About the Merritts

The annual Robert Merritt awards celebrate and highlight all different aspects of Outstanding professional Nova Scotian theatre. Named for the late beloved Dalhousie Theatre professor, Robert Merritt, and first established in 2002.

 

The Merritts are unique, as the only province-wide theatre awards in the country. Theatre Nova Scotia administers the jury system as well as the criteria and procedures surrounding the awards. Professional productions all across the province are juried throughout the year, and exceptional performances, direction, design and more are honoured the following March to align with World Theatre Day.

24

Years of Ceremony

1060

Awards Given

40+

Productions Juried Annually 

200+

Artists Recognized Annually

Biography of Robert Merritt

Robert Merritt was well known to the Halifax community both as the teacher of playwriting in the Theatre Department at Dalhousie University, and as the film critic for CBC’s Information Morning. In this latter role, he provoked strong audience reactions with his attacks on Hollywood mediocrity and his promotion of daring, independent work. He is still remembered for the acuteness of his dissection of pretentious filmmaking and the directness of his statements. Describing the classic Warren Beatty/Dustin Hoffman debacle Ishtar, for instance, Robert said that it was a pity that the film wasn’t named Tishtar, because then “if you spelled it backwards, it would almost write its own review.”

 

At Dalhousie, he inspired a generation of playwriting students to challenge the conventions of mainstream theatre and to find their own individual voices. He was consistently successful in finding the best qualities in his students’ work and in helping them develop it. His generosity with his students was legendary, and he built lasting friendships with many of them. Most of all, he taught the importance of craft and vision, and launched a large number of today’s working playwrights.

 

Robert died in 1999, five years after he had taken early retirement from the university in order to pursue his own passions of painting and gardening. He took great pleasure in both these pursuits, and in his collection of prewar electric trains. But the theatre was always on his mind, and he never stopped encouraging his former students and his colleagues to make their work better and braver both on and off the stage.

The History of the Merritt Awards

In 2000, the Nova Scotia Professional Theatre Alliance (NSPTA) held a celebration evening at Neptune to mark World Theatre Day and presented awards to extraordinary volunteers from each theatre.
In 2001, NSPTA held a ceremony in the rotunda at Alderney Landing honoring Best Actor and Best Actress, along with the full slate of volunteer awards.

2002 marked the first year of the Robert Merritt Awards, named for the late beloved Dalhousie Theatre professor. Theatre Nova Scotia arranged the jury system and developed the policies and procedures around an awards system and ceremony in Nova Scotia. For over two decades since, the awards have been administered by Theatre Nova Scotia and its policies developed collectively from professional members across the entire province. 

A complete list of past winners/nominees can be viewed here.