About

Nikki Shaffeeullah is a theatre & film artist, facilitator, producer, writer, equity worker, and community organizer.

Nikki Shaffeeullah (she/her) is a theatre & film artist, facilitator, producer, writer, equity worker, and community organizer.

Her work has included serving as Artistic Director of The AMY Project; Editor-in-Chief of alt.theatre: cultural diversity and the stage; and Assistant Artistic Director of Jumblies Theatre. Nikki has also taught in the performance departments of University of Toronto Scarborough and the University of Alberta. She produces sector-change projects through her organization Undercurrent Creations, and is a a founding member of Confluence Arts Collective, a group of artists-activists who believe in transformative justice and a world without prisons. An award-winning theatre and film artist, Nikki works as a director, writer, actor, improvisor, and producer, and collaborates with companies and artists from across Canada. She has held residencies with organizations including Canadian Stage, Why Not Theatre, The Theatre Centre, SummerWorks, and others, and she is a Fellow of the Salzburg Global Forum for Young Cultural Innovators.

As a facilitator, Nikki supports grassroots groups, non-profits, and public institutions to uphold equity and accountability in all aspects of their work, and runs facilitation training initiatives for equity-seeking artists and activists leading community-engaged work. She is an alumnus of Training for Change’s JCJ Fellowship for Trainers of Colour.

Nikki holds an MFA in Theatre Practice from the University of Alberta, where her thesis won the Canadian Association for Theatre Research award for Intercultural Theatre, and a BA from McGill University. She has trained internationally with groups including Makhampom Foundation (Thailand) and Yuyachkani (Peru).

A queer Indo-Caribbean artist born and living in Toronto, Nikki’s work is informed by a family who loves music, puns, justice, and food. She is grateful to live the complex, diverse metropolis of Toronto; land that been stewarded for many thousands of years by Indigenous peoples including the Anishinaabeg, the Haudenosaunee and the Wendat peoples; land that is subject to the precolonial Dish With One Spoon covenant, and the colonial Treaty 13, held with the Mississaugas of the Credit Nation.

Nikki believes that art should disrupt the status quo, centre the margins, engage with the ancient, dream of the future, and be for everyone.

Current (2021-2022) season highlights include:

 

Stages of Transformation

Nikki is the lead curator for Stages of Transformation, a multi-year artistic research initiative exploring implications of transformative justice for the national theatre sector, produced by the National Arts Centre - English Theatre.

 

Black Paris

Through Moveable Beast Collective, Nikki is collaborating with theatre & opera artist Neema Bickersteth on a new interdiscplinary stage work, Black Paris, with support from The Theatre Centre and Why Not Theatre.

A Poem for Rabia

Following a season in Nightwood Theatre’s playwrights’ unit, Nikki is continuing development on her play A Poem for Rabia (previously titled Betty’s House) through a residency at Why Not Theatre.

 

Parallel Tracks

Through Undercurrent Creations, Nikki is leading a national sector change project that equips equity-seeking artists with focused arts-based facilitation training, specifically for work online

International Director Training

Nikki is deepening her craft in theatre directing through an international training project under mentors Kirsty Housely and Sarah Stanley. Supported by the Ontario Arts Council and Canada Council for the Arts.

 

Purgatory

Nikki’s new short film is Purgatory, a dark comedy following Zena, a queer Muslim with a supernatural streak. Purgatory is currently a finalist in Reel Asian Film Festival’s pitch competition.

Confluence Arts

Confluence Arts Collective is running COVID-19-safe interdisciplinary arts programming with women/non-binary/trans folks in Toronto who have experienced incarceration

 

Facilitation

Nikki is working longer-term with several small & mid-size arts organizations across Canada on organizational transformation projects to centre racial justice, safety/harm reduction, and anti-oppression in their work