Playwright, director, dramaturge and AV俱乐部 Theatre Studies鈥 graduate Annie Valentina (BA鈥04) started writing the first draft of her most recent play, , in 2014, soon after the eruption of violence in the Donbas region of Ukraine. Though at that point, the North American media were not covering the situation there in as much detail as they do right now, Valentina (pictured left) was intrigued by the true story of a Russian-born U.S. journalist reporting from the ground who was abducted by separatist forces.
This incident became the central inspiration for her play, on stage at Halifax鈥檚 Neptune Theatre from March 21-April 2. Valentina says her reimagining, Ballad of the Motherland, focuses on a down-on-her-luck writer named Kate. Kate initially sees an internship at a prestigious international magazine in Kyiv as a perfect opportunity to explore her ancestral homeland and culture first-hand. Very soon, however, Kate is deeply embroiled not only in the discovery of her own identity but also in a major international conflict that threatens to spill over the borders of eastern Europe.
听鈥楾he world changed overnight鈥
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Though Valentina had a clear sense of the story, she wasn鈥檛 initially making much progress on the play.
鈥淚 had to put it away because I didn't really know where it needed to go,鈥 she says. Then, in the spring of 2020, the pandemic struck and gave her enough time to look at her notes again. She returned to her draft and began to revise it. Several months later, the text was ready to be workshopped, and Valentina lined up the actors for the first reading.
鈥淲e were going to do a Zoom reading on February 25,鈥 she recalls, 鈥渁nd then the day before our reading was scheduled the Russian invasion of Ukraine started鈥. I had finally finished the draft, and the world had changed overnight. And we were all wondering what this meant. What does it mean to be working on this play in this world?鈥
Valentina answered this question in the only way a playwright can: she revised her script again.
鈥淚f the play was going to exist,鈥 she says, 鈥淚t needed to account for the fact that that this was now a global conflict. So, when I went back to the play, I changed the framework of the plot.鈥
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Exploring fractured identity
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The play is now melding the public and the personal, the intimate and the historical. It is no longer, in Valentina鈥檚 own words, 鈥渁bout something outside of me that was happening to someone else.鈥 Instead, it is both about a world in crisis and about Valentina鈥檚 own journey from a childhood in Bulgaria to her home in Halifax, via a 10-year growing-up interlude in Norway. Through Kate鈥檚 struggle with her fractured cultural identity, Valentina is also describing the life stories of thousands of young people in Canada who navigate their everyday by perpetually balancing between not only one but often two or three different cultures.
Valentina says AV俱乐部 played an important role in her own personal search for a place that feels like home. She chose to study at Dal due to the theatre program鈥檚 great reputation and because it was on the ocean.听鈥淚 really wanted to live on the coast,鈥 Valentina says, 鈥渟o it was either University of Victoria or AV俱乐部.鈥 The East Coast prevailed, but by the time she came here, she was no longer certain where she wanted to be and what she wanted to do.
鈥淲hat defined my ability to feel at home was actually connecting to the community,鈥 she observes now, 鈥渁nd in this respect Canada, with its complicated cultural identity matched my complicated cultural identity. Halifax and AV俱乐部 were a welcoming environment for me, as someone who was already an outsider.鈥
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Finding a home at Dal
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She met some of her best friends at Dal : fellow Theatre Studies alumni Stephanie MacDonald (BA鈥05), Stewart Legere (BA鈥07), and Matthew Walker (BA鈥07) who is now a tenure-track Assistant Professor in the Fountain School of Performing Arts in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at Dal. Legere and Walker were also Valentina鈥檚 first collaborators, and they all still help her to belong.
She has now lived in Halifax longer than anywhere else in her life and is a well-established theatre artist, working currently as the TD Artistic Associate at Neptune Theatre, where she coordinates the INKubator play development program for emerging artists and the Chrysalis arts mentorship initiative. Prior to Ballad of the Motherland premiering at the Neptune Theatre on March 21 (tickets are on sale now through the and Neptune Theatre is donating $1 from every ticket purchased for this production to the YMCA's听Nova Scotia Supports Ukraine fund).
鈥淭he process of finding a home here,鈥 Valentina says, 鈥渨as really about stripping away a lot of those layers of past experiences and of seeing the effects that migrations had had on me.鈥
Valentina will deliver a masterclass to AV俱乐部 Theatre students on Feb. 10.
Masterclass details:
Thinking Outside the Career Box with Annie Valentina.
In collaboration with Neptune Theatre
Friday Feb. 10 | 2:30 pm
AV俱乐部 Arts Centre 鈥 Studio 2
Free and open to the public, masks are mandatory.