Anusree Roy
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Anusree Roy | |
---|---|
Born | 1982 Kolkata, India |
Occupation | Playwright, actress |
Nationality | Indian/Canadian |
Period | 2000s-present |
Notable works | Pyaasa, Brothel #9, Letters to my Grandma, Roshni, Sultans of the Street |
Anusree Roy (born 1982 in Kolkata, India) is an Indo-Canadian award-winning playwright, actress and librettist.[1] Roy emigrated to Canada with her family at age 17. Roy writes plays because she truly believes that they have the power to change the world [2]
Education
She holds a B.A in theatre from York University and an M.A from the University of Toronto.[1]
Theatre work
She premiered her first piece, breathlessness, in 2006.[1] Her play Pyaasa debuted at Theatre Passe Muraille in 2007, and won two Dora Mavor Moore Awards in the independent theatre division in 2008, including Outstanding New Play and Outstanding Performance (Female).[1] Her subsequent plays have included Letters to My Grandma, Roshni and Brothel #9.[1] Brothel #9 won the Carol Bolt Award and the Dora Mavor Moore Award for Outstanding New Play in 2011, and was a nominee for the Governor General's Award for English-language drama at the 2012 Governor General's Awards.[1] She has also won the RBC Emerging Artist Award, the K. M. Hunter Award and the Siminovitch Protege Prize. She has premiered two operas, Noor over Afghan and The Golden Boy.[1]
She has been playwright-in-residence at the Canadian Stage, Theatre Passe Muraille, Nightwood Theatre, Factory Theatre and the Blyth Festival, and is co-artistic director with David DeGrow and Thomas Morgan Jones of Theatre Jones Roy.[3]
She currently plays Nurse Patel on the TV show Remedy. She was also a story editor for Remedy in its first season. A]
Play summaries
- Brothel # 9 - Rekha, a young South Asian village woman, travels to Calcutta to take an honest job, only to discover she has been sold into a brothel. There she meets Jamuna, the jaded madam, who believes there's no escape from the confines of their trade. Strong-willed and determined to defy fate, Rekha realizes she can shape her own destiny and discovers compassion, faith and forgiveness are the foundation of true liberty.[4]
- Letters to My Grandma - Malobee unearths letters detailing her grandmother's fight to survive the 1947 partition of India, which resonates with Malobee's own struggles to create a new life in present-day Toronto.[5]
- Pyaasa - Set in Calcutta, Pyaasa tells the story of Chaya, an eleven-year-old untouchable who dreams of nothing more than learning her times tables. When Chaya's mother begs a woman from a higher caste to give Chaya a job at a local tea stall, Chaya's journey from childhood to adulthood begins and ends over ten days.[6]
- Little Pretty and The Exceptional - a family drama involving two sisters and their father preparing to open their new sari shop in Toronto's Little India neighbourhood.[7]
Awards
- Dora Mavor Moore Award Outstanding New Play for Pyaasa (2008)
- Dora Mavor Moore Award Outstanding Performance by a Female for Pyaasa (2008)
- RBC Emerging Artist Award Theatre (2009)
- Dora Mavor Moore Award Outstanding New Play for Brothel # 9 (2011)
- K. M Hunter Artist Award Theatre (2011)
- Dora Mavor Moore Award Outstanding New Play (Brothel # 9) (2011)
- Carol Bolt Award for Playwriting Brothel # 9 (2011)
- Governor General's Award. Theatre (Brothel # 9) (2013)
- Siminovitch Protege Prize Theatre (Brothel # 9) (2012)
- Dora Mavor Moore Award Outstanding New Play (Sultans of the Street) (2014)
- Dora Mavor Moore Award Outstanding Ensemble (Sultans of the Street) (2014)
- Dora Mavor Moore Award Outstanding Direction (Sultans of the Street) (2014)
- Dora Mavor Moore Award Outstanding Production (Sultans of the Street) (2014)
References
- ^ a b c d e f g Roy, Anusree. Canadian Theatre Encyclopedia, 10 November 2011.
- ^ Bhatia, Nandi (2013). "Diasporic activism and the mediations of "home": South asian voices in canadian drama". Studies in Social Justice. 7 (1): 129–141. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
- ^ "Anusree Roy gets to roar in The Golden Dragon". NOW, 5 January 2012.
- ^ http://www.playwrightsguild.ca/play/brothel-9
- ^ http://www.playwrightsguild.ca/play/letters-my-grandma
- ^ http://www.playwrightsguild.ca/play/pyassa
- ^ Wheeler, Brad (29 March 2017). "What playwright Anusree Roy is watching, looking forward to and tuning into". theglobeandmail.com. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
- Canadian stage actresses
- Canadian women dramatists and playwrights
- Indian stage actresses
- Indian women dramatists and playwrights
- Actresses from Toronto
- Writers from Toronto
- Writers from Kolkata
- Indian emigrants to Canada
- York University alumni
- University of Toronto alumni
- Dora Mavor Moore Award winners
- Living people
- Canadian writers of Asian descent
- Canadian actresses of Indian descent
- 1982 births
- 21st-century Canadian dramatists and playwrights
- 21st-century Indian women writers
- 21st-century Indian dramatists and playwrights
- Women writers from West Bengal
- Dramatists and playwrights from West Bengal