Sunday, March 15, 2026
ADVT 
Life

Script about Missing and Murdered Aboriginal Women Receives Continued Support

Darpan News Desk, 02 Sep, 2016 10:58 AM
    Ashleigh Giffen, an 18-year-old Level One Arts Club LEAP (Learning Early About Playwriting) student, spent the past year commuting from her home in Squamish to Vancouver’s Arts Club Theatre Company in order to write her new play Still Waters (originally titled Kam Watan Nipe: Quiet Waters).
     
    The script, centred on missing and murdered Aboriginal women, struck a chord with LEAP Program Leader Shawn Macdonald and Arts Club Education Coordinator Kevan Ellis, who continued to seek ways to support its development.
     
    “Each year, LEAP scripts are given public readings by professional actors here at the Arts Club,” says Ellis, “But following the Vancouver presentation in April of this year, Ashleigh really wanted to keep working on a new draft and have a reading of it in her own community. Typically, our involvement on LEAP scripts ends once classes are complete, but once she brought the idea forward, it was amazing to see the momentum of support from both the Arts Club and by her local Squamish Band council.”
     
    Arts Club Artistic Managing Director Bill Millerd adds: “As LEAP approaches its 10th anniversary, we are thrilled with the impressive growth under the direction of Shawn Macdonald. The reading of Ashleigh’s play is an important step in our commitment to encouraging playwrights from diverse communities to share their stories.”     
     
    “My community has made many strides in working towards reconciliation, and the First Nations community has done amazing things to showcase culture and healing,” says Giffen. “The Squamish people mean a lot to me, and through them I have met many incredible, powerful leaders, who have been an inspiration to me in writing a play about our murdered and missing women. I want to go beyond the mold of how people perceive Aboriginal people, but I feel it’s important to bring focus to the issues that are still happening today. Doing this locally, for me, is just the beginning.” 
     
    Still Waters will receive a public reading in Squamish on September 10, at 7 PM. Young artists interested in applying for the Arts Club’s 2016 LEAP program have until October 31 to apply. Application details: artsclub.com/participate/leap
     
    Photo by Mark Halliday

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Why thinking skills go down with age

    Why thinking skills go down with age
    If your grandparents take a long to recognise known faces from a fleeting glance, that may well signal their declining intelligence....

    Why thinking skills go down with age

    Let workers surf internet to boost productivity

    Let workers surf internet to boost productivity
    The new mantra to boost productivity is: Give your employees internet breaks during work hours to help kids in school homework or pay utility bills and not offline during lunch or coffee breaks....

    Let workers surf internet to boost productivity

    Decoded: How you sniff that jasmine smell

    Decoded: How you sniff that jasmine smell
    Do you know why some people can easily detect faint whiffs of coffee or wine buried amid a plethora of odours? An Indian American researcher says they...

    Decoded: How you sniff that jasmine smell

    Your bed goes beyond just sex and sleep

    Your bed goes beyond just sex and sleep
    But the reality is that consumers have turned their mattresses into reading nooks, home offices, music dens, TV stations and even dining rooms....

    Your bed goes beyond just sex and sleep

    In college and stressed?

    In college and stressed?
    In college and cannot manage stress owing to studies or frequent relationship troubles? Take heart....

    In college and stressed?

    Fear of losing money affects investment

    Fear of losing money affects investment
    The more averse, or fearful, of losing money an investor is, the lower his or her willingness seems to be for taking risks in the stock market, says a study....

    Fear of losing money affects investment