From Page to Stage: A Conversation with Djanet Sears, AND Harlem Duet
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This session is co-presented by The McGill Writing Centre, Black Theatre Workshop and the Segal Center for the Arts
This course will cover the process for a playwright to create a story for the purpose of having it presented on a stage by actors. Using her play Harlem Duet as an example, award-winning playwright Djanet Sears will share her writing process - from its initial idea as a prelude to Shakespeare’s Othello to a full length production. From the development of the initial idea, to the process of rehearsals and production, you will learn what is involved in writing a piece intended to be “presented” instead of simply read. Learn all of the elements involved in bringing a piece from the page to the stage.
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Facilitator
Djanet Sears is a Toronto-based award-winning playwright, director and actor. She is the author of several plays, including Afrika Solo, The Adventures of a Black Girl in Search of God and Harlem Duet, for which she received the Chalmers Award, the Governor General’s Literary Award and a Dora Mavor Moore Award. She has also received Black Theatre Workshop’s Martin Luther King Jr. Achievement Award, the Harry Jerome Award for Excellence and a Phenomenal Woman in the Arts Award. She is an adjunct professor at University College, University of Toronto, and the driving force behind the AfriCanadian Playwrights Festival, a celebration of African diasporic writing for the Canadian stage, held in Toronto in 2003 and 2006. She is the editor of a two-volume collection of African Canadian plays, Testifyin': Contemporary African Canadian Drama (2000), and Tellin' It Like It Is: A Compendium of African Canadian Monologues for Actors (2000).