on aesthetic innovation in circus training.

    The next CaiO conference is set for 2027 and will be held in Kerala, India. Based in Delhi, Aastha Gandhi is the co-organizer of the conference alongside Fricker and Batson.

    Circus, Gandhi said, is deeply woven into her country’s cultural tapestry.

    “Hosting CaiO in Kerala is a momentous occasion. There is a rich and complex history of circus in India, impacted for decades by shifting sociopolitical landscapes. To have visitors come from many places to celebrate the art and complexity of circus today presents an exciting opportunity to share our perspectives with the world,” Gandhi said.

    Given the widespread interest in CaiO from circus artists and academics alike over the past decade, Fricker and Batson are turning their sights on continuing to build the project in a sustainable way, including archiving conference materials and performances and identifying new leadership models that reflect the inclusive values of the project.

    “Experiencing the transformation of Circus and its Others into a robust, global inquiry is an immense privilege, and the work doesn’t stop here. We want to continue to help make space for the many diverse and beautiful voices of contemporary circus for years to come,” Batson said.

    CaiO has been supported by the Department of Dramatic Arts, the Dean of Humanities Discretionary Fund, the Humanities Research Institute, Office of the Vice-President Research, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada, and the Canada Council for the Arts.

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  • How the arts shaped Walker Cultural Leader’s path to Indigenous roots

    As part of the 2025-26 Walker Cultural Leader Series presented by the Marilyn. I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts, celebrated multidisciplinary artist Nicole Joy-Fraser (second from left) is in residence in the Department of Dramatic Arts (DART). Joy-Fraser plays the role of the Métis Nutcracker in DART’s mainstage production, performing alongside DART students second-year student Tejay Morley (left), fourth-year student Emma Marcy (second from right) and second-year student Sarah Lazo de la Vega Sanchez (right).

    Originally posted in the Brock News | Tuesday, December 02, 2025 | by 

    Reclaiming their First Nation identity has led multidisciplinary artist Nicole Joy-Fraser down many paths, from international theatre stages to local drum circles and, recently, to Brock.

    As one of Dramatic Arts’ (DART) Walker Cultural Leaders for 2025-26, Joy-Fraser plays the role of the Métis Nutcracker in DART’s upcoming mainstage production.

    They will join Assistant Professor and Métis Nutcracker playwright Matthew MacKenzie, a citizen of the Métis Nation of Alberta, for a public artist talk, “Making Métis Nutcracker,” on the Marilyn I. Walker Theatre stage on Friday, Dec. 5 at 3 p.m.

    Joy-Fraser is a proud bear clan matriarch who grew up in Mississauga with Euro-Settler, Tsa’tinée, Nehiyaw and Métis bloodlines from Horse Lake First Nation in Alberta.

    Identity is the heartbeat of Joy-Fraser’s artistic practice, which spans more than 25 years of storytelling on stage and screen with celebrated companies such as the Stratford Festival, the Shaw Festival, Mirvish, Theatre Aquarius, CBC, CBS, BBC and Telefilm.

    “The more I learn about my background, the more I am driven to keep sharing Indigenous theatre and more deeply understand my job as an artist to propel stories forward not just about identity but also reconciliation,” Joy-Fraser says.

    Nicole Joy Fraser

    Dramatic Arts Walker Cultural Leader Nicole Joy-Fraser is a proud bear clan matriarch who grew up in Mississauga with Euro-Settler, Tsa’tinée, Nehiyaw and Métis bloodlines from Horse Lake First Nation in Alberta. As a multidisciplinary artist, community theatre practitioner and cultural facilitator, Joy-Fraser continues to advocate for Indigenous ways of knowing and doing, which have greatly impacted their journey as a Sixties Scoop witness and 2Spirit Helper.

    Inspired by — as it happens — a performance of The Nutcracker they saw with their parents, Joy-Fraser spent much of their youth performing with local theatre companies. They instantly fell in love with ballet and began singing thanks to the “golden oldie” musicals on repeat in their home.

    It was in high school drama class, when handed a copy of Dry Lips Oughta Move to Kapuskasing (1989) by Cree writer and performer Tomson Highway, that Joy-Fraser began asking more questions about their roots.

    After three years at performing arts college Randolph Academy, Joy-Fraser landed a dream-come-true gig as a member of the first North American cast of Mirvish Theatre’s Mamma Mia! auditioned by ABBA’s Björn Ulvaeus himself.

    Years of performing in many non-Indigenous roles followed for Joy-Fraser on prestigious stages across Canada and with West End Theatre in London, U.K.

    At the same time, Joy-Fraser’s drive to learn about their First Nation identity burned brighter, spurring them on in their journey to find their maternal birth family.

    After years of searching and almost giving up, Joy-Fraser finally connected to their Northern Alberta roots. An Elder at their first sweat ceremony recognized their surname as belonging to their birth mother and realized her cousin was married to Joy-Fraser’s Auntie.

    “At that time, we weren’t equipped with the language and learnings to help us carry our trauma as intergenerational survivors and Sixties Scoop witnesses,” Joy-Fraser said.

    Joy-Fraser began attending traditional healing ceremonies and connecting with Elders and Knowledge Keepers. Suddenly, they were learning their history.

    “My acting roles began resonating with my personal growth, and I knew I was bound to give back to our community by sharing my story and helping others heal through the arts,” they said.

    Performing the role of the Métis Nutcracker as DART’s Walker Culture Leader has been a meaningful experience for Joy-Fraser, moved by sharing both their extensive experience as theatre practitioner as well as First Nation customs that have been part of the production process, including smudging ceremonies and feasts.

    “The best way to learn something is to experience it, and DART students are learning about Indigenous cultures by embodying this story — by living it and reflecting on it — you couldn’t ask for a more active action of reconciliation than what Brock is doing right now with this piece.”

    As an Indigenous student and actor, second-year DART student Abbey Keays of the Upper Mohawk Turtle Clan who performs in Métis Nutcracker said she has learned so much from Joy-Fraser, who she looks to as a mentor.

    “We have had important talks about what we can do to keep our cultural stories accurate, appropriate and informative. It’s not very often you get the chance to experience Indigenous work or work with Indigenous artists as an actor who is starting out,” Keays said. “I am very grateful to have Nicole Joy-Fraser to look up to in my career.”

    For more information about the Métis Nutcracker see the Department’s Events + Programming webpage.

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  • Métis Nutcracker: Classic winter tale reimagined in celebration of Indigenous identity

    Brock Dramatic Arts students are preparing for the University’s upcoming mainstage production of Métis Nutcracker written by award-winning Canadian playwright and Assistant Professor Matthew MacKenzie. Third-year student Ella Martin, Assistant Head of Wardrobe (left), adjusts third-year student Molly Solomon’s (centre) handmade Maple Sugar Fairy regalia, assisted by fourth-year student Nav Brar, Wardrobe Co-ordinator.

    Originally posted in the Brock News | Friday, November 28, 2025 | by 

    When Molly Solomon brings her contemporary Fancy Shawl Dance to life in Brock University Dramatic Arts’ (DART) mainstage production, she will draw strength from her Ojibwe name, Ishkode Kwe.

    The name, translated to “Fire Woman” and “First Spark in my Heart,” was gifted to the third-year DART student by her grandmother — and she wears it proudly, just like the handcrafted regalia she dons on stage.

    Solomon plays the Maple Sugar Fairy in Brock’s upcoming production of Métis Nutcracker, which opens Friday, Dec. 5 at the Marilyn I. Walker TheatreThe new play was written by award-winning Canadian playwright and DART Assistant Professor Matthew MacKenzie, citizen of the Métis Nation of Alberta, and is directed and choreographed by celebrated theatre artist Monica Dottor.

    Solomon says sharing her Indigenous heritage with the Brock community is a profound experience.

    “I feel so welcome when my peers and mentors are genuinely curious to learn about my Indigenous identity,” she says.

    Brimming with magic, song and dance — and sprinkled with a dash of playful audience interaction that may involve throwing snowballs at the stage — the story is inspired by MacKenzie’s family heritage.

    In Métis Nutcracker, two Ukrainian refugees named Tatiana and Vanya are forced to flee from their home in the Red Pine Forest to escape the evil Rat King. They seek safety on Turtle Island where they are taken under the protection of the Métis Nutcracker, played by DART Walker Cultural Leader and multidisciplinary artist Nicole Joy-Fraser.

    “They travel in the four directions learning about different nations and sacred medicines in the Land of Flowers, Land of Berries, Land of Snowflakes and Land of Pine Cones,” MacKenzie says of the characters’ journey in his adaptation of the classic Nutcracker tale.

    Created for young audiences, the play celebrates identity and diversity.

    “My son is Ukrainian and Métis, and I wanted to be able to speak to him about his Indigeneity while exploring concepts of colonialism in a way that he could understand,” MacKenzie says.

    For Joy-Fraser, performing the role of the Métis Nutcracker also resonates with reclaiming their own Indigenous background. Joy-Fraser is a proud bear clan matriarch who grew up in Mississauga with Euro-Settler, Tsa’tinée, Nehiyaw and Métis bloodlines from Horse Lake First Nation in Alberta.

    Paramount to the production was ensuring that youth — particularly those with an Indigenous background — had the opportunity to experience Métis Nutcracker. Support from St. Catharines theatre company Carousel Players helped to achieve this goal, with two school-day matinee performances now sold out.

    “I hope every Indigenous child sitting in the audience sees themselves and their beliefs reflected in the beauty of the show,” Joy-Fraser says. “It’s magical storytelling embedded in nature, which is so much a part of who we are.”

    Indigenous practices of cultural significance are woven throughout the play,  including set pieces, costumes and regalia featuring intricate beadwork as well as custom painted canoe paddles, created in collaboration with Indigenous theatre cohort Pemmican Collective.

    MacKenzie, who teaches Contemporary Canadian Indigenous Theatre, says learning about different Indigenous nations alongside the cast and crew has been transformative.

    Métis Nutcracker celebrates differences,” he says. “Everyone involved at Brock has come together to honour those differences, putting the ‘action’ in truth and reconciliation.”

    As the first Indigenous DART faculty member to write an original mainstage production for the University, MacKenzie says the in-house work of Indigenizing theatre is gaining momentum.

    MacKenzie is also excited to see more Indigenous representation at the University in the future.

    “We have such a supportive environment at the MIWSFPA, a true willingness and curiosity to learn,” he says. “Our conversations are centred on this performance, but they will carry forward.”

    Additional performances of Métis Nutcracker will take place Saturday, Dec. 6 at 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, Dec. 7 at 2 p.m. General admission tickets are $25 and tickets for students and seniors are $20. Visit Brock University Tickets to reserve seats.

    MacKenzie and Joy-Fraser will also host a public artist talk related to the production at the Marilyn I. Walker Theatre on Friday, Dec. 5.

    For more information about the Métis Nutcracker see the Department’s Events + Programming webpage.

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  • Distinguished grad builds community through transformative arts progamming

    Image caption: Interim Dean of Humanities James Allard (left) presented Alana Perri (BA ’13) with the 2025 Faculty of Humanities Distinguished Graduate Award on Sept. 21 during the University’s recent Homecoming celebrations.

    Friday, October 10, 2025 | by 

    Alana Perri (BA ’13) is on a mission to ensure creative expression is accessible to all.

    Perri, who recently received the Faculty of Humanities Distinguished Graduate Award during Brock’s 2025 Homecoming celebrations, is dedicated to fostering inclusivity, accessibility and empowerment by harnessing theatre for non-traditional uses.

    A performer at heart, Perri began her journey at Brock in 2009 as a Dramatic Arts (DART) student.

    Through her studies, and a pivotal course exploring “drama therapy,” she found her true calling in expressive arts therapy. She also gained co-op experience at RAFT, an organization aiming to reduce youth homelessness in St. Catharines through attachment-based programs.

    “We brought drama into a place where feelings of joy and fun were often scarce. Together we created a book together filled with poems and art called I Just Need to Let This Out. This experience showed me how the arts for everyone; I still have the book, and every day it reminds me of the power of expressive art,” she said.

    Now the Executive Director and Owner of Purple Carrots Drama Studio, an Toronto-based organization offering innovative drama and expressive arts programs for neurodiverse youth, teens and adults, she has had profound impact in the lives of others.

    When Perri took the helm of Purple Carrots in 2020, she was driven to keep the arts programs running when much of the world was shutting down during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    “We work with the disability community and with people of all abilities, so it was not possible or beneficial for everyone to participate virtually, but our community is incredibly strong and passionate and rose to the challenge, and we’re still here,” she said.

    The drama studio now serves approximately 300 participants across Canada, providing inclusive, expressive arts programs and workshops that encourage emotional regulation and self-awareness.

    “We use different art forms to help build social and communication skills and work towards a final production or performance to share with family and friends. We also provide one-on-one coaching and other community services; it’s a really beautiful purple world we’ve built,” she said.

    Perri often collaborates with fellow alumni at Purple Carrots, with more than half of the Purple Carrots team comprised of DART graduates.

    “Being part of the DART community was a totally different way of learning, steeped in community. Everyone — faculty, staff and students — support each other, during and beyond graduation. I am grateful to have been given the space to create and find my path and continue working with my Brock community,” she said.

    Perri’s professional practice previously extended beyond the drama studio as an Expressive Arts Therapist, using creative expression as a therapeutic tool to support diverse communities through life transitions, including grief and palliative care.

    Perri has also empowered the next generation of creative leaders through education, teaching students at Mohawk College how to integrate the arts into treatment for individuals living with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and instructing DART students at Brock on how to leverage movement in education and theatre applications.

    She said being recognized as a Distinguished Graduate is an honour.

    “The University has always been there to support me. I am so grateful, and I try to pay it forward everyday through the work that I do. I’ve made it this far, and I will keep going.”

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    Categories: Alumni, News

  • ‘Now, you get to exist the way you want to’: Dramatic Arts grad’s life-changing journey

    Image caption: Dramatic Arts graduate Oliver Webb Wilkinson (BA ’25) celebrated his academic achievements as well as his journey of self-discovery through artistic creation during Brock’s 117th Convocation.

    Wednesday, June 11, 2025 | by 

    Oliver Webb Wilkinson (BA ’25) will never forget the first time he stepped on the Marilyn I. Walker Theatre stage as his authentic self: a transgender man.

    At the end of his first year studying Dramatic Arts (DART) at Brock’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts (MIWSFPA), Webb Wilkinson realized he was not quite who he thought he was.

    “I entered first year living in residence a regular city girl, but quickly realized something was different for me,” he said.

    Webb Wilkinson embarked on a winding — and joyful — journey of self-discovery.

    “All of my professors and classmates were so supportive as I was figuring out what was happening in my head and heart. How could I marry what my soul is with what my body is? The path is different for every trans or gender-queer person,” he said.

    Brock’s Student Health Services team helped Webb Wilkinson navigate important health information and access resources, support that Webb Wilkinson was grateful for as he began his medical transition.

    Photograph of four actors in scene from Mementos

    Oliver Webb Wilkinson (BA ’25) performed alongside fourth-year Dramatic Arts students and members of Peregrine Theatre Co. in “Mementos,” which explores themes of hope and amidst life’s challenges. From left are Megan Mastantuono, Simon Bell, Webb Wilkinson and Maddox Keller.

    “Partaking in the creation of who you are is a beautiful, empowering thing; truly feeling who you are and seeing it outwardly is magic,” he said.

    Studying theatre at Brock, with a Concentration in Performance, allowed Webb Wilkinson to explore themes of identity through creativity and playfulness.

    “Failure doesn’t exist in DART; if things don’t work, you try something else. What I will remember is the sense of play and lack of judgment in classes,” he said. “Trial and error is part of making theatre, we learn from things that don’t work.”

    Through Brock co-op opportunities, Webb Wilkinson worked every summer at professional theatre organizations, including Crane Creations Theatre Company as Artistic Producer, Pirate Life Theatre as a performer and recently Theatrix Costume House in Hamilton as an intern.

    These experiences gave Webb Wilkinson a sense of what his future workplace would look like and allowed him to benefit from professors who are theatre makers and learn from professionals like DART’s Head of Wardrobe Bobbi Pidduck, who works in wardrobe at the Shaw Festival.

    “It’s school theatre at a professional calibre, and there is nothing like a mainstage at Brock,” Webb Wilkinson said.

    In the DART 2023 mainstage production of A Vampire Story, Webb Wilkinson played his first role as a male character, and said the creative team led by Director Gyllian Raby were completely open to his interpretation of masculinity.

    “It was an incredible and affirming moment for me,” he said.

    In his final year, Webb Wilkinson explored his interest in costuming as the Assistant Designer for the Department Mainstage Scorched, mentored by Head of Wardrobe Bobbi Pidduck and production designer and faculty member, David Vivian, and also played key roles in the DART 4D56 production Mementos, a student-led production guided by Associate Professor Mike Griffin.

    “We were so lucky to have Professor Griffin guiding us as we wrote and mounted Mementos,” he said. “I spoke with him a lot about the growing stress of being trans at a time when there is increasing oppressive legislation targeting the trans and queer community — but at the same time, experiencing the joy of being loved and supported by your family and friends.”

    Webb Wilkinson wrote characters reflecting these themes into the play. He said a line in Mementos summed it up for him.

    “‘Now, you get to exist the way you want to’: to write those words and perform them was life changing. Theatre speaks to people in profound ways, and Brock gave me that chance to communicate with audiences whose stories were similar,” Webb Wilkinson said.

    This summer, Webb Wilkinson will be working in Toronto with MERCHANT, a production company specializing in commercials and collaborations with advertising agencies. He will help build storyboards, check and book film locations, conduct research on props and costumes and be a production assistant on set.

    Webb Wilkinson said he’s become a whole different person in the best way possible at Brock.

    “The University has been such a kind and wonderful environment. I don’t want to leave, but Brock has made sure I’m prepared to go.”

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    Categories: Alumni, Current Students, News

  • Youth theatre festival shines spotlight on Canada’s brightest emerging talent

    Image caption: High school students from Ontario and New Brunswick made puppets in a workshop led by Dramatic Arts instructor and local designer for theatre Alexa Fraser as part of the 2025 National STAR Festival hosted at the MIWSFPA.

    Wednesday, May 21, 2025 | by 

    Teens learn tricks of theatre trade from industry pros

    Secondary school theatre students and creative professionals from across the country recently gathered for a dynamic celebration of creativity and excellence in youth theatre.

    Hosted by Brock’s Department of Dramatic Arts (DART), the 2025 National STAR (School Theatrical Arts Recognition) Festival welcomed 200 students to the Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts (MIWSFPA) from May 8 to 10 for a packed schedule of workshops and opportunities to showcase their talents through friendly competition.

    David Vivian, DART Associate Professor and Scenographer, said engaging workshops led by acclaimed industry professionals and post-secondary educators provided a powerful platform for students to shine.

    “From musical theatre to playwriting and technical production participants gained valuable insight from influential theatre artists,” he said. The festival is unique for its focus on story telling and performance without design elements such as sets and costumes.

    Vivian co-organized the festival with lead Tracy Garratt, Program Leader for the Arts with the District School Board of Niagara and a teacher at A.N. Myer Secondary School in Niagara Falls.

    Photo of carpentry expert Ed Harris giving demonstration to students at STAR Fest

    Dramatic Arts graduate James McCoy (BA ’14), left, Head Technician at the Roselawn Theatre and DART Head of Scenic Construction and Instructor Ed Harris demonstrated stagecraft skills to students of Laura Secord Secondary School, A.N. Myer Secondary School and Waterloo Oxford District Secondary School during the Technical Theatre Olympics Challenge.

    Garratt, a champion of STAR Festival programming in Niagara, said opportunities to engage with diverse narratives and characters help students develop empathy and critical thinking skills, fostering a deeper understanding of the world around them and inspiring change in their communities.

    “As a passionate teacher in the arts, I believe in the transformative power of theatre and the joy of participating in festivals that celebrate creativity,” she said. “Theatre not only nurtures artistic voices but also serves as a vital educational tool that helps students explore complex social issues and inequities.”

    DART Chair Jennifer Roberts-Smith’s delivered a keynote welcome and remarked that now — more than ever — the world needs theatre made by diverse new voices.

    “Dramatic Arts at Brock is fortunate to have our University’s support in making an equitable and inclusive space for all voices to grow,” she said. “We were delighted to welcome the new perspectives of this year’s STAR Festival participants to our beautiful facilities at the Marilyn I. Walker School.”

    Adjudicators of the event represented a diverse cast of theatre professionals in the region, including current and past Shaw Festival ensemble members.

    Vivian said DART’s close relationship with the Shaw Festival’s performing, production and administrative teams is an important component of learning for the Brock community.

    “The DART Shaw Festival Internship has been a life-changing experience for our senior and graduating students,” he said.

    DART graduates also returned to lend their expertise to the next generation, including theatre artist James McCoy (BA ’14), Head Technician at the Roselawn Theatre with Lighthouse Festival Theatre in Port Colborne.

    McCoy shared his skills and career experience in the STARfest Technical Theatre Olympics, a program of learning and fun competitive collaboration in stagecraft. Students learned news skills and put them to the test in a program adapted for the festival by McCoy, Vivian, and Head of Stage Construction for Dramatic Arts, Ed Harris.

    The opportunity to meet colleague theatre artists from across the country was at the foundation of the community-building event.  Emmett Carter, a student from A.N. Myer Secondary School emphasized that the opportunity to learn and create with new friends, and then witness their performances and presentations was the highpoint of their experience.

    “Meeting people from across Canada was cool. …. Being all here, together at the festival, allows me to see what people are doing across the country and gives me the opportunity to learn what is important to kids from other provinces,” he said.

    Photo of students performing onstage at STAR Fest.

    Students from DSBN Academy in St. Catharines performed an original new play “Dogs Smell Blood” written by student Alaster Nikolic (front). The students polished the play in two sessions with renowned Canadian playwright John Lazarus and Canadian actor, screenwriter and sound designer Sean Meldrum. The play was selected in the national competition for the STAR Short Play program and will be published by TRW Plays (New York).

    Matt Niddrie, a student from A.N. Myer Secondary School, highlighted the joy of experiencing the final moments of the festival.

    “We were all cheering each other on and celebrating each other and our respective accomplishments. This festival builds community. The workshops bring us all together; we all share the same ideals. The festival is a great time for us to be together supporting each other’s passion for theatre arts,” he said.

    During the festival, a DART Creative Citizenship Scholarship award was launched by the department, with the inaugural award presented to a Saint Paul Catholic High School student.

    “Whether these emerging young artists pursue studies in music theatre, dramatic arts, teacher education or other subjects such as the pre-med sciences, nursing, maths and business, I am very enthusiastic about their developing capacity to drive original and meaningful change,” Vivian said.

    The third Niagara Regional STAR Festival is planned for December 2025 at the MIWSFPA.

    Watch the video report below by YourTV Niagara featuring an interview with the lead organizer, Tracy Garratt. (4:13)

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    Categories: Alumni, Future students, News, Visiting Artists