The Telegram (St. John's)

Drawn from history

Opera aims to bring story of Beothuks to life using sketches and records of Shawnadith­it

- BY HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER

In 1829, a uniquely important young woman died of tuberculos­is in St. John’s.

Shawnadith­it was the last living member of the Beothuk — Newfoundla­nd’s lost Indigenous tribe, who died out after Europeans brought violence and disease to the island.

She left behind drawings and records that constitute most of what we know about her people.

It is the stuff of operas — and is now becoming one.

A libretto based on her life is being developed as a co-production between the St. John’sbased Opera on the Avalon and Toronto’s Tapestry Opera.

Workshoppe­d for the first time this month at the Arts and Culture Centre in St. John’s, “Shawnadith­it” is to make its Toronto debut next summer.

The libretto, by Saskatchew­an-born, Algonquin writer Yvette Nolan, is structured around the 10 sketches Shawnadith­it left behind at the home of explorer William Cormack.

Nolan relied on historical texts, including the writings of Cormack — who founded the “Beothic Institutio­n” and sought to preserve Beothuk history — and the work of scholar Ingeborg Marshall.

But Nolan said most of her work draws from stories found between the lines of recorded history.

“As an Indigenous person and as a feminist, it means we have to read against the grain,” said Nolan. “We have to read what’s not there. But that’s also the story of being Indigenous in this country.”

Nolan reached out to Indigenous artists from across the country, including Aria Evans, Michelle Olson, Jerry Evans, Lori Blondeau, and Jordan Bennet, to interpret Shawnadith­it’s artwork for the show’s design.

“It’s so fascinatin­g to me what she created in that little time, inside that little space,” Nolan said. “It’s not just the artifact that was left, but how it has affected us as Indigenous artists that we get to show the audience.”

It tells Shawnadith­it’s story from the time she met William Cormack until her death.

The workshop paired Nolan’s writing with initial musical compositio­ns from St. John’sbased Dean Burry.

Burry had been fascinated by Shawnadith­it’s story since his childhood growing up in Gander. After taking a few runs at writing the opera, Burry asked

his longtime friend Nolan to work with him.

Once Tapestry Opera came on board, they reached out to Marion Newman to star.

Originally from Vancouver Island, Newman is an accomplish­ed mezzo-soprano opera singer of Kwagiulth and Sto:lo heritage. She wasn’t familiar with Shawnadith­it’s story, but it was easy for her to find places of connection with the character.

“I think any Indigenous person has probably had that feeling, or met up with somebody who said, ‘Oh, I didn’t realize there were still Indigenous people. You’re the first one I’ve ever met.’ Like, that has happened several times in my life,” Newman said.

“The idea of actually being a people who is understood to be disappeare­d resonates.”

The task of bringing Shawnadith­it’s story to life comes

with big challenges — for starters, how to write an authentic story about a people with no surviving members to consult?

This was one of the reasons the story is based around Shawnadith­it’s drawings. Artist Jerry Evans, who grew up in Grand Falls-windsor, says consulting with other East Coast Indigenous people has been a crucial part of ensuring the opera’s authentici­ty, in the music and the language.

“You can look at it as being dialectic changes between us, but we have similar things, we have exact words for certain things, for animals and such,” said Evans, who is of Mi’kmaq heritage. “I think we can just look to our cousins.”

While little is known about Beothuk musical traditions, Burry says he’s approachin­g the compositio­n by using natural objects to bring Shawnadith­it’s world to life.

“Growing up here in Newfoundla­nd, we certainly share the wind, and we share the tides and the rain, and so it was those sounds, those sounds that we all would have heard the same way, that I wanted to start to derive the music from,” said Burry.

Burry and Newman say Shawnadith­it’s story is well-suited to opera, expressing the idea that music is the universal, emotional language that everyone can understand.

“When you think about what opera is, it’s storytelli­ng through music with some instrument­ation, rhythm, costumes, makeup, masks, what have you. Most cultures have a tradition of that kind of storytelli­ng through music,” said Newman.

After the initial read-through, Burry will compose the majority of the opera’s music, before “Shawnadith­it” premieres in Toronto next summer.

There’s still creative work to be done, but collaborat­ors like Evans hope they will keep alive her story, and that of the Beothuk people, “so that there’s something more than that footnote.”

“They were our relations,” said Evans. “They were people. They were human beings.”

Newman says after hearing the initial soundscape­s and compositio­ns, she’s starting to feel Shawnadith­it come alive.

“When the waves are pulling away, that sort of thing paints the whole picture for me — my character, where she’s from, and what her world has been,” said Newman.

“Which makes her not just a character on a page, but she’s starting to become human.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, OPERA ON THE AVALON ?? Canadian mezzo-soprano Marion Newman, left, sings during a workshop for a new opera being written about the life of Shawnadith­it, the last surviving member of the Beothuk people in Newfoundla­nd in St. John’s, N.L. in this undated handout photo.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, OPERA ON THE AVALON Canadian mezzo-soprano Marion Newman, left, sings during a workshop for a new opera being written about the life of Shawnadith­it, the last surviving member of the Beothuk people in Newfoundla­nd in St. John’s, N.L. in this undated handout photo.

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