Arts Club artistic director Ashlie Corcoran receives YWCA Women of Distinction Award
Annual accolade honours an individual who has significantly enriched Metro Vancouver’s arts and culture community
Ashlie Corcoran. Photo courtesy YWCA Metro Vancouver
ASHLIE CORCORAN, ARTISTIC DIRECTOR of the Arts Club Theatre Company, is the winner of this year’s YWCA Women of Distinction Award in the Arts, Culture & Design category.
Corcoran accepted the award on April 28 during a ceremony at the Westin Bayshore downtown, presented by Scotiabank. Now in its 42nd year, the accolade goes to a woman or gender-diverse individual who has enriched the Metro Vancouver arts and culture community with their talent, commitment, and leadership.
Since taking the helm at the Arts Club in 2018, Corcoran—who is originally from White Rock—has directed everything from a wildly entertaining Little Shop of Horrors to Omari Newton and Amy Lee Lavoie’s hard-hitting comedy Redbone Coonhound. Among the initiatives the artist has introduced to the company are relaxed performances for neurodivergent audience members and accessible performances for individuals with sight and hearing challenges.
Corcoran regularly consults disability experts and cultural advisors when working on Arts Club productions. She also recently conducted Die Fledermaus and The Magic Flute for Vancouver Opera, and in her spare time, she mentors young people through the Loran Scholars Foundation.
In a release today, Corcoran called the award win “both an honour and a reminder of the profound responsibility we have as artists and arts leaders,” adding that she is “deeply committed to ensuring that theatre remains a place where everyone can participate, contribute, and thrive.”
Past recipients of the YWCA Women of Distinction Award in the Arts, Culture & Design category include Bill Reid Gallery of Northwest Coast Art associate curator Beth Carter, Vancouver Youth Choir founding artistic director Carrie Tennant, and independent curator and art historian Krystal Paraboo. ![]()
Emily Lyth is a Vancouver-based writer and editor who graduated from Langara College’s Journalism program. Her decade of dance training and passion for all things food-related are the foundation of her love for telling arts, culture, and community stories.
Related Articles
The Arts Club director says the smash-hit U.K. show is one of the most technically demanding comedies ever written
At The Cultch’s York Theatre, wonderfully weird characterizations meet gravity-defying feats in a raucously unpretentious banger that has “hit” written all over it
Whether you’re looking for a quick drink and snack, conversation, reflection, or people-watching, these airy meeting places hit their marks
Playwright Kate Besworth and director Ming Hudson team up for a contemporary adaptation of the classical Sophocles tragedy
Cheeky, DIY theatre event aimed to throw light on the stage scene’s unsung heroes—and ended up selling out
The veteran theatre artist grappled with big questions of good and evil, and took inspiration from genre films, for his visually stylized new adaptation
Elevated visual design and a strong, multitasking cast bring ample Newfoundland warmth to new Arts Club Theatre Company and Citadel Theatre coproduction
Ashley Wright has helmed it himself, but in Bard on the Beach’s new production, he plays Shakespeare’s dissolute knight under the capable direction of Rebecca Northan
London’s Three Legged Race Productions folds in influences from contemporary circus to cabaret in a raucously funny show that celebrates a ’90s-style birthday at The York Theatre
Boca del Lupo and ArtstageSAN’s show at the Vancouver International Children’s Festival is more of an immersive experience than a plot-driven play
Megan Milton’s Free Kittens and William Rubel’s Robin Redbreast in a Cage converge on close human relationships in an age of reality TV and AI
The Arts Club teams up with Edmonton’s Citadel Theatre for new local production of the international smash-hit musical
Two senior artists play young Newfoundland couple in Western Gold Theatre’s gentle staging
Stephen Drover directs his own haunting adaptation of Shakespeare’s tragedy, laced with tyranny and moral corruption
Boca del Lupo returns to the outdoor stage in partnership with Korean puppet masters for five-metre-tall spectacle
Event’s top works from across the country and the globe leap between juggling, circus, art installation, concert, and more
Laugh-out-loud, music-filled production sets Shakespeare’s play in a fictional soccer-obsessed Vancouver suburb
The Vancouver director says there’s something “extraordinarily intimate” about Nobel Prize laureate Peter Handke’s 1966 “anti-play”
Tomatoes Tried to Kill Me But Banjos Saved My Life documents the creator’s retirement, cancer diagnosis, and pursuit of a long-deferred passion for music
Sharply funny shows by standup comics Scarlet Chen and Megan Milton get theatrical about themes of immigration and mother-daughter relationships
Veteran actors Craig March and Dolores Drake play the young lovers in David French’s play, set in a Newfoundland outport 100 years ago
