Times Colonist

Troubled theatre focuses on women

- ADINA BRESGE

TORONTO — The Soulpepper Theatre Company is putting a spotlight on female and minority voices in its 2018-2019 season as the Toronto-based not-for-profit forges ahead in the face of lawsuits over sexual-misconduct allegation­s against its founding artistic director.

The new slate of shows kicks off in October with the Canadian première of Marco Ramirez’s The Royale, based on the true story of African-American boxer Jack Johnson’s fight to become the heavyweigh­t world champion amid early 20th-century racial segregatio­n.

Spring will bring acclaimed shows such as the Tony Awardwinni­ng Copenhagen, directed by Katrina Darychuk, and Pulitzer Prize-winning family comedic-drama August: Osage County, directed by Jackie Maxwell.

The Brothers Size by Tarell Alvin McCraney, the writer of the 2017 Oscar-winning best picture Moonlight, will hit the stage in May, directed by Mumbi Tindyebwa Otu.

“This season includes new voices and voices we have grown to love and cherish,” acting artistic director Alan Dilworth said in a statement. “These are our stories — they are stories for our time.”

In January, four actresses filed separate lawsuits against Albert Schultz and the company, alleging he groped them, exposed himself, pressed against them or otherwise behaved inappropri­ately. None of their allegation­s have been tested in court.

Schultz, who has resigned from Soulpepper, said he will “vigorously defend” himself against the allegation­s.

In February, the Canada Council for the Arts announced it was rescinding a planned funding increase for Soulpepper, but also maintainin­g its base funding at previous levels. Soulpepper reported more than $12.5 million in revenues in 2017, about 16 per cent of which came from grants, according to an annual report released in June.

After an embattled year, the theatre’s lineup for next season will showcase female and minority playwright­s, directors and characters. Production­s include Oraltorio: a Theatrical Mixtape, which follows two Toronto girls as they grapple with womanhood and identity through Afroinspir­ed soundscape­s, and Caryl Churchill’s Escaped Alone, mounted by an all-female creative and production team.

Joanna Garfinkel will direct Japanese Problem in October, about Japanese-Canadians who were sent to internment camps during the Second World War.

This will be followed by the world première of the Silk Bath Collective’s Yellow Rabbit, directed by Jasmine Chen, which centres on a battle for racial supremacy in a post-nuclear wasteland. The play will be performed in English, Mandarin and Cantonese.

Kate Hennig’s The Virgin Trial, a companion piece to last year’s The Last Wife, about the sexual intrigue of the Tudor court, will enjoy a limited run at the theatre early next winter.

Around the holiday season, the theatre will stage familyfrie­ndly offerings such as A Christmas Carol and Peter Pan, in addition to the new musical Rose, based on Gertrude Stein’s The World is Round.

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