Caitlin Hicks

PLAYWRIGHT. AUTHOR. PERFORMER. PRESENTER.

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Performer

My work in theatre, television and film in San Francisco, New York, Toronto and Vancouver has included roles as diverse as Nina in The Seagull, Gwendolyn in the musical of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest, Gammer Gurton in the oldest English comedy, Gammer Gurton’s Needle, Nancy Reagan in an off-Broadway political satire A Bonzo Christmas Carol. In Toronto, I played Sylvia Plath in the Canadian Premiere of Letters Home, Fefu in Maria Irene Fornes’ Fefu & her Friends.

In film and television, credits range from a Stephen King movie of the week, It, to guest starring with Mickey Rooney in the Vancouver-based tv series The Black Stallion. I played three starring roles in the feature-length motion picture Singing the Bones, which premiered at the Montreal World Film Festival, and has screened in Australia, New Zealand, the U.K., the United States and Canada. Radio credits include Stories for a Winter Solstice on CBC’s Morningside (1996), Almanac (‘94 & ‘95, The Afternoon Show (‘94) and A Woman’s Body and One of Those Days,Commentary (‘95).

I have toured my own work as a playwright to hundreds of cities in five countries, playing Annie Shea in Six Palm Trees, Dorothy and Karen in Just a Little Fever, Sara, Meg and Nicole in Singing the Bones. My work as an actress/playwright has been seen at the Edmonton and Vancouver Fringe, the Women In View Festival, at Sechelt’s Raven’s Cry Theatre and Gibson’s Heritage Playhouse. I have performed at the National Arts Center Atelier in Ottawa and the Festival des Ameriques Cabaret in Montreal.

And now, I’m putting characters from all this work into the world again, with my podcast SOME KINDA WOMAN, Stories of Us. The voices of women at pivotal moments in their lives, one character at a time.

My first novel A THEORY OF EXPANDED LOVE was published by US publisher Light Messages in 2015 and won industry prizes, including iBooks Best New Fiction.

Acclaimed Debut Novel

Republished by Sunbury Press this summer

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Take my recipe, please!

Mother Marcelle's Spaghetti, as discussed in my podcast, "Some kinda woman - Stories of Us"

Sign up for podcast and writing updates and receive a copy of the infamous “Mother Marcelle’s Spaghetti” – a favourite that fed a family of 16 in the 60’s