The Title Block Live

The Title Block Live September 3 2020 by Michael Kruse

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On September 3, 2020, we held a panel entitled Sustainability in Design.

The UN has named this the Decade of Action, our last chance to create the transformation to a livable future. What does it mean to align our practices with a 1.5 degree Celsius global temperature rise?

This event focuses on the aesthetics of climate-friendly sustainable design in theatre, as a core design practice and as part of a larger equitable green recovery.

Panel members include Logan Raju Cracknell, Kendra Fanconi, Paul Fujimoto-Pihl, Lauren Gaston, Elia Kirby, Ken MacKenzie, and Edward T Morris. The moderator is Ian Garrett.

The Title Block Live September 3 2020
Michael Kruse

Bios

Ian Garrett (Moderator) is designer, producer, educator, and researcher in the field of sustainability in arts and culture. He is the director of the Centre for Sustainable Practice in the Arts; Associate Professor of Ecological Design for Performance at York University; and Producer for Toasterlab. He maintains a design practice focused on ecology, technology and scenography. Through Toasterlab’s Mixed Reality Performance Atelier, recent work includes The Stranger 2.0 with DLT Experience; Groundworks with Rulan Tangen and collaborating artists from Pomo, Wappo, and Ohlone communities; The locative audio project TrailOff with Philadelphia’s Swim Pony; and Transmission (FuturePlay/Edinburgh and Future of Storytelling Festival/New York). Notable projects include the set and energy systems for Zata Omm's Vox:Lumen at the Harbourfront Centre and Crimson Collective’s Ascension, a solar 150’ wide crane at Coachella. With Chantal Bilodeau, he co-directs the Climate Change Theatre Action. His writing includes Arts, the Environment, and Sustainability for Americans for the Arts; The Carbon Footprint of Theatrical Production in Readings in Performance and Ecology, and Theatre is No Place for a Plant in Landing Stages from the Ashden Directory. He serves on the Board of Directors for Associated Designers of Canada. He was the Curator for the US for the 2019 Prague Quadrennial, and is co-chair for World Stage Design 2021 in Calgary.

Logan Raju Cracknell is a Toronto based lighting designer and live stream artist who has been working across Canada in theatre, dance, opera, and live events. Recently he was an assistant lighting designer at both the Stratford and Shaw festivals, and with the recent pandemic has been branching out into more live streaming work. Portfolio: https://logancracknell.com .

Kendra Fanconi is the Artistic Director of The Only Animal, a fifteen year-old company that is uniquely dedicated to theatre that springs from a deep engagement with place. Our mandate reads, in part: "We act on huge stages; the forests, the ocean, human possibility. There we find enormous challenges of the times, including the climate challenges that threaten our existence as a species. We seek creative ways forward and solutionary actions. We love the impossible.” As a director, playwright and producer she has made over 30 plays including theatre of snow and ice, sand, in trees, on mountains, and on active waterways. Favourite projects include tinkers based on the Pulitzer-Prize winning novel by Paul Harding in an old- growth forest, and NiX, theatre of snow and ice was featured at Calgary’s Enbridge playRites Festival and the 2010 Cultural Olympiad. Projects in development include a rain theatre, and Year of the Typewriter, which creates pathways to translate the voice of the wilderness, and A 1000 Year Theatre. With David Suzuki Foundation she created a 1000 person piece called Sea of Hearts to support the kids suing the Canadian Government for the rights to a livable climate. Kendra is recognized nationally as a theatrical innovator and a nature-based artist. She has taught her unique creation style at University of British Columbia and Playwrights Theatre Centre. She lives on the land and is a farmer, forager and mother of two kids who are real characters. www.theonlyanimal.com.

Paul Fujimoto-Pihl is Project Manager at the Grand Theatre on the traditional lands of the Haudenosaunee, Attawandaron, Anishinaabeg, Lenape, and Wendat peoples on Treaty six lands in London, Ontario. He is  Chair of the Ontario Section of CITT and Director of TDArts. He enjoys spending time with his family, playing Kerbal Space Program,  and explaining the difference between watts and watt-hours to strangers on the internet. 

Lauren Gaston is a costume designer, illustrator and sustainability advocate. Her design work has been featured by The Juilliard School, The A.A. Bakruhshin State Theatre Museum in Russia and most recently by Time Lapse Dance in NYC. She relishes collaborations that approach the creative process through a lens of sustainability. Along with Elizabeth Mak, Edward T. Morris, Sandra Goldmark and Michael Banta, she is a co-author of The Sustainable Production Toolkit, which they presented recently as part of The Broadway Green Alliance's #Greenquaratine series. In exploring methodologies for circular design and production, she has co-hosted panels on sustainability with Megan Quarles at FABSCRAP and The Theatre Communications Group in NYC. While her work in entertainment is on pause, she volunteers with The Broadway Relief Project and is dreaming up what a thriving future may look like with her Sustainable Production Toolkit team and as part of the sixth cohort of The Creative Entrepreneur Project at The Actors Fund.

Elia Kirby founded and runs the Great Northern Way Scene Shop; and with that has worked on over 600 projects in all of the artistic disciplines (and some non-artistic as well).  Significant projects include: Rumble in the Bronx with Jackie Chan (1994); CODE Live at the Vancouver Olympics 2010; Westside Story for Vancouver Opera; A Thousand Unnumbered Stars for the 2014 TED Talks; international tours of Winners and Losers with Neworld Theatre and Theatre Replacement (2016~2018); and 18 years with the Caravan Stage Company touring by horse and wagon across North America.  He has a Master's Degree in Human Geography and BA in Cultural Studies from SFU.  He has two grown children and lives and breaths in on the unceded ancestral territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and səl̓ilwətaɁɬ / sel̓íl̓witulh (Tsleil-Waututh) First Nations.

Edward T. Morris is a set and projection designer and sustainability advocate. Along with Elizabeth Mak, Lauran Gaston, Sandra Goldmark and Michael Banta he's a co-author of the Sustainable Production Toolkit.  Edward is a member of United Scenic Artists Local #829Wingspace Theatrical Design, and United Auto Workers  local 8092. He teaches design and dramaturgy at The New School in New York City. He has long been a participant in initiatives by the Broadway Green Alliance and incorporates sustainable practices into most of his designs. The Covid 'intermission' led him to co-create the Sustainable Production Toolkit to make a roadmap for theaters to re-open more sustainably.

Michelle Tracey is an eco-scenographer  and designer based in Toronto, Ontario. She specializes in set and costume design, but she also enjoys working with lighting and projections. Her work spans the fields of theatre, opera, dance, film, live events & installation art. Michelle is a founding member of Triga Creative, a collective of designers committed to artistic exchange and developing new sustainable working models.  Michelle is also a member of Associated Designers of Canada (ADC). Michelle has designed for such companies as Soulpepper Theatre, Canadian Stage, Tarragon Theatre, the Stratford Festival, Luminato Festival, Tapestry Opera, Theatre 20, U of T Opera, Theatre Smith-Gilmour, Binocular Theatre, the red light district, and Convergence Theatre. For more about Michelle's work please visit www.michelletraceydesign.com

Michelle is representing her company on the panel, so here is the bio of Triga Creative:

Triga Creative is Alexandra Lord, Michelle Tracey and Shannon Lea Doyle: three next-generation designers of space, bodies and light for events and performance. Triga Creative creates art experiences with an Ecoscenographic approach. Applying an autonomous, collaborative model that values the sustainability of people, planet and profit, Triga Creative is able to design for any scope, always at the human scale. Triga has been working to innovate sustainable approaches to design since establishing in 2017. Their work has included an ambitious month-long Eco-Design Charrette in 2019, a large outdoor event for Luminato 2019 called Maada’ookii Songlines, The 2018 Director’s Guild of Canada’s Awards Ceremony, and Dora-nominated scenic design for PARADIGM Production’s The Empire Trilogy by Susanna Fournier in 2018/2019. Triga’s upcoming collaborations include, Luminato Festival Toronto’s 2021 Opening Event; an ongoing design residency with YES Theatre in Sudbury, Ontario; and an exhibit design at the Gardiner Museum for visual artist Shary Boyle in January 2021. Due to the global pandemic Triga turned their rental clothing stock of vintage pieces into an online store and are also selling Michelle Tracey’s handmade non-medical masks. Check them out at www.trigacreative.com, @trigacreative or on Etsy at TrigaBoutique.



The Title Block Live August 6 2020 by Michael Kruse

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On August 6th, 2020, we presented what proved to be another important discussion about todays theatre in Canada or Turtle Island: Grounding Indigenous Art & Design On Mixed-Raced Teams: A conversation reflecting on creating spaces and processes for Indigenous Theatre with anti-appropriative practices and inter-Nation collaborations. Our panel included performer Yolanda Bonnell, sound designer/composer Mishelle Cuttler, costume designer Samantha McCue, and projection, set and lighting designer Emily Soussana. The panel was led by Fire Creator, Indigenous Theorist and Cultural Evolutionist, Kim Senklip Harvey.

This is another co-pro with the Associated Designers of Canada, who are generously providing a bit of funding for the moderators and panelists. Please subscribe to the YouTube channel so you don’t miss the next episode. Bios of are panel are below.

The Title Block Live Aug 6 2020
Michael Kruse

Bios

Yolanda Bonnell (she/her) is a Queer 2 Spirit Ojibwe/South Asian performer, playwright and poet from Fort William First Nation in Thunder Bay, ON. Now based in Tkarón:to, and a graduate of Humber College’s Theatre Performance program, Yolanda was named one of NOW Magazine's Theatre Discoveries and most exciting artists to watch in Summerworks 2016. Her solo show bug, had its world premiere at the Luminato Festival in 2018, followed by a national tour and co- presented at Theatre Passe Muraille by manidoons collective, which she runs with Michif (Métis) artist Cole Alvis. She was also a part of Factory Theatre’s The Foundry, a creation program for new career writers, where her play, Scanner continues to be developed. Yolanda also completed a season at the Stratford Festival as well as a residency at the Banff Playwright’s Lab with her piece, White Girls in Moccasins, which is now in residency at Buddies in Bad Times Theatre. Website: www.yolandabonnell.com

Mishelle Cuttler is a composer, sound designer, music director and actor/musician based in Vancouver. After 5 years working professionally in Vancouver, Mishelle moved to New York where she obtained an MFA in Musical Theatre Composition at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts. She returned to beautiful British Columbia in June, 2017 full of inspiration and ready to make more music. Mishelle has made music with numerous professional theatre companies throughout Vancouver, including Bard on the Beach, Arts Club Theatre, Rumble Theatre, Pi Theatre, Théâtre la Seizième, Ruby Slippers, and ITSAZOO Productions. . She is board member for the ADC and a core member of the Vancouver Design Forum. Website: www.mishellecuttler.com

Kim Senklip Harvey is a proud Syilx (silk), Tsilhqot'in (sil-co-teen), Ktunaxa (to-naka) and Dakelh (da-kell) woman and is a Fire Creator, Indigenous Theorist and Cultural Evolutionist. She completed the BFA program at UBC and is currently doing her Masters in Creative Writing at UVIC. Kim is interested in Indigenous creation works dismantling and troubling colonial and neo-capitalistic systems with a particular focus on the resurgence of Indigenous Matriarchal led systems and frameworks. Especially those amplifying the emancipatory journeys of those enduring state oppression. She is also really good at buck hunter, like really good. Website :www.kimsenklipharvey.com

Samantha McCue is an Anishinabekwe and Ned’u’den costume designer and anti-racism advocate based in Ottawa, Ontario. She graduated with a BFA in Theatrical Production from York University in 2017. With a variety of skills in costume design and construction, theatre management and administration, Samantha is passionate about developing the Indigenous theatre community in Canada and beyond. Website: sammccuedesign.com

Emily Soussana is a projection, set, and lighting designer based out of Tiotia:ke (jo-ja-jay) or Montreal. They are the co-founder of potatoCakes_Digital, a production design and digital arts collective whose mandate orbits around the integration of technology into traditional art forms and the exploration of how visual art can help facilitate the telling of a story. Website: www.potatocakesdigital.ca


The Title Block Live July 9 2020 by Michael Kruse

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This week a special presentation of The Title Block Live, presented in partnership with The Associated Designers of Canada on Supporting a BIPOC cast with your design. A panel of fantastic Canadian theatre designers and artists discuss several questions around how our designs and collaborations can support or hinder the flourishing of Black, Indigenous, and People of Colour in live performance.

This week’s panel consists of Carmen Alatorre, C.J. Astronomo, Sammy Chien, Deanna H. Choi, Rachel Forbes, Camellia Koo, Sage Paul, Kimberly Purtell, and Emily Soussana, and is moderated by Michelle Ramsay.

Please go to designers.ca for more information about the ADC. All members of the panel were paid a honorarium by the the ADC to sit on the panel. The Title Block and Michael Kruse did not accept any fees for this.

TTB Live July 9 2020
Michael Kruse

The Panel:

Originally from Mexico City, Costume Designer Carmen Alatorre artist who earned her MFA degree in Theatre Design at UBC and lives in the unceded traditional territories of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations (Vancouver) since 2006. Some of her recent design credits were seen in companies such as: Arts Club Theatre Company, Bard on the Beach, Globe Theatre Regina, Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre, Citadel Theatre and Electric Company. Carmen is the recipient of three Jessie Richardson Theatre Awards. For more information visit: carmenalatorre.com

C.J. Astronomo is a freelance lighting designer, originally from Tkaronto, who has worked across Turtle Island, Australia & New Zealand. She is currently fortunate to be working as an Associate Technical Director at the Stratford Festival.

Sammy Chien is a Taiwanese-Canadian immigrant and queer artist-of-colour, who’s an interdisciplinary artist, director, designer, performer, researcher and mentor in film, sound art, new media, performance, movement and spiritual practice. His work has been exhibited across Canada, Western Europe, and Asia, worked with pioneers of digital performance: Troika Ranch and Wong Kar Wai’s Cinematographer Christopher Doyle, and active in projects engaging various underrepresented communities. Sammy has been featured on TV and commercials such as CBC Arts and BenQ. Sammy is the official instructor of Isadora and Artistic Director of Chimerik似不像 collective.

Sound Designer Deanna H. Choi is a recovering violinist with a background in behavioural neuroscience. Her latest project is designing the sound of her kitchen production of Into the Woods, starring her KitchenAid stand mixer, Matilda.

Rachel Forbes is an award-winning Toronto-based set and costume designer. She creates for theatre, dance, opera and film all across the country. You can find her work at rachelforbesdesign.com

Camellia Koo Camellia is a Toronto based set and costume designer for theatre, opera, dance and site-specific performance installations. Recent designs for theatre include collaborations with Cahoots Theatre Projects, Factory Theatre, The National Arts Centre, Soulpepper Theatre, The Shaw Festival, The Stratford Festival, Tarragon Theatre and Why Not Theatre. Recent designs for opera and ballet include collaborations with Against the Grain, Banff Centre, Boston Lyric Opera, Canadian Opera Company, Edmonton Opera, Helikon Opera (Moscow), Minnesota Opera, Pacific Opera Victoria, Santa Fe Opera, and Tapestry New Opera. She is a graduate of Ryerson Theatre School and Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design (U.K.). Camellia has received six Dora Mavor Moor Awards (Toronto), a Sterling Award (Edmonton), a Chalmers Award Grant, 2006 Siminovitch Protégé Prize, and the 2016 Virginia and Myrtle Cooper Award for Costume Design.

Sage Paul is an award-winning artist & designer and a recognized leader of Indigenous fashion, craft and textiles. Sage is also founding collective member and Artistic Director of Indigenous Fashion Week Toronto. Her art and design practice is conceptual, creating narrative-driven garments, crafts and costumes for artistic presentation, fashion, film, TV and theatre.

Kimberly Purtell is an award winning Toronto based lighting designer for theatre, opera and dance. She has had the opportunity to design across the country and internationally.

Emily Soussana is a projection, set, and lighting designer based out of (jo ja jay) (Montreal). They are the co-founder of potatoCakes_Digital, a production design and digital arts collective whose mandate orbits around the integration of technology into traditional art forms and the exploration of how visual art can help facilitate the telling of a story.

Michelle Ramsay is an award winning Toronto based lighting designer who works with dance, theatre and opera companies across the country. She is also on the board of the Associated Designers of Canada. For more information see michelleramsaydesign.ca.

The Title Block Live June 4 2020 by Michael Kruse

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After a two week hiatus we are back with the Title Block Live for June 4 2020. This week a multi-disciplinary panel discusses collaboration in theatre design. The panel is also composed entirely of women, so that lens is applied to think about design in Canada. Our panel consist of: Kate De Lorme, Rachel Forbes, Pam Johnson, Beth Kates, Megan Koshka, Michelle Ramsay, and Amelia Scott. The panel was co-hosted by Vancouver based sound designer and composer Mishelle Cuttler.

The Title Block Live June 4 2020
Michael Kruse

Bios

Mishelle Cuttler is a sound designer and composer based in Vancouver who works primarily with the intersection of music and storytelling. She is board member for the ADC and a core member of the Vancouver Design Forum.

Kate De Lorme is a Sound Artist and Co-founder of Lobe Spatial Sound studio in Vancouver, BC. Her work ranges from contemporary dance and theatre to immersive sound experiences. More at: Katedelorme.com and lobestudio.ca 

Rachel Forbes s a Toronto based set and costume designer who thoroughly enjoys a good puzzle. Artistic, jigsaw or crossword. She loves (and misses) collaboration most of all.

Pam Johnson has been a theatre designer for 40 years, and was an instructor at Studio 58 for 29 years. She has designed in most theatres from Montreal to Victoria.

Beth Kates is a set, lighting, video and mixed reality designer, who started working in rock and roll a long time ago and is now actively creating work that blends virtual reality, augmented reality and live performance. She is currently completing a Masters degree at the University of Calgary, is a proud member of the ADC, and is the mom to an 8 year old who has the same initials. More infot: www.playgroundstudios.ca www.burythewren.ca

Megan Koshka is an Edmonton based set, costume, and lighting designer and graduate of the University of Alberta. She was recently nominated for two Sterling Awards for "The Blue Hour" as part of the SkirtsAFire festival. More info: www.mkoshka.com

Michelle Ramsay is an award winning Toronto based lighting designer who works with dance, theatre and opera companies across the country. She is also on the board of the Associated Designers of Canada. More info: michelleramsaydesign.ca

Amelia Scott is a video designer, projection technologist, and new media artist creating for theatre, opera, dance, and beyond. Based out of Montreal and working across Canada, she works in the intersection of animation, video, film, and live performance. More info: ameliascott.ca


The Title Block Live May 14 2020 by Michael Kruse

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On this next episode of The Title Block Live we discuss video and projection design with a panal of fantastic Canadian designers. Our panel is led by Conor Moore and includes Hugh Conacher, Cameron Fraser, T. Erin Grube, Jamie Nesbitt, Sean Nieuwenhuis, and Emily Soussana.

Links

Cameron’s Virtual Worlds Project

Disguise

Hatch Studios (particle modeling)

Bios

Hugh Conacher is a lighting and multi-media designer, and a photographer, whose practice is based in live performance. Hugh lives and works on Treaty One territory, also known as Winnipeg. He has collaborated with choreographers, directors, visual artists, and dance and theatre companies throughout Canada and around the world, in venues large and small.

Cameron Fraser is a multidisciplinary artist and designer from Vancouver working in dance, theatre, circus and opera.

T. Erin Gruber is an artist working professionally as a visual storyteller. She collaborates with directors, builders, performers and technicians to bring experiences to audiences across Canada. She is committed to combining the powers of visual communication with the passion and emotion of live performance.

Jamie Nesbitt is a Vancouver based projection designer and has worked across Canada, including the Shaw and Stratford festivals and with choreographer Crystal Pite. We spoke to Jamie on episode 49 of the show.

Sean Nieuwenhuis is a video & projection designer and producer based in Vancouver who has worked nationally and internationally in theatre, opera and special events.  Outside of my theatrical work I run a production company specializing in large scale projection and media production for corporate projects.

Emily Soussana is a projection, set, and lighting designer based out of Tiohtià:ke (Montreal).  They are the co-founder of potatoCakes_Digital, a production design and digital arts collective whose mandate orbits around the integration of technology into traditional art forms and the exploration of how visual art can help facilitate the telling of a story.  In the before times they worked nationally though now they create elaborate "in house" installations for their cats.  

The Title Block Live May 14 2020
Michael Kruse

The Title Block Live May 7 2020 by Michael Kruse

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The next episode of The Title Block Live for May 7 2020 features an all-star panel of costume designers. See below for bios.

Bios

Originally from Mexico City, Carmen Alatorre earned her MFA degree in Theatre Design at UBC and has worked as a theatre designer in Vancouver since 2006. Some of her recent design credits include: Peter and the star catcher, Top dog/Under dog and Mustard (Arts Club Theatre Co.); Pericles, The Winter’s Tale, As you like it and All’s well that ends well (Bard on the Beach); Cinderella, (Globe Theatre Regina); As you like it (Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre/Citadel Theatre); Anywhere but here, (Electric Company) Carmen is the recipient of three Jessie Richardson Theatre Awards. For more information visit: carmenalatorre.com

Nancy Bryant Vancouver is home base, work primarily as a costume designer. Recent design for Dance includes work with Crystal Pite and team… ‘Revisor’ (Kidd Pivot), 'Angels Atlas’ (National Ballet of Canada and the Zurich Ballet), ‘Body and Soul’ (Paris Opera, Palais Garnier), ‘Partita’ (Netherlands Dance Theatre). Recent design for theatre with Kim Collier… Full Light of Day (Banff Centre, Van. Playhouse, Can. Stage). Opera - The Overcoat (Tapestry, Can. Stage, Van. Opera). Fidelio (Pacific Opera Victoria). also work in film on and off…

David Boechler has been a set and costume designer for over 25 years, for theatre, dance, and opera, with a focus lately on musical theatre. He has also had extensive experience in audience engagement activations in the corporate world; film and television production; and he took a few years to run the fine art department at an auction house.

Sabrina Miller is a set, costume and puppet designer who came to Montréal from the west coast. She uses her skill of combining symbolism and costume design to create the full spectrum of large scale musicals with hundreds of costumes, to intimate new works and site specific shows.

Sean Mulcahy - Toronto based Costume and Set Designer, graduate of York University. Past regional rep for ADC, Sean has worked across North America, most recently designing Costume for the Canadian premiere of Bend It Like Beckham the Musical in Toronto.

Dana Osborne is a set and costume designer based in Stratford, Ontario. She was just about to start her 20th season with the Stratford Festival, designing costumes for Chicago, the new Daniel MacIvor/Steve Page musical Here’s What It Takes and Morris Panych’s Frankenstein Revived.

April Vizcko is past president of Associated Designers of Canada, currently project lead on World Stage Design 2021 and professor at the University of Calgary. She resides in Calgary, works for theatres regionally and nationally. She is also a mother to a precocious 6 year old boy.

Ming Wong is a Toronto costume designer, stylist, and wardrobe technician. She has worked on a variety of projects ranging from dance, theatre, and film & television, and has designed across the city and beyond for companies such as the Canadian Opera Company, Citadel Theatre, Canadian Stage, Crow’s Theatre, Nightwood Theatre, Factory Theatre, Obsidian Theatre, and Modern Times Stage Company.

Joanna Yu is a set and costume designer who primarily works in Ontario, but has had the opportunity to design for theatres across Canada. Joanna spends most of her time designing new Canadian plays, but occasionally designs musicals, Shakespeare, classics, for dance and opera.

The Title Block Live May 7 2020
Michael Kruse


The Title Block Live April 30 2020 by Michael Kruse

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This time on The Title Block Live, we feature an incredible panel of Canadian sound designers. See the lineup below, with their bios and links to their work.

Bios

Jean-Sébastien Côté is a Canadian composer and sound designer based in Ottawa. Since 1999, he designed more than 15 productions of Canadian stage director Robert Lepage. He also had the privilege to work with some of Canada's best theatre directors and choreographers and he also composed and mixed the music of many documentaries, tv ads, multimedia shows, art installations and VR experiences.

Deanna H. Choi is a recovering violinist with a background in behavioural neuroscience. Her latest project is designing the sound of her kitchen production of Into the Woods, starring her KitchenAid stand mixer, Matilda.

Richard Feren has been composing music and sound designs for theatre, dance and film since 1992. He has won seven Dora Mavor Moore Awards, the 1999 Pauline McGibbon Award, and was the first-ever sound designer to be shortlisted for the Siminovitch Prize, in 2012.

John Gzowski is a sound designer based in Toronto.

With a multi-faceted and distinct visual style, jaymez has worked in the visual art, dance, theatre and music communities. His lighting, video and sound work has appeared in a number of international festivals, theatrical and dance productions and he has designed for a wide and diverse range of companies and choreographers. He holds a BFA in Video from the University of Manitoba.

David Mesiha is a composer/sound designer, projection designer and theatre deviser splitting his time between Toronto and Vancouver. He's currently an interactive experience co-designer for the Digital Storytelling project at The Cultch in Vancouver and technical producer with Theatre Conspiracy.

Debashis Sinha’s work in theatre is part of a rich and varied sound practice that spans the genres of audio art, radiophonic art, and music. He has composed for the country’s biggest - and smallest - stages.

Nancy Tam is a composer / sound-artist / performance artist whose work includes musical composition, multichannel sound installation for live and fixed media, audio walks, and sound design for site-responsive theatrical, and dance performances. She is an active and founding member of the Toronto based Toy Piano Composers composer collective, and the Vancouver based performance collective A Wake of Vultures. Nancy has been a core collaborator and devisor with Fight With A Stick since 2011 in creating contemporary performance works. In 2017, their show Revolutions won the Critics' Choice Award at the Jessie Richardson Theatre Awards. Nancy’s current research focuses on the triangulation of sound, body, and space, and continues to investigate the choreography of human mobilization through listening and walking in her work. Nancy holds a MFA from Simon Fraser University and a BMus from Wilfrid Laurier University. More info can be found at www.nantam.ca

The Title Block Live April 30 2020
Michael Kruse

The Title Block Live April 23 2020 by Michael Kruse

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This week on The Title Block Live on our You Tube channel, a panel of top Canadian theatrical set designers take questions about their craft and approach to design. On this episode, Pat Flood, Susan LePage, Shawn Kerwin, Camellia Koo, Ken MacDonald, Ken Mackenzie, and Lorenzo Savoini join co-host Conor Moore to take your questions.

See us live every thursday at 8pm EST, 5pm PST at The Title Block Podcast channel on You Tube.

The Title Block Live April 23 2020
Michael Kruse

The Title Block Live Announcement CHANGE by Michael Kruse

Title Block Live Announcement UPDATE
Michael Kruse

Hey there, Michael Kruse here again - I have to recall that last announcement! We are also in a period of flux, I jumped the gun a bit, and the First Title Block Live episode will now be on Thursday April 16th at 8 pm EST. Join me, and designer Conor Moore, as well as an all-star panel every Thursday at 8 pm EST, starting April 16th on the Title Block Podcasts channel on youtube live. Find us at The Title Block Podcast on YouTube and plug into a great conservation about theatre design.

The show can be linked to here: https://youtu.be/Yc7AWA30UpM

So, this Thursday, April 16th at 8 pm EST we start with lighting designers Louse Guinand, Kevin Fraser, Michael Walton, Kim Purtell, and Kevin Lamotte who will be answering your questions sent to thetitleblock@gmail.com, so start sending those in and we will try to address them during the show.

We will have a panel on video design coming up in a couple of weeks, so stay tuned for that anouncement, and in the mean time, please visit thetitleblock.com for past episodes.

I will be releasing the audio from the live shows on the podcast feed as well, and the videos will stay up to review after the event as well, so don't worry if you miss it.

The Title Block Live Announcement by Michael Kruse

The Title Block Live Announcement
Michael Kruse

During these, um, what's the euphemism marketers are using? "Uncertain Times" we are all stuck at home waiting to make our art again; waiting for the world to change and settle and pushed apart from each other.

In an effort to build comm unity and to take one small advantage of this, tumult, The Title Block is debuting a new weekly live event to deepen the conversation about design in Canadian theatre.  b

Join me, and designer Conor Moore, as well as an all-star panel every Tuesday at 8 pm EST, starting April 14th on the Title Block Podcasts channel on YouTube live. Goto youtube.com/thetitleblockpodcast/live and plug into a great conversation about theatre design.

This Tuesday April 14th we start with lighting designers Louse Guinand, Kevin Fraser, Michael Walton, and Kim Purtell talking about the Fourth Wall and how lighting designers think about it.

We will have a panel on video design coming up in a couple of weeks, so stay tuned for that announcement, and in the mean time, please visit thetitleblock.com for past episodes. 

Thank you for your support, and take care during these outrageous times.