Out at School - The Audio Play
We recorded and produced the audio play version of Out at School with funding from New College at the University of Toronto. Right now, team member, Doug Friesen is mixing and editing Out at School - the Audio Play, and once it is complete, it will be available for download here. Stay tuned!
Land Acknowledgements and Biographies of the Cast and Crew
We acknowledge that the university and city of Toronto sits on land that has been a site of human activity for 15,000 years. The land is the territory of the Haudensaunee, the Six Nations Confederacy, the Wendat and Petun First Nations, the Seneca, the Anishinaabe, and most recently, the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation. The treaty that was signed for this particular parcel of land is collectively referred to as the Toronto Purchase and applies to lands east of Brown’s Line to Woodbine Avenue and north towards Newmarket. This land, as part of the Great Lakes region, is the subject of the Dish With One Spoon Wampum Belt Covenant, an agreement between the Iroquois Confederacy and Confederacy of the Ojibwe and allied nations to peaceably share and care for the resources around the Great Lakes. Today, Toronto is home to the highest Indigenous population in Canada. We are grateful to the Elders and story-keepers who are working to make the first stories of this land known.
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ALANIS
I’m Alanis and my parents come from Panama and I am of African and Indigenous descent.
Alanis Ortiz Espinoza
Alanis Ortiz Espinoza has a B.A. (Hons) Political Science and Equity Studies (With Distinction) from the University of Toronto and has always been heavily passionate about social justice issues, equity studies, and the field of law. She has served on the University of Toronto’s Tribunal as a student panelist, the University’s Council of Athletics and Recreation as a student representative, the Canadian Hispanic Congress, and is now a law student at the University of Leicester in the UK, from which she hopes to graduate from in 2021.
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ALEC
Tkaronto is where I have lived since 1983, I am originally from the Mi’kmaq Territory of Uni’maki on the Atlantic Coast, therefore I am a visitor who has settled in the Dish With One Spoon Territory, thereby I respectfully abide the call to share this part of Turtle Island gratefully with the original inhabitants of the land of the Great Lakes--the Anishnawbe, the Wendot, the Iroquois, and the Mississaugas.
Alec Butler
Alec Butler is an award winning playwright and filmmaker, they are of Indigenous and settler ancestry originally from Uni’maki Territory aka Cape Breton Island. They identify as Two-Spirit, Trans, Intersex, and Non-binary. They work in the genres of film, novella, poetry, theatre, and performance. Their works over the past forty years include Black Friday, a play about coming out, which was nominated for the Governor General’s Award for Drama in 1991; the novella Rough Paradise published in 2014; and the award-winning trilogy of animated short films called, Misadventures of Pussy Boy. Alec went back to school in 2015 to major in Indigenous Studies and Sexual Diversity Studies at the University of Toronto. Currently, they are pursuing a Master’s Degree in Gender, Feminist and Women’s Studies at York University. They are working on their first non-fiction work called Lay of the Land: Reclaiming Paradise, a literary and critical/cultural analysis of Queer Indigenous Literatures and Media.
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AMAKA
My name is amaka and I am grateful for the numerous sacrifices that allowed me to emigrate from Nigeria 16 years ago, to honour this bounty-full land.
Amaka Umeh
amaka ameh is a Toronto-based creative with homes and heart-parts in Calgary, AB, and Lagos, NG. A graduate of the Musical Theatre Performance Program at the Randolph College for Performing Arts, she has had the incredible fortune of receiving many wonderful opportunities to collaborate with diverse artists in this community, and their work has been generously recognized with three Dora Mavor Moore Award nominations and two My Entertainment World Critics’ Pick Award nominations. They also completed the Factory Theatre Mechanicals and Toronto Fringe T.E.N.T. Programs. Selected credits: Ensemble in Towards Youth (Project:Humanity/Crow’s Theatre), Goalie in The Wolves (Howland Company/Crow’s Theatre), Hermia in A Midsummer Night’s Dream (High Park), Christa in Beethoven Lives Upstairs (Grand Theatre 100 Schools Tour), Hasana in All Our Yesterdays (Chloe Hung, Toronto Fringe). Upcoming: Bobbi in Hilda’s Yard (Foster Festival), Portia in Portia's Julius Caesar (Shakespeare...Ruff/Hart House), Octavius in Julius Caesar (Groundling/Crow's).
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BENJAMIN
My name is benjamin and i was born as an uninvited visitor to the traditional, unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishnaabeg People. My family of origin also includes every queer, trans, gender-bending revolutionary who has taught me about love.
benjamin lee hicks
benjamin lee hicks is a visual artist, elementary school teacher, and PhD candidate in Curriculum and Pedagogy at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE), University of Toronto. They taught JK-grade 6 classrooms in the Toronto District School Board for 8 years prior to beginning graduate studies full time. benjamin has written and designed curriculum materials on topics of sustainable community building, queering school space and arts-based activism. They are interested in how we might better support teachers to expect queerness and welcome all gender identities in their classrooms. benjamin is also passionate about centring the voices and experiences of trans and non-binary people navigating the school system as students, staff and caregivers. Their current work explores how visual storytelling and comic art can help to engage teachers more personally and continuously in professional learning (+action) for social justice. www.benjaminleehicks.com
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BRENDAN
My name is Brendan. My people come from all walks of life. Where I can find family, I make family. Where I can give love, I give and receive love.
Brendan Chandler
Brendan Chandler is a Cree English artist who recently finished Humber College Theatre for Performing Arts in Toronto. Humber Theatre works with a devised creative process. In his final year Brendan got to play Penelope in To Ithacadirected by Tatiana Jennings. Brendan has also created his own show called How Did You Find Me Here?which appeared in the Toronto Fringe Festival and was chosen as one of the top 5 artists to watch by CBC. Recently Brendan finished a duo piece with his creation partner Jessica Bowmer for the cabaret in Paprika Festival called A series of unfortunate behaviors. The piece is a bouffon piece and will be on YouTube soon. Brendan is honoured to be a part of this project and very pleased to work with such beautiful artists.
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CHARLOTTE
My name is Charlotte and I am from Calgary, AB in Treaty 7 territory, and my ancestors are from England and Scotland.
Charlotte Stewart
Charlotte recently completed her B.A. (Hons.) in Anthropology and Equity Studies at the University of Toronto. Over the course of her degree, she held work-study and internship positions at U of T's Centre for Community Partnerships, where she helped to facilitate programs focused primarily on connecting students to each other and to community-based organizations across the GTA. She currently lives just outside of what is known as Calgary, AB, where she works in outdoor and environmental education and harbours a passion for storytelling of all sorts.
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DESTINY-MAE
My name is Destiny. I acknowledge this state as a white supremacist, settler-colonial state, thus I consider and acknowledge the continuous enactment of violence that has allowed us to occupy this land and space. I am a treaty person and I acknowledge the work I must do as a treaty person, in solidarity with First Nations people.
Destiny-Mae is an undergraduate student at the University of Toronto, and a spoken-word-educator living in Tkaronto. Since she was a pre-teen, Destiny has dedicated and continues to dedicate, any opportunity to claim space and community for Black students within Tkaronto schools. Destiny is committed to calling for awareness, and action to ensure schools are included in the process of liberating Black and Indigenous students.
-----------
DOUG
My name is Doug. My mennonite grandparents fled religious persecution in the former U.S.S.R. and finally ended up settling in Manitoba on Treaty 1 territory: the land of Anishinaabe, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, Dene, and Métis Nations. I grew up helping on farm land that was stolen and I have many privileges because of this.
Doug Friesen is an educator, musician, and PHD candidate researching critical sound and listening pedagogies. He has led teachers, students, musicians, and other interested folks through ways of using listening and sound to engage creativity and community. Doug has worked as an Instructional Leader for the Toronto District School Board, and as a course instructor at the University of Toronto, Queens University, and Wilfrid Laurier University.
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JENNY
Jenny Salisbury
Jenny Salisbury has a Ph.D from theCentre for Drama, Theatre,and Performance Studies at the University of Toronto. Her teaching and research interests include contemporary Canadian play creation and devising processes, with a focus on audience, community-engaged theatre, and the role of the artist as researcher. She is a co-founder and associate director of The Centre for Spectatorship and Audience Research, and is Artistic Director Common Boots Theatre along with Jennifer Brewin and Alex Bulmer (www.commonbootstheatre.ca). Jenny has enjoyed sessional work at Huron University College, Western University, as well as serving as the program coordinator for Ask & Imagine, a leadership program for youth and youth leaders.
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JORIE
My name is Jorie, I was born in Toronto and I was adopted, so my people are everywhere.
Jorie Morrow
Jorie is a professional Actor, Social worker, Meditation Teacher and Activist. She has appeared in both film and on stage. This is her 4thproduction as a performer with Gailey Road Productions. She first appeared as “Worried Mother” in Pound Predators12 years ago! A tremendous amount of gratitude to Tara Goldstein for inviting her back for this special event. A big shout out to family and friends for their ongoing support! Love to Bob and Hailee. “I feel that being a part of this theatre experience brings us all together- we are a community of many different voices! Now more than ever, this research about the LGBTQ community and the education system is needed. As an artist, my hope is to support and strengthen the powerful messages of all these good people, these good families represented here today. To send a powerful message that we are joyful, we are proud and we will stand together.” Up Next: You will find Jorie performing in the award-winning play, Checkpoint 300 by Michelle Wise. This will be at Factory Mainstage at the Toronto Fringe Festival 2019.Up next: Jorie looks forward to her self-produced production of Collected Stories by Donald Margulies at The Campbell House Museum in 2021.
-----------
KATE
My name is Kate. I am a settler of Scottish and British heritage and understand that I live, work, and play on land that belongs to First Nations People. Daily engagement with the natural world and the land of Treaty 3 and the Mississaugas of the Credit River in Traditional Anishinaabek territory where I live is vital to my survival and well-being. The gratitude I have to be able to live on this land is difficult to describe in words.
Kate Reid
Slam-storytelling and folk poetry collide with a roots-country vibe as Kate Reid’s musings about identity, love, queer life, and the interesting people she meets merge in songs that just might have you rolling in the aisles with laughter or dabbing tears from your eyes. A whip-smart wordsmith with a knack for candid songwriting that is charged with humour and clever social commentary, Kate has five albums under her belt and performs at music and Pride festivals, youth and arts conferences, public schools, universities, community service organizations, and in people’s living rooms. Cutting across countless boundaries and bringing her diverse audiences to a place of common ground, they are funny, feminist, queer as a three-dollar bill, and they are sure to entertain. Kate has a Ph.D from the University of Toronto where she investigated the use of songs in curriculum development for gender and sexuality education. Kate is currently a Post-Doctoral Researcher at York University.
pronouns: she/they www.katereid.net
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MAX
I'm Max and I'm from former Lenape territory in Princeton, New Jersey, under the Treaty of Easton, and I have roots in Northern Ireland, Croatia, and the eastern European Jewish diaspora.
Max Cameron Fearon
Max Cameron Fearon (they/them) is a queer, non-binary, disabled theatre artist, and a recent graduate of the UofT Centre for Drama, Theatre, and Performance Studies. As an actor, director, dramaturge, and facilitator, their work focuses primarily on issues of identity, community, and mental health. They've performed and directed/AD'd with the Toronto Fringe, InspiraTO Festival, Hart House Theatre, Aluna CAMINOS Festival, Seven Siblings, Driftwood Theatre, Mixed Company Theatre, UofT campus groups, and are a current member of the Nightwood Theatre Young Innovators Program. Max is currently working on accessibility and event coordination for Lakeshore Arts and the Toronto Community Dance Love-In, with the hopes of expanding options for disabled artists and audiences in community arts settings. They're so grateful to be part of such a touching and inspiring story, and to be representing trans and non-binary youth. Enjoy the show! #ProtectTransKids
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PAM
Pamela Baer
Pamela Baer is a theatre and media artist with a focus on community engaged work. Drawn from a young age to storytelling as a way of connecting people and building community, her work revolves around personal narratives, oral histories, and life stories. Pamela has facilitated community arts projects with diverse groups, and wide-reaching themes, in England, Ghana, and Canada. Her current work focuses on LGBTQ families, stories, and representations, and explores the role of collective community creation in the production of participatory media. Pamela has a B.F.A in Theatre and Development from Concordia University, a M.A. in Theatre and Media for Development from the University of Winchester, and a M.A. in Education from The Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto. Pamela is the Research Manager on the LGBTQ Families Speak Out project, a PhD Student in Education at the University of Toronto and the Program Coordinator at Charles Street Video, an artist-run video production facility in Toronto.
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RYAN
My name is Ryan. I'm a mixed-race, queer settler on this land, born in Edmonton by parents linked to the West Indies, India, Africa, and the Netherlands.
Ryan Singh
A Toronto-based performer, educator, and activist, Ryan is thrilled to be a part of this cast sharing the moving and beautiful words of some amazing queer & trans parents and youth. Ryan has fought for LGBTQ2 rights for over 15 years, as well as educating youth across Canada on diversity, inclusion, and creating social change. In a past life he co-founded Fly By Night Theatre Company and directed, produced, & performed with them several times. Currently, he is president of the board of Common Boots Theatre. Thanks Jenny & Pam for asking and your guidance, Tara for your gigantic heart, an amazing team surrounding us, my husband two times over, this beautiful cast, and most importantly, the participants whose stories build this world. You inspire me to work harder for our rights and speak our truths more clearly than I ever have.
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SANDAKIE
I’m Sandakie, my ancestors are Sinhalese and my parents emigrated from Sri Lanka to the land we acknowledged here today, and I was born and raised here.
Sandakie Ekanayake
I had the pleasure of working with Tara and benjamin during the fall of 2018 in their undergraduate course on Equity and Activism in Education, and it was through this that I was first introduced to the project and the research. I have joined the team for the production as an actor and I am truly grateful to be a part of such a collaborative team. I am a recent graduate from the University of Toronto with a BA, majoring in Equity Studies. I aspire to work as an educator and continue to be an outspoken ally to the queer community, prioritizing marginalized and intersectional perspectives and experiences.
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TARA
My name is Tara. I was born in Montreal, Quebec. My great-grandparents on my father’s side and my grandfather on my mother’s side emigrated to Montreal from Eastern Europe in the early 1900s to escape the pogroms of antisemitism. I have lived in Toronto since 1985 when I moved here to pursue a doctorate in education at the University of Toronto, where I began to learn about the violent colonial history of my Canadian home.
Tara Goldstein
Tara Goldstein is a professor, ethnographer and playwright in the Department of Curriculum, Teaching and Learning at the Ontario Institute of Studies in Education, University of Toronto where she teaches an undergraduate course called Equity, Activism and Education for the Equity Studies program at New College and a graduate course called Gender, Sexuality and Schooling. Tara is also the Founding and Artistic Director of Gailey Road Productions, a theatre company that produces research-informed theatre on social and political issues that affect us all (www.gaileyroad.com). Tara co-wrote the Toronto Pride script of Out at School with artist researchers Pam Baer and Jenny Salisbury. Tara’s next production will be Castor and Sylvie which is about French feminist philosopher Simone de Beauvoir and her companion Sylvie Le Bon. Castor and Sylvie was workshopped at the Toronto SummerWorks Festival in 2015, revised and performed the L Fest in Llandudno, Wales in 2018, and will be performed again in Toronto in March 2020 in celebration of International Women's Day.
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TSHOLO
My name is Tsholo Khaleme. I was born in South Africa amidst the apartheid era. I learned from a young age the importance of the land. The land is ours to love and take of; when we take care of the land, the land takes care of us.
Tsholo Khalema
Tsholo Khalema is an actor, photographer and aspiring theatre/film director. He recently performed in the 2019 revival of Michel Marc Bouchard' play Lilies at Buddies in Bad Times. He is also known for his film work in Unexpectedly Trans (2018) Almost Heroes (2011) and Beyond a Friend (2007).
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TY
My name is Ty. I've lived my entire life in the Greater Toronto Area. My mother emigrated here from Manchester with her parents in the 1960's. My father was born to British parents in Montreal, and moved to Toronto to pursue a music career. This place has always felt like home.
Ty Walkland is a writer, teacher, and teacher educator who works with youth and teachers to confront power, privilege, and the possibilities of a more just and equitable future. He is currently pursuing a PhD in Curriculum and Pedagogy at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE), University of Toronto, where his research explores critical and holistic approaches to drug education. Before grad school, Ty spent several years teaching secondary English, Social Science, and Special Education for the Simcoe County District School Board. He still teaches high school occasionally, and continues to develop curriculum and lead workshops across the province that support education workers to meet the needs of diverse youth and families.
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BISHOP
My name is Bishop and I am a second generation Canadian, born in Toronto.
Bishop Owis
Bishop is a PhD candidate at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto (OISE/UT). They are a graduate of the Masters of Teaching program at OISE/UT where they earned her teaching qualifications in the Junior-Intermediate division. Bishop’s research at OISE explores how teachers and students can co-create queer and trans-inclusive sex education curriculum by using participatory action research. Bishop is a member of the Advisory Council for the Young Women’s Leadership Network, a Junior Fellow at Massey College, and the facilitator for the group, “Queer at OISE.” They also facilitate workshops with Planned Parenthood as a member of the TEACH team, and work as an external educator with the Sex Education Centre at the University of Toronto. Bishop is passionate about equity issues in education, LGBTQ+ advocacy and creating equitable spaces for women of colour in educational and political spaces.
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ALANIS
I’m Alanis and my parents come from Panama and I am of African and Indigenous descent.
Alanis Ortiz Espinoza
Alanis Ortiz Espinoza has a B.A. (Hons) Political Science and Equity Studies (With Distinction) from the University of Toronto and has always been heavily passionate about social justice issues, equity studies, and the field of law. She has served on the University of Toronto’s Tribunal as a student panelist, the University’s Council of Athletics and Recreation as a student representative, the Canadian Hispanic Congress, and is now a law student at the University of Leicester in the UK, from which she hopes to graduate from in 2021.
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ALEC
Tkaronto is where I have lived since 1983, I am originally from the Mi’kmaq Territory of Uni’maki on the Atlantic Coast, therefore I am a visitor who has settled in the Dish With One Spoon Territory, thereby I respectfully abide the call to share this part of Turtle Island gratefully with the original inhabitants of the land of the Great Lakes--the Anishnawbe, the Wendot, the Iroquois, and the Mississaugas.
Alec Butler
Alec Butler is an award winning playwright and filmmaker, they are of Indigenous and settler ancestry originally from Uni’maki Territory aka Cape Breton Island. They identify as Two-Spirit, Trans, Intersex, and Non-binary. They work in the genres of film, novella, poetry, theatre, and performance. Their works over the past forty years include Black Friday, a play about coming out, which was nominated for the Governor General’s Award for Drama in 1991; the novella Rough Paradise published in 2014; and the award-winning trilogy of animated short films called, Misadventures of Pussy Boy. Alec went back to school in 2015 to major in Indigenous Studies and Sexual Diversity Studies at the University of Toronto. Currently, they are pursuing a Master’s Degree in Gender, Feminist and Women’s Studies at York University. They are working on their first non-fiction work called Lay of the Land: Reclaiming Paradise, a literary and critical/cultural analysis of Queer Indigenous Literatures and Media.
-----------
AMAKA
My name is amaka and I am grateful for the numerous sacrifices that allowed me to emigrate from Nigeria 16 years ago, to honour this bounty-full land.
Amaka Umeh
amaka ameh is a Toronto-based creative with homes and heart-parts in Calgary, AB, and Lagos, NG. A graduate of the Musical Theatre Performance Program at the Randolph College for Performing Arts, she has had the incredible fortune of receiving many wonderful opportunities to collaborate with diverse artists in this community, and their work has been generously recognized with three Dora Mavor Moore Award nominations and two My Entertainment World Critics’ Pick Award nominations. They also completed the Factory Theatre Mechanicals and Toronto Fringe T.E.N.T. Programs. Selected credits: Ensemble in Towards Youth (Project:Humanity/Crow’s Theatre), Goalie in The Wolves (Howland Company/Crow’s Theatre), Hermia in A Midsummer Night’s Dream (High Park), Christa in Beethoven Lives Upstairs (Grand Theatre 100 Schools Tour), Hasana in All Our Yesterdays (Chloe Hung, Toronto Fringe). Upcoming: Bobbi in Hilda’s Yard (Foster Festival), Portia in Portia's Julius Caesar (Shakespeare...Ruff/Hart House), Octavius in Julius Caesar (Groundling/Crow's).
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BENJAMIN
My name is benjamin and i was born as an uninvited visitor to the traditional, unceded territory of the Algonquin Anishnaabeg People. My family of origin also includes every queer, trans, gender-bending revolutionary who has taught me about love.
benjamin lee hicks
benjamin lee hicks is a visual artist, elementary school teacher, and PhD candidate in Curriculum and Pedagogy at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE), University of Toronto. They taught JK-grade 6 classrooms in the Toronto District School Board for 8 years prior to beginning graduate studies full time. benjamin has written and designed curriculum materials on topics of sustainable community building, queering school space and arts-based activism. They are interested in how we might better support teachers to expect queerness and welcome all gender identities in their classrooms. benjamin is also passionate about centring the voices and experiences of trans and non-binary people navigating the school system as students, staff and caregivers. Their current work explores how visual storytelling and comic art can help to engage teachers more personally and continuously in professional learning (+action) for social justice. www.benjaminleehicks.com
-----------
BRENDAN
My name is Brendan. My people come from all walks of life. Where I can find family, I make family. Where I can give love, I give and receive love.
Brendan Chandler
Brendan Chandler is a Cree English artist who recently finished Humber College Theatre for Performing Arts in Toronto. Humber Theatre works with a devised creative process. In his final year Brendan got to play Penelope in To Ithacadirected by Tatiana Jennings. Brendan has also created his own show called How Did You Find Me Here?which appeared in the Toronto Fringe Festival and was chosen as one of the top 5 artists to watch by CBC. Recently Brendan finished a duo piece with his creation partner Jessica Bowmer for the cabaret in Paprika Festival called A series of unfortunate behaviors. The piece is a bouffon piece and will be on YouTube soon. Brendan is honoured to be a part of this project and very pleased to work with such beautiful artists.
-----------
CHARLOTTE
My name is Charlotte and I am from Calgary, AB in Treaty 7 territory, and my ancestors are from England and Scotland.
Charlotte Stewart
Charlotte recently completed her B.A. (Hons.) in Anthropology and Equity Studies at the University of Toronto. Over the course of her degree, she held work-study and internship positions at U of T's Centre for Community Partnerships, where she helped to facilitate programs focused primarily on connecting students to each other and to community-based organizations across the GTA. She currently lives just outside of what is known as Calgary, AB, where she works in outdoor and environmental education and harbours a passion for storytelling of all sorts.
-----------
DESTINY-MAE
My name is Destiny. I acknowledge this state as a white supremacist, settler-colonial state, thus I consider and acknowledge the continuous enactment of violence that has allowed us to occupy this land and space. I am a treaty person and I acknowledge the work I must do as a treaty person, in solidarity with First Nations people.
Destiny-Mae is an undergraduate student at the University of Toronto, and a spoken-word-educator living in Tkaronto. Since she was a pre-teen, Destiny has dedicated and continues to dedicate, any opportunity to claim space and community for Black students within Tkaronto schools. Destiny is committed to calling for awareness, and action to ensure schools are included in the process of liberating Black and Indigenous students.
-----------
DOUG
My name is Doug. My mennonite grandparents fled religious persecution in the former U.S.S.R. and finally ended up settling in Manitoba on Treaty 1 territory: the land of Anishinaabe, Cree, Oji-Cree, Dakota, Dene, and Métis Nations. I grew up helping on farm land that was stolen and I have many privileges because of this.
Doug Friesen is an educator, musician, and PHD candidate researching critical sound and listening pedagogies. He has led teachers, students, musicians, and other interested folks through ways of using listening and sound to engage creativity and community. Doug has worked as an Instructional Leader for the Toronto District School Board, and as a course instructor at the University of Toronto, Queens University, and Wilfrid Laurier University.
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JENNY
Jenny Salisbury
Jenny Salisbury has a Ph.D from theCentre for Drama, Theatre,and Performance Studies at the University of Toronto. Her teaching and research interests include contemporary Canadian play creation and devising processes, with a focus on audience, community-engaged theatre, and the role of the artist as researcher. She is a co-founder and associate director of The Centre for Spectatorship and Audience Research, and is Artistic Director Common Boots Theatre along with Jennifer Brewin and Alex Bulmer (www.commonbootstheatre.ca). Jenny has enjoyed sessional work at Huron University College, Western University, as well as serving as the program coordinator for Ask & Imagine, a leadership program for youth and youth leaders.
-----------
JORIE
My name is Jorie, I was born in Toronto and I was adopted, so my people are everywhere.
Jorie Morrow
Jorie is a professional Actor, Social worker, Meditation Teacher and Activist. She has appeared in both film and on stage. This is her 4thproduction as a performer with Gailey Road Productions. She first appeared as “Worried Mother” in Pound Predators12 years ago! A tremendous amount of gratitude to Tara Goldstein for inviting her back for this special event. A big shout out to family and friends for their ongoing support! Love to Bob and Hailee. “I feel that being a part of this theatre experience brings us all together- we are a community of many different voices! Now more than ever, this research about the LGBTQ community and the education system is needed. As an artist, my hope is to support and strengthen the powerful messages of all these good people, these good families represented here today. To send a powerful message that we are joyful, we are proud and we will stand together.” Up Next: You will find Jorie performing in the award-winning play, Checkpoint 300 by Michelle Wise. This will be at Factory Mainstage at the Toronto Fringe Festival 2019.Up next: Jorie looks forward to her self-produced production of Collected Stories by Donald Margulies at The Campbell House Museum in 2021.
-----------
KATE
My name is Kate. I am a settler of Scottish and British heritage and understand that I live, work, and play on land that belongs to First Nations People. Daily engagement with the natural world and the land of Treaty 3 and the Mississaugas of the Credit River in Traditional Anishinaabek territory where I live is vital to my survival and well-being. The gratitude I have to be able to live on this land is difficult to describe in words.
Kate Reid
Slam-storytelling and folk poetry collide with a roots-country vibe as Kate Reid’s musings about identity, love, queer life, and the interesting people she meets merge in songs that just might have you rolling in the aisles with laughter or dabbing tears from your eyes. A whip-smart wordsmith with a knack for candid songwriting that is charged with humour and clever social commentary, Kate has five albums under her belt and performs at music and Pride festivals, youth and arts conferences, public schools, universities, community service organizations, and in people’s living rooms. Cutting across countless boundaries and bringing her diverse audiences to a place of common ground, they are funny, feminist, queer as a three-dollar bill, and they are sure to entertain. Kate has a Ph.D from the University of Toronto where she investigated the use of songs in curriculum development for gender and sexuality education. Kate is currently a Post-Doctoral Researcher at York University.
pronouns: she/they www.katereid.net
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MAX
I'm Max and I'm from former Lenape territory in Princeton, New Jersey, under the Treaty of Easton, and I have roots in Northern Ireland, Croatia, and the eastern European Jewish diaspora.
Max Cameron Fearon
Max Cameron Fearon (they/them) is a queer, non-binary, disabled theatre artist, and a recent graduate of the UofT Centre for Drama, Theatre, and Performance Studies. As an actor, director, dramaturge, and facilitator, their work focuses primarily on issues of identity, community, and mental health. They've performed and directed/AD'd with the Toronto Fringe, InspiraTO Festival, Hart House Theatre, Aluna CAMINOS Festival, Seven Siblings, Driftwood Theatre, Mixed Company Theatre, UofT campus groups, and are a current member of the Nightwood Theatre Young Innovators Program. Max is currently working on accessibility and event coordination for Lakeshore Arts and the Toronto Community Dance Love-In, with the hopes of expanding options for disabled artists and audiences in community arts settings. They're so grateful to be part of such a touching and inspiring story, and to be representing trans and non-binary youth. Enjoy the show! #ProtectTransKids
-----------
PAM
Pamela Baer
Pamela Baer is a theatre and media artist with a focus on community engaged work. Drawn from a young age to storytelling as a way of connecting people and building community, her work revolves around personal narratives, oral histories, and life stories. Pamela has facilitated community arts projects with diverse groups, and wide-reaching themes, in England, Ghana, and Canada. Her current work focuses on LGBTQ families, stories, and representations, and explores the role of collective community creation in the production of participatory media. Pamela has a B.F.A in Theatre and Development from Concordia University, a M.A. in Theatre and Media for Development from the University of Winchester, and a M.A. in Education from The Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto. Pamela is the Research Manager on the LGBTQ Families Speak Out project, a PhD Student in Education at the University of Toronto and the Program Coordinator at Charles Street Video, an artist-run video production facility in Toronto.
-----------
RYAN
My name is Ryan. I'm a mixed-race, queer settler on this land, born in Edmonton by parents linked to the West Indies, India, Africa, and the Netherlands.
Ryan Singh
A Toronto-based performer, educator, and activist, Ryan is thrilled to be a part of this cast sharing the moving and beautiful words of some amazing queer & trans parents and youth. Ryan has fought for LGBTQ2 rights for over 15 years, as well as educating youth across Canada on diversity, inclusion, and creating social change. In a past life he co-founded Fly By Night Theatre Company and directed, produced, & performed with them several times. Currently, he is president of the board of Common Boots Theatre. Thanks Jenny & Pam for asking and your guidance, Tara for your gigantic heart, an amazing team surrounding us, my husband two times over, this beautiful cast, and most importantly, the participants whose stories build this world. You inspire me to work harder for our rights and speak our truths more clearly than I ever have.
----------
SANDAKIE
I’m Sandakie, my ancestors are Sinhalese and my parents emigrated from Sri Lanka to the land we acknowledged here today, and I was born and raised here.
Sandakie Ekanayake
I had the pleasure of working with Tara and benjamin during the fall of 2018 in their undergraduate course on Equity and Activism in Education, and it was through this that I was first introduced to the project and the research. I have joined the team for the production as an actor and I am truly grateful to be a part of such a collaborative team. I am a recent graduate from the University of Toronto with a BA, majoring in Equity Studies. I aspire to work as an educator and continue to be an outspoken ally to the queer community, prioritizing marginalized and intersectional perspectives and experiences.
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TARA
My name is Tara. I was born in Montreal, Quebec. My great-grandparents on my father’s side and my grandfather on my mother’s side emigrated to Montreal from Eastern Europe in the early 1900s to escape the pogroms of antisemitism. I have lived in Toronto since 1985 when I moved here to pursue a doctorate in education at the University of Toronto, where I began to learn about the violent colonial history of my Canadian home.
Tara Goldstein
Tara Goldstein is a professor, ethnographer and playwright in the Department of Curriculum, Teaching and Learning at the Ontario Institute of Studies in Education, University of Toronto where she teaches an undergraduate course called Equity, Activism and Education for the Equity Studies program at New College and a graduate course called Gender, Sexuality and Schooling. Tara is also the Founding and Artistic Director of Gailey Road Productions, a theatre company that produces research-informed theatre on social and political issues that affect us all (www.gaileyroad.com). Tara co-wrote the Toronto Pride script of Out at School with artist researchers Pam Baer and Jenny Salisbury. Tara’s next production will be Castor and Sylvie which is about French feminist philosopher Simone de Beauvoir and her companion Sylvie Le Bon. Castor and Sylvie was workshopped at the Toronto SummerWorks Festival in 2015, revised and performed the L Fest in Llandudno, Wales in 2018, and will be performed again in Toronto in March 2020 in celebration of International Women's Day.
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TSHOLO
My name is Tsholo Khaleme. I was born in South Africa amidst the apartheid era. I learned from a young age the importance of the land. The land is ours to love and take of; when we take care of the land, the land takes care of us.
Tsholo Khalema
Tsholo Khalema is an actor, photographer and aspiring theatre/film director. He recently performed in the 2019 revival of Michel Marc Bouchard' play Lilies at Buddies in Bad Times. He is also known for his film work in Unexpectedly Trans (2018) Almost Heroes (2011) and Beyond a Friend (2007).
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TY
My name is Ty. I've lived my entire life in the Greater Toronto Area. My mother emigrated here from Manchester with her parents in the 1960's. My father was born to British parents in Montreal, and moved to Toronto to pursue a music career. This place has always felt like home.
Ty Walkland is a writer, teacher, and teacher educator who works with youth and teachers to confront power, privilege, and the possibilities of a more just and equitable future. He is currently pursuing a PhD in Curriculum and Pedagogy at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE), University of Toronto, where his research explores critical and holistic approaches to drug education. Before grad school, Ty spent several years teaching secondary English, Social Science, and Special Education for the Simcoe County District School Board. He still teaches high school occasionally, and continues to develop curriculum and lead workshops across the province that support education workers to meet the needs of diverse youth and families.
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BISHOP
My name is Bishop and I am a second generation Canadian, born in Toronto.
Bishop Owis
Bishop is a PhD candidate at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto (OISE/UT). They are a graduate of the Masters of Teaching program at OISE/UT where they earned her teaching qualifications in the Junior-Intermediate division. Bishop’s research at OISE explores how teachers and students can co-create queer and trans-inclusive sex education curriculum by using participatory action research. Bishop is a member of the Advisory Council for the Young Women’s Leadership Network, a Junior Fellow at Massey College, and the facilitator for the group, “Queer at OISE.” They also facilitate workshops with Planned Parenthood as a member of the TEACH team, and work as an external educator with the Sex Education Centre at the University of Toronto. Bishop is passionate about equity issues in education, LGBTQ+ advocacy and creating equitable spaces for women of colour in educational and political spaces.