Shirley Barrie
Shirley Barrie | |
---|---|
Born | Shirley Grace Barrie September 30, 1945 Tillsonburg, Ontario |
Died | April 15, 2018 Princess Margaret Hospital, Toronto | (aged 72)
Website | |
www |
Shirley Barrie (1945-2018) was a Canadian writer. She was the co-founder of the Wakefield Tricycle Company and Tricycle Theatre. Her plays include Straight Stitching, Carrying the Calf, and Tripping Through Time.
Early life and education
[edit]Barrie was born on September 30 in 1945 in Tillsonburg, Ontario.[1][2] She was a member of the University Alumnae Dramatic Club at the University of Toronto.[3] Barrie attended Western University in London, Ontario and Carleton University in Ottawa.[1] While at Carleton, Barrie co-founded a college theatre group called Sock 'n' Buskin with Ken Chubb, who she would later marry.[4]
Career
[edit]In 1972, Barrie co-founded the Wakefield Tricycle Company in London, England with husband Ken Chubb.[2][4] They named the company in reference to medieval mystery plays and a pub in King's Cross. In 1980, the two set up the Tricycle Theatre, dropping Wakefield from the name, at Kilburn High Road.[5][6] Until 1984, Barrie was an associate director of Tricycle Theatre.[7]
After returning to Toronto, Barrie and Lib Spry founded Straight Stitching Productions in 1989.[2] Straight Stitching Productions produced Barrie's play Straight Stitching, about immigrant women working in the garment industry. The show featured songs by Arlene Mantle.[8] Straight Stitching went on to become a runner-up for the Floyd S. Chalmers Canadian Play Award.[9] Straight Stitching Productions later produced Carrying the Calf, a play for children addressing violence against women from the perspective of young women attending a self-defense class.[2] Barrie was inspired to write the play after reading a Globe and Mail article that claimed that, "81% of Canadian female university students admit to having experienced psychological, sexual or physical abuse on a date".[10] Carrying the Calf won a Dora Mavor Moore Award for outstanding play for young audiences in 1992.[11]
Working with the Workman Theatre Project, a theatre company that integrates people with mental illness, Barrie created the play Tripping Through Time in 1993. In the show, audiences are immersed in a mental asylum and given diagnoses at random. The play dramatizes experiences at the Queen Street Mental Health Centre from 1850 to the present.[12]
Awards and nominations
[edit]Year | Award | Category | Work | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1990 | Floyd S. Chalmers Award | n/a | Straight Stitching | Nominated | [9] |
1992 | Dora Mavor Moore Awards | Outstanding play for young audiences (small theatre) | Carrying the Calf | Won | [11] |
2015 | NOW Magazine’s People's Choice Awards | Best Toronto Playwright | n/a | Nominated | [7] |
2015 | Tom Hendry Awards | PGC Lifetime Award | n/a | Won | [13] |
Works
[edit]Plays:
- The Adventures of Super Granny and the Kid[2]
- Beautiful Lady, Tell Me...
- Brigid Bonfast: Space Scientist
- Choices
- The Girl in the Flower Basket
- In the Midst of Death
- Topsy Turvy[2]
- Straight Stitching[9]
- Shusha And The Story Snatcher[14]
- Riders Of The Sea[14]
- Jack Sheppard's Back[14]
- Carrying the Calf[15][10]
- What if...?[2]
- Two Tonic[16]
- The Pear is Ripe[17]
- Revelation[18]
- Reflections
- Riders of the Sea
- Sonjo & the Thundergod
- Hansel and Gretel[2]
- Beautiful Lady, Tell Me...[2]
- Tripping Through Time[12]
- Measure Of The World[19]
- Queen Marie[20]
- I Am Marguerite[21]
- Marguerite de Roberval
As editor:
- Prepare to Embark: Six Theatrical Voyages for Young Adults[22]
Personal life
[edit]Barrie was married to Ken Chubb. The two returned from London to live in Canada in 1985.[23] They had two children. Barrie died at the Princess Margaret Hospital in Toronto on April 15, 2018.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Shirley Barrie Obituary (2018)". Legacy.com. 2018-04-21. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Nothof, Anne (2019-01-31). "Canadian Theatre Encyclopedia - Barrie, Shirley". www.canadiantheatre.com. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
- ^ Ahsan, Sadaf (2019-08-01). "How the women of Toronto's Alumnae Theatre Company have upheld their century-old purpose in the face of constant change". National Post. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
- ^ a b Conlogue, Ray (1980-02-23). "Tricycle troupe cuts some ice with hot jazz". The Globe and Mail.
- ^ Billington, Michael (2018-09-03). "Over Kiln: the Tricycle theatre doesn't need a new name; Indhu Rubasingham has overseen a rebrand for the north London theatre but her exciting programme doesn't suggest a radical break from its rich history. So why the new moniker?". The Guardian.
- ^ Dex, Robert (2018-04-17). "Calls for newly named Kiln Theatre to revert back to Tricycle". London Evening Standard.
- ^ a b Thomas, Ren (2018-04-18). "Portrait of a playwright: Shirley Barrie". Ren Thomas. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
- ^ "Memories of Arlene Mantle". Our Times. Vol. 33, no. 1. Toronto: Our Times Publishing Inc. 2014. p. 7.
- ^ a b c "Fans keep vigil at Sammy Davis' home". Toronto Star. 1990-05-13. p. C3.
- ^ a b McClelland, Joanna (1995). "If we are women". Canadian Theatre Review (83): 77–80.
- ^ a b "Dora Mavor Moore winners". Toronto Star. 1992-06-28. p. D4.
- ^ a b Kirsty, Johnson (2008). "Performing an Asylum: Tripping Through Time and La Pazzia". Theatre Topics. 18 (1): 55–67. doi:10.1353/tt.0.0002. S2CID 159476930.
- ^ "Lifetime Award Past Recipients". Playwrights Guild of Canada. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
- ^ a b c "Calling all book fiends". Toronto Star. 1990-09-29. p. M5.
- ^ "Review: Wanna play? Three plays for high school". Canadian Theatre Review (85): 77–80. 1995.
- ^ Wagner, Vit (1998-12-03). "A plague of success". Toronto Star.
- ^ Kaplan, Jon (2001-11-08). "Pear Lacks Juice". NOW Magazine. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
- ^ "Fringe Festival Reviews". NOW Magazine. 2002-07-11. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
- ^ "Updating Julie". NOW Magazine. 2013-11-14. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
- ^ "Queen Marie". NOW Magazine. 2020-06-22. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
- ^ "I Am Marguerite". NOW Magazine. 2020-06-23. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
- ^ Zaidman, Harriet (2004). "Review: Prepare to Embark: Six Theatrical Voyages for Young Adults". Canadian Review of Materials. 11 (3).
- ^ "Biography". Shirley Barrie. 2007-12-09. Retrieved 2022-01-04.