Canadian class - Angelique opens next week in Toronto
Marie-Joseph Angélique will Burn Down The House
By Stephen Weir
It
is not as though the story of how Angélique, a young Montreal domestic slave,
set fire to Montreal and was hanged for her trouble is a state secret. However,
the fact that there was slavery in Canada, and at least one black woman fought
back in 1724, is not a well-known fact.
“The trouble with
history is knowing whose version of the facts are real. While the establishment might see Angélique,
as a villain, the Black community will have a different take," said Luke Reece a
Producer at Obsidian Theatre. "Next week we are opening AngÄlique a play that
tells her story and gives a vibrant account of Canadian Black history."
Angélique,
a classic Canadian play written by the late Lorena Gale, is based on the
transcripts of the trial of an enslaved Black woman who was tortured and hanged
for the Montreal fire 245 years ago. The current drama (mounted initially by
the Quebec
based Black
Theatre Workshop) draws a line from the relatively unknown dark past to this
country’s contemporary
struggles with racism.
The
remounted classic is currently on tour in Ontario. After successful runs in
Montreal and Ottawa this past few months it is now en-route to Toronto. It will
be opening on April 3rd downtown at the Factory Lab Theatre on Bathurst St. for
a three week stay.
“We were approached by
Factory Lab to co-produce Angélique. That is because Obsidian is known for our
commitment to being a platform for dramatically telling the Black story,” Reece told the
Caribbean Camera. “As you know we work with Canada’s best Black actors
and actresses, be they established or about to be discovered. Audiences know
and trust our take on (contemporary theatre).”
The
play stars Jenny Brizard, a young Montreal actress and dancer who has performed
in both English and French on stage, film and television. She has already portrayed
Angélique in a short 2017 film, and for the last few months working with
director Mike Payette on this current take on the play.
Jenny Brizard |
“We had a chance to
meet Jenny before we even knew that we would be signing on to Gale’s
revival. We regularly bring in Black
artists to show us what they are doing, and giving them the opportunity to
network with other Black actors, actresses, producers and the theatre community,”
explained Reece. “She blew us away, and I know Toronto will be in awe of what they
will see from her next week.”
Although
you don’t need to know who Angélique
was it is helpful to know the backstory. She was born in Portugal probably in
1705 and was enslaved and sold as a young teenager to a Flemish slaver. She was
shipped to the US and was sold again to a New France (Quebec) slaver in 1725
and brought north to Montreal where she worked as a domestic slave.
She
was not a model servant and was sold again to a Quebec City merchant who was
set to ship her out to work in the Caribbean once the St Lawrence River was
free of ice. When fire levelled the Merchant District of Montreal in 1734 she
was arrested and accused of setting the fire while attempting to flee her
owners. She was tried, tortured and forced to publicly confess her crimes.
She was then hung, her body was put on display from a giblet and then finally
burned.
This
play casts doubt on the decision of the court and the ultimate guilt of the
young woman.
Some
historians say that she was railroaded because of her reputation as a difficult
runaway; others write that her arson was an act of rebellion against slavery.
Jenny
Brizard and company burned down the house in Montreal and Ottawa. It is now Toronto’s turn to see if we
can stand the heat!
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