Kristen Harris is a Canadian actress whose recent work includes Channel Zero, The Pinkertons, The Exorcism of Molly Hartley, and The Choking Game. Other work includes The Gabby Douglas Story, Bunks, Flashpoint, Todd and the Book of Pure Evil, Less Than Kind, The Wrath of Grapes: The Don Cherry Story II, Men With Brooms, We Were Children, Beethoven Saves Christmas, Wrong Turn IV, Lucid, House Party, Taken in Broad Daylight, Maneater, and Category 7: The End of the World.
Kristen won a Best Actress ACTRA award, and Best Actress in a Drama at the Vancouver International Film Festival for her performance in Shelagh Carter’s Passionflower.
Kristen studied comedy improv at the Groundling Theatre in Los Angeles, voice performance at the University of Toronto, and film acting in Winnipeg, Canada.
Darcy Fehr made his onscreen acting debut in Guy Maddin’s The Cock Crew (1997) and has performed in over 60 productions in film, television and live theatre since. Recent television and film credits include, Before Anything You Say (2016), Juliana and the Medicine Fish (2016), and Considering Love and Other Magic (2016).
Beginning his career as a stage actor, Darcy returned to the theatre over the last few years receiving critical praise for his performance as “George” in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf (2014) and “Rupert Cadell” in a stage adaptation of Alfred Hitchcock’s Rope (2013). In 2014, Fehr won the ACTRA MB best actor award for his performance in Euphoria (2013) and in 2012 he was nominated for the ACTRA MB best actor award for his work in Passionflower (2011).
Over the span of his career, he has worked numerous times with Canadian filmmaker Guy Maddin, most recently in the critically acclaimed feature film, Forbidden Room (2015).
John Bluethner has been acting in theatre and film for over 40 years. He has appeared at the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre, Theatre Calgary, the National Arts Centre, Stage West and the Stratford Shakespeare Festival. His film credits include The Haunting in Connecticut, The Lookout, A Dog’s Purpose, A Face in the Crowd, Trench 11, and Passionflower as well as TV series such as Cashing In, and Falcon Beach. John shamelessly overacted dressed in tights in The Pinkertons episode The Play’s the Thing.
John is a bilingual actor (and translator) and has performed many times for Winnipeg’s French theatre the Cercle Molière. He currently teaches at the Université de Saint-Boniface in the heart of Winnipeg’s French quarter.
Toni Reimer is a Winnipeg based actor, working primarily in theatre. Her recent credits include The Gravitational Pull of Bernice Trimble, Mission: Munschpossible (Prairie Theatre Exchange), Richard III, A Stripped Down Midsummer Night’s Dream (Shakespeare in the Ruins), and Danny, King of the Basement (Manitoba Theatre for Young People).
Toni has been an ACTRA Manitoba council member for the past 5 years and currently holds the position of secretary.
Graham’s first foray into acting was in the mid-eighties with the Rude Players, a company which created plays using the Mike Leigh method, via the Hull Truck Theatre. For many years he was a member of avant-garde company Adhere & Deny, and continues to work with founder Grant Guy. Perhaps his biggest mark in theatre has been with the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre’s Master Playwright Festival, having appeared in such successes as The Wedding, Glengarry Glen Ross, Jumpers, Some Kind of Love Story, Village Wooing, and Private Lives, the last of which earned him Best Supporting Actor in the Winnipeg Free Press season roundup.
In film and television he has played neo-Nazis, delusional marathon runners, Don Cherry’s speech coach, Alan Pinkerton’s old underground railroad compatriot, and John Ashbery’s seedy bathing man. He also appeared for a single second in a Sparks video, which, as a 40-year owner of Kimono My House, tickles him.
Shelagh Carter is a Lifetime Member of The Actors Studio as an Actress and Director, a Professor of Theatre and Film at the University of Winnipeg and a graduate of the Canadian Film Centre’s Directors Lab in Toronto. As a director, Shelagh has created work for over ten years. Night Travellers, her third short film, was a National Screen Institute Drama Prize winner in 2007. Her award winning 35 mm short, One Night, filmed as part of the Canadian Film Centre’s Short Dramatic Film 2009 series, screened at several international film festivals. She has also won world festival recognition with her experimental narrative short films Canoe, Rifting/Blue and Is It My Turn.
Shelagh’s first feature film called Passionflower, the story of Sarah, an 11-year- old girl, forcing her family to come to terms with her mother’s increasing mental instability, has earned film festival attention and honors. Her latest indie feature, Before Anything You Say, an innovative drama based on a true story, has been completed. Additional feature film projects, a psychological thriller called The Woman Who Swallowed West Hawk Lake, a Noir inspired screenplay called Skinner, and a Chekhovian based drama called Into Invisible Light, are in various stages of development. She is a recipient of the award, Women In the Director’s Chair Career Advancement Module 2010, in collaboration with Women in Film Festival Vancouver.
“I am very happy for an opportunity to show my work. If I stood back from my films, some words to describe what I am interested in are ‘transitions and delicate and dangerous transformations.’ I hope you enjoy them.”
Deborah Schnitzer is Professor Emerita at the University of Winnipeg and 3M National Teaching Fellow. Her critical and creative work includes the award-winning collection The Madwoman in the Academy: 43 Women Boldly Take on the Ivory Tower and the novel An unexpected Break in the Weather, recipient of the 2010 Margaret Laurence Award for Fiction. With her colleague Shelagh Carter, Deborah has developed a number of experimental short films which have screened internationally, including Canoe, inspired by her most recent novel, jane dying again, as well as Rifting/Blue and Is It My Turn. Deborah composed the screenplay for Before Anything You Say. Her next novel, the woman who swallowed west hawk lake, which exposes the desire for reckoning, reconciliation, and truth telling to pervasive fascist forces in old and new world landscapes, is being adapted for the screen by Carter.
Ousama Rawi started his career in the film business in the U.K.
After many years shooting Commercials and Feature Films, he moved to Canada. He now divides his time between Toronto and Los Angeles when he is not on location somewhere else in the world on a filming assignment.
Some of his credits include: Killing Jesus (National Geographic), Dracula (NBC), Ben Hur (Muse Entertainment/CBC/ABC), Borgia (Canal+), The Tudors (Showtime), Pirates of Silicon Valley (TNT), Zulu Dawn (Allied Artists), Black Windmill (Universal Pictures), and Pulp (United Artists).
He is an Emmy winner for Outstanding Cinematography for his work on The Tudors, and another seven wins, including two Gemini Awards, four CSC Awards, and in 2012 he received the Kodak New Century Award for Outstanding contribution to the Art of Cinematography.
He has also had seven other nominations for: another Emmy Award, another Gemini Award, two ASC Awards and three other CSC Awards.
Taavo Soodor earned Genie nominations for Best Achievement in Art Direction for Jeremy Podeswa’s feature The Five Senses; Thom Fitzgerald’s award-winning The Hanging Garden; and John Fawcett’s The Boy’s Club as well as a Gemini nomination for Best Production Design or Art Direction in a Dramatic Program or Series for the CBS television drama Haven, directed by John Gray. In 2008 he won the award for Best Art Direction at the 28th Atlantic Film Festival for the feature Growing Op. He designed for the features The Big Hit produced by John Woo starring Mark Wahlberg, Paramount’s Steppin’ Up/Save the Last Dance II, Aurora Borealis, starring Donald Sutherland, Spinning Boris, directed by Roger Spottiswoode, and the multi-award winning feature Owning Mahowny, starring Philip Seymour Hoffman, as well as Narc, starring Ray Liotta.
He has served as Production Designer for the television movies The Phantoms, Open House, A Very Married Christmas, Blessings, and The Man Who Saved Christmas; A&E’s The Big Heist, starring Donald Sutherland, and the remake of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, starring Mira Sorvino; Craig Zadan and Neil Meron’s Flowers For Algernon for CBS; ABC’s Trump Unauthorized, and Labor of Love; USA Network’s Silent Echoes; the pilot Total Recall 2070; and Turner Broadcasting’s Anatomy of Love. In 2007, Taavo earned a Gemini and DGC nomination for his work on In God’s Country.
Keri Latimer is a musician and visual artist living in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
She has been writing, recording and performing with the band Nathan Music Co. since 1999. People say her songs confound description. Acoustic Guitar Magazine called them “…infectious alt-country noir, fractured folk-swing and surreal…”; The Globe and Mail described them with “…something mysterious at the core … as if to remind you that home is just another word for the place where you keep your darkest secrets.”
Music awards include Juno, Western Canadian Music, and Canadian Folk Music. In 2008 she collaborated with Peter Golub and Shahzad Ismaily on the musical score for the film Frozen River, which was nominated for two Academy Awards and won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival.
As a visual communications graduate of ACAD, she has been freelance designing and illustrating since 1993.