Skip to main content

Hot Off the Press: Up the Garden Path &

The Adventures of the Black Girl In Her Search for God

int(100173)
/interview by / Dec 14, 2017
SHARE

Reading plays is not only for actors who need monologues for auditions or for producers in search of their next show. It’s for theatre lovers who can’t get out to the theatre, or who’ve heard about a play that’s not being presented in their city, or who want to return to a story they loved watching unfold on stage. It’s for anyone who feels like they don’t have the time to read novels, or who skim over the long descriptions in novels to get to the dialogue. Reading plays is for anyone who likes to read.

Lisa Codrington, playwright of Up the Garden Path and The Adventures of the Black Girl in Her Search for God, does not consider herself a thrill seeker.

“I’m, like, the most boring person ever,” she says with a laugh. “Artistically, I certainly like to do things that challenge me. But I’m not a daredevil.”

And yet, as she discusses her process and craft as both a playwright and an actor, the conversation continually circles back to the idea of risk-taking as a motivator in her career.

Codrington never had a grand vision of what her career would look like. Instead, she tried new things time and time again, searching for opportunities that would push her to grow as an artist, which has led her to where she is today. Despite how her life may appear to an outsider, she admits that most of the time she has no idea what she is doing until after she has done it. “There are things I’d like to do and accomplish and learn, but I’m always surprised by how I get there.”

When Codrington, a trained actor, first started to write, she came at it from an actor’s perspective: through character and voice. This was the method she used to create her first play, Cast Iron, which began as a school assignment. “I’d write a monologue until another character would come in and then it would become dialogue.”

Over time, this practice started to hinder Codrington, motivating her to look for other ways into the story. After taking a class in screenwriting at George Brown, she found her new approach: look at the story from beginning to end, using outlines and working on structure. Now, she is challenging herself through a six-month-long residency at the Canadian Film Centre (CFC). Her focus is on developing skills as a television writer, which has meant learning to write faster, focusing more on imagery than dialogue, and learning a new form of story structure.

Being in a residency, she says, is also an opportunity for her to “jump in and make mistakes.” This prompts the questions many artists grapple with: Can we set ourselves up to make mistakes? Don’t we have an instinct to produce work that will be good?

“Maybe allowing myself to make mistakes is not the clearest way of getting at that idea. I do things to challenge myself, and with the challenge comes the risk of mistakes,” she says. “Doing things where you don’t know the result. So I’m excited about television writing. I don’t know where that’ll end, but I’m willing to take that risk.”

She admits that mindset is not for everyone. Some people are driven by perfecting one thing, day in, day out. But that’s not where her inspiration manifests. So, if taking on a challenge is what motivates her, where is her struggle in writing?

“It’s more my brain. Sometimes it’s imposter syndrome. That gets a lot of airtime.”

Despite these doubts, Codrington—who is accomplished, self aware, and soft-spoken—pushes forward. It is clear she is in the driver seat of her career. Although the destination is unknown, she wouldn’t be in the job of telling stories if she wasn’t up for, and stimulated by, the challenge.

As she says herself, “If you’re in the arts, you are a risk-taker.”

About the Plays

Up the Garden Path and The Adventures of the Black Girl in Her Search for God are two plays featuring young black women who suddenly find themselves navigating unfamiliar territory on their own. As they embark on journeys from the only homes they’ve ever known, they’re challenged to think for themselves and to fight for what they want and believe in.

About the Playwright

Lisa Codrington is a Toronto-­based actor and writer. Her writing, including The AftermathThe Colony, and Cast Iron, has been produced in Toronto, Niagara-­on-­the-­Lake, Winnipeg, and Barbados. Lisa is a recipient of the Carol Bolt Award for Playwrights and the K.M. Hunter Theatre Award. She has been playwright-­in-­residence at a number of theatres, including Canadian Stage, Nightwood Theatre, the Blyth Festival, and the Shaw Festival.

For information about the published play, click here

Megan Robinson
WRITTEN BY

Megan Robinson

Megan writes and teaches yoga in Toronto. She likes chickpeas, exploring new places, and talking on the phone.

LEARN MORE

Comments

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


/

‘The Community We’ve Never Had’: Investigating Power in Performance with AACE

Organizing coaches and educators is vital: instead of working in silos, through the AACE community, coaches can now learn from each other.

By Sarah Robbins, , Jennifer Wigmore
The banner image for Chris Dupuis' interview with Anosh Irani on his new play, Behind the Moon. The image features a filteres picture of the production, starring Vik Sahay and Ali Kazmi. A periwinkle filter over the photo gives it an aged look, combined with a black-flecked filter. In the foreground of the image is Irani's headshot. iPhoto caption: Vik Sahay and Ali Kazmi in Anosh Irani's Behind the Moon - original photo by Cylla von Tiedemann. Overlaid on the image is Anosh Irani's picture.

A Glimpse Behind the Moon with Anosh Irani

We caught up with the celebrated scribe to chat about literary formats, strange characters, and achieving immortality through writing.

By Chris Dupuis

The Importance of Intersectionality in Theatre and Beyond

If we can understand the world in terms of intersectionality, can we not achieve great things through that lens, as opposed to thinking, we have to be inclusive – because inclusive of what and for whom?

Interview by Jessica Watson, Video by Jill Harper

A Risk on Paper: Re-writing Theatre at Home

"It's the perfect time to try something. It's the perfect time to take a risk."

By Mae Smith
iPhoto caption: Ian McKellen, Patrick Stewart, and Owen Teale in No Man's Land. Photo by Johan Persson.

Cineplex Stage Series Fall 2020: Q&A with Brad LaDouceur

There is magic in the theatre–there is a unique opportunity to see great actors perform in the context of the magic of the theatre. This appeals to both cinema lovers and theatre lovers.

By Stephen Low
iPhoto caption: "Have You Figured Yourself Out?" by Li Wan (Wuhan, China)

In Conversation: Nick Green on The Social Distancing Festival

We aren’t trying simply to shift art that is meant to be experienced live to carbon copies online. Online collaborations that produce work that is meant to be experienced online can continue along with attending concerts at the concert hall.

By Stephen Low