If the content you are seeing is presented as unstyled HTML your browser is an older version that cannot support cascading style sheets. If you wish to upgrade your browser you may download Mozilla or Internet Explorer for Windows.

Leblanc, Diana

CTE photo
Diana Leblanc in La Voix humaine, at Théâtre Français de Toronto, 1996, directed by Martha Henry

Ontario-based actor/director, born in 1943 in Montreal, who has worked in many of Canada's major theatres in English and French. Diana Leblanc studied at the National Theatre School of Canada in both the English and French programs in the first graduating class.

Her extensive directing credits include The Rehearsal at Canadian Stage (1995); Hamlet at the Stratford Festival (1996); Skylight by David Hare at the National Arts Centre and Citadel Theatre (1999). Her subsequent Stratford productions of Sweet Bird of Youth, Death of a Salesman, The Cherry Orchard and, especially, Long Day's Journey Into Night (which was also filmed), established her as a director of the first rank. In 1999, she directed Macbeth, featuring the husband and wife team of Martha Henry and Rod Beattie. In 2013, she directed John Murrell's Talking Shakespeare, starring Martha Henry.

Diana Leblanc was artistic director of Théâtre Français de Toronto from 1991 to 1996, and acted in the company's 1996 production of La Voix humaine. She has also directed for the Canadian Opera Company (Dialogue des Carmelites) and Opera Ontario (Madama Butterfly, October, 2000).

She is a founding member of Soulpepper Theatre Company, where she directed the summer 1999 production of A Streetcar Named Desire starring Fiona Reid; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf; The Real Thing; The Maids; The Zoo Story; Doc (summer 2010); and Glenn by David S. Young (2014).

Her many acting credits include Heartbreak House (Shaw Festival 1968); The Measure of Love and Little Foxes (Stratford); Mirandolina and The Mill on the Floss (Soulpepper); La Voix Humaine, Le Pays Dans la Gorge (Dora Award), Damnée Manon sacrée Sandra and La Maison Suspendue, both by Michel Tremblay (Théatre Francais); and Scorched by Wajdi Mouawad (Tarragon Theatre/National Arts Centre. In January 2014, she played an aging Juliet in The Last of Romeo and Juliet by Mitchell Cushman, set in a retirement home, with David Ferry as Romeo (Talk is Free Theatre, Barrie, Ontario).

Leblanc has also worked extensively in television and film.

In 1998 she received a grant from the Alliance française of Paris for her body of work toward building bridges between anglophone and francophone culture. In 2015, she received a Governor General's Performing Arts Award.

Her advice to actors is to "love the art in yourself, not yourself in the art."

Profile by Gaetan Charlebois and Anne Nothof

Last updated 2021-03-09

Leblanc, Nicole

Nicole Leblanc
Nicole Leblanc

Magnificent character actor, born in the Gaspé region of Quebec September 2, 1941, where she was a teacher before coming to Montreal to study at the National Theatre School of Canada. She died in Saint-Mathieu-de-Rioux May 23, 2017 at 75.

Nicole Leblanc toured with the Canadian Players in 1965-1966, and with the young players of Théâtre du Nouveau Monde the following year, before appearing in the premiere of Michel Tremblay's Les Belles-soeurs at Théâtre du Rideau Vert. During her long career, she has appeared in many of Tremblay's works, notably À toi pour toujours, ta Marie-Lou in 1984, Bonjour, là, bonjour in 1987, and again in Les belles-soeurs in 1993. .

She co-founded Le Théâtre du Même Nom (TMN) with Jean-Claude Germain in 1969, and enjoyed a huge success with Germain's Les Hauts et les bas d'la vie d'une diva, Sarah Ménard par eux-mêmes and toured it widely.

In 1990, Leblanc played the solo role in the Rideau Vert's production of Valentine/Shirley Valentine, and in November 1999, she appeared in Gratien Gélinas's Bousille et les justes at Théâtre du Rideau Vert, directed by Micheline Lanctôt. She acted in the premiere of Abla Farhoud's Maudite Machine in August 2000 at Rideau Vert. Her last stage appearance was at Compagnie Jean-Duceppe in December 2004 in Août, un repas à la campagne by Jean-Marc Dalpé.

Leblanc also appeared frequently in film and television, notably playing Rose-Anna St-Cyr in the very popular historical series, Le temps d'une paix by Pierre Gauvreau, from 1980 to 1988.

Nicole Leblanc's performances were marked by a self-deprecating sense of humour and excellent timing.

Source: Mario Gilbert. "Décès de la comédienne Nicole LeBlanc." www.lapresse.ca 2017/05/24.

Profile by Gaetan Charlebois and Anne Nothof

Last updated 2021-03-10