Stage Left Productions is an interdisciplinary performance company dedicated to collaborative arts forms, community theatre practices, Disability art, and social activism. Self-described as âÂÂa grassroots, Popular Theatre company of diverse artists and non-artists/catalysts of change who create pathways to systemic equity â in and through the arts,â Stage LeftâÂÂs activities âÂÂpromote equity & diversity, provide support services for still-excluded artists and community groups, and produce radical forms of Political Art.â Based in Canmore, Alberta, the company is active in Calgary, as well as provincially, nationally, and internationally. Stage LeftâÂÂs output is intercultural and multifaceted, encompassing Guerrilla theatre actions, production, presenting, training, education, advocacy, and organizational support work.
Stage Left was established in 1999 by a group of individuals including Michele Decottignies, a lesbian activist-artist with mental and physical disabilities who serves as the current Artistic Director. Decottignies has a BFA and is a graduate of Technical Theatre Arts Program (class of 1992) at CalgaryâÂÂs Mount Royal College. Interested in âÂÂchanging the world by creating community through performance,â Decottignies founded a theatre company and adopted Augusto BoalâÂÂs Theatre of the Oppressed techniques, which became a cornerstone of the companyâÂÂs practice. With its various productions, Stage Left has forged a distinctive aesthetic described by scholar Kirsty Johnston as âÂÂa combination of Popular Theatre genres (e.g., Theatre of the Oppressed, Agitprop, Guerrilla theatre, Theatre of the Streets, Workersâ Theatre), Political drama, Documentary theatre, Performance Creation, Digital media and New media art, Interdisciplinarity Production, and Artist-Community Collaboration with anti-oppressive, arts-based change processes.âÂÂ
Stage Left incorporated as a Nonprofit organization in 2003. In its early years, the company operated primarily through project grants and working collaborations/partnerships, which in turn influenced and shaped funding opportunities. Decottignies explains the approach in a 2010 interview: âÂÂWe identify programming needs from long-standing and continued engagement with specific communities. We work with our partners to figure out how best to offer programming that may meet those needs. We apply for funding to support that programming.â In 2012, the Canada Council for the Arts âÂÂofficially recognized the arts and disability sector as a new field of exploration,â and Stage Left started receiving multi-year operational funding to help support and sustain its activities. By that time, the theatre had become âÂÂCalgaryâÂÂs most accomplished performance company engaging exclusively in artist-community collaboration and in professional production with marginalized artists.
Augusto BoalâÂÂs popular theatre techniques are an important aspect and hallmark of Stage LeftâÂÂs activities, from the companyâÂÂs inception through to the present day. In 2005 the organization was officially endorsed by Boal as an International Centre for Theatre of the Oppressed in Canada. Taking theatre to the people (rather than bringing people to the theatre), Stage Left often collaborates with historically-marginalized groups (though not exclusively so), such as Indigenous Nations; people of colour; folks with mental and physical disabilities; LGBTTTIQ+; and at-risk youth. As Decottignies explains in a 2005 profile article, Stage LeftâÂÂs mandate is to craft a âÂÂprofessional artist-community collaborationâ performance model that will âÂÂintegrate marginalized people into the creative, artistic, and social life of [the] community by providing safe and accessible space in which they can explore, define, and celebrate their culture; develop confidence, imagination, and artistic expression; contribute to the culture of community in meaningful ways; and express both individual and collective identity.â Moreover, the company uses âÂÂthe arts to enable marginalized people to establish a visible presence in the larger community, increasing awareness of specific issues and fostering an appreciation of diverse cultures through the presentation of authentic, dynamic, and non-sentimental images of personal experience.âÂÂ
By the early 2000s, Stage Left was facilitating different streams of activity grounded in Theatre of the Oppressed and other popular and political theatre practices, such as Active Arts for people with disabilities and Acting Out for LGBTTTIQ+ youth. Engagement with First Nations communities has always been central as well, as demonstrated by a 2004/05 joint initiative with Dr. Lindsay Crowshoe (a physician and assistant professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Calgary at that time) intended to improve doctor training and cultural competency for Aboriginal healthcare. The Medical Education journal reports that Forum Theatre was utilized for first-year students âÂÂto connect mentally, physically, spiritually and emotionally with the content and begin to develop an appropriate approach towards interacting with Aboriginal patients.â Forum Theatre is an interactive technique in which various problematic scenarios are played out on stage, facilitated by a âÂÂjokerâ or emcee figure who encourages audience members to stop the action on stage, replay it, and insert themselves into the scene in an attempt to find an acceptable resolution for the issue at hand. Three âÂÂreal-lifeâ scenarios were developed as part of this âÂÂcomprehensive curriculum project,â which was designed to place âÂÂhuman relationship and understanding at the heartâ of medical training, and to âÂÂaddress both a gap in Aboriginal health and a gap in student understanding in Aboriginal and medical cultures. The medical students found Forum Theatre to be âÂÂa very effective way of engaging the class in conflict resolution strategies,â and as Crowshoe notes, it is a useful way âÂÂto strip away the layers of prejudice and political correctness and start getting at the real issues and truly begin opening up dialogue.â Implementing Forum Theatre practices for medical training is âÂÂground breakingâ work, ensuring that Indigenous health issues and curricula are not âÂÂan addendum to mainstream medical education,â but rather incorporated âÂÂas an integral part of medical education."
The efficacy of this work is evident in the ongoing relationship of Stage Left and Dr. Crowshoe, who have continued to partner on various projects over time. In 2018, the University of CalgaryâÂÂs Indigenous, Local, and Global Health Office partnered with Stage Left and a team of doctors, including Dr. Lindsay Crowshoe, on a knowledge exchange platform aimed at enhancing âÂÂIndigenous youth capacity to understand, articulate, and address toxic stress as well as to influence policy and services affecting their wellness.â Entitled Interrupting Toxic Stress in Indigenous Youth: A Social Congress for Indigenous Health, Stage Left and Dr. Crowshoe once again utilized Theatre of the Oppressed techniques to engage Indigenous youth, and âÂÂto invite civil society partners to become more aware, engaged, and networked in identifying options available to prevent and mitigate toxic stress impacting Indigenous youth and communities.âÂÂ
In addition to educational training, Stage Left uses Theatre of the Oppressed for different kinds of advocacy work. In 2006, the company partnered with the Autism Aspergers Friendship Society to create a Forum Theatre piece involving youth with disabilities, many of them on the Autism spectrum, that was performed at Stage LeftâÂÂs Disability Arts Festival. The presentation is described as âÂÂa brief skit that brought the audience a sense of what it would be like to be a high school student living with the challenges of a disability. The skit highlighted what it would be like to be "different"; the frustration of having learning challenges, the anxiety of dealing with issues of peer acceptance and bullying, and struggles with special needs assistants and teachers who, at times, do not understand.â Audience members were able to stop to the play and insert themselves into the action to find alternate solutions to the problems presented. As one witness remarked, âÂÂWhat was most remarkable with the performance that night was the engagement of the audience. Some of the audience members who joined on stage, themselves had a disability. The play fostered a profound sense of empathy and understanding, while empowered many with ideas on how to cope with a disability themselves, or how to make life better for a disabled person in our community." Moving beyond the usual theatrical paradigms, this groundbreaking work of Stage LeftâÂÂs created theatre by and for people with disabilities.
That same year, the company was also commissioned by the Alberta Council for Global Cooperation (ACGC) to work with immigrant populations âÂÂin rural areas of Alberta in international development issues and global citizenship.â Stage Left created We Are Global Citizens!, a Forum Theatre piece that provided âÂÂa safe space for individuals to share, discuss, and learn about the concept of global citizenship and to examine the impact of their own actions on our global community.â The ACGCâÂÂs Art Aware! conference kicked off with a performance of the piece, and Stage Left wrapped up the event with a Popular Theatre workshop about arts-based community development. Forging new collaborations, the conference also included a âÂÂPainting Our Changeâ mural workshop, the final products of which toured to high schools as an art exhibit along with subsequent productions of We Are Global Citizens!, presented in Edmonton, Smoky Lake, Fort McMurray, Jasper, Brooks, High River, Three Hills, Kathryn, Sundre, and Rosebud. This âÂÂinteractiveâ play was âÂÂextremely well-receivedâ and âÂÂproved to be a highly effective tool of public engagement for the Council.âÂÂ
While Stage Left does not consider itself a TYA company, it frequently works with (often at-risk) youth, as evidenced by the high school tour of We Are Global Citizens!, and other productions, such as The Hate Show, an original piece presented at the Calgary International ChildrenâÂÂs Festival in May 2011. That play was an intercultural work exploring âÂÂhow a group of diverse urban teenagers â dis-abled, queer, Muslim, Aboriginal or poor â are forming their identities while trying to fit in with their peers.âÂÂ
Moving beyond AlbertaâÂÂs borders, Stage Left has also formed national and international partnerships based on its Theatre of the Oppressed work. The most far-reaching of these was a 2016 Arts exCHANGE Project involving âÂÂcross-continental collaborationâ between Stage Left and AustraliaâÂÂs Third Way Theatre. The two groups teamed up to offer âÂÂequity intervention trainingâ intensives delivered via âÂÂembodied learning.âÂÂ
Theatre of the Oppressed rarely occurs in designated theatre spaces, so it often goes unreviewed and undocumented, and thus, it is worth noting that a company such as Stage Left has collaborated and engaged with thousands of people through its projects over time, far more than a regular theatre company of comparable size.
As part of its expansive political theatre practice, Stage Left also engages in Performance Creation for the development of original, often venue-based, performance works. This branch of activity likewise employs artist-community collaboration and draws on a fusion of popular and political theatre techniques, most especially Bertolt BrechtâÂÂs Epic Theatre practices. Productions of this nature include As I Am (2002), Mercy Killing or Murder: The Tracy Latimer Story (2003), Notwithstanding: 100 Years of Eugenics in Alberta (2005), Same Difference (2008), Time to Put My Socks On (2008) WomenâÂÂs Work (2013), Le Crip Blue (2018, 2019), and more.
Mercy Killing or Murder: The Tracy Latimer Story is considered a âÂÂcritically importantâ work by scholars. The subject matter for the play is an actual Canadian crime: the 1993 premeditated killing of 13-year-old Tracy Latimer by her father, Robert Latimer, who claimed he had no choice but to kill her because she was in âÂÂconstant, excruciating painâ from cerebral palsy. Robert Latimer employed this âÂÂnecessityâ defense in court, creating a sympathetic media storm, and even though the murder was premeditated, he received a second- rather than a first-degree murder sentence resulting in ten yearsâ jail time. Mercy Killing or Murder: The Tracy Latimer Story, âÂÂexplores the extreme positions taken during Robert Latimer's trials and offers up voices that were seldom heard amid the dialogue around his case: those of people with physical and developmental disabilities like Tracy Latimer." The production âÂÂsought to redress an imbalance the artists perceived in the media coverage of the criminal case,â which was âÂÂmore typically focused on public sympathy for Robert as well as debates about euthanasia and the human rights of people with disabilities." Michele Decottignies is credited as the playâÂÂs author, but a collaborative building process is acknowledged in the billing credits, which note the play was borne âÂÂout of a performance creation process in which all team members are co-authors.â Company members found that âÂÂTracy Latimer had been belittled, dehumanized, and under-represented in the legal process," and so the creative process âÂÂfocused on finding, supporting, and featuringâ the voices of people with disabilities" Consequently, the play offers up perspectives and viewpoints of people with disabilities, while also presenting additional facts about the case that were not made public at the time. Stylistically, the play draws on documentary and verbatim theatre techniques, quoting from media coverage and trial transcripts for the lines of the Latimers, Judges, Lawyers, Witnesses, and the like, whereas the dialogue of the other characters is original and most often the performersâ own. The latter input was developed collaboratively with extensive research and dramaturgical support over an extended period of time, âÂÂby six performers with physical and developmental disabilities, by a host of professional artists, some with disabilities and some not, and by community collaborators interested in giving voice to perspectives of people with disabilities on the case."
Presented in December 2003, both the play's setting and staging emphasized the polarity of perspectives in the case between the general public and people with disabilities, as well as between âÂÂexpertsâ and âÂÂordinary people,â and due to the central role of the media, it also had a strong presence on stage throughout, underscored by the use of film and digital media projections. In a homage to the Canadian Workers Theatre Movement (and more specifically to Eight Men Speak), Mercy Killing or Murder employs a trial-within-a-trial set-up in which the people/characters with disabilities function as a jury, while the staging suggests that the audience functions as jury as well. The original production included one of the actors with a disability sitting in the house and delivering his lines from there, implicating and involving the audience further by breaking the fourth wall. Additional tactics along these lines included the audience sharing popcorn with the actors, and at the end of the play, participating in a candlelight vigil for Tracey Latimer, so that spectators were âÂÂalignedâ with the âÂÂlayered and complexâ perspectives of people with disabilities. As disability theatre scholar Kirsty Johnston writes, âÂÂthe production did not step back from being critical, judgemental, and hard-hitting in its rhetoric and argumentsâ while evoking empathetic responses to a dehumanizing situation, a âÂÂgreater questioning of Tracy LatimerâÂÂs story,â and additional understanding about âÂÂhow disability is understood and experienced in contemporary Canadian society. Given its articulation of âÂÂpressing human rights concerns for people with disabilities," the efficacy of popular theatre tactics, and the innovations of disability aesthetics, Mercy Killing or Murder: The Tracy Latimer Story is considered a germinal and canonical work of disability theatre in Canada.
Another piece in the Epic Theatre vein, and a coproduction this time around, is Time to Put My Socks On, the brainchild of Alan Shain, a stand-up comic, dancer, and professional actor with cerebral palsy from Ontario. He worked with Stage Left on a few different shows over time. Time to Put My Socks On was collaboratively written by Shain, Decottignies, and the Associate Artistic Director of Stage Left at the time, Nicole Dunbar. The piece is a dramady exploring âÂÂlove between a disabled guy, Marc, and his non-disabled lover, Linda,â and it includes âÂÂsexuality and adult themesâ dealing with âÂÂthe dynamics of relationships and MarcâÂÂs independence as an individual with a disability. A sequel to ShainâÂÂs 1999 Still Waiting for that Special Bus, Time to Put My Socks On had a Bow Valley run in 2008, presentations in 2009, and a 2010 tour to Ottawa.
Disability Art is defined in Wikipedia as any artwork centring disability in terms of topic, theme, or context. This is contrasted with the Wikipedia entry for Disability in the Arts, which involves the inclusion and direct involvement of people with disabilities, and is sometimes understood as a political act. Stage Left is firmly situated in the latter quadrant, but the company employs the former term, âÂÂDisability Artsâ (in the opposite manner of current Wikipedia descriptions), as it is understood and utilized by scholars such as Colin Barnes, Emeritus Professor of Disability Studies at the University of Leeds. He defines disability art as: âÂÂnot simply about disabled people obtaining access to the mainstream of artistic consumption and production. It is the development of shared cultural meanings and collective expression of the experience of disability and struggle. This entails using art to expose the discrimination and prejudice disabled people face and to generate group consciousness and solidarity.â Decottignies elaborates further in a 2017 interview, citing three distinct (though often overlapping) practices of disability art in Canada: art and disability, disability-inclusive art, and disability-identified art. Art and disability is defined as âÂÂtraditional art forms practiced by artists with disabilities, without regard for disability politics, culture or pride,â whereas disability-inclusive art refers to âÂÂwhen disabled people receive accommodations that allow non-traditional artists to adapt to traditional aesthetics,â while disability-identified art âÂÂembraces and promotes disability politics, culture and pride,â centring âÂÂresistance, affirmation, and inversion,â which can be revolutionary in both form (e.g., âÂÂwhen impairments are positioned as a source of artistic enrichmentâÂÂ) and content (e.g., âÂÂwhen disability stereotypes and biases are challenged and reframed, and disability is celebrated as a kind of diversity instead of shame)."
Some claim that âÂÂCanada has the oldest history of disability arts production in the world," and Stage Left is one of the countryâÂÂs longest running disability arts companies, positioning it at the forefront of the movement. As Canadian scholar Kirsty Johnston frames it (quoting Decottignies), Stage Left subscribes to the âÂÂglobal disability arts movementâÂÂs promotion of a distinctive artistic practice which resists âÂÂdominant norms that frame disability as undesirable,â advances new ideas of equity, and reflects a disability aesthetic.â This means understanding disability âÂÂâÂÂas a unique culture in society â the value of which can be commented on and shared with a largely ignorant and biased society in artistically engaging ways â just as âÂÂqueerâ or âÂÂfeministâ art contributed a new understanding of humanity to society through artistic channels.â In this way, Johnson connects the foregrounding of radical disability arts politics to a larger international scene as a âÂÂmarkerâ of Stage LeftâÂÂs âÂÂconnection to the global movement,â warranting the use of one of the companyâÂÂs taglines: âÂÂStage Left: CanadaâÂÂs leading contributor to the global Disability Arts & Culture Movement.
Stage Left also functions as a presenter, as with its notable disability arts festival, Balancing Acts. In Stage Turns: Canadian Disability Theatre, Kirsty Johnston writes that âÂÂSince 2000, Canadians have played an important role in organizing disability arts festivals with local, national, and international reach,â and this has âÂÂraised the profile of disability arts in general and helped connect discrete pockets of disability arts activity.â Johnston further notes Stage LeftâÂÂs significant contributions to this phenomenon, starting in February 2002, when the company teamed up with the Calgary SCOPE Society and Transition to Independence to produce CalgaryâÂÂs first disability arts festival. Entitled âÂÂStages: Unmasking Disability Culture,â the festival âÂÂwas a celebration of disability culture through shows in drama, dance, music, poetry, photography, and the fine arts,â involving over fifty artists with disabilities. Stage Left and the Calgary SCOPE Society joined forces again at the end of the year in December for another rendition, called âÂÂA Second Look at Disability Culture: Another Disability Arts Festival,â this time presented by One Yellow Rabbit. âÂÂSecond Lookâ was designed to increase âÂÂawareness and appreciation of disability issues by providing authentic, dynamic, and non-sentimental images of disability experience and by integrating disability culture into the creative, artistic, and social life of our community.âÂÂ
The following year, in December 2003, Stage Left produced the festival again, this time independently, renamed it Balancing Acts, and co-presented it with One Yellow Rabbit. Balancing Acts was repeated annually in December 2004 through to 2009. The company defined the festivals as âÂÂa celebration of creative self-expression by people with developmental, physical, or sensory disability, mental illness, brain injury, and/or chronic illness,â articulating âÂÂdistinct explorations, representations, and declarations of disability identity, highlighting the creativity of disabled performers and offering artistic expressions that celebrate and challenge both the ethos and the perception of disability culture.â Moreover, Balancing Acts âÂÂpromotes the professional advancement of disabled artists and fosters an appreciative, educated audience for disability culture through the presentation of thought-provoking, innovative performances, visual arts displays, arts-based workshops, and panel discussions. The work of over 100 disabled artists is showcased over the week long festival, with a primary focus on performances of originally created work and on diversity in performance and across disability."
Poignant and political, Balancing Acts, as Kirsty Johnston writes, âÂÂbuilt critical connections between Canadian and international disability theatre artists,â featuring acclaimed disability theatre artists such as Mat Fraser, as well as nationally renowned artists, like Alex Bulmer, Jan (JD) Derbyshire, Rachel Gorman, Victoria Maxwell, Alan Shain, and Spirit Synott, as well as homegrown community performance groups like Inside Out and MoMo.
Stage Left expanded its activities and moved into the realm of commissioning in 2008 when it introduced the Balancing Acts Commissioning Project to bring into being âÂÂchallenging, thought-provoking performance work of high artistic merit from emerging and established professional disabled artists whose work aligns with the goals and principles of the global disability arts and culture movement. The company focused on developing âÂÂa global rather than a national culture, and it commissioned ten new plays by artists with disabilities with the intent of a series of mainstage production between the years 2008 and 2010.
The Commissioning Project supported the development of poet, broadcaster, and new media artist Meg TorwlâÂÂs ThatâÂÂs So Gay!. Presented at Balancing Acts in 2009, that piece was âÂÂa multidisciplinary solo performance examining gender, disability, and sexuality." Based on the success of the first show, Stage Left commissioned Meg Torwl again in 2010, resulting in a new play entitled, Cancer Town.
All in all, Stage Left presented ten festivals over the course of eight years, involving the participation of more than 1200 artists.
Another branch of Stage LeftâÂÂs activities includes advocacy, alliance building, and support for organizations working towards greater equity, diversity, and inclusion in the arts. One such national project was the pioneering formation of the Disability Arts and Culture Network (DACN) in 2006.
Inspired by her work on the Performance Creation Canada network with Michael Green, Decottignies received funding to create a national presentersâ network for disability arts organizations, which according to Kirsty Johnston, constituted, âÂÂ[o]ne of the few coordinated national-scale efforts in service of Canadian disability arts.â The goal was for presenters to âÂÂforge professional ties, exploring possibilities for coalition, and work toward improving such efficiencies as: developing co-production or sharing touring costs; determining best practices for serving artists with disabilities; or problem-solving around such recurring festival challenges as media relations or arranging travel and accommodation for specific disability needs.â In other words, the idea was to create a support network for discussion and coordinated efforts between disability arts presenters.
The inaugural meeting was held in Calgary in March 2006, and it was the first time that disability arts presenters met as a group to discuss the future of disability arts presenting in Canada. The meeting involved people from six organizations â Stage Left for Balancing Acts (Calgary), RyersonâÂÂs Art With Attitude (Toronto), Kick-START (Vancouver), S$DAC (Vancouver), Madness and the Arts World Festival (Toronto), and the Abilities Festival (Toronto). Representatives from each organization met for three days and discussed such issues as: âÂÂthe balance of professional and community-based art; audience development; sustainability and lack of operating funds; burnout and coping with success; relations with mainstream arts organizations; research and documentation; marginalization; assimilation and cultural appropriation; regional disparities; lack of colleagues/support; competition and cooperation within the network,â and more. A second gathering was held in Toronto in February 2007 at which eight presenters came together to draft vision and mission statements. DACN did not meet again in subsequent years (it was not intended to be a long-term initiative), but the two gatherings laid important groundwork for additional transitions in the field, such as the formation of the DisArts Collective and its Beyond Access High Impact Gathering (which in turn led to the first national arts service association for artists with disabilities in Canada), and historical firsts, such the Canada Council for the Arts officially recognizing disability arts in 2007 with its 2008 â 2011 Strategic Plan, which came about due to âÂÂinitial lobbying by Decottignies, other network members and disability artists and their supporters across the country.âÂÂ
Following in the wake of DACN, by 2009, Decottignies was âÂÂorganizing a separate and differently-oriented network of radical disabled artists âÂÂconcerned with disability arts practices as a unique mode of cultural production, rather than with assimilation into the mainstream.âÂÂâ The greater political emphasis of the DisArts Collective is manifest in Beyond Access: A Disability Arts Gathering, a conference produced and hosted by Stage Left in their hometown of Canmore, Alberta from September 29 to October 6, 2012. This was âÂÂCanada's First National Disability Arts Gathering,âÂÂ,â and the theme was working together âÂÂto shift CanadaâÂÂs Disability & Arts and Culture Movement discourse away from the over-represented access issues that dominate the milieu to the more pressing artistic practice issues that too many disabled artists are up against.â The GatheringâÂÂs core purpose was discussion and conversation to devise collaboratively a proposed national Disability Arts and Culture Strategy via a three-pronged approach involving knowledge sharing, performance labs, and public engagement. The Beyond Access Gathering featured discourse, an artistsâ roundtable, a reception with stakeholders, and more, providing âÂÂa domain of collective resistance to the cultural erasure of the true purpose and practice of Disability Arts.â Also of significance, it was the Beyond Access Gathering that led to the formation of a more permanent network and an arts service organization; the Deaf, Disabled and Mad Arts Alliance of Canada.
As a Stage Left initiative, the Deaf, Disability & Mad Arts Alliance of Canada (DDMAAC) has been led by Michele Decottignies as the Executive Director from its inception to the present day. Decottignies refers to DDMAAC as âÂÂa collective of long-established, disability-identified artists who came together in 2012 in response to increasing disability inequity in the disability arts domain.â For this context, in a 2016 Canadian Theatre Review article, Decottignies adopts a Ryerson University description of âÂÂdisability artsâ as marking âÂÂthe growing political power of disabled people⦠[who] use it to counter cultural misrepresentation, establish disability as a valued human condition, [and] shift control to disabled people.â DDMAACâÂÂs stance is more radical than its DACN predecessor, eschewing cries for mainstream access, as indicated by DDMAACâÂÂs website description:
âÂÂDDMAAC supports Stage Left collaborators who are marginalized from the [professional arts] domain, as a result of its neoliberalization and the classist imposition of âÂÂaccessâ (to a mass culture that relentlessly devalues people who live with any kind of impairment? No thanks!).
Through DDMAAC, Stage Left offers solidarity and support services to socially and culturally diverse members of our company who experience disablement in the professional arts ecology, who seek a practice of autonomy over inclusion and who understand that âÂÂaccessâ is merely a condition of artistic practice, not the end goal.âÂÂ
DDMACâÂÂs mission is to advocate for âÂÂdisability justiceâ via the âÂÂadvancement of counter-cultural, non-normative aesthetics, through the integration of decolonization, anti-racism and anti-oppression into production and presenting processes.âÂÂ
DDMAAC is also noteworthy for conducting the first national survey of CanadaâÂÂs disability arts domain. The 2016 study found that in Canada the sector is primarily multidisciplinary, and the most popular disciplines are theatre, dance, visual art, and new media. DDMAAC reported a total of twenty-nine professional companies, approximately 250 artists, several commercial organizations, and an unknown number of amateur arts groups. The surveyâÂÂs most startling finding was that while âÂÂvery high degrees of both equity and diversity exist in disability-identified artwork,â disability equity had decreased in the disability arts domain, in so far as people with disabilities were âÂÂdependent on the non-disabled for access to the arts. This inequity, it was argued, âÂÂseems to be tied to disability arts policies, funding interventions, and market-access collaborations that focus on the inclusion of disabled people in the arts as the principle concern of disability arts, rather than the production of disability-identified art work by qualified disabled artists.â As a result of these findings, DDMAAC committed to three priorities to help bring about greater equity in the disability arts domain in Canada: âÂÂ(1) educating stakeholders and collaborators on the difference between disability-inclusive art and disability-identified art; (2) promoting disability-identified artists, art forms, and artistic practices; and (3) insisting on increased investment in disability-identified artwork that is produced by disability-identified artists.â The organization has carried out related activities ever since: presenting workshops, forming strategic alliances on various initiatives, and devising policy recommendations for the Canada Council for the Arts.
The breadth of Stage LeftâÂÂs work is impressive. By 2013, the company had facilitated 150 community arts performances with youth and adults with disabilities, and it had introduced more than 5000 people with disabilities to âÂÂarts-based self-advocacy programming.â As of 2016, Stage Left could boast âÂÂten disability arts festivals, fifteen original theatre productions, and thirty digital films,â all of which Decottignies describes as âÂÂintercultural, intersecting, and interdisciplinary fusions of feminist art, queer art, and disability art â co-created with teams of diverse collaborating artists from across Canada.â By 2017, add to that the three hundred plus equity workshops that Decottignies conducted across Canada, in the United States, and abroad.
Stage Left continues its work unbated, its statistics ever-growing, except for the usual shut-down period during the COVID-19 pandemic, but even then, the company kept busy. Stage LeftâÂÂs work with multi-media and digital forms took precedent, and the theatre once again partnered with Dr. Crowshoe (and others) on The KIT (âÂÂKeeping It TogetherâÂÂ) Podcast. KIT is âÂÂan Indigenous-oriented audio/visual podcast showcasing stories and strategies for maintaining wellness in a post-pandemic world.â There are eighteen episodes, hosted by a team of four - Louis Crowshoe, Bridget White, Dr. Adam Murry, and Dr. Lyndsay Crowshoe â who share their own and invited guestsâ experiences throughout the pandemic, as well as âÂÂthe activities and hobbies that helped them âÂÂkeep it togetherâÂÂ.âÂÂ
Coming full circle, since 2021, Stage Left has also been working with Dr. Lindsay Crowshoe and a team of doctors at the University of Calgary on the next iteration of Interrupting Toxic Stress in Indigenous Youth; a continuation of the initiative started in 2018 with the Social Congress for Indigenous Health. The purpose of the recent project is twofold: to involve youth directly in the work as experts with the formation of a Youth Advisory Circle (YAC), and to gather and share learnings via a knowledge exchange platform with a focus on Indigenous approaches to help mitigate toxic stress and foster healthier people. Referring to this ongoing and multi-year project as âÂÂMetaxis: An Arts in Indigenous Health CongressâÂÂ, Stage LeftâÂÂs role is to support a pan-Indigenous Youth Coalition by working with BoalâÂÂs Legislative Theatre techniques to advocate for the Truth and Reconciliation CommissionâÂÂs Calls to Action, particularly numbers 18 to 22, which address the legacy of residential schools and colonization as it pertains to health in present day Canada. Stage Left has also conducted workshops for the Cummings School of Medicine at the University of Calgary, such as the June 2022 offering, âÂÂDisrupting Anti-Indigenous Racism.â This workshop utilized forum theatre techniques with the Indigenous Health Leadership Pathways graduating class as a tool for disrupting racism and bringing about positive change.
Stage Left celebrated its twentieth anniversary in 2023. Apropos of the occasion, the company programmed a retrospective symposium called Step Right Up!. Executed in partnership with the Canadian College of Performing Arts (CCPA) in Victoria, BC, the event was originally planned as a live affair for June, but due to high demand, the format was switched to a digital presentation model for the end of the year. The conferenceâÂÂs content revisited and commemorated Canadian Disability Theatre âÂÂfirstsâ from the last fifty years, such as the first disability theatre production in the western world; Creeps by David Freeman. The symposiumâÂÂs presenters included Lyle Victor Albert, Rachel da Silveira Gorman, Michele Decottignies, Brian Paisley, Ruth Ruth Stackhouse, Adam Warren, and more. There was one live presentation at the CCPA, a closing event called the CripTeases Cabaret, and it included solo performances and a presentation of Alain Shain and Karine RathleâÂÂs âÂÂCloset Freaks,â which is described as âÂÂa physical theatre spectacular that strips away the many layers of oppression which exist amid the intersections of disability, sex and society.â Indicative of a post-pandemic approach, the symposium team created a series of videos of the conference presentations, the cabaret included, which will be available on Vimeo in 2024.