Emerging Perspectives: Howard Dai

March 2, 2026

“Instead of just grinding, I was more of an explorer. I’d go around and see every corner of the map.”

This is theatre maker Howard Dai, answering a question about playing video games as a kid. But it’s hard not to see a connection to the way he spends his time these days, now that he’s the ripe old age of twenty-nine. Dai’s work covers a lot of ground. He has devised multi-lingual works that incorporate augmented reality, while in digital residence at places like Impulse Theatre’s PeekFest, Rumble Theatre, The PuSh Festival, and the UK’s Royal Court, and made audio-plays for children based on Chinese holidays, as a member of the Five Blessings Collective. He’s acted in the world premiere of Salesman in China at the Stratford Festival, trained in performance capture, and takes gigs as a sound designer, technical director, and interactive programmer, all while pursuing his own unclassifiable creations, in and around Vancouver’s renowned indie performance creation scene.

And Dai isn’t done exploring. With a portion of his Emerging Artist Grant from the Siminovitch Foundation, he bought a laptop with enough capacity for cutting edge projection design software. In his off-hours, he’s been taking YouTube tutorials and making little projects, with an eye to incorporating the technique into his own work, and also, as he puts it, “to lend my skills to theatre companies to make some fun things.” To him, what’s interesting is the interactive part. He loves the idea of “an audience member reacting to audio, interacting with art work, doing things with it, seeing the cause and effect in real time.”

For someone so keen on technology, Dai’s interest in live theatre might be surprising, at first glance. “I don’t really watch film or TV,” he says, “I never was into it. For some reason I never really quite enjoyed the idea of sitting at home and putting on a movie. It always felt like I could go out and do something more useful.” 

It all seems to come back to this idea of interactivity. Dai points out that all theatrical events, even conventional plays, are defined by the fact that the audience is in the same space as the performance, and it’s obvious that he likes that relationship to be lively. “My pet peeve for shows,” he says, “is when it feels like I don’t need to be there.” In his view, tech isn’t a passive, one-way delivery mechanism, like when you’re lying on the couch at home, flipping through a carousel of options on a streaming platform. Quite the opposite. Dai thinks the inventive use of tech can act as an invitation to the audience to get in there and play. “I make interactive work so the audience can feel like they have a hand in whatever it is they are experiencing,” he says. Even when the show’s over, Dai relishes theatre’s vibe: “You’re with people right away, you can share this energy together. Whether it was good or bad, you’re in community.”

Born in Canada, Dai lived in Taipei from the ages of five to twelve. When he came back to Vancouver with his mother, as a teen, the drama and band rooms were his refuge, “not because I’m good at music, but because of what it made me feel.” In grade eight, he was on the student stage-crew for Grease. On closing night, a teacher, clearly picking up on some sort of yearning in him, took him into the dressing room, found him a costume, and invited him to go onstage for the finale. Dai says that looking back, there had always been a performer in him, but that experience cemented his place in the community of theatre: “If you’re so lucky to find the people you can be with,” he says, “stick with it.”

Dai calls his time at Simon Fraser University’s BFA in Theatre and Performance program “devising school,” an inspiring, challenging place where and his fellow students were given materials, parametres, and a deadline, and had to make something, every single week. Nowadays, studio time is precious, especially in expensive Vancouver, so Dai finds he spends quite a lot of time behind a laptop, working on logistics. But he’s fine with that. “I really love spreadsheets,” he says. “I think I’m really good with them, I think spreadsheets are integral to my process. So by the time I’m in the studio, I’m ready to make things.” He brings along what he calls his “devising kit,” a couple of tote bags full of things like fishing line, bungee cords, scraps of fabric, and many kinds of tape. Useful items to have on hand, he’s found, when you need to rig something up quickly. 

His current project is inspired by the flamboyance and excitement of the televised lottery draws he remembers from his childhood in Taiwan. Called Dream Machine, it’s a large-scale, interactive installation piece that gamifies the dreams and aspirations of the audience. He’s captivated by the image of the numbered balls, bouncing around in the drum, each one a possibility, a piece of someone’s hypothetical future. “One of the first things I tried to do was get a lot of ping pong balls in the studio,” he recalls. “What can we make with them?” Since then, the piece has evolved through several labs and workshops with Rumble Theatre and rice & beans theatre, where Dai is an Associate Artist. “Whenever I do Dream Machine,” he says, “it feels like me practicing to host a birthday party.” He anticipates one more workshop before the end of 2026, then the piece will be ready for production. 

His Siminovitch mentor, 2025 Finalist Adrienne Wong, is offering support during their monthly standing meetings. Their connection goes back to when he was a teenager. She “really inspired my pursuit of making theatre with technology,” he says. As for this piece, she continues to help him with “pushing the boundaries beyond what is conventional in form. Every time I make a new work,” he explains, “I feel like I’m exploring a new dramaturgy.”

For now, it’s more time on his laptop, at home in the apartment he shares with his mom. The street they live on is quiet compared to Taipei, a place of “overwhelming stimuli, which I love,” he says. But his mother’s TV is usually on in the background while he works, and “that’s the sound that makes me feel like home.”

Howard Dai is a Taiwanese actor, writer, director, and theatre artist based on the unceded land belonging to the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm, Skxwú7mesh, and səl̓ilwətaɁɬ  Nations, colonially known as Vancouver. He was selected by 2025 Siminovitch Prize Finalist Adrienne Wong to be one of the 2025 recipients of the Siminovitch Foundation’s Emerging Artist Grant. https://howarddai.com/

Listen to Five Blessings’ audio-plays for kids here!

Howard Dai was selected as Siminovitch Theatre Foundation Protégé by 2025 Finalist Adrienne Wong.

Vanessa Porteous is a theatre artist, filmmaker, and writer based in Calgary. From 2018 to 2021 she was Jury Chair for the Siminovitch Theatre Foundation prize.

Photo: Salesman in China (2024) – dir. Jovanni Sy at Stratford Festival – photo by David Hou

Emerging Perspectives: Mayumi Ide-Bergeron

Mayumi Ide-Bergeron and cast in Mizushobai (The Water Trade), with headshot. Costume design by Mayumi Ide-Bergeron. Photo by A J Korkidakis.

Lately, Mayumi Ide-Bergeron has been thinking a lot about Tinkerbell. She’s assisting props designer Karine Cusson on a new production of Peter Pan the Musical, and they’ve been assigned “La Fée Clochette,” as the iconic sprite is known in French. She tells me she has rewatched all the Tinkerbell made-for-TV movies – who knew there were any – and she’s struck by Tink’s penchant for bricolage. “She tries to build things out of random objects to create something useful,” she explains. “She’ll create a car out of nuts and just build something out of trash.” As someone with a lifelong love of making things with her hands, Ide-Bergeron can relate.

Childhood summers spent with her grandmother in Bayfield, Ontario often included a family trip to the nearby Stratford Festival, and she credits a 2015 production of Taming of the Shrew with sparking the idea that she could combine her love of visual arts with theatre to make a career. After a couple of years at the Collège Lionel-Groulx in Sainte-Thérèse, she was admitted to the National Theatre School in Montreal. That’s where she lives now, working, somewhat unusually, in both French and English theatre. Doing the best job in the world, as she puts it: “I get to do craft and art. To create a magical piece with a bunch of new people?” Nothing better.

English and French theatre practice can be quite different, even down to how they handle props. Often, in English theatre, one designer is assigned both set and props, whereas in Québec, it’s more common for props to get their own, dedicated designer. “I’ve been called to do prop design because the set designer says specifically they don’t want to do ‘the little things’,” Ide-Bergeron says with a laugh. She designs set and costumes too, but she has an evident affinity for props. Even her student set design project at [National Theatre School] had a prop-ish quality. At first glance, it was a kitchen, but it was full of details that transformed in unexpected ways: a spice rack became a ladder, for example, and a pantry door turned into a bathroom. Since her schooldays, her eye for detail has only increased. She shares that recently, she was watching a hospital show on TV with her mom, and she noticed all the binders on the administrator’s office shelves were empty.

Ide-Bergeron is inspired by multi-disciplinary theatre designers like Cédric Lord, who runs Le Salon Particulier in Montreal, a combo of woodshop, rehearsal space, art gallery, and gathering spot. “My dream office would have prop storage, all the tools I need, a lot of everything,” she fantasizes. “I’m a maximalist for props and a minimalist in every other aspect of my life.”

That minimalism is no doubt influenced by her commitment to sustainable design. “I love talking about eco-design,” she enthuses, “I’m a city girl, but I feel the most alive when I’m in the forest, hiking.” At NTS, she took a class with sustainable practices leader Anne-Catherine Lebeau, which led to a job as a researcher at Lebeau’s organization Écoscéno, a company that consults with arts companies on how to reduce their environmental footprint. That experience opened her eyes to the many wasteful aspects of conventional theatre production, with its resource-intensive, short-term builds that get tossed in the dumpster the day the show closes. Now she thinks about environmental impact right from the beginning of her process, researching sustainable materials, breaking her design down into reusable structures, and trolling through thrift stores and markets “with a prop in mind, thinking, how can I do stuff with the things I already have?”

In the future, Ide-Bergeron would love to travel for work, and hopes to expand her practice to include circus and dance, more costume design, and in general, “learning as many things as I can.” She is currently looking into paper-making, for example, which she plans to pursue during an upcoming trip to Japan. She is travelling with her Siminovitch mentor, Sonoyo Nishikawa, who promises to introduce her to theatre-makers there. They’ll be accompanied by 2015 Siminovitch Laureate Annick Bissonnière, another connection made since Ide-Bergeron was named Protégé by Nishikawa.

She relishes the opportunity to spend more time with Nishikawa in Japan, and during a two-week residency in Banff this fall, offered by the Siminovitch Foundation in partnership with the National Arts Centre and the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity. She recalls: “I remember seeing [Nishikawa’s] name in the credits for a show I’d been hired for, and thinking, that sounds like a Japanese name, and getting really excited. She was on my way home from the theatre; sometimes I’d give her rides, and we got to talk. When I found out she was nominated I was extremely excited for her, but I never thought she’d name me. I’m a lot less shy to contact her now. We went to a few plays, and now we’re planning our trip.”

People are a big part of what Ide-Bergeron loves about theatre. When asked how her collaborators might describe her, her thoughts circle back to Tinkerbell. “I’m good at problem-solving with the means that I have,” she muses, “but I like learning new things. I’m always tinkering.”

Mayumi Ide-Bergeron was selected as Siminovitch Theatre Foundation Protégé by 2024 Laureate Sonoyo Nishikawa.

Vanessa Porteous is a theatre artist, filmmaker, and writer based in Calgary. From 2018 to 2021 she was Jury Chair for the Siminovitch Theatre Foundation prize.

Mizushōbai (The Water Trade) at the Segal Centre Studio Space
Photo: A J Korkidakis

Playwright: Julie Tamiko Manning
Director: Yvette Nolan
Set Designer: Jawong Kang
Costume Designer: Mayumi Ide-Bergeron
Lighting Designer: Zoë Roux
Sound & Composition: Christine Lee
Graphic Design: A J Korkidakis

Cast: Yoshie Bancroft, Hanako Brierley, Brenda Kamino, Katelyn Morishita, Dawn Obokata