Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Acclaimed Actor, Director And Playwright Joy Coghill-thorne Dead At 90

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jan, 2017 12:42 PM
    VANCOUVER — Acclaimed Canadian actor, director and playwright Joy Coghill-Thorne has died at age 90.
     
    She had been admitted to St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver after suffering massive heart failure and died on Jan. 20.
     
    Coghill-Thorne was born in Findlater, Sask., on May 13, 1926, and grew to be a trailblazer in the Canadian theatre community.
     
    She created Holiday Theatre in 1953, which is billed as Canada's first professional children's theatre.
     
    Coghill-Thorne was the first woman to hold the position of artistic director at the Vancouver Playhouse from 1967 to '69, and more than 40 years later she founded Western Gold, a company for senior Canadian actors.
     
    One of her best-known works as a playwright is "Song of This Place" about legendary Canadian artist Emily Carr.
     
    She was inducted as a member of the Order of Canada in 1991, and received a Governor General's Award for the Performing Arts in 2002.
     
    In 2001, Coghill-Thorne co-founded the Performing Arts Lodge Vancouver which provides affordable housing and a network of support for veterans of the city's performing arts communities.
     
    Coghill-Thorne is survived by her three children, Debra, Gordon and David, and her grandchildren Casey and Lucy.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    VPD Police Detective James Fisher Charged With Sexual Exploitation And Sex Assault

    VPD Police Detective James Fisher Charged With Sexual Exploitation And Sex Assault
    A senior Vancouver police detective is facing several charges including sexual exploitation, sexual assault and attempting to obstruct justice.

    VPD Police Detective James Fisher Charged With Sexual Exploitation And Sex Assault

    Foreign Investor Selected As Business Newsmaker Of The Year

    Foreign Investor Selected As Business Newsmaker Of The Year
    A nameless, faceless figure at the heart of the controversy surrounding soaring real estate prices has been named The Canadian Press business newsmaker of the year.

    Foreign Investor Selected As Business Newsmaker Of The Year

    Red Light Texting Still A Problem In Canada, Says CAA

    Red Light Texting Still A Problem In Canada, Says CAA
    OTTAWA — Some 33 per cent of Canadians who participated in a recent poll conducted by the Canadian Automobile Association admit they have texted while stopped at a red light in the last month.

    Red Light Texting Still A Problem In Canada, Says CAA

    'Rainbow Lobster' Leads Social Media Contest For Craziest Crustacean

    'Rainbow Lobster' Leads Social Media Contest For Craziest Crustacean
    Social media users are casting their "likes" for photos of exotic lobsters in an online contest that has a multitude of multicoloured, oversized and extra-limbed critters clawing to be crowned the craziest crustacean.

    'Rainbow Lobster' Leads Social Media Contest For Craziest Crustacean

    Rich Coleman Says Tent Cities Need Faster Shut Down Responses To Prevent Growth

    Rich Coleman Says Tent Cities Need Faster Shut Down Responses To Prevent Growth
    VICTORIA — B.C. Housing Minister Rich Coleman says he learned valuable lessons from the government's handling of a homeless camp on the lawn at Victoria's courthouse, and one of those lessons is acting more quickly to provide housing for people who are looking for it. 

    Rich Coleman Says Tent Cities Need Faster Shut Down Responses To Prevent Growth

    'It Just Shocks Me:' Calgary Police Chief Wants Action On Opioid Crisis

    'It Just Shocks Me:' Calgary Police Chief Wants Action On Opioid Crisis
    Calgary's police chief says the Alberta government has to take more aggressive action on fentanyl if it wants to help addicts and families who are being destroyed.

    'It Just Shocks Me:' Calgary Police Chief Wants Action On Opioid Crisis