Kevin Loring


Kevin Loring is a Canadian playwright and actor. As a playwright, he won the Governor General's Award for English-language drama, the Herman Voaden Playwriting Competition and the Jessie Richardson Award for Outstanding Original Script, and was nominated for the Dora Mavor Moore Award for Outstanding New Play, for ' in 2009. His 2019 play, ', was short-listed for the Governor General's Award for Drama.
As an actor, his credits include roles in the television series Da Vinci's Inquest, Arctic Air and Health Nutz, and the film Pathfinder, as well as stage roles including Michel Tremblay's , George Ryga's The Ecstasy of Rita Joe and Edmund in an all-First Nations production of William Shakespeare's King Lear at the National Arts Centre in 2012.
A Nlaka'pamux from the Lytton First Nation in British Columbia, he studied theatre at the prestigious Studio 58 theatre program at Langara College. In June 2017, Loring was selected by the Hnatyshyn Foundation as a recipient of the , which honours Indigenous Canadian artists across disciplines. Kevin Loring created the in collaboration with five separate organizations in his home community. This project aimed to bring traditional Nlakap’amux songs and stories, which where recorded on wax cylinders in the beginning of the 20th century by anthropologist James Teit, to contemporary audiences. This work informed The Battle of the Birds, a play which debuted at the Lytton River Festival in 2015, and which was restaged in Ottawa in 2019. It also spurred The Boy Who Was Abandoned, a second production which debuted in Lytton in September 2016.
On June 15, 2017, Loring was announced as the first artistic director for . In early 2019, the NAC was denied $3.5 million dollars of requested federal funding, a decision which would have a significant impact on the inaugural season. The first production, “The Unnatural and Accidental Women” by Métis playwright Marie Clements opened on September 11, 2019.

Works