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Townsman, 1991-02, Page 12wasn't any typical small-town boy destined to grow up, marry the local girl and work in the local factory, came when he finished high school and decided he wanted to travel. He ended up hitch -hiking across Europe, picking olives in Crete during the day, sleeping on the beach at night "to experience the scene". Later he washed dishes in Rome, travelled all over Ireland, worked in a warehouse in London, and came home with the kind of education university couldn't pro- vide. Back in Canada he worked as a recreation director in northern Ontario, then took off for Europe again. When he decided to go back to school he ended up at Brock University "where I started study- ing theatre for some bizzare rea- son". He thought he would be a writer but after a year at Brock decided the school wasn't for him. He went to work at Frontier college, working on the railway in northern Saskatchewan helping new immi- grants learn about the country. At the end of the summer he wrote to University of Victoria because he knew they had a drama program and he wanted to see the west coast (he gives the impression the coast mattered more than the theatre at the time). He was accepted and successfully auditioned for an act- ing program at the school. The next summer he had the chance to go back to Frontier College but was persuaded to audition for a touring theatre pro- duction of "Collected Works of Billy The Kid". That, he says was the play that changed his life. He read the script and "I decided that if there was anything like this in theatre ... I'd never read anything quite so astounding." "After that summer I acted in anything. didn't matter what" he recalls. He did anything that was going at the university, did lunch hour theatre, auditioned for any- thing in downtown Victoria. Each summer he'd work in the Univer- sity's summer theatre season, then throw himself back into the winter activities at the university. After graduation he was invited to teach part-time and do shows but on the advice of a friend decided it was the time to cut the apron strings and ended up going to Winnipeg where he worked at both MTC and Prairie Theatre Exchange, meeting Kather- ine Kaszas who invited first Laurel Paetz, then himself to come to Blyth as an actor. Summers in Blyth became a regular part of the Smith family itinery each year for six years (the last two as associate artistic direc- tor). In the winter it was Winnipeg or the Alberta Theatre Projects in Calgary where he and Laurel did more work with new play develop- ment. The common thread has been new play development, a thread that goes back to childhood. "There has always been somebody telling me a story in my life," he recalls, "my folks, the nuns and priests who taught me, the football coach and that's what brought me to this position." People connect with each other through the telling of stories, he feels. Blyth Festival is about the telling of "our stories to us in a way of entertaining, of educating, or imploring, of whatever." Not every story will be liked by everybody in the audience "but the attempt is always honourable here." The challenge of taking over a theatre with a million -dollar budget and summer staff of upwards of 100 is like any of those other times in his life when he started something Arts give you a chance to constantly start anew entirely new, he says. "1 think the background for this job is every place I've been", he says. "Maybe 1 haven't got the technical expertise of running other theatres but my fascination with what I think this place is, having spent six summers here, having talked to everybody - Joe Chatterton (a local garage owner and theatre lover), to Alice Munro is huge. My apprenticeship for this job may be less than someone who has run three or four theatres but I don't think it's Tess detailed or involved. "The neat thing about this job is that I'm at an age when most guys are settling in and I don't know what's going to happen. This is all brand new. It's one of the things that has always attracted me to the arts: every project is all new and 10 TOWNSMAN/FEBRUARY-MARCH 1991 you begin all over again." The learning process has been helped by the Festival staff, he says. This guy from the outside still keeps in touch with who he's been. In February he planned lengthy audition sessions in Toronto and Calgary trying to see as many as possible of the hundreds of actors who have flooded his desk with resumes. "These people deserve respect," he says, "plus I know what it was like. Maybe only one or two or three people of all the people I see may end up here this summer. I'm going to do this every year. I don't want people to think there's no chance of getting in here. Some of these people have trained for 10 years. If I can't give them 15 minutes of my time I think there's something wrong. "These are professionals and deserve to be treated as such. It's funny the way the arts are treated in this country. There are a lot of The Olde hed HOLMI3V ILLF Located in Holmesville between the School and the Community Centre Busy Hands Boutique •Greenware and Supplies •Isabel's Finished Ceramics •Local Handcrafts Hours: Wed. - Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 Call Isabel at 482-1740 Special Effects •Silk floral bouquets •Wedding Invitations & supplies •Silk flowers, plants & trees •Gifts, wicker & craft supplies •Balloons and Decorations for' all occasions. Hours: Wed. - Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Appointments Anytime Call Millie at 482-5700