Richard Ouzounian


Richard Ouzounian is a Canadian journalist and theatre artist. He was the chief theatre critic for the Toronto Star and the Canadian theatre correspondent for Variety.

Life and career

Ouzounian was born in New York City. He is of Scotch-Irish descent, and was adopted by an Armenian-Italian-Finnish family. Ouzounian was educated at Regis High School, and in 1970 received his B.A. in English Literature from Fordham University. He completed his M.A. studies in Theatre and Creative Writing at the University of British Columbia in 1972 and was made an honorary Doctor of Sacred Letters by Thorneloe University in 2003.
Ouzounian has worked professionally in the world of the performing arts and arts journalism for the past 45 years. In that time, he has written, directed, or acted in over 275 productions, served as Artistic Director of five major Canadian theatres,, been an Associate Director of the Stratford Festival of Canada for four seasons, and worked as Harold Prince's assistant on the original Toronto production of The Phantom of the Opera. He was President of the Board of the Arts Foundation of Toronto from 1996-1998.
He has served on the boards of Community Living Toronto and Surrey Place Foundation, as well as organizing fund-raising galas for both organizations, including the popular series of “Night of Stars” Concerts for Community Living Toronto, featuring artists like Colm Wilkinson, Louise Pitre and The Barenaked Ladies.
Ouzounian has taught and/or directed at the University of British Columbia, Simon Fraser University, the University of Winnipeg, Dalhousie University, George Brown College and Sheridan College.
Ouzounian lives in downtown Toronto and has been married since 1977 to his wife, Pamela. They have two children.

Journalism

Ouzounian is an award-winning journalist whose work has been seen in many major Canadian publications and is an in-demand public speaker. Starting in 2000, he was the chief theatre critic for the Toronto Star, Canada’s largest daily newspaper. Beyond his duties as theatre critic, he also wrote numerous celebrity profiles, travel and restaurant features for the Star.
In the summer of 2003, McArthur & Company published Are You Trying to Seduce Me, Miss Turner?, a collection of the celebrity interviews he had conducted since joining the Toronto Star. He filed his final review for the Star in December 2015.
From 2002-2013, Ouzounian was also in charge of reporting on and reviewing the Canadian theatre scene for Variety. In 2006, Toronto Life referred to him as "the city's most influential critic".

Theatre credits

Since retiring from The Star in 2015, his directing credits have included "Napoleon", "Darling of the Day" and "Candide", "Carrie: the Musical", "Atlantis" and writing the scripts for "Porgy and Bess in Concert" and "Prohibition: the Concert".
Original musical theatre credits, written with his longtime collaborator Marek Norman, include:
The scripts to Dracula, Emily, and Larry's Party were published by McArthur & Company.
He has written the book for another musical retelling of the famous vampire legend. This one is called Dracula - Entre l'amour et la mort, starring Bruno Pelletier, and had its premiere in Montreal in February 2006 to rave notices and toured successfully throughout Quebec until December 2006, making its European debut in Lyon, France, in January 2008.
His earlier works for the stage include the 1978 off-Broadway revue A Bistro Car on the C.N.R. and musical adaptations of "The Merry Wives of Windsor", "Two Gentlemen of Verona", "Macbeth", and "Love's Labour's Lost". Original musicals include "Olympiad", "O, Juan de Fouca!", "Reprise", "Cornucopia", "The Great Adventure" and "Hasten to Come Before Winter".
Ouzounian also wrote the plays "Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are", "The Chekhov Kids", "British Properties", "The City Show", and "West". He has also written adaptations/translations of "Scapin", "Tartuffe" and "Encore Brel".
In 2009, he directed the Canadian premiere production of "", at Hart House Theatre, in Toronto, which broke box-office records for the theatre. To date, it remains the only production of the show, anywhere in the world, to have NOT been targeted by protests, threats, or hate-mail.

Radio and television

From January 1990 through June 2004, Ouzounian was the host of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's musical theatre program Say It With Music, which aired every Sunday on CBC Radio 2 across Canada and worldwide on the internet. Author Bob Martin has often said that the character of Man In Chair in "The Drowsy Chaperone" was inspired by Ouzounian's broadcasts.
During the period from March 1991 through May 2000, he was also the theatre critic for CBC Radio One Toronto reviewing shows on a weekly basis.
From 1995 to 2000, he was Creative Head of Arts at TVOntario, Canada's largest educational broadcaster, where his duties included hosting 104 episodes of the arts interview series Dialogue, and executive producing the three-time Gemini-nominated book series Imprint.
He also served as producer/host/interviewer for CBC Television on a 13-part series about the 50-year history of the Stratford Festival entitled Stratford Gold, which aired in the summer of 2002 and was published simultaneously in book form by McArthur & Company.