Diana Frances (born Diana Frances Clent) is a Canadiancomedian, writer, and business manager. She has written and performed comedy for stage, television and radio for three decades, and served as the managing director of the Vancouver-based Rock Paper Scissors comedy collective. Her writing has been recognized with a Canadian Screen Award and a Writers Guild of Canada Award, and she has also been nominated for a Gemini Award and nine Canadian Comedy Awards.
Early life and education
Diana Frances Clent moved from Langley to Maple Ridge, British Columbia, when she was 13, after what she later described as a "rather traumatic family shake-up".[1] She was adopted[2] and lived with her aunt and uncle while attending Maple Ridge Secondary School.[1] She took drama courses and initially pursued dramatic Shakespearean acting,[3] but was repeatedly cast in comedic roles and was thrilled by the audience response.[1] She studied theatre at Douglas College.[3] As she entered the entertainment business, she dropped her surname which she felt sounded like "a cartoon sound effect".[1]
Career
Frances joined the VancouverTheatresports League, where she learned improvisational techniques. Her quick wit gained her a place in the Rock Paper Scissors (RPS) comedy collective.[3] In 1991, she replaced an actor in the RPS production A Twisted Christmas Carol, an improvisational play based around a framework of the Dickens classic.[4] She returned to be a part of every seasonal production of the play to 2005, and later relaunched the play in 2014 at the Arts Club.[5]
RPS attracted corporate clients and found steady work performing customized comedy for conferences and also offering workshops for employee relations. As managing director of RPS, Frances was named one of the "Forty Under 40" by Business in Vancouver magazine in 2003.[6][3] Frances also performed with the Impolite Company (IMPCO) sketch collective,[7] Urban Improv[8][9] and Canadian Content.[10]
In July 1997, Frances starred in the one-act musical comedy I'd Probably Be Famous.[11] She directed a production of The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (Abridged) in January 1998,[12] and staged a portion of the play as a song-and-dance number when she found that her actors could tap dance.[13] In 2001 and 2002, she performed with RPS in the improvised musical Blankety Blank: The Unknown Musical[14] and Design For Living.[15] In 2005, Frances began performing Leave it to Cleavage, an improv show she had developed with Ellie Harvie, in which their housewife characters provide 1950s-era solutions to modern problems posed by the audience.[16][17][18] They were recognized with a 2004 Canadian Comedy Award nomination for Best Improv Troupe.[19]
Frances has developed material for Vancouver and Victoria fringe festivals,[7] and is credited with bringing improvisational comedy to the Yukon after insisting on an improv segment at the 2003 Nakai comedy festival. Organizers and audiences were so impressed that Frances was booked for full improv shows the following years[25] and closed the 2007 festival with Leave it to Cleavage.[19]
Frances performed with RPS on two tours for the Canadian Armed Forces: a one-month tour in 1997, visiting CFS Alert, Bosnia, Egypt, Israel, and CFB Goose Bay;[1][34] and a nine-day tour of Afghanistan in 2003, performing at Camp Julien in Kabul[35] and nearby Camp Warehouse.[36]
In 2018, Frances began touring with Elvira Kurt and Friends[37] and Girls Nite Out.[38] In 2023, she performed six shows of Leave it to Cleavage at the Incanto Theatre in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, with Second City alumni Karen Parker and Vancouver TheatreSports alumni Christine Lippa.[39][relevant?]
Frances has written for a number of award shows in Canada, including the 2018 ACTRA Awards in Toronto show, hosted by Colin Mochrie,[40] and the 2019 and 2024 ACTRA Awards hosted by Martha Chaves.[citation needed] For 11 years, she has written the Banff World Media Festival Rockie Awards.[citation needed] She also wrote for the Just For Laughs Galas for 2017–2019.[citation needed] Frances has written for the Canadian Screen Awards in 2018[citation needed] and 2019, the latter of which earned her a Canadian Screen Award nomination.[41] and she has also written for The Directors Guild of Canada Awards (host Arisa Cox),[citation needed] and the Scotiabank Giller Prize.[citation needed]
^ abcdDown, Susan (8 August 2002). "Actors flex improv muscles: Blankety Blank is a dream job for actors who can't remember their lines. They only have to remember to keep the audience laughing". Times Colonist. Victoria, British Columbia. p. D6. ProQuest345887431. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abConner, Shawn (4 December 2005). "Ghosts of improv's past deliver Dickens with a twist". Vancouver Courier. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. 39. ProQuest359320744. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^Leiren-Young, Mark (27 November 2014). "Audience the author of Christmas Carol twists; Arts Club lets the public decide on details of Scrooge's life". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. C15. ProQuest1628624873. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abCarlson, Tim; McIntyre, Anne (4 February 1999). "Laughing live: Comedy nights at local bars and cafes provide an opportunity to see amateurs and veterans work out new material". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. C16. ProQuest242832325. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abWasserman, Jerry (13 September 2005). "Fringe Today". The Province. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. B2. ProQuest269415931. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abChai, Daniel (8 September 2006). "Busy Boothby prepares for Fringe and comedy festival". Vancouver Courier. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. 35. ProQuest359364257. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abArmstrong, John (15 July 1997). "Two dreams face same reality". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. B7. ProQuest242948639. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^Birnie, Peter (8 January 1998). "The complete works of Shakespeare - in two acts: Vancouver's RPS Productions attempts to squeeze all of the Bard's plays into one giddy two-hour evening". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. C1. ProQuest242897545. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abBirnie, Peter (12 April 2001). "Well Hello, Ruthie Nichol! It's so nice to have you back where you belong". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. C4. ProQuest242611663. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abPerry, Malcolm (7 March 2002). "Campagnolo, Taylor give Jansson his due: Board of Trade suits assemble to fete one of their own". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. B3. ProQuest242492120. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abHilborn, Dan (12 January 2005). "Cats and dogs at Shadbolt". Burnaby Now. Burnaby, British Columbia. p. 11. ProQuest358614936. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^"Solving today's problems,'50s style". The Morning Star. Vernon, British Columbia: Torstar Media Group. 19 October 2005. p. 25. ProQuest373062399. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abcd"Fresh, funny and fast; Leave it to Cleavage riffs on the virtues of the good ol' days". Chilliwack Times. Shilliwack, British Columbia. 27 September 2012. p. A31. ProQuest1081218410. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abcWaddell, Stephanie (30 November 2006). "Nakai poised to serve up some mirth". Whitehorse Star. Whitehorse, Yukon. p. 4. ProQuest362364376. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abCarlson, Tim (28 February 2002). "Variations on a screen: Whether to explore pop culture myths, improvise music or just go for laughs, three different groups are inventing new soundtracks for old films at Blinding Light Cinema". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. D14. ProQuest242526195. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ ab"Move over, it's the original desperate housewives". The Morning Star. Vernon, British Columbia: Torstar Media Group. 12 October 2005. p. 25. ProQuest372995216. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abcWaddell, Stephanie (4 December 2003). "Festival's yuk-yuks to warm up January". Whitehorse Star. Whitehorse, Yukon. p. 4. ProQuest362237597. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ ab"Leave it to Cleavage at Evergreen Oct. 29". Coquitlam Now. Coquitlam, British Columbia. 21 October 2005. p. 26. ProQuest358484716. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^Chamberlain, Adrian (2 December 2004). "Comedy isn't pretty, but it's funny". Times Colonist. Victoria, British Columbia. p. D4. ProQuest347980073. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abc"Wily writers do battle in Literary Death Match; War of words waged to attract new audiences to reading events". Vancouver Courier. Vancouver, British Columbia. 6 October 2010. p. 28. ProQuest757032981. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ abcMinty, Melanie (6 November 2014). "'Leave it to Cleavage' comedy comes to Surrey". The Tri-Cities Now. Port Moody, British Columbia. p. A34. ProQuest1621693441. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^Inwood, Damian (5 November 1997). "Improv comedy troupe off to humor troops". The Province. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. D9. ProQuest267599789. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^Pedwell, Terry (24 November 2003). "Canadian soldiers treated to racy down-home tour show at base in Afghanistan". Toronto, Ontario. Canadian Press Newswire.
^"Emotional journey awaits at Civic Chorale concert". The Post. Burlington, Ontario: Torstar Syndication Services. 22 April 2019. ProQuest2212932756. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^ ab"Awards". Writer's Guild of Canada. Retrieved 1 September 2024.
^Birnie, Peter (17 December 1998). "Scrooge twisted into season's best Christmas spoof". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. C21. ProQuest242830781. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^Doruyter, Renee (1 December 1996). "Improv troupe makes sport of X-Files". The Province. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. B15. ProQuest267570466. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^Birnie, Peter (13 August 2004). "Antics of improv Musketeers range from clever to puerile". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. D3. ProQuest242325337. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^Birnie, Peter (9 September 2006). "The fringe of a new Empire". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. F20. ProQuest242159809. – via ProQuest(subscription required)
^Strachan, Alex (2 October 2002). "Hockey Nightmare in Canada: Don and Rex". Vancouver Sun. Vancouver, British Columbia. p. D8. ProQuest242506045. – via ProQuest(subscription required)