Articles tagged with: metis

  • 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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  • 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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    Categories: Announcements, Current Students, Events, Faculty & Instructors, Future students, In the Media, News, Performance Season, Plays, Uncategorised, Visiting Artists