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Ottawa

NAC to create indigenous theatre department

The National Arts Centre in Ottawa announced Thursday it's creating a new Department of Indigenous Theatre as part of its strategic plan for 2015-2020.

'A place where the next great works could be developed'

Actor August Schellenberg as King Lear in an all-aboriginal production of the play at the National Arts Centre in 2012. (Chasinglear.com)

The National Arts Centre in Ottawa announced Thursday it's creating a new Department of Indigenous Theatreas part of its strategic plan for 2015-2020.

It's being heralded as a historic move that will finally bring Canada's disparate indigenous voices together and put a long-needed national spotlight on their artistic works.

"I really see it as a place where the next great works could be developed," saidactor-director Michael Greyeyes, a Plains Cree artistic director of Signal Theatre in Toronto.

"There are many countries that have actually had national indigenous theatres, and Canada one of the most highly developed, wealthiest countries in the world not having one has been an odd thing because we've had a vibrant theatre community for decades."

Seeds planted 10 years ago

The NAC says the seeds for the idea were first planted 10 years ago, when Peter Hinton was artistic director and programmed indigenous work into every season. In that time, the NAC also worked with indigenous artists on various projects and started doing retreats with them.

Rosemary Thompson, NAC

9 years ago
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NAC communications officer, Rosemary Thompson estimates the new program will cost $2 million annually.

"It's a very, very gratifying moment for us, because we'll be 50 in 2019," said Rosemary Thompson, the NAC' director of communications."And that we will have a full-fledged indigenous theatre department to mark our 50th anniversary is right ...It should've happened a long time ago."

Greyeyes, who also teaches at York University's Department of Theatre, was among those who took part in the NAC's 2014 summit in Banff, Alta. He says it was there that the formal conversations about the indigenous theatres began.

'Astounding' body of work

When the NAC conducted a study looking at the artistic projects of Canada's indigenous population, it found "the body of work was astounding."

"Even us, like people who are creating the body of work, were simply astounded," saidGreyeyes. "Production after production, play after play, it was pages upon pages."

Such works spanned the worlds of theatre, dance and opera, among others.

'I think that's one of the purposes of the NAC indigenous theatre, is to allow a place for these incredible works.- Michael Greyeyes

Many aren't aware of this vast body of work because it isn't produced a lot, saidGreyeyes.

"'The Rez Sisters' (play) gets produced a lot, other big plays get remounted, but many, many plays don't see that rich production history, and it's production history that turns good plays into canonical works," he said.

"I think that's one of the purposes of the NAC indigenous theatre, is to allow a place for these incredible works, deservedly canonical works, to gain the recognition across the country."

Public, private donations

Thompson saidthe theatre will be partly financed through both public and private donations, and they're "convinced it's going to be very well supported."

The NAC will appoint an artistic director for the theatre in 2017 and launch its first season of full programming in the fall of 2019.

"What we're hearing from indigenous artists is that it should be multi-disciplinary it could be dance, it could be music, it could be visual, it could be craft," said Thompson.

"We take their lead."

Sandra Abma/CBC