Monique Mojica

Monique Mojica (Kuna and Rappahannock) is a playwright, director, and actor based out of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. She was born in New York City, but came to Canada as founding member of Native Earth Performing Arts.

She has appeared in several films and plays, including Smoke Signals in 1998, and her own stage play Princess Pocahontas and the Blue Spots.[1]

Biography

Mojica comes from a long line of theatre practitioners. Her mother, Gloria Miguel, and aunts Muriel Miguel and Lisa Mayo (born Elizabeth Miguel) are the founders of Spiderwoman Theater. Mojica began training in acting and theatre at the age of three and follows many of the traditions of storytelling and theatre creating seen in Spiderwoman's works.[2]

Career

Her most famous plays include Princess Pocahontas and the Blue Spots, Birdwoman and the Suffragettes, and Chocolate Woman Dreams the Milkyway. She has collaborated with Floyd Favel on research and theatre projects that focus on Native performance culture.[3][4]

From 1983 to 1985 she was artistic director of Native Earth Performing Arts, which is Canada's oldest professional Indigenous theatre company.[5]

Along with Jani Lauzon and Michelle St. John, Mojica co-founded Turtle Gals Performance Ensemble which produced the plays The Scrubbing Project and The Tripple Truth.[6][7]

Mojica is co-editor of Staging Coyote's Dream: An Anthology of First Nations Drama in English with Ric Knowles.

She has been nominated for best supporting actress by Native Americans in the Arts for her role in Smoke Signals.

Filmography

Theatre appearances

  • The Rez Sisters (Native Earth)
  • Red River (Crow's Theatre)
  • The Adventures of a Black Girl in Search of God (Nightwood Theare/Obsidian/Mirvish)
  • Home is My Road (Factory Theatre)
  • Death of a Chief (Native Earth/NAC)
  • The Governor of the Dew (Globe Theatre/NAC)
  • Jessica (TPM)[4]

References

  1. "Mojica". NAC-CNA.
  2. Carter, Jill (2010). Repairing the Web: Spiderwoman's Children Staging the New Human Being (PDF). Library and Archives Canada: University of Toronto.
  3. "Monique Mojica Bio". Playwrights Canada.
  4. "Monique Mojica". Gary Goddard Agency.
  5. "Native Earth Performing Arts". Native Earth Performing Arts.
  6. "Monique Mojica". Canadian Theatre.
  7. Gazette News, The (3 April 2006). "Turtle Gals to present original play this week". Champaign, Ill: The Gazette News. pp. C-3.
  8. "Monique Mojica". IMDB.
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