Damien Atkins

Damien Atkins
Born 1975
Australia
Occupation actor, playwright
Nationality Canadian
Period 1990's - present
Notable works Lucy, We Are Not Alone, Good Mother
Website
damienatkins.workbooklive.com

Damien Atkins is a Canadian actor and playwright.[1]

Born in Australia in 1975 and raised in Edmonton, Alberta,[1] Atkins graduated from the musical theatre program at Grant MacEwan College in 1994[2] and moved to Toronto in 1997 after appearing in a Canadian Stage production of Into the Woods.[1]

Childhood

Atkins grew up in St. Albert, Alberta. At the age of five he was cast in the first show presented by the St. Albert Children's Theatre: The Hobbit. He continued performing with SACT (in almost 40 shows) until 1992. His family moved to Saskatoon in 1989, where he attended high school at Marion Graham Collegiate, graduating in 1992.

Playwriting

His first play, miss chatelaine, was staged at Theatre Passe-Muraille in 1999[3] following a successful run at the Edmonton Fringe Festival [2] In 2000, his musical cabaret show Real Live Girl was workshopped at Buddies in Bad Times,[4] before having its official premiere in December 2001. Also in 2001 he premiered Good Mother, starring Seana McKenna, at the Stratford Festival of Canada.[5]

Good Mother won the Elliott Hayes Playwright Development Award from the Stratford Festival and the Prism International Prize from the University of British Columbia,[4] and made Atkins the youngest playwright ever to have a new work staged at the Stratford Festival.[4] Real Live Girl was later restaged by Buddies in 2003 and went on tour in 2004. He performed a one-act version of the piece for a Buddies fundraiser in 2010.[6]

His fourth play, Lucy, premiered at Canadian Stage in March 2007,[7] and was later staged at the Ensemble Studio Theatre in New York City in October 2007.[8]

His fifth play, The Mill, Part Four: Ash, was the fourth part of The Mill tetralogy produced by theatrefront. The other writers involved in The Mill were Matthew MacFadzean, Hannah Moscovitch and Tara Beagan.

In 2013, Buddies in Bad Times staged The Gay Heritage Project, a play in which Atkins and cocreators Andrew Kushnir and Paul Dunn dramatized various scenes investigating the notion of a heritage that is particular to gay people.[9]

In February 2015, Atkins premiered his newest solo show, We Are Not Alone, at the Segal Centre in Montreal, in a co-production between The Segal Centre and Toronto's Crow's Theatre.

Acting

In addition to some of his own plays, Atkins has appeared in many productions across Canada and the U.S. Selected credits include: I Am My Own Wife, The Retreat From Moscow, Mr. Burns, A Post-Electric Play, Sextet, Beatrice & Virgil, Unidentified Human Remains..., Someone Else, Seussical, Frost/Nixon,[6] 7 Stories,[6] The Way of the World,[6] London Road,[10] Angels in America,[11] Shopping and Fucking,[4] Hamlet,[4] Fiddler on the Roof,[4] The Alchemist,[4] Macbeth,[4] The Tempest,[4] Titus Andronicus,[4] Elizabeth Rex,[4] Our Country's Good and The Chocolate Soldier.[4]

His roles in film and television have included Angel Square, The Art of Woo, Children of My Heart, Take This Waltz, Slings and Arrows and The Matthew Shepard Story.

Awards and nominations

Atkins has been nominated for nine Dora Mavor Moore Awards for acting and writing, winning four.

He won two Doras in 2002, in the categories of Best New Musical and Outstanding Male Performance in a Musical, for Real Live Girl.[12]

He was nominated for the Dora for Outstanding New Play, but did not win, in 2007 for Lucy.

He was nominated for a Dora for Best Actor in a Musical in 2011 for Seussical.

In 2014 he was nominated for five Doras in one evening (Best Actor in a Play for Angels in America: Perestroika, Best Actor in a Musical for London Road, Best Ensemble for The Gay Heritage Project, Beat New Play (with Andrew Kushnir and Paul Dunn) for The Gay Heritage Project and Best Ensemble of a Musical for London Road). He won both Doras for London Road.

That same year he won the Toronto Theatre Critics Award for Best Actor for Angels in America.

He has also been nominated for Montreal's Masque Award (Best Actor for The Glass Menagerie) MECCA award (Best Actor for Geometry in Venice) and META awards (Best Actor and Best New Play for We Are Not Alone).

References

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