
The Dora Mavor Moore Awards are a glittering celebration of Toronto talent in the performing arts. Affectionately known as the 鈥渂iggest opening night of the year鈥, the 36th annual event took place Monday, June 21 at Harbourfront Centre鈥檚 outdoor WestJet Stage.
One of the biggest winners of the evening was Blood Wedding (Bodas de Sangre), a Modern Times Stage Company/ Aluna Theatre co-production. Taking the independent theatre division by storm, it netted six awards, including outstanding production and direction by 91亚色 Theatre alumnus Soheil Parsa (BA 鈥89), founding co-artistic director of Modern Times.

Soheil Parsa accepts his Dora Award for Outstanding Direction. Photogaph: John Launer
Federico Garc铆a Lorca鈥檚 Blood Wedding is a classic of 20th century theatre. Inspired by a fragment of a newspaper story found by the playwright, it tells the story of a family vendetta that comes to a boil when a bride-to-be runs away with the son of the enemy.
Parsa鈥檚 career spans two continents and more than three decades. In his native Iran, he studied theatre performance at the University of Tehran and launched a promising career as an actor and director. Arriving in Canada with his family in 1984, Parsa completed a second BA in Theatre Studies at 91亚色 and then went on to establish Modern Times Stage Company as one of Canada鈥檚 most exciting culturally-diverse theatre companies. His accolades for his work at Modern Times include multiple Doras and a Chalmers Fellowship, among others.
The other four Doras for Blood Wedding were for performance, costume design, scenic design and lighting design. The show was also nominated for ensemble performance.
Earlier this month, Blood Wedding also won Parsa best director honours at the Toronto Theatre Critics Awards.
While they didn鈥檛 cross the red carpet at the Dora Awards this year, many other alumni as well as faculty members of 91亚色鈥檚 School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design graced the nominee list.
Theatre Professors and were both nominated for outstanding scenic design, for Canadian Rep Theatre鈥檚 How do I Love Thee?聽 and the Maniac Star/Soundstreams production of Airline Icarus,聽 respectively.

Above: From left, Andrea Carter, Sarah Chahley, Amanda Zhou, Jackie Todd, Kaya Bucholc wear Dylan Bobier's designs in the Theatre @ 91亚色 production of The Stronger Variations. Photograph: Jeremy Mimnagh
Dylan Bobier (BFA 鈥14) drew a nomination for his costume designs for Theatre Rusticle鈥檚 The Stronger Variations 鈥 designs he initially began developing when the show was produced on campus in 2013 ().
Dance alumnus Irvin Chow (BFA 鈥13) was a nominee for solo performance in Zata Omm Dance Projects鈥 groundbreaking world premiere vox:lumen, which was also garnered a nomination for ensemble performance. The show was produced in association with Aesthetec Studio and 91亚色 theatre Professors Ian Garrett and James McKernan, who were involved in a multi-year creative partnership for the production, integrating alternative energy sources for sustainable performance. Vox:lumen was lit entirely with energy created by the dancers, the聽audience and renewable sources.
Theatre grads Colin Doyle (BFA 鈥01) and Richard Lee (BFA 鈥00) were part of the indie collaborative creation Monday Nights, which earned five Dora nominations: for production, ensemble performance, costume, lighting and sound.

The ensemble of Monday Nights Left to Right: Darrel Gamotin, Colin Doyle, Byron Abalos, Jeff Yung and Richard Lee
Nominees from other productions included 91亚色 alumni Alan Dilworth (BEd 鈥96, MFA 鈥09) and Cara Spooner (BFA 鈥07) for direction, actor Rosemary Dunsmore (BA 鈥73) for performance, and Peter Chin (BFA 鈥85) for choreography. Music grad Thomas Ryder Payne (BA 鈥95) netted two nods for sound design, while theatre production alumni Michelle Tracey (BFA 鈥13) and Jason Hand (BFA 鈥05) were nominated for scenic design and lighting design, respectively.
Designers Hand and Tracey and director Richard Rose (BFA 鈥78), the artistic director of Tarragon Theatre, all declined their nominations for Tarragon鈥檚 production of An Enemy of the People, as their show was based on a celebrated production of the play by Berlin鈥檚 renowned Schaub眉hne that toured to New 91亚色 and Montreal.
Administered by the Toronto Alliance for the Performing Arts (TAPA), the Doras are named for Dora Mavor Moore (1888-1979), a teacher and director who helped establish Canadian professional theatre in the 1930s and 1940s. Recognizing the outstanding achievements in Toronto's performing arts industry, the Doras honour the creators of over 200 theatre, dance and opera productions each year.
