CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

Teaching gig just another way to be creative, Egoyan says

Last Updated: Thursday, August 17, 2006 | 3:06 PM ET

Canadian film director Atom Egoyan sees his three-year teaching stint at the University of Toronto as a way of extending his creativity into a new form.

"I'm looking forward to exploring my own ideas with students who are creative and open," he said in an interview with CBC Radio.

Film director Atom Egoyan says working in different mediums, such as theatre and opera, helps feed creativity. This fall he adds a new role: university teacher.
Film director Atom Egoyan says working in different mediums, such as theatre and opera, helps feed creativity. This fall he adds a new role: university teacher.
(Aaron Harris/Canadian Press)
Egoyan said his course, which begins in September at U of T's faculty of arts and sciences, won't be "Atom Egoyan 101."

But his own films and a reading list will form part of the course material and he plans a series of artistic labs, where he and his students will work through the process of artistic creation.

"It's not a traditional course," he said. "We will look at how works translate from one medium to another, which is my area of interest."

Egoyan began his career in theatre and continues to take on theatre and opera projects, including a recent production of a Beckett play in London, as well as making films such as Where The Truth Lies and Ararat.

Egoyan hopes students will learn in a lab setting the dynamic potential of having an actor on stage while a camera follows his face, a technique he used in Eh Joe, the Beckett film he recreated on stage in Dublin and London.

Observers often question his practice of moving from successful moviemaking into other mediums, he said.

"I think for me the peak of it came around 1998 when I was nominated for the Academy Award for The Sweet Hereafter, but I was doing a premiere of a new opera in London, and at the same time I was doing this experimental chamber piece and there was this surprise that someone who's riding the crest of the commercial film world would be interested in these other mediums," he said.

"I just find that baffling because it's what nourishes what I do."

Egoyan's post at U of T is being called the dean's distinguished visitor in theatre, film, music and visual studies.

It is a flexible position that allows him to teach in a concentrated period of a few months or teach over a full academic year, depending on his other projects.

Eager to work with students

He has other work on the go. This November, he's agreed to participate in an anthology film project out of Germany that will see him do a 20-minute short inspired by a photo by Canadian photographer Jeff Wall, Morning Cleaning.

But he said he's excited at the prospect of working with students who grew up in the digital age.

The growth of the internet and low cost of digital filmmaking make moviemaking and the distribution of work more accessible than it was 20 years ago, when Egoyan himself was at U of T.

"There's immediacy and I think that that's a key issue that a young artist is dealing with now, is that there's nothing to restrict the transmission of an idea from the source of where the idea is coming from," he said.

"That creates an entirely different type of language and I think that profoundly changes the way we create drama and the way in which we create the filters through which we watch drama."

He said he's looking forward to hearing ideas of 20-year-olds, who are at a critical age when they are free to be creative without being overly concerned with commercial success.

"The discussions of how images affect our lives are as acute as ever," he said.

  • This story is now closed to commenting.
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

Toronto Headlines

Mother lost grip in child's airport fall: police Video
A 15-month-old Winnipeg-born boy died Sunday night after wriggling out of his mother's arms and falling about 15 metres at Toronto's Pearson International Airport.
4 acquitted in Creba killing Video
Four men accused in the 2005 shooting death of 15-year-old Jane Creba in downtown Toronto were acquitted of manslaughter charges Monday.
Tories storm out of legislature over HST Video
The Opposition walked out of the Ontario legislature en masse Monday to protest the government's refusal to hold public hearings on its bill to create a 13 per cent harmonized sales tax.
Jacksoul lead singer dies
Juno Award-winning artist Haydain Neale of the R&B band Jacksoul died Sunday at Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital after a private, seven-month battle with lung cancer.
Roloson foils Maple Leafs with 58 saves
Dwayne Roloson made a career-high 58 saves and Josh Bailey scored 4:18 into overtime as the New York Islanders beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 4-3 on Monday.

Canada Headlines

Mother lost grip in child's airport fall: police Video
A 15-month-old Winnipeg-born boy died Sunday night after wriggling out of his mother's arms and falling about 15 metres at Toronto's Pearson International Airport.
Detainee transfers halted 3 times in 2009, feds say Video
Canada halted the transfer of detainees to Afghan prisons three times in 2009 over concerns of treatment of prisoners and access to facilities, officials in Ottawa said Monday.
Liberals propose restricting MPs' partisan flyers
The Liberals want the federal government to restrict how much partisan flyers MPs can send to constituents at taxpayers' expense.
Storm tosses B.C. ferry passengers
BC Ferries passengers were thrown about a ship buffeted by high winds and reported seven- to 10-metre waves on a voyage Prince Rupert to Skidegate in the Queen Charlotte Islands early Monday morning.
4 acquitted in Creba killing Video
Four men accused in the 2005 shooting death of 15-year-old Jane Creba in downtown Toronto were acquitted of manslaughter charges Monday.

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Red Cross told late about prisoner transfers Video
Canadian officials delayed telling the Red Cross it had transferred prisoners to Afghan authorities, CBC News has learned, a situation that may have put detainees at greater risk of abuse.
Storm tosses B.C. ferry passengers
BC Ferries passengers were thrown about a ship buffeted by high winds and reported seven- to 10-metre waves on a voyage Prince Rupert to Skidegate in the Queen Charlotte Islands early Monday morning.
Baby cribs recalled after 4 deaths Video
U.S. government safety regulators are recalling more than 2.1 million drop-side cribs made by B.C.-based Stork Craft Manufacturing, the biggest crib recall in U.S. history.
Mother lost grip in child's airport fall: police Video
A 15-month-old Winnipeg-born boy died Sunday night after wriggling out of his mother's arms and falling about 15 metres at Toronto's Pearson International Airport.
4 acquitted in Creba killing Video
Four men accused in the 2005 shooting death of 15-year-old Jane Creba in downtown Toronto were acquitted of manslaughter charges Monday.