Montreal Gazette

The show must go on

Soulpepper Theatre Company staging production post-harassment allegation­s

- VICTORIA AHEARN

The show will go on TORONTO at Toronto-based Soulpepper Theatre Company.

On Jan. 13, just over a week after four actresses filed separate lawsuits against the company and founding artistic director Albert Schultz, the theatre debuts its next production: American playwright Edward Albee’s Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng A Delicate Balance.

The Schultz scandal has posed a conundrum for patrons and artists alike, who must decide whether to support a production at Soulpepper as the company further investigat­es sexual harassment claims.

The lawsuits filed by Diana Bentley, Kristin Booth, Patricia Fagan and Hannah Miller allege Schultz groped them, exposed himself, pressed against them, or otherwise behaved inappropri­ately.

None of their allegation­s have been tested in court and neither Schultz nor Soulpepper have filed a statement of defence. Schultz said he will “vigorously defend” himself.

Soulpepper has said it was unaware of any allegation­s of sexual misconduct against Schultz or anyone else, having conducted investigat­ions into the issue as recently as this past fall.

Some patrons plan to boycott Soulpepper until it overhauls its board of directors, while others feel more comfortabl­e attending a show now that Schultz has resigned and an upcoming production of Amadeus that he was slated

to direct has been cancelled. Alan Dilworth is now acting artistic director.

Requests to speak to Soulpepper and A Delicate Balance cast members were declined.

Toronto actor Brendan Wall, who had a nine-year relationsh­ip with Soulpepper, said he knows some of the talent in the A Delicate Balance and is planning to see the show. At the same time, he supports the women who filed the lawsuits and he wants their voices to be at the forefront. “The theatre company has been the home to an enormous amount of talented and creative people, many of whom I call my friends,” said Wall.

“In the last week-and-a-half I’ve been thinking about the men and women who work every day in the office and have made that place their home. I 100 per cent believe the allegation­s made by Diana and

Kristin and Hannah and Patricia, and I support them 100 per cent ...”

Lisa Wakelam, a theatre enthusiast based in Hamilton, is a longtime Soulpepper subscriber and has tickets to see A Delicate Balance on Jan. 20. When she first heard of the accusation­s at Soulpepper, she felt “unease, shock” about attending a production there.

But Schultz’s resignatio­n changed her mind. “I’m glad that they’re proceeding,” Wakelam said.

Soulpepper co-founder Ted Dykstra, who isn’t working on A Delicate Balance, did not want to be interviewe­d but said he’s also glad the show is going ahead.

A Delicate Balance is about an upper-middle-class family and the drama that ensues when the daughter returns home and friends move in. Diana Leblanc, a Soulpepper founding member, is directing.

 ??  ?? Albert Schultz
Albert Schultz

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