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University of Saskatchewan Photograph Collection With digital objects
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Dr. John D. Ripley - Portrait

Head and shoulders image of Dr. John D. Ripley, Canadian theatre scholar and teacher.

Bio/Historical Note: Born in Londonderry, Nova Scotia, on 27 January 1936, Dr. John Daniel Ripley received his early education in Londonderry and Yarmouth and later attended the University of New Brunswick where he completed a BA (1st Class Hons.) and an MA in English. In 1963 he received his PhD in theatre history) from the Shakespeare Institute (University of Birmingham, England). He also studied theatre professionally at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, London, and held Licentiate diplomas from the Guildhall School of Music and Drama (speech and drama), the Royal Academy of Music (speech and drama teaching), and Trinity College of Music (voice and speech). In 1963 he joined the Department of English at Dalhousie University, where he was active in the founding of the Dalhousie Drama Workshop (later the Department of Theatre) and the design and construction of the Dalhousie Arts Centre. He joined McGill's Department of English in 1969 as associate professor and director of the Drama and Theatre Program, where he remained until his retirement in 1997. In 1980 he was promoted to professor of English and in 1990 was named to the David C. Greenshields Chair. He served as chair of the Department of English from 1990-1993, and was a member of Senate and a Senate representative on McGill's Board of Governors for some years. Throughout his teaching career he followed with interest the careers of the numerous Canadian actors, directors, and media figures who had passed through his classes, but he took equal delight in those who discovered in theatre a continuing source of personal enrichment. From time to time in the course of his career, Dr. Ripley acted and directed in Canada and Europe in stage, radio, and television productions ranging from medieval mysteries to soap opera. His last appearances were in the daily television serial Time of Your Life. Dr. Ripley was the author of three books on stage history, and numerous contributions to essay collections, periodicals, and reference works. On his retirement, Dr. Ripley was invited to become Visiting Pforzheimer Curator of the Performing Arts Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin where he served for some years. In 2012, he was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal. Dr. Ripley died on 18 September 2015 in Montreal.

Greystone Theatre - "Candida" and "Picnic"

Top image is a scene from Candida, starring Frances Hyland and directed by Emrys Jones. This play, the inaugural production of the Department of Music, was performed in Convocation Hall in March 1946. Bottom image is a scene from Picnic, was performed at Greystone Theatre in December 1965. Actors (l to r): Don Evanishen, Helen Burton and Eric Peterson.

Greystone Theatre - "A Doctor In Spite of Himself"

Murray Edwards (left), Frances Hyland, and two students in costume pose in front of a forest themed backdrop.

Bio/Historical Note: Frances Jean Hyland was born in 1927 in Shaunavon, Saskatchewan. She was raised by her mother's family in Ogema, Saskatchewan. Her mother put herself through teacher's college to support her daughter's acting career. Hyland graduated in 1948 from the University of Saskatchewan with a BA in English. She earned a scholarship to and graduated from the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. After graduation Hyland made her professional debut in London in 1950, as Stella in A Streetcar Named Desire. In 1954 she returned to Canada to perform as Isabella in the Stratford Festival production of Shakespeare's Measure for Measure. She became a regular at the festival, performing in ten seasons. Her roles there included Isabella (in Measure for Measure), Portia (in The Merchant of Venice), Olivia (in Twelfth Night), Perdita (in The Winter's Tale), Desdemona (in Othello) and Ophelia in (in Hamlet). Hyland directed the Stratford Festival's 1979 production of Othello. She also performed with the Shaw Festival and on Broadway (opposite Tony Perkins in Look Homeward, Angel). On television Hyland co-starred on The Albertans and played Nanny Louisa on Road to Avonlea. Hyland was considered a champion of Canadian actors' campaign for higher status and pay. In 1970 Hyland was appointed an Officer of the Order of Canada. In 1994, Hyland received the Governor General's Performing Arts Award, Canada's highest honour in the performing arts, for her lifetime contribution to Canadian theatre. Frances Hyland died of respiratory failure following surgery in 2004.

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