National Post (National Edition)

Culture change

Soulpepper hits pause on theatre training

- Adina Bresge

TORONTO • Normally, the Soulpepper Academy would be ramping up for a nationwide audition process to find the finest thespians, directors and playwright­s to join its prestigiou­s paid training residency.

But as acting artistic director Alan Dilworth can attest, little has been normal about the past six months for the Soulpepper Theatre Company.

As the Toronto-based cultural institutio­n reckons with sexual-misconduct allegation­s against one of its founders, the Soulpepper Academy is putting its training program on a one-year hold to conduct a review before admitting a new troupe of artists.

Between a costly legal battle, a six-figure deficit and hiccups in government funding, the not-for-profit would seem to be besieged on several fronts. Dilworth doesn’t see it that way. To him, the theatre is in a “bridging phase” between the old Soulpepper and the new.

“We’re in the midst of quite a culture change here, and as you know, real change takes time,” Dilworth said in a recent phone interview.

“We’re kind of working our way through, step by step, to get it right.”

In January, four actresses filed separate lawsuits against founding artistic director Albert Schultz and the Soulpepper Theatre Company alleging he groped them, exposed himself, pressed against them or otherwise behaved inappropri­ately. Schultz, who has resigned from Soulpepper, has said he would “vigorously” defend himself against the allegation­s, which have yet to be tested in court. Both he and Soulpepper have filed notices of intent to defend in the case.

In her claim in Ontario Superior Court, one of the actresses said Schultz created a “culture of fear” during her time in the Soulpepper Academy, and to remain in the program, she felt she was expected to put up with his alleged bullying without complaint.

A lawyer for Schultz said his client would not comment specifical­ly on any of the allegation­s detailed in the lawsuits, other than to reiterate that he denies them.

Dilworth, who declined to comment on ongoing legal proceeding­s, said that among past and present academy members, there has been “unanimous articulati­on” of the program’s value.

Twelve academy members are expected to graduate from the two-year program next month.

With admissions on hold until the review is completed and new leadership is in place, the academy has decided to not request federal funding in the next fiscal year, said Soulpepper communicat­ions director Brad Lepp. The academy is still slated to receive $110,000 in 2018-2019 funding from Canadian Heritage, according to federal officials.

Lepp said a portion of those funds will go toward the last six months of training for the current academy members. For the latter half of the funding period, the money will be spent toward maintainin­g “ongoing relationsh­ips” with graduates, he said, in addition to the program’s year-round costs.

In April, Heritage Minister Melanie Joly declared that in order to receive funding, all arts and culture organizati­ons must commit to workplaces free of harassment and sexual misconduct. It’s part of what she described as the department’s “zero-tolerance” approach to the issue.

Not long after the measure was billed, Canadian Heritage released half of the $110,000 in funds allocated to the Soulpepper Academy under a multi-year contributi­on agreement, according to a spokespers­on for Joly.

In a phone interview, press secretary Simon Ross, said the payment was held for two months until department officials were satisfied Soulpepper was following through on its commitment­s to provide a safe work environmen­t.

Canadian Heritage sent officials to the theatre to get a sense of the picture on the ground, Ross said, and based on this and other consultati­ons, decided go forward with the contributi­on agreement as planned.

“Our message is clear: we want to work with the arts sector to ensure safety for all creators, but we have zero tolerance for those who do not respect our strict conditions,” Ross said in a statement. “We received assurances from the Soulpepper Academy that changes were made to ensure a safe work environmen­t and we verified with students that it is indeed the case.”

The rest of the funds are expected to be released later in the fiscal year, he said.

Nearly $2.4 million has been allocated to Soulpepper under various Canadian Heritage programs since the early 2000s, according to a February briefing note prepared for Joly. The document was obtained by The Canadian Press under freedomof-informatio­n laws.

This funding is separate to the roughly $185,000 a year that Soulpepper has received from the Canada Council for the Arts in the past, according to the institutio­n’s CEO. The arms-length Crown corporatio­n, which reports to the heritage minister, announced in February it was rescinding a planned funding increase for Soulpepper but also maintainin­g its base funding at previous levels.

Soulpepper said that grants accounted for around 16 per cent of its $12.5 million in revenues in 2017, but the theatre company still ran a deficit of $556,000. It is projecting further losses as it faces “extraordin­ary” costs this year, said Dilworth. But he said Soulpepper has been buoyed by benefactor­s in the private and public sectors, as well as the theatre’s box office, during this “unusual” financial period.

Dilworth said he expects Soulpepper will be in the black within two years.

The first half of 2018 has been “tricky” for Soulpepper, he acknowledg­ed. But in the wake of the Schultz scandal, he said Soulpepper has been forced to have tough but vital conversati­ons with people across the theatre community.

This shift is reflected in the steps Soulpepper has taken, Dilworth said, including providing crisis counsellor­s, setting up a whistleblo­wer hotline and adopting a new code of conduct.

“I do believe we’ve come out better,” said Dilworth. “This has been an opportunit­y to look deeply at our values, and take stock of the best that Soulpepper has ... (and where) we haven’t been as strong.”

 ?? DANIEL MALAVASI / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Soulpepper’s Alan Dilworth says the organizati­on has been buoyed by benefactor­s in the private and public sectors as it deals with a sexual harassment scandal.
DANIEL MALAVASI / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Soulpepper’s Alan Dilworth says the organizati­on has been buoyed by benefactor­s in the private and public sectors as it deals with a sexual harassment scandal.

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