With Brigitte Haentjens and Mani Soleymanlou at your side, meet the seven artists featured in Portrait(s): Theatre at the Forefront, the new NAC French Theatre video series.
NAC French Theatre Artistic Director since 2012, Brigitte Haentjens studied theatre in Paris with Jacques Lecoq before moving to Ontario in 1977. She quickly emerged as a major force in the Franco-Ontarian cultural community, first in Ottawa and then in Sudbury. As artistic director of the Théâtre du Nouvel-Ontario for eight years, she revitalized the company with an artistic energy that attracted attention across Canada, Quebec and France. In 1991 she moved to Montreal, where she established a reputation for her powerful, original and personal style. She was the artistic director of the Nouvelle Compagnie Théâtrale from 1991–94, and founded her own company, Sibyllines, in 1997 to deepen her artistic vision in a context of greater freedom. Selected directing credits include Heiner Muller’s Quartett (which won several Masque awards, including best production of the 1995–96 season and—as did Brigitte’s production of Louise Dupré’s Tout comme elle—the Prix de l’Association québécoise des critiques de théâtre), Combat de nègre et de chiens (Bernard-Marie Koltès), La cloche de verre (Sylvia Plath), Woyzeck (Georg Büchner) and L’opéra de quat’sous (Brecht/Weill).
Recipient of the 2017 Governor General’s Performing Arts Award for lifetime artistic achievement, the 2007 Siminovitch Prize in Theatre and the 2007 Gascon-Thomas Award, Brigitte Haentjens was named artistic director of NAC French Theatre in 2012 (the first woman to occupy the position). For this outstanding artist, acclaimed for her exceptional contribution to Franco-Ontarian theatre, the appointment represented a kind of homecoming and an acknowledgment of her highly original and compelling artistic practice. A passionate lover of literature, a director keenly interested in issues of female identity, power and sexuality, she is known for dazzlingly innovative productions marked by uncompromising rigour. They include most recently Une femme à Berlin and Molly Bloom. She is also the artistic director of the Montreal-based company Sibyllines, which she founded in 1997.
The NAC French Theatre has presented many of Haentjens’ works since her nomination as Artistic Director, including Le 20 novembre by Lars Norén (2013) ; La nuit juste avant les forêts with Sébastien Ricard (2013); Ta douleur, a theatrical choreography with Anne Le Beau and Francis Ducharme (2013); Molly Bloom, inspired by James Joyce’s Ulysses (2014) and Shakespeare’s Richard III (2015).
A 2008 graduate of the National Theatre School of Canada, Mani Soleymanlou has lived in Tehran, Paris, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal, and has worked with such acclaimed directors as Alice Ronfard (Les pieds des anges), Brigitte Haentjens (L’opéra de quat’sous), Claude Poissant (Rouge gueule, The Dragonfly of Chicoutimi), Serge Denoncourt (Projet Andromaque, Les trois mousquetaires), Olivier Kemeid (Furieux et désespérés), Denis Bernard (Ce moment-là) and Eric Jean (Variations sur un temps).
He is best known as the founding artistic director (2011) of the Montreal-based theatre company Orange Noyée. His distinctive artistic practice investigates notions of community identity (Un/One, Deux/Two, Trois/Three) and social relationships (Ils étaient quatre, Cinq à sept, 8). He pursued this approach more recently in Neuf [working title] and Zéro presented in fall 2019 in Montreal and Ottawa, and also in various artistic collaborations over the years: Lapin blanc, Lapin rouge, Les Lettres arabes II, and À te regarder, ils s’habitueront. Mani Soleymanlou was part of the impressive team behind Gabriel Dumont’s Wild West Show (premiered at the NAC in October 2017), as director and co-artistic director.
Mani Soleymanlou assumed the position of Artistic Director of NAC French Theatre on September 1, 2021.