Crow’s Theatre appoints Sherrie Johnson
Jan 28, 2019
TORONTO (January 28, 2019) – It is with tremendous excitement that Crow’s Theatre announces senior arts leader and long-time producer Sherrie Johnson, most recently of Canadian Stage, will be joining Artistic Director Chris Abraham at Crow’s Theatre as Executive Director, on February 11.
“We are thrilled to welcome Sherrie to the Crow’s Theatre family, to join Chris Abraham in continuing the remarkable creative and organizational growth the company has seen since it moved into Streetcar Crowsnest two years ago,” said Crow’s Theatre Board Chair John Duffy. “Sherrie brings a new level of experience and stature that builds upon the solid foundation of the company. She and Chris are a powerhouse team. Their transformative leadership will make an even bigger impact for Crow’s, delivering urgently contemporary theatre in Canada.”
Sherrie Johnson comes to Crow’s from Canadian Stage, where she has been a member of the senior leadership team, serving as Executive Producer and Director of International Partnerships. She joined Canadian Stage in 2013, where she worked closely with Artistic and General Director Matthew Jocelyn to program, produce and present up to 18 productions per season. Sherrie has worked with leading artists from around the world including Robert Lepage, Stan Douglas, Jordan Tannahill, and Crystal Pite. As the company underwent a major executive leadership transition through the 2017-2018 season, Sherrie lead Canadian Stage in all capacities as Interim Artistic and Managing Director and Executive Producer. In that time of transition, Johnson brought $1.1 million dollars in new funds to the company and ended the 2018 fiscal year in a surplus position. Under her guidance the company also significantly exceeded revenue targets for the 2017-2018 season.
Prior to joining Canadian Stage, some highlights of Johnson’s three-decade artistic career include: serving as Founding Artistic Director for Outside the Box, an ambitious multi-arts festival in Boston; acting as Senior Curator at the highly esteemed PuSh International Performing Arts Festival in Vancouver; programming and producing the Six Stages Festival in Toronto, Prague, Berlin, and Glasgow; producing for Germany’s internationally renowned Rimini Protokoll; and co-founding the iconic indie company da da kamera with Daniel MacIvor. In that setting, she served as producer and general manager for 14 years, establishing an international touring network for MacIvor’s acclaimed one-man shows. Johnson also launched a film and television division for da da kamera and produced award-winning short and feature films for MacIvor, as well as for Jeremy Podeswa, Wiebke von Carolsfeld, and Srinivas Krishna.
“Joining the Crow’s Theatre family feels like home to me” comments Johnson. “Chris Abraham is one of the most dynamic and aspirational Artistic Directors in our country. We share a similar focus and desire to be influential connectors of the people in this city, in the country and around the world through the participation and animation of the arts. As a team, Chris and I intend to be a catalyst for an inclusive and accessible organization that champions new works, builds a holistic blueprint for the artists creating the work, and redefines our way of thinking about institutional power. Chris and I are well-matched partners. With the committed Board and staff at Crow’s, we have the opportunity to make a lasting impression with our far-reaching imagination, ideas, exchange, and grassroots belief in how the arts can have a societal impact. In addition to being excited about the artistic side, I am also looking forward to embracing the city-building facets which have become part of Crow’s growth. By expanding our relationships with our east end neighbors outside of performances, we intend to evolve Streetcar Crowsnest as a meeting point where everyone belongs, and we are known not only for robust artistic programming, but our extraordinary commitment to enhancing our community’s quality of life."
“I have been watching and admiring Sherrie’s work going back to those formative years for Toronto theatre when she and Daniel Macivor created da da kamera," says Crow’s Theatre Artistic Director Chris Abraham. “Aside from her incredibly varied career experience that has taken her across Canada, back to the United States, and overseas, Sherrie brings a dedication to supporting artists that knows no bounds. She sees artists deeply and she listens. Creators across the country and beyond will tell you how absolutely they trust her. This is what gives her such stature in the Canadian arts scene. She marries her dedication to supporting artists with the ability to realize artistic and strategic ambition. She’s a remarkable combination of talents.”
Johnson joins Crow’s Theatre in the last few months of their 3rd season in Streetcar Crowsnest. The 2018-2019 season, like its predecessors, has already celebrated huge successes, starting with the season opener The Wolves, co-produced with The Howland Company, which landed on almost every Best of 2018 list for the year and enjoyed sell-out houses. The season has included the acclaimed presentation of Shaw Festival’s Middletown, the provocative docu-theatre piece The Assembly (produced in partnership with Porte Parole), and runs of Damien Atkins’ We Are Not Alone (produced in partnership with Segal Centre and 2b theatre company), and Abraham’s smash-hit production of Tartuffe presented in partnership with Canadian Stage, Stratford Festival, Groundling Theatre, and David versus Goliath Productions. The company is currently touring their critically acclaimed productions True Crime starring Torquil Campbell and The Wedding Party, created by and starring long-time Crow’s collaborator Kristen Thomson.
As Johnson joins the company, Crow’s prepares to open a World Premiere co-production with Project: Humanity, Towards Youth: A Play on Radical Hope, co-directed by Abraham and Andrew Kushnir. The 2018-2019 season wraps up with a presentation of a Modern Times Stage Company production of The Cherry Orchard directed by Soheil Parsa and starring Arsinée Khanjian.
About Sherrie Johnson
Sherrie Johnson has developed an international reputation as an innovative and accomplished curator, artistic director, agent and producer of critically acclaimed and award-winning, theatre, dance, film and performing arts festivals. Sherrie joins Crow’s Theatre following a 5-plus year tenure at Canadian Stage, Canada’s flagship multi-disciplinary year round cultural institution, where she served as Executive Producer and Director of International Partnerships. Prior to her time at Canadian Stage, she worked as Artistic Director to launch the inaugural multi-arts festival, Outside The Box in Boston, Massachusetts, under the leadership of an arts philanthropist. She was Senior Curator at the renowned PuSh International Performing Arts Festival, in Vancouver, Canada from 2009 to 2012 and she has more than 25 years of experience presenting, commissioning, producing, co-producing, and touring live performance.
In addition to her curatorial and producing work, Sherrie has dedicated her time to building and leading professional development workshops and seminars around the world. She has had long-standing relationships with the Under the Radar Symposium as part of New York’s Under the Radar showcase and Caravan, presented as part of the Brighton Festival in England. Sherrie was the Touring Liaison and Curator of the Magnetic North Theatre Festival in Canada in 2006 and 2007, PuSh Assembly in Vancouver from 2007 to 2012, and the Producer of Canadian content for the 2007 International Network for Contemporary Arts (IETM) in Montreal. She was the Canadian Producer of Celebrate Scotland; the Co-Founder, Producer, Co-Artistic Director of the Six Stages Festival (1995-2003) in Toronto, Canada, with her colleague Menno Plukker; and a Production Assistant for the du Maurier Arts World Stage Festival under the leadership of Don Shipley.
As the producer of da da kamera (1993–2007), her long-standing association with Daniel MacIvor resulted in a string of acclaimed theatre productions that toured worldwide, along with several celebrated feature films. She received a Bachelor of Science degree in Criminology and Theatre and a Master of Science degree in Communications from Indiana State University and has studied at the University of Toronto’s Rotman Executive Program. Sherrie was the recipient of the John Hobday Award for outstanding achievement in arts management from the Canada Council for the Arts in the first year the award was given in 2008.
For more information or interview requests please contact:
Suzanne Cheriton, RedEye Media, 416-805-6744, suzanne@redeyemedia.ca