In the DANCE DIVISION the following members received nominations:

Outstanding Production
Harbourfront Centre’s World Stage for Gudirr Gudirr and Me So You So Me

Outstanding Choreography
Heidi Strauss (adelheid dance projects) and DanceWorks for elsewhere
James Kudelka for #lovesexbrahms  – Art of Time/Coleman  Lemieux & Cie
Esmeralda Enrique/Juan Ogalla for Pueblo
Peter Chin for Returning Empathis Toronto Dance Theatre
Susie Burpee for Seven Stages for TransformationToronto Dance Theatre

Outstanding Performance (Male)
Anuj Mishra Damaru Dhamaar DanceWorks
Brodie Stevenson  This Is A Costume Drama  Harbourfront Centre’s World Stage & Dietrich Group
Irvin Chow  vox: lumenZata Omm Dance and Harbourfront Centre’s World Stage
Vincent Mantsoe  NTUDanceWorks

Outstanding Performance (Female)
Axelle Munezero Complexe R and Caroline Fraser Skills & Soul BattlesTUDS/Gadfly
Dana Michel  1976 (In Touch)Dancemakers
Mariana Medellin-Meinke  This Is A Costume Drama Harbourfront Centre’s World Stage & Dietrich Group
Takako Segawa – Moments In Time Maxine Heppner & DanceWorks

Outstanding Performance (Ensemble)
#lovesexbrahms – Arts of Time/Coleman Lemieux et Cie
elsewhereadelheid dance /DanceWorks
La CapitanaEsmeralda Enrique  Spanish Dance
This Is A Costume Drama – Harbourfront Centre’s World Stage/Dietrich Group
vox-lumenZata Omm Dance/ Harbourfront Centre’s World Stage

Outstanding Sound Design/Composition
John Kameel Farah/Fides Frucker – locus plot Peggy Baker Dance Projects
Nicolad Hernandez – La Capitana & PuebloEsmeralda Enrique Spanish Dance
Thom Gill  Martingales Toronto Dance Theatre
Vineet Vyas Damaru Dhamaar – DanceWorks

Outstanding Lighting Design
Gabriel Cropley  Sirocco  Ritmo Flamenco
Marc Parent  locus plotPeggy Baker Dance Projects
Rebecca Picherak elsewhere  adelheid dance projects/DanceWorks
Simon Rossiter  #lovesexbrahms & Looking For Elvis  Coleman Lemieux et Cie

In The INDEPENDENT THEATRE DIVISION
Outstanding Sound Design/Composition
James Bunton (Design)/Amy Nostbakken (Composer)  Mouthpiece  Quote Unquote Collective/Why Not Theatre

In the THEATRE FOR YOUNG AUDIENCES DIVISION
Kathleen Rea/Canada’s Ballet Jorgen  The Velveteen Rabbit for Outstanding Production, Outstanding New Play, Outstanding Direction and Outstanding Performation (Ensemble).

In addition, PEGGY BAKER was honoured as this year’s recipient of The George Luscombe Award for Mentorship
The George Luscombe Award was inaugurated in 1999. Revolutionary theatre founder and artistic director George Luscombe founded Toronto Workshop Productions in 1959, marking the beginnings of Toronto’s alternative theatre movement. He was Artistic Director for 27 years at TWP.

This year’s recipient is Peggy Baker, Artistic Director of Peggy Baker Dance Projects and Artist-in-Residence at Canada’s National Ballet School. Ms. Baker began her career in 1974 as a founding member of Toronto’s Dancemakers, toured internationally with Lar Lubovitch’s celebrated New York company throughout the eighties, and joined Mikhail Baryshnikov and Mark Morris for the inaugural season of their White Oak Dance Project in 1990, subsequently forging important creative relationships with Paul-André Fortier (Montreal), James Kudelka (Toronto), Doug Varone (New York), Tere O’Connor Dance (New York), Molissa Fenley and Dancers (New York) and Toronto Dance Theatre through numerous performance projects.

She established Peggy Baker Dance Projects in 1990, and for the first 20 years she dedicated herself to solo performance, winning rapturous praise for the eloquence and depth of her dancing, and accolades for her collaborative partnerships with extraordinary musicians and designers. Over its 25-year history Peggy Baker Dance Projects has been presented at major festivals and dance centres across the globe. Since 2010, Baker has focused her choreography on works for small ensembles.

Some of Toronto’s most respected dance artists count Ms. Baker among their top influences. Her role as a mentor to younger dance artists is perhaps best reflected in her eight-year project, The Choreographer’s Trust. From 2002 to 2010, she passed on six of her choreographies to twelve dancers: Kate Alton, Nova Battacharya, Sylvain Brochu, Shannon Cooney, Chris Grider, Rex Harrington, Kate Holden, Tanya Howard, Sasha Ivanochko, Helen Jones, Andrea Nann and Jessica Runge. A booklet and DVD set for each year of the project have been compiled, containing footage of the process and writing by Baker and literary manager Amy Bowring, as well as sketches by Jerry Silverberg. Ms. Baker explains the rationale behind The Choreographer’s Trust: “In the summer of 2002, realizing that unless I passed my dances onto others, the hard-won lessons embedded in them risked being lost when I retired.”

Ms. Baker has been honoured with numerous awards for her extraordinary achievements and contributions, including the Governor General’s Award for Lifetime Achievement, the Premier’s Award for Excellence in the Arts, the Order of Canada, the Order of Ontario, five Dora Mavor Moore Awards, the Toronto Arts Council’s Margo Bindhardt Award, the Walter Carsen Prize for Excellence in the Performing Arts, a Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal, and Honorary Doctorates from the University of Calgary and York.

Previous winners of The George Luscombe Award are Franco Boni, Yvette Nolan, Leah Cherniak & Martha Ross, Iris Turcott, Andy McKim, ahdri zhina mandiela, Layne Coleman, Alison Sealy-Smith, Winston Morgan, Maja Ardal, Urjo Kareda, Ken Gass, Jenny Phipps, and Ruth Howard.

The George Luscombe Award is administered by the Toronto Alliance for the Performing Arts. Committee members are: Chair – Maja Ardal, Steven Bush, Ravi Jain and Anusree Roy. The George Luscombe Award comes with original artwork by Theo Dimson, a copy of the book Conversations with George Luscombe: Steven Bush in conversation with the Canadian Theatre visionary and a cash prize of $1,000 through the generous sponsorship of an anonymous donor.

Congratulations everyone!