Alex Bulmer
{{Short description|Canadian playwright and theatre artist}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Alex Bulmer
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| birth_place = Kitchener, Ontario, Canada
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| nationality = Canadian
| occupation = Playwright
| alma_mater = Royal Central School of Speech and Drama
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| website = {{URL|https://www.alexbulmer.co.uk}}
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Alex Bulmer is a Canadian playwright and theatre artist. Bulmer is the co-founder of the theatre companies SNIFF Inc. and Invisible Flash. She wrote the play Smudge and was a writer for the 2009 Channel 4 series Cast Offs.
Early life and education
Bulmer was born in Kitchener, Ontario, but grew up in Puslinch. She attended Bishops University and studied theatre at the Ryerson Polytechnical Institute's Theatre School. While studying at Ryerson, Bulmer began to lose her vision. She left Ryerson to study voice in the UK, which she hoped would allow her to maintain a connection to theatre even with her declining visual ability.{{Cite web |last=Cutruzzola |first=Anne Marie |date=2022-04-20 |title="Depth and Diversity": CoMotion Festival Curator Alex Bulmer Shares the Impact of Deaf and Disability Art |url=https://www.shedoesthecity.com/depth-and-diversity-comotion-festival-curator-alex-bulmer-shares-the-impact-of-deaf-and-disability-art/ |access-date=2022-08-18 |website=Shedoesthecity}} She attended the Central School of Speech and Drama in London, England.{{Cite news|last=Crew|first=Robert|date=2000-11-13|title=Eyesight gone in a smudge ; With star Diane Flacks, playwright explores loss of sight: [Ontario Edition]|page=D02|work=Toronto Star|issn=0319-0781}}
Career
Bulmer performed drag as Alvin Calvin Cumberbund.{{Cite web|last=Kaplan|first=Jon|date=2000-11-16|title=Alex Bulmer's groundbreaking Smudge goes inside the mind's eye. Sight unseen|url=https://nowtoronto.com/culture/stage/alex-bulmers-groundbreaking-smudge-goes-inside-the-minds-eye-sight-unseen|access-date=2020-08-10|website=NOW Magazine}} She also taught theatre at both Ryerson University and George Brown College. Bulmer founded SNIFF (Sensory Narrative in Full Form) Inc., a theatre company focussed on creating works that challenge conventional uses of sensory perception in theatre.{{Cite book|last=Johnston|first=Kirsty|title=Stage Turns: Canadian Disability Theatre|publisher=McGill-Queen's University Press|year=2012|pages=23|oclc=820835187}} In 1996, Bulmer played Barb in Kate Barker's Army of Lovers? at Buddies In Bad Times Theatre.{{Cite news|last=Wagner|first=Vit|date=1996-09-20|title=Little to like (or dislike) in slight lesbian sitcom|page=D15|work=Toronto Star|issn=0319-0781}}
In 2000, Bulmer's one-act play Smudge premiered with Nightwood Theatre under the direction of Alisa Palmer. The central character in Smudge has retinitis pigmentosa, like Bulmer. The production starred Diane Flacks, Sherry Lee Hunter, and Kate Lynch.{{Cite web|last=Crew|first=Robert|date=2000-12-11|title=Smudge|url=https://variety.com/2000/legit/reviews/smudge-2-1200465900/|access-date=2020-08-10|website=Variety|language=en}} Smudge was nominated for the Chalmers Canadian Play Award.{{Cite news |last=Flacks |first=Diane |author-link=Diane Flacks |date=2009-05-26 |title=Life is a five-star performance; Having cultivated her talent abroad, Alex Bulmer plants her creative seed here |page=E6 |work=Toronto Star |issn=0319-0781}}
In 2003, Bulmer emceed Smashing Stereotypes Productions' Culture Cauldron II, a cabaret of performances inspired by disability performed at Ryerson University.{{Cite news|last=Henderson|first=Helen|author-link=Helen Anne Henderson|date=2003-03-22|title=Cabaret about disabilities promises to be a hit: [Ontario Edition]|page=L04|work=Toronto Star|issn=0319-0781}} Bulmer is one of the founders of Invisible Flash, a theatre company which she is currently the artistic director of. She also worked as a part-time literary manager for Graeae Theatre in London.
In 2009, after returning to Canada, Bulmer acted in Michael Rubenfeld and Sarah Stanley's The Book of Judith, a play inspired by quadriplegic activist and artist Judith Snow, at The Theatre Centre in Toronto.{{Cite web|last=Sumi|first=Glenn|date=2009-05-27|title=The Book of Judith|url=https://nowtoronto.com/culture/theatre/the-book-of-judith|access-date=2020-10-31|website=NOW Magazine}}
Bulmer produced Cripping the Arts and Cripping the Stage in 2016, with funding from the British Council, Tangled Art and Disability, Ryerson University Disability Studies, and Harbourfront Centre. Cripping the Arts has since become a yearly symposium and, in 2019, featured Crip Shorts, which Bulmer co-produced.{{Cite web|date=2019-01-22|title=Cripping the Arts shines a light on disability arts in Canada|url=https://nowtoronto.com/culture/cripping-the-arts-wants-to-shine-a-light-on-disability-arts|access-date=2020-08-10|website=NOW Magazine}} For Crip Shorts, Bulmer worked with circus performer Erin Ball to make her performance accessible for the visually impaired.{{Cite news|last=Kenins|first=Laura|date=2019-01-24|title=For these performers, accessibility isn't an afterthought — it's a creative opportunity|work=CBC|url=https://www.cbc.ca/arts/for-these-performers-accessibility-isn-t-an-afterthought-it-s-a-creative-opportunity-1.4990389|access-date=2020-08-09}}
In 2017, Bulmer acted in Martha Ross's The Story with Common Boots Theatre. In 2019, she worked with Common Boots Theatre again, this time serving as accessibility dramaturge for Natasha Greenblatt and Yolanda Bonnell's The Election.{{Cite web|last=Cole|first=Susan G.|date=2019-10-15|title=Savvy The Election evokes the passion of political volunteers|url=https://nowtoronto.com/culture/theatre/review-the-election-common-boots-2|access-date=2020-08-10|website=NOW Magazine}} At the 2019 Toronto Fringe, Bulmer co-directed Scadding with Jennifer Brewin.{{Cite web|last=Sumi|first=Glenn|date=2019-07-06|title=Fringe review: Scadding|url=https://nowtoronto.com/culture/theatre/fringe-review-scadding-2019|access-date=2020-08-10|website=NOW Magazine}}
Bulmer co-created the play May I Take Your Arm with Anna Camilleri, Tristan Whiston, and Katie Yealland. May I Take Your Arm premiered with Red Dress Productions in 2018.{{Cite web|title=May I Take Your Arm?|url=https://nowtoronto.com/events/may-i-take-your-arm-11f949a3|access-date=2020-08-10|website=NOW Magazine}}{{Cite journal|last1=Chandler|first1=Eliza|last2=Johnson|first2=Megan|last3=Gold|first3=Becky|last4=Rice|first4=Carla|last5=Bulmer|first5=Alex|date=2019|title=Cripistemologies in the city: 'Walking-together' as sense-making|url=http://www.publicpedagogies.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/08-Chandler.pdf|journal=Journal of Public Pedagogies|pages=2–3}} Bulmer and Red Dress Productions re-imagined May I Take Your Arm as an online performance for the 2020 Luminato Festival.{{Cite web|last=Sumi|first=Glenn|date=2020-06-10|title=Six must-see shows at Luminato's three-day virtual festival|url=https://nowtoronto.com/culture/6-must-see-shows-at-luminato-2020|access-date=2020-08-10|website=NOW Magazine}}{{Cite web|last=Corrigan|first=David Rockne|date=2020-05-14|title=The show must go online: Theatre in the age of COVID-19|url=https://www.tvo.org/article/the-show-must-go-online-theatre-in-the-age-of-covid-19|access-date=2020-08-10|website=TVO.org|language=en}} Bulmer developed the play Blind Woman in Search of a Narrative between 2018 and 2020 during her residency with Bodies in Translation at the University of Guelph.
In April 2022, Bulmer curated the CoMotion Festival, a showcase of Deaf and disabled artists online and at Toronto's Harbourfront Centre.{{Cite web |last=Murphy |first=Aisling |date=2022-04-18 |title='Welcome to our world': CoMotion Festival brings deaf and disabled arts to Toronto |url=https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/2022/04/18/welcome-to-our-world-comotion-festival-brings-deaf-and-disabled-arts-to-toronto.html |access-date=2022-08-18 |website=thestar.com |language=en}} Her play, Perpetual Archaeology, is set to premiere with Crow's Theatre under the direction of Leah Cherniak and starring Bulmer, in June 2023.{{Cite web |last=Wild |first=Stephi |date=2022-06-01 |title=Crow's Theatre Announces 2022-23 Season |url=https://www.broadwayworld.com/toronto/article/Crows-Theatre-Announces-2022-23-Season-20220601 |access-date=2022-11-29 |website=BroadwayWorld.com |language=en}}
Works
= Plays =
- Smudge
- May I Take Your Arm - co-created with Anna Camilleri, Tristan Whiston, and Katie Yealland
- Blind Woman in Search of a Narrative
- Perpetual Archaeology
= Other =
- Cast Offs {{Em dash}} 6-part television series, co-written with Jack Thorne, Tony Roche, Jamie Campbell, and Joel Wilson (2009){{Cite book|last=Johnston|first=Kirsty|title=Stage Turns: Canadian Disability Theatre|publisher=McGill-Queen's University Press|year=2012|pages=90|oclc=820835187}}
Personal life
Bulmer was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa at age 21 and lost functioning vision in 2006 as a result. In 2003, Bulmer moved to London, England but returned to Toronto permanently in October 2017.{{Cite web|last=Maga|first=Carly|date=2017-12-12|title=Blind actor Alex Bulmer leads the way into theatre's future|url=https://www.thestar.com/entertainment/stage/2017/12/12/blind-actor-alex-bulmer-leads-the-way-into-theatres-future.html|access-date=2020-08-10|website=Toronto Star|language=en}}
References
{{Reflist}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bulmer, Alex}}
Category:Canadian artistic directors
Category:Canadian women dramatists and playwrights
Category:Canadian blind people
Category:Canadian theatre directors
Category:Canadian women theatre directors
Category:Toronto Metropolitan University alumni
Category:Bishop's University alumni
Category:Academic staff of Toronto Metropolitan University
Category:Academic staff of George Brown College
Category:Alumni of the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama
Category:Canadian women television writers
Category:Canadian television writers
Category:Writers from Kitchener, Ontario
Category:21st-century Canadian dramatists and playwrights
Category:21st-century Canadian women writers
Category:Year of birth missing (living people)