Articles tagged with: Nav Brar

  • Wardrobe experience leaves Dramatic Arts grad on pins and needles — in the best way

    Image caption: Dramatic Arts graduate Nav Brar discovered his passion for wardrobe and costume design at Brock’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts, where he contributed his skills to creating costumes for performances.

    published Wednesday, June 10, 2026 in The Brock News | by 

    Nav Brar found an unexpected new passion woven into the fabric of his Brock University experience. Though he’s had a lifelong love for the stage, the Dramatic Arts (DART) graduate wasn’t sure where his academic path would lead when he first arrived at Brock — that is, until he stepped into Wardrobe at the Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts (MIWSFPA). Now, Brar is forging ahead with purpose after earning his degree and being honoured with the 2026 Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts Textile Award at Brock’s 119th Convocation on Wednesday, June 10. Always more focused on acting and writing, Brar had never pictured himself in theatre production. Then came his a first-year DART production course, which ignited his passion for fabric and materials. In his third year, he landed the role of Assistant Head of Wardrobe, learning from and working with DART’s Head of Wardrobe Bobbi Pidduck on the School’s theatre performances.

    Nav Brar crosses the stage in graduation gown at convocation.

    Dramatic Arts graduate Nav Brar discovered his passion for wardrobe and costume design at Brock’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts, where he contributed his skills to creating costumes for performances.

    Brar quickly picked up sewing, cutting and minor pattern drafting, all integral skills for professional costume designers. “Somehow, working with my hands and envisioning the final product, it was easy for me to understand what I needed to do,” he said. For Brar, the beauty is in the challenge of the process. “It’s envisioning the design, what you need to make, figuring out the math and then figuring out what the steps are,” he said. “Sometimes we build a simple T-shirt, and sometimes we work on hugely technical garments with lots of specifications to fit the production.” Working alongside Pidduck on mainstage productions, including Metamorphoses and Métis Nutcracker, was a transformative experience for Brar as he developed his design and dressing skills, bringing two-dimensional designs to three-dimensional life. “When the actor puts on the costume and performs on stage, you see it all come together,” he said. “It’s a very exhilarating experience to see something you’ve made or created give the desired effect.” When the curtain closes on each production, Brar is driven to keep creating, knowing he has contributed to enhancing the audience experience. “It’s incredibly meaningful and fulfilling,” he said. “Nav has been dedicated to his work, seeking to learn as many skills as possible and consistently improving with each new project, continuously navigating challenges with grace and humour that earned the respect of his peers and instructors at DART,” Pidduck said. From student peers to faculty, Brar said the support of the close-knit DART community sets the stage for students to grow and thrive in their academic and creative endeavours. “All of our professors and instructors are so kind. They are all talented theatre professionals and so willing to share their knowledge with students as we develop our own creative voices,” he said. “The opportunity to create in such a stunning facility has truly been a golden experience for me.”

    Photo of flower costumes from Metis Nutcracker Production.

    Nav Brar built dynamic costumes for the Dramatic Arts mainstage productions including Métis Nutcracker written by award-winning Canadian playwright and Assistant Professor Matthew MacKenzie.

    The Marilyn I. Walker Textile Award is given to a graduating student to further their apprenticeship or study in textiles. “Nav has contributed so much to the theatre program through his beautiful costume designs and constructions,” said Visual Arts Professor Linda Carreiro, Associate Dean, Fine and Performing Arts and MIWSFPA Director. “He truly deserves this award, and I’m thrilled that he will be able to use it to continue honing his craft.” Brar will pursue the Fashion Techniques and Design program at George Brown Polytechnic to expand on his theoretical and technical foundation in garment construction and costume building. He hopes to be found happily working away in a professional wardrobe room one day. “I am excited to keep developing my design eye,” he said. “I am forever grateful for the role Brock has played in setting me on this path.”

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    Categories: Alumni, Announcements, Current Students, Faculty & Instructors, Future students, In the Media, Media Releases, News, Uncategorised

  • 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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    Categories: Announcements, Current Students, Events, Future students, In the Media, Media Releases, News, Performance Season, Plays, Uncategorised

  • Brock to make splash with Metamorphoses mainstage

    Image caption: Brock University’s Dramatic Arts mainstage performance of Ovid’s Metamorphoses opens this Friday, Feb. 28 at the Marilyn I. Walker Theatre.

    Monday, February 24, 2025 | by 

    Creative minds in Brock University’s Faculty of Humanities have joined forces to bring an epic ancient Roman poem to life on stage.

    The Department of Dramatic Arts (DART) will present playwright Mary Zimmerman’s award-winning adaption of Metamorphoses — complete with a challenging stage element sure to make waves with audiences.

    The play, which includes a large pool of water central to the production, opens Friday, Feb. 28 at the Marilyn I. Walker Theatre stage in downtown St. Catharines.

    Though the original literary work dates back more than 2,000 years, Metamorphoses continues to capture imaginations across creative and academic disciplines. Written in Latin by Ovid, a Roman poet exiled by emperor Augustus in 8 CE, the collection of myths explores themes of transformation, beauty and struggle in the ancient world.

    “Mary Zimmerman’s adaptation shows how powerless people are empowered through Ovid’s stories, and we hope the hilarity and poignant drama will open similar transformations for audiences,” said retired DART Associate Professor Gyllian Raby, who is directing the production.

    Adam Rappold, Assistant Professor of Classics and Archaeology, teaches a course dedicated to Ovid’s Metamorphoses and worked on the mainstage as Dramaturge —  an expert in the interpretation and composition of theatrical works, often advising on the text and how it is represented on stage.

    Rappold advised on the poem’s literary devices and shared insights with the cast about storytelling and the construction of myths.

    “Contemporary artists and scholars have re-examined the rebelliousness of Ovid’s poem and rediscovered the critique of the Roman Empire, revealing the full compassionate range of the exiled Ovid’s vision,” he said.

    Raby says that theatrically, this has been the most challenging play she has tackled to date. She credits the production team at Brock’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts for rising to the occasion.

    The DART cast and production crew created a technically advanced and visually stunning stage environment, including the large pool of water famously called for by Zimmerman’s adaptation.

    DART Technical Director Gavin Fearon said throughout rehearsals, the production crew have continued to discover new aspects of the pool’s impact on every element of the show including choreography, props and lighting.

    “Students in every role are navigating challenges introduced by the water,” he said. “The costumes team in particular, needed to track wet and dry quick changes in under 30 seconds.”

    Audiences will also experience original music of composer and DART sound design Instructor Joe Lapinski (BA ’99) who has drawn inspiration from the ancient Greek philosophical idea that celestial bodies make music, known as the “music of the spheres.”

    Voice Instructor and soprano Leanne Vida in the Department of Music coached individual singers in the production, including fourth-year actor Maddox Keller, who also took on the role of Choral Conductor.

    Metamorphoses opens Friday, Feb. 28 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 1; Friday, March 7; and Saturday, March 8 at 7:30 p.m. A matinee performance is scheduled for 2 p.m. on Sunday, March 2.

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

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    Categories: Current Students, Faculty & Instructors, News, Performance Season, Plays