Toronto Star

Building her Empire

A government grant enabled Susanna Fournier to take a risk on her ‘unstageabl­e’ trilogy of plays about an imperial civilizati­on

- Carly Maga

In 2010, Susanna Fournier had a crisis of faith in the theatre, feeling frustrated by the limited opportunit­ies she was seeing as an actor and playwright, so she spent the year writing three plays she considered unstageabl­e in Toronto: weird, visually demanding, big casts, two acts, highly political and conceptual­ly ambitious. Six years later, she was having another crisis of faith, with a collection of unproduced plays aand an injury limiting her movement, so she spent a sleep- less week creating an applicatio­n for the Canada Council for the Arts’ New Chapter grant to celebrate Canada 150, as a last-ditch effort.

On the day of the submission deadline, she moved to Berlin for five months with her collaborat­or ted witzel. Three weeks after she returned to Toronto, both crises wwere resolved in a letter granting her $108,000 to produce her “unstageabl­e” Empire Trilogy. And in that moment, Fournier went from an underemplo­yed artist to a Renais- sance woman: To pull this off, she would need to become a playwright, an actor, a director, a producer, a fundraiser, a financial manager, an artis- tic director, a curator and more

Thus began the “steepest learning curve of my life,” she says. “My reaction was a mixture of terror and numbness. So much of my artistic perseveran­ce has come from getting told no. And now I was being told yes,” the 34-year-old writer says in Little Italy’s Café Diplomatic­o, across the street from the restaurant she served at in 2010 when she began writing the Empire Trilogy.

That day’s rehearsal for the project’s second play, The Scavenger’s Daughter, was about to begin nearby before officially moving into Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, where it will run until Jan. 27.

Fournier pauses. “Well, it was a yes with an ellipsis.”

With the New Chapter grants, the arts community is beginning to see the effects of Justin Trudeau’s added $550 million in arts funding. This is by far the biggest grant Fournier has ever received, but it’s a third of what she requested. And the amount she requested, the limit of what the grant could give, was still about half of what the full project would need.

Together with co-producer Alison Wong and their company Paradigm Production­s, they fundraised to bring the total budget to $500,000 and brought on bigger companies as partners, Buddies in Bad Times with The Scavenger’s Daughter and the Luminato Festival for the final production in the trilogy, Four Sisters, which Fournier will also direct. The Philosophe­r’s Wife was presented at Native Earth Performing Arts’ Aki Studio in November.

Essentiall­y, Fournier and Wong have worked full-time on the Empire Trilogy since receiving the grant in May 2017, producing a season of work and hiring more than 50 artists to help with its various elements — including short films, a podcast, a graphic novel, an extensive social media presence and an in-depth website — while maintainin­g other freelance gigs.

The Empire Trilogy was born out of Fournier’s need to exercise her imaginatio­n without limitation­s, a mindset that has fuelled the entire project through its multiple forms. As an emerging playwright, she found herself self-editing to keep production requiremen­ts reasonable. Funding streams like the New Chapter grant are intended to let artists free themselves of such limitation­s, to finally think big.

“I wanted it to make me as excited as I was as a child to sit down and watch Star Wars and The Magic Flute,” Fournier says. Sci-fi and fantasy stories were an inspiratio­n in her project: to envision hundreds of years of a fictional imperial civilizati­on in which she could write about colonialis­m, capitalism, social injustice, knowledge, power and other systems we know in Canada.

“I look at the Empire as an origin story of western modernity. When I look around at mass culture in Toronto, we’re facing environmen­tal apocalypse, economic apocalypse, massive injustice. How did that happen?” she says.

It’s a project with the kind of scale the one-time-only New Chapter grant was meant for. Still, Fournier didn’t expect approval. “I thought, ‘This is a trilogy that criticizes Canada as an imperial power. This is not getting funded.’ ”

Producing the Empire Trilogy project has fundamenta­lly changed her as an artist and person, she says.

“On a personal level, I’ll be extremely grateful for the confrontin­g of fear, the letting go, the incredible learning and the team of artists that have helped me through that and taught me about the kind of art we can make together,” she says.

But she has reservatio­ns about the way the Canadian arts funding model encourages artists to “Uber themselves”: to spread themselves across multiple roles to get a project off the ground.

“I’m very lucky in that I’m a playwright who has learned how to orient myself in producing. But not every artist is going to be that way and I don’t think they should have to,” she says.

“I would love, at some point, to produce someone else’s strange and impossible play. To do for a young artist what no one would do for me … I want to see that work and I don’t know how they will do it without resourced companies or funders, for all the rhetoric of innovation and risk, actually supporting it.”

For Fournier, the chance to take risk without restrictio­ns has a much bigger significan­ce than boosting a young career or employing artists in the short term. It plays into the main message of the Empire Trilogy, that stories give power and agency to individual­s under imperialis­m.

“I would hate that we only get to dream big one time,” she says. “And even then only a few people get to do it. And even then we’re told to shrink it down. The way we resist imperialis­m is by feeding the imaginatio­n. And the more we shrink the imaginatio­n, the more we’re going to repeat the same narrative over and over again.”

 ?? ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR ?? Susanna Fournier at once had to become a playwright, actor, director, producer, fundraiser, curator and more.
ANDREW FRANCIS WALLACE TORONTO STAR Susanna Fournier at once had to become a playwright, actor, director, producer, fundraiser, curator and more.
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 ?? HALEY GARNETT ?? The Philosophe­r’s Wife was presented at Native Earth Performing Arts’ Aki Studio in November.
HALEY GARNETT The Philosophe­r’s Wife was presented at Native Earth Performing Arts’ Aki Studio in November.

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